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Item:ZIMBABWE $1.00 ~ $500.00 RARE RELEASE UNC VERY FEW NOW

ZIMBABWE $1.00 ~ $500.00 RARE RELEASE UNC VERY FEW NOW

Item condition:--
Ended10 Nov, 200903:14:32 AEDST
Bid history:12 bids
Winning bid:AU $18.60
Postage:FREE postage OtherSee more services 

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Other item info
Item number:110451937885
Item location:Henfield, United Kingdom
Posts to:Worldwide
Item specifics - World Coins
Era: 2000sPattern: --
Material: PAPER MONEYProof: --
Origin: AfricaSet: --
Mint Marked: --  

BETTER THAN ANY INVESTMENT ON ANY STOCK EXCHANGE:::::

FOR SALE !!!!!

THE LAST NOTES PRINTED IN ZIMBABWE.

$1.00

$5.00

$10.00

$20.00

$50.00

$100.00

 $500.00 

 

1 X SET OF SEVEN NOTES INCLUDING THE MEGA, SUPER RARE $500.00 NOTE ABSOLUTELY UNC.

PRINTED IN 2009 AND THIS IS THE RAREST NOTE AVAILABLE IN MY SHOP.

FREEPOST ANYWHERE IN THE WORLD

BILLIONNARES COLLECT ART.

MILLIONNARES COLLECT FERRARI'S.

WE COLLECT STAMPS AND COINS.

THIS IS A REAL INVESTMENT.


On 10-Aug-08 at 06:31:16 AEST, seller added the following information:


Use the FREE Counters 1 million sellers do - Andale!


On 14-Apr-09 at 02:27:19 AEST, seller added the following information:

Zimbabwe shelves own currency for a year:

Sun Apr 12, 2009 12:00pm BST

HARARE (Reuters) - Zimbabwe will not use its own local currency for at least
a year, a state newspaper reported on Sunday, while it tries to repair an
economy which critics say was destroyed by President Robert Mugabe.

The southern African state has allowed the use of multiple foreign
currencies since January to stem hyperinflation which had rocketed to over
230 million percent and left the Zimbabwe dollar almost worthless.

The state-controlled Sunday Mail said the unity government of Mugabe and
opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai decided the Zimbabwe dollar should only
be reintroduced when industrial output reaches about 60 percent of capacity
from the current 20 percent average.

"The Zimbabwe dollar will be out for at least a year. We resolved that there
will be no immediate plans to (re)introduce the money because there is
nothing to support and hold its value," the newspaper quoted Economic
Planning and Development Minister Elton Mangoma as saying.

"Our focus is to first ensure that we have a vibrant industry. If we try to
reintroduce the local currency now, it will face the same fate of being
wiped out of its value within weeks."

On Thursday, Zimbabwe's Central Statistical Office (CSO) said consumer
prices fell for a third straight month in March after the government
abandoned its worthless currency.

The CSO said inflation stood at -3.0 percent month-on-month in March
compared with -3.1 percent in February, as food prices fell.

Critics say Mugabe, who has led Zimbabwe since independence from Britain in
1980, has destroyed one of Africa's most promising economies through
controversial policies, including the seizure of white-owned commercial
farms for redistribution to inexperienced black farmers.

Mugabe, 85, denies the charge and says the economy has been sabotaged by
enemies opposed to his nationalist policies.

Zimbabwe is seeking an urgent cash injection of $2 billion to stabilise an
economy suffering unemployment above 90 percent and a severe shortage of
foreign currency.

Western donors have held back aid, demanding the unity government in which
Tsvangirai is the prime minister undertakes political and other reforms.

(Reporting by Cris Chinaka; Editing by Sophie Hares)


On 08-Jul-09 at 06:10:03 AEST, seller added the following information:

Mon Jul 6, 2009 4:36pm GMT By Carolyn Cohn LONDON, July 6 (Reuters) - Zimbabwe will not return to using its own currency in the near future, and any move back to the Zimbabwe dollar will be linked to export strength, Zimbabwe's finance minister Tendai Biti said on Monday. "It is not our intention to depart in a hurry from the regime of multiple currencies that we are using at the present moment," Biti said in an interview with Reuters television on the sidelines of an Africa forum. "There is no reversion to the Zimbabwe dollar at all. If it happens, it will depend on the performance of our economy, the performance of our exports. We are still a very, very long way to the return of the Zimbabwean dollar." Zimbabwe has allowed the use of multiple foreign currencies since January to stem hyperinflation which has left the Zimbabwe dollar almost worthless in the midst of a severe economic crisis. President Robert Mugabe has said Zimbabwe may revive the use of its own currency because the U.S. dollar was unavailable to a majority of people in the countryside. Biti told Reuters that inflation would reach 3-4 percent this year, after averaging -2.0 percent over the January-June period. Zimbabwe recorded a monthly inflation rate of -1.0 percent in May. The last inflation figure announcement before the country permitted the use of foreign currencies was in October, which showed prices racing along at a record 231 million percent. Biti also said Zimbabwe needed budgetary support. "We expect our 2009 budget to be $1 billion, I expect to collect $800 million by the end of the year. This will leave us a shortfall of $200 million." Biti said Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai had a "very successful" trip last month to the United States and Europe, which he hoped would help the country to attract money to plug the budget gap. The International Monetary Fund said last week that improved economic policies in Zimbabwe had led to a "nascent" recovery in the economy, but that the country must clear more than $1.1 billion in areas to creditors before it can qualify for IMF financial aid. "Three things are critical -- Zimbabwe has to reengage with its friends, we need development assistance and we need trade finance in the immediate short term," Biti said. "The real challenge is the mistrust of the international community of this inclusive government experiment." Rivals Mugabe and Tsvangirai are seeking $10 billion to rebuild Zimbabwe's economy. (Editing by Ron Askew)



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Item location: Henfield, United Kingdom
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