Zimbabwe Sells $14 Million in Gold-Backed Digital Tokens

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Zimbabwe 1 oz gold coin

The Zimbabwean economy is no stranger to hyper-inflation. In 2009, the country adopted the USD as an official alternative to their local currency which helped to stabilize prices for a while.

The economy in the landlocked nation in the southern zone of Africa is based on natural resources and the country’s largest export is gold. In a sense, the economy of Zimbabwe is like a canary in a coal mine and can give investors of a sense of the direction things are heading at home.

Inflation set in again in recent years and the country’s leaders are looking to step away from the USD in favor of gold. The initial launch of the country’s gold-backed digital currency The token’s initial offering is backed by 140 kilogram gold bars that have been allocated from central bank reserves.

The offering Zimbabwe caused a ruckus with some international lenders, with the IMF issuing a statement reminiscent of the outrage posited against El Salvador when it established bitcoin as a legal currency began issuing bitcoin bonds.

A major announcement about a gold-backed basket currency is expected from the BRICS conference in South Africa in August. The BRICS gold-backed currency will offer emerging nations greater opportunities to flourish without being dependent on the dollar currency for settling cross-border transactions.

Zimbabwe to Launch Gold-Backed Digital Currency

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central bank digital currency

Zimbabwe has had a long history of economic instability. From 2004 until 2009 the country experienced five years of hyperinflation.

During the period of hyperinflation the country had to halt the exchange of local currency to dollars due to a meteoric rise in prices.

In early 2009, the government had abandoned the local currency, instead favoring the US dollar for all official transactions.

By 2014, there were eight legal foreign currencies being used for day-to-day transactions throughout the country.

Almost ten years later, the economy is Zimbabwe is still in shambles. The Zimbabwe dollar was reintroduced in 2019. Periods of high inflation quickly followed.

In an attempt to curb inflation last year, government leaders began to issue gold coins to try to earn the trust of investors with a store of value.

The latest announcement from the African nation says that the central bank will begin to issue a digital token that is backed by gold.

The gold-backed digital is an attempt by the country’s central bank to provide a trusted hedge against the volatility of its local currency.

The country’s central bank reports holding just 350 kg of gold bars among its reserves and estimates that it will need $100 million dollars to support the digital gold token.

Royalties from the mining industry exceed $300 million dollars per year.