Macroeconomic stability reflects policy change anchored in monetary discipline

Business Reporter

Zimbabwe’s macroeconomic stability in 2025 reflects a deliberate policy shift anchored on monetary discipline, fiscal restraint and improved coordination among economic authorities, according to analysts.

This lays a firm foundation for the National Development Strategy 2 (NDS 2) and the long-term Vision 2030 agenda.

NDS 2 is Zimbabwe’s medium-term blueprint for the five years to 2030, by which Zimbabwe’s economy is expected to have attained middle-income status.

According to the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe’s recent Monetary and Financial Conditions Snapshot, inflation, exchange rate movements and liquidity conditions improved markedly during the year, signalling a decisive break from past instability cycles driven by excess liquidity and fiscal slippages.

Annual ZiG inflation slowed to 15 percent by the end of 2025, well below the official 30 percent target, while month-on-month inflation averaged 0,4 percent between February and December, providing a more predictable pricing environment for households and businesses.

Economist, Ms Gladys Shumbambiri-Mutsopotsi, said the inflation outcome reflected improved policy credibility and discipline.

“The clear separation between fiscal spending and monetary financing has been critical,” she said. “Zero central bank financing of Government expenditure removed a major inflation trigger and reinforced confidence in policy execution.”

The RBZ confirmed that reserve money growth was contained at ZiG5,3 billion as at end-December 2025, underscoring a tight liquidity stance aligned with fiscal restraint. The Treasury also maintained a cautious spending approach, with budget outcomes broadly balanced, supported by improved revenue collection and tighter controls on unbudgeted expenditure.

Ms Shumbambiri-Mutsopotsi said predictability in fiscal execution had helped stabilise market expectations.

“Consistency matters. When policy signals are backed by action, confidence improves.”

Exchange rate developments further strengthened the policy narrative. The interbank exchange rate largely oscillated around ZiG26 per US dollar, while the parallel market premium was contained below 20 percent for most of 2025, supported by the Willing-Buyer Willing-Seller framework and improved foreign currency availability.

Economist, Mr Tinevimbo Shava, said exchange rate predictability was central to restoring confidence in the domestic currency and supporting de-dollarisation efforts.

“Stability in the exchange rate is essential for rebuilding trust in the ZiG,” he said.

“It supports pricing discipline and gradually encourages wider local currency usage, which is a key pillar of the mono-currency roadmap.”

Foreign currency receipts rose to US$16,2 billion in 2025, up from US 13 billion in 2024.

 

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