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From 1994 to 1997, the Reserve Bank introduced the second series of Zimbabwe banknotes into circulation. Due to high inflation, which at the time peaked at 42.1% in 1992, [33] the rollout began with two new denominations, $50 and $100. Other denominations followed in 1997, while the $2 note was replaced by a coin. [34]
In November 2016, backed by a US$200 million loan from the African Export-Import Bank, the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe began issuing $2 bond notes. [2] Two months later, US$15 million worth of new five-dollar bond notes were also released. [3] Further plans for $10 and $20 bond notes were ruled out by the Reserve Bank's governor John Mangudya. [4]
In November 2016 backed by a US$200 million Afreximbank loan the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe began issuing $2 bond notes. [4] Two months later US$15 million worth of new $5 bond notes were also released. [5] Further plans for $10 and $20 bond notes were ruled out by the central bank's governor, John Mangudya. [6]
New low-denomination banknotes touted by the government as the solution to the acute cash shortage that has crippled Zimbabwe's economy failed to arrive on Monday, leaving banks in confusion and ...
Mutapa Investment Fund, formerly known as the Sovereign Wealth Fund of Zimbabwe is a Zimbabwean sovereign wealth fund formulated by the Sovereign Wealth Fund Act (Chapter 22:20). [2] It was renamed after the re-election of Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa as the president of Zimbabwe , doing so by using Statutory Instrument 156 of 2023. [ 3 ]
Zimbabwe will introduce higher denomination bank notes to increase the amount of cash in circulation, the finance minister said in a government notice on Thursday, at a time inflation is soaring ...
Pages in category "Government-owned companies of Zimbabwe" The following 15 pages are in this category, out of 15 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
On 11 November 2019, the Reserve Bank issued regular banknotes for the first time since 2009, with commercial banks releasing them to the general public on the following day: [30] [31] the regular $2 and $5 banknotes were similar to the bond notes, but they did not have the "bond note" inscription on either side. $10 and $20 notes entered ...