Zimbabwe is not planning to adopt the rand, Business Report said on
Tuesday, citing the country's central bank.
This followed a suggestion by President Kgalema Motlanthe that it
might be practical for South Africa's neighbour to enter into an
agreement with the SA Reserve Bank and allow the rand to become the
common currency to assist Zimbabwe's crippled economy.
However, the governor of the central bank of Zimbabwe Gideon Gono
told the newspaper that a formal arrangement with South Africa "was not
an option we are considering".
Gono also denied knowledge of a document bearing his name, which
described the rand as "the naturally obvious choice to anchor the
Zimbabwean dollar".
Economist Dennis Dykes told Business Report that Zimbabwe's
"terrible monetary policy" had contributed to its dysfunctional
economy.
He said that if the rand were adopted, Zimbabwe would automatically
take on the interest rates and monetary policy of the SA Reserve Bank.
Mthuli Ncube of Wits Business School was quoted by Business Report
as saying that replacing Zimbabwe's currency with the rand would not be
a burden to South Africa.
The rand was already being used in Zimbabwe and any official
agreement to use it "would merely formalise things", he said.