Fintechs Fly Planes of Cash Into Zimbabwe to Meet Demand for Dollars

(Bloomberg) -- At least once a month — and sometimes as often as three times a week — a private plane lands in a secure part of Robert Gabriel Mugabe International Airport on the outskirts of the Zimbabwean capital, Harare, carrying millions of US dollars. The pallets of cash are unloaded, broken down into packages, and then distributed to transfer points across the country.

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This unusual but legal operation, organized by the country’s biggest mobile money app, Mukuru, illustrates how far companies will go to accommodate customers seeking to avoid the local currency in one of the world’s most dysfunctional economies.

Africa’s mobile money sector has grown rapidly over the last two decades, and now processes around $912 billion a year, according to GSMA, a global research and lobby group for mobile operators. But while most fintechs focus on sending money digitally, the ones in Zimbabwe also fill a different niche: they help Zimbabweans get their hands on physical US dollars.

“The demand for dollars is massive in Zimbabwe,” said Ross Martin, the commercial manager for Africa for Travelex Ltd., one of the world’s biggest foreign exchange firms. In the first five months of the year, remittances from Zimbabweans living outside the country rose 16% to $823 million, according to the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe.

The country’s preference for cash originated more than 15 years ago, after a failed land reform policy set off a hyperinflation spiral that wiped out Zimbabweans’ savings and led to the national currency being scrapped in 2009.

“During hyperinflation, people get rid of their local currencies like hot potatoes,” explained Steve Hanke, a professor of Applied Economics at Johns Hopkins University. In the midst of one such episode, the US dollar became king.

The government has made six attempts to reinstate a national currency since then, with the latest being a gold-backed unit known as the ZiG. When that launched in April, 80% to 85% of all transactions in Zimbabwe were being conducted in US dollars, according to the national statistics agency. While the new currency has so far been stable, it’s been an uphill battle to get people to adopt it.

“Since I have foreign currency, I don’t have to worry about currency depreciation,” Maureen Nyoni, 68, explained while collecting remittances from her children in the UK from a Mukuru agent in Harare.