Friday, December 12, 2008

Zimbabwe - Its $500 million currency note and real estate market! and the huge crisis!

WOW! A $500 million currency note after a $100 million currency note has been printed in Zimbabwe which is facing hyperinflation. Zimbabwe’s highest inflation was last estimated in July at 231 million percent but is now believed to be much higher. And did we say we were at 8% and still dreading the effects! Scary, isnt it.

$100 million in Zimbabwe = $14 USD. Unbelievably true!! The highest inflation India has ever faced is 53.8% way back in the famine year of 1943.
Many other Asian countries have done far worse than India over the years. (The less said about hyperinflation-prone Latin America, the better.) Inflation in China reached 1,579% in 1947, when there was a civil war raging there. Japanese inflation peaked at 568% in 1945, the year of defeat and economic collapse. South Korea saw inflation shoot up to 210% in 1951, when it was at war with the communist North.

All this thought about the hyperinflation led me to wonder what the property market in Zimbabwe would be like. As it appears, the rentals are revised very rapidly without any major developments. Surprisingly, there is huge demand from South African and Russian buyers for Zimbabwean property despite the global meltdown and the countrys problems.

Further research provided more information about the problems. The president Mugabe who has been at the helm since the country got independence in 1980 from the Britishers in 1980, has started a new land redistribution
project that takes property from white farmers and turns it over to blacks. He has said that Britain should be responsible for compensating farmers, because British settlers took the land in the first place. Land redistribution has led to widespread food shortages and stratospheric inflation.

The situation is expected to get worse in the country with widespread cholera epidemic that has killed thousands of people. The country is facing a currency crisis and a political infighting is not going to help Zimbabwe resolve its issues. Either the United Nations or the United States need to intervene to bring this country out of a crisis.

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