The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe on Wednesday raised the daily
cash withdrawal limit for individuals to Z$500,000 from Z$50,000, at the same time officially releasing new bank notes in denominations
of Z$100,000, Z$500,000, and Z$1 million dollars.
The
withdrawal limit for companies was raised to Z$1 million a day from Z$10,000. In previously setting the limit at an insignificant Z$10,000 the central bank was trying to encourage companies to use alternative means of making payments, like checks. But checks can take weeks to clear, by which time hyperinflation last officially measured at 231 million percent has taken a massive bite out of the value of the payment.
The bank had earlier shut down a system for electronic payments as a radical measure to prevent currency speculators from transferring large sums of money.
Many banks ran out of cash quickly Wednesday as customers took full
advantage of the higher withdrawal limit, in addition to which the
new notes were slow to be delivered by the Reserve Bank, financial
sources said.
In Bulawayo, the country's second-largest city, some banks limited
withdrawals to $200,000, local sources
said.
The latest Reserve Bank policy changes immediately came under attack by the
Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions, which said withdrawal limits should
be abolished completely so that workers like other Zimbabweans could have the full use of
their money.
ZCTU Secretary General Wellington Chibebe told
reporter Jonga Kandemiiri of VOA's Studio 7 for Zimbabwe that his union might reconsider its October
decision to shelve plans for a labor action in protest of continuing cash shortages.
More reports from VOA's Studio 7 for Zimbabwe...