Zimbabwe’s Currency Crisis: the worthless $100 trillion bill - YouTube

Channel: PolyMatter

[0]
This video is sponsored by Ting.
[2]
Start paying only for the data you actually use and get $25 off with the link in the description.
[9]
Life in Zimbabwe has never been easy.
[12]
Since its independence, the Southern African country has seen factional violence, international
[17]
sanctions, and rampant political instability.
[20]
But in the mid 2000’s, it lost something even more fundamental: its currency.
[26]
Surviving meant waking up as early as 2 in the morning, trekking to the nearest ATM,
[31]
and then waiting in line.
[32]
On a good day, you’d be able to withdraw the equivalent of about one or two US dollars
[37]
- the maximum allowed by the government.
[40]
Or, you might find, after losing sleep and waiting for hours, that no more money was
[45]
left.
[46]
That’s because, around 2007, Zimbabwe experienced the second highest inflation in history, after
[52]
Post-War Hungary.
[53]
It’s hard to know exactly how bad it got, as the government stopped reporting numbers
[58]
after 100,000% inflation, when a loaf of bread cost 30 billion Zimbabwean dollars.
[65]
Employees stopped going to work when their annual salary wouldn’t even pay for their
[69]
bus ride home.
[70]
And vending machines were put out of service - unable to hold the billions of coins that
[75]
a single can of soda would cost.
[77]
To keep up, the central bank kept printing bigger and bigger banknotes - a million dollars,
[83]
one hundred billion, and, finally, one hundred trillion - worth a whole 40 US cents.
[89]
So, how did Zimbabwe get here?
[91]
And how did this devastating economic crisis help launch Africa’s financial technology
[96]
revolution?
[100]
Zimbabwe is home to the largest waterfall in the world: Victoria Falls - over twice
[104]
the height of Niagara, and whose tumbling water can be heard 40 kilometers, or 25 miles
[110]
away.
[111]
Further South are the intricate stone ruins of an 11th century palace city.
[116]
And savannas everywhere in between hold Africa’s Big Five: lions, leopards, elephants, buffalo,
[123]
and rhinos.
[124]
Unfortunately, few will ever get to see these wonders.
[128]
Because, in addition to being blessed with natural beauty, Zimbabwe is also cursed with
[133]
an abundance of gold, platinum, coal, and diamonds.
[136]
All things which led Cecil Rhodes of the British South Africa Company to invade the land with
[141]
the newly invented Maxim Gun at the end of the 19th century.
[145]
The company-run territory was almost entirely governed and exploited by the tiny white minority.
[151]
Years later, two rival factions emerged: Zimbabwe’s African People’s Union, supported by the
[156]
Soviet Union, and the National Union, backed by Mao’s China.
[161]
In 1980, Zimbabwe gained its independence and the National Party won its first election.
[166]
Almost immediately, with the spirit of nationalism strong, leader Robert Mugabe began doing what
[171]
all good dictators do: consolidate power.
[175]
His army, trained by North Korea under Kim Il Sung, began murdering dissidents.
[180]
He granted himself the power to dissolve parliament, declare martial law, and removed all term
[185]
limits.
[186]
Mugabe’s authoritarian rule lasted 37 years, just 4 short of Africa’s record, and teemed
[192]
with corruption.
[193]
He once accidentally let slip that his opponent had won 73% of the vote in the last election
[199]
before quickly correcting himself.
[201]
This insatiable thirst for power had more than political consequences.
[205]
In 2000, his government began forcibly seizing land from white farmers for redistribution.
[211]
Officially, the goal was to correct for the country’s unjust colonial past.
[215]
In reality, the policy help him buy political support.
[218]
The effects were devastating.
[221]
The new farmers usually had little or no experience and sometimes no interest in agriculture.
[226]
From 2000 to 2009, total agricultural output was cut in half, with some farms producing
[232]
only a tenth as much as before.
[235]
By wiping out two of its largest crops: corn and tobacco, land reform both singlehandedly
[240]
destroyed its economy and decimated its food supply.
[244]
Meanwhile, many of its skilled farmers fled for safety.
[248]
As farms became less productive and demand for the little food left rose, so did prices.
[254]
And fast.
[255]
Daily inflation reached 98% and Zimbabwe’s economy totally collapsed.
[260]
Shops, if they were still open, increased prices multiple times a day as 12 million
[265]
people struggled to find food, water, and power.
[269]
Now, to slow inflation, a government must do two things:
[272]
First, it has to stop printing money.
[275]
Basic economics says increasing money in circulation simply decreases its value.
[280]
Second, and much harder is a government has to convince people that its currency has value.
[286]
Mugabe did neither.
[288]
To fund its involvement in the Second Congo War, the Reserve Bank kept printing new, higher
[293]
denominations.
[294]
But it just couldn’t keep up.
[297]
The bank spent $500,000 US Dollars a week ordering new banknotes, which, by the time
[302]
they arrived from Germany, were already worthless.
[305]
Twice it redenominated - removing 10 zeros from all banknotes in 2008 and 12 in 2009
[312]
- but, to no avail.
[314]
Zimbabweans didn’t believe their currency had value, and, therefore, it didn’t.
[319]
In other words, prices kept rising largely because people expected them to.
[324]
And soon, no more money was left.
[326]
There just weren’t enough bills to go around.
[329]
And that’s when Zimbabwe got creative.
[332]
Like much of Africa, the vast majority of its population is unbanked.
[336]
In advanced economies, about 92% of people have some kind of bank account, but that number
[341]
is only 20% in sub-saharan Africa.
[344]
Here, where the number of transactions are high but balances are low, branch locations
[350]
and ATMs just aren’t very profitable - leaving Zimbabwe with 6.5 ATMS per 100,000 people,
[357]
Uganda with 4.2, and Niger with 1.7, compared to the United States’ 174 or Macao’s 324.
[367]
Zimbabweans lacked the infrastructure necessary to keep money safe or transfer it between
[371]
people.
[372]
Not only does this hide the flow of money - granting cover to criminals and making it
[376]
impossible for the government to regulate or tax it, but it’s also physically dangerous.
[382]
Many who live in cities regularly send money to family members in the country, requiring
[387]
they take a one or two day journey themselves or hire someone to do it for them - and risk
[391]
having it stolen.
[393]
But while this lack of banks would ordinarily only slow the continent’s technological
[397]
progress, African entrepreneurs turned it into an advantage.
[401]
What it does have a lot of are phones.
[404]
In many of it countries, total mobile phone penetration stands at 80%.
[409]
These two things allowed countries like Zimbabwe to leapfrog over checks and credit cards,
[414]
and then surpass more advanced economies in mobile payments.
[418]
In places like the U.S., the ubiquity of banks and credit cards actually holds back new technologies.
[424]
Tapping or texting would make sending money much easier, but first, you and I need the
[429]
same app.
[430]
Hence why there are so many competitors - Chase Pay, Google Pay, Square Wallet, PayPal, Apple
[437]
Cash, Cash App, Zelle, and Venmo.
[439]
The hard part isn’t building the app, it’s hitting a critical mass of users.
[444]
In Africa, the selling point was obvious: Either take a two day bus ride, or send a
[449]
text.
[450]
And because many of its countries are dominated by a telecom monopoly - that company can ensure
[455]
quick and universal adoption.
[457]
In 2007, for example, Kenya’s largest mobile network operator, Safaricom, launched M-PESA,
[463]
’m’ for mobile and ‘pesa’, meaning money.
[467]
Each M-PESA user is associated with a SIM card, allowing them to text anyone else money.
[472]
There’s no charge to sign-up or deposit, and fees are minimal.
[476]
But what’s truly revolutionary is that it doesn’t require a bank account.
[481]
To deposit or withdraw, you simply find an agent - over 100,000 middle-men who get paid
[486]
to collect and then bring cash to banks, or take out cash for when users withdraw or transfer
[492]
money.
[493]
It’s so convenient that it’s used for almost everything - school fees, water, electricity,
[498]
food, and so on.
[499]
In Zimbabwe, the preferred app is called EcoCash, which in 2017, had 6.7 million users compared
[506]
to its two million bank accounts.
[508]
That year, the Reserve Bank reported digital payments accounted for 90% of its $97.5 billion
[515]
dollars in total transactions, making its economy virtually cashless.
[520]
Even digital currency, however, isn’t immune to political incompetence.
[525]
As a landlocked country, Zimbabwe relies on its powerful rivers for water and electricity.
[531]
The Kariba dam alone provides over half of the nation’s electricity, making its frequent
[535]
droughts extremely dangerous.
[538]
In July, Econet generators failed to start after a power outage, disabling its mobile
[543]
payment platform, and, therefore effectively, the national economy.
[547]
Lifting a nation out of poverty is so difficult not for a lack of resources but rather because
[553]
solutions require deep, political changes.
[556]
To rebuild its economy, Zimbabwe must first manage its inflation.
[560]
To manage inflation, it has to build confidence.
[563]
And to do that, its government requires reform.
[567]
That hope came in 2017, when Mugabe was deposed after nearly 4 decades of economic ruin.
[574]
Fear promptly returned when this year Zimbabwe reintroduced its Dollar and inflation again,
[579]
began increasing.
[581]
Yet, even while countries like Zimbabwe and Kenya clearly still have plenty of unresolved
[585]
challenges, they’re also model examples of how those very same challenges are the
[588]
necessary ingredients for innovation.
[591]
Mobile money is, at best, a convenience for most of us.
[595]
But for the world without bank accounts, it’s life-changing.
[598]
By making transactions faster and more secure - apps like M-PESA literally increase the
[604]
value of money.
[605]
Theft is reduced, there’s less waiting in line or time spent delivering money, credit
[610]
is more accessible to entrepreneurs, it increases savings, and improves accountability.
[616]
Africa is the world-leader in mobile money precisely and only because it previously had
[621]
so far to come.
[622]
And as the youngest continent, on the receiving end of massive amounts of loans, its financial
[628]
revolution is just the beginning.
[630]
What’s genius about M-PESA is how it piggybacked on existing technology - phones were widespread,
[636]
and SIM-cards and carriers were well established in Africa.
[640]
Likewise, the expensive part of cell service - towers and equipment has already been built
[645]
by big companies like T-Mobile and Sprint.
[647]
Ting can help you save money by using those exact same networks in the U.S. but without
[652]
a monthly plan.
[653]
The truth is WiFi is everywhere - we spend most of our day at homes, school, work, and
[659]
shopping.
[660]
So it might not make sense to pay for the same 2, or 5, 10 GB a month.
[665]
With Ting, you only pay for exactly what you use, so it’s a good way to save money.
[670]
The average bill is $23 a month, and if you use my link in the description, you get a
[675]
$25 credit, which is essentially a whole month free.
[679]
Thanks to Ting for sponsoring this video and to you for watching.