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Item:ZIMBABWE- 20 x 100-TRILLION DOLLARS NOTE,AA Pref

ZIMBABWE- 20 x 100-TRILLION DOLLARS NOTE,AA Pref

Reduce poverty in Zimbabwe...These notes are NOW RARE

Item condition:--
Ended31 Oct, 200908:32:13 AEDST
Bid history:9 bids
Winning bid:US $18.50
Approximately AU $21.00
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Item number:320442257337
Item location: Essex, United Kingdom
Posts to:Worldwide
Item specifics
Country: ZimbabweNumber of Notes: 20
Year Issued: 2009  

20 x UNCIRCULATED 100 TRILLION DOLLAR NOTES,AA Prefix,(2009)

The uncirculated 100 trillion dollar notes was made to reduce the burden of carrying large sums of notes and coins of lesser denominations,by the CENTRAL BANK OF ZIMBABWE.

The notes have all the security features which are;

  • THE WATERMARK ,ZIMBABWE BIRD
  • SERIAL NUMBER WITH AA PREFIX
  • SECURITY THREAD WRITTEN ,RBZ
  • DR G. GONO SIGNATURE

THESE NOTES WHERE COLLECTED FROM MEN AND WOMEN IN COMMUNITIES IN ZIMBABWE.THEY SPENT MANY HOURS IN QUEUES OF BANKS TO WITHDRAW THEIR HARD EARNED CASH WHICH LOSES VALUE EVERYTIME THEY WITHDRAW IT DUE TO HYPERINFLATION.CURRENTLY MANY GOODS AND SERVICES ARE NOW SOLD IN US$ AND MANY CANNOT AFFORD TO BUY BECAUSE US$ ARE BEYOND THEIR REACH.SO WE COLLECTED THESE NOTES FROM BOTH URBAN AND RURAL COMMUNITIES WHO HAD THESE NOTES IN THIER HANDS WHEN THEY WERE ERODED BY INFLATION AND THE INTRODUCTION   US$ ON ALL PRICE TAGS OF GOODS AND SERVICES.

BY PURCHASING THESE NOTES FROM US YOU WILL BE PUTTING FOOD ON THE TABLES OF MANY PEOPLE,EDUCATION AND ALSO FOR HIV  AND CHOLERA PREVENTION PROJECTS WE HAVE IN ZIMBABWE.

 

Why Zimbabwe unveils 10,20,50 & 100 trillion dollars notes

Zimbabwe unveils $100-trillion note

Harare - Zimbabwe will introduce a Z$100-trillion note, in its latest attempt to keep pace with hyperinflation that has left its once-vibrant economy in tatters, state media said Friday. The new $100 000 000 000 000 bill would have been worth about US$300 at Thursday's exchange rate on the informal market, where most currency trading now takes place, but the value of the local currency erodes dramatically every day. The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe is introducing three other notes in trillion-dollar denominations of 10, 20 and 50, the government mouthpiece Herald newspaper said. "In a move meant to ensure that the public has access to their money from banks, the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe has introduced a new family of banknotes which will gradually come into circulation, starting with the $10-trillion," the bank said in a statement quoted by the Herald. Just last week, the bank had introduced billion-dollar bills in denominations of 10, 20 and 50 with the same goal, but those notes are no longer large enough to keep up with hyperinflation.

The last official estimate put inflation at 231 million percent in July, but outside experts now believe it is many times higher. When Zimbabwe's leader Robert Mugabe first took power in 1980, following independence from Britain, the local unit was worth about the same as the British pound. With the local currency in freefall, everyone from streetside vegetable vendors to mobile phone service providers are pegging their prices in foreign currency to hedge against losses. Zimbabwe's central bank has licensed at least 1 000 shops to sell goods in foreign currency in a move aimed at helping businesses suffering from a chronic shortage of foreign currency to import spare parts and foreign goods. Other shops and service providers have followed suit although they have not been authorised by the government and have done so despite warnings that those arrested for flouting foreign exchange regulations would be prosecuted.

Even basic commodities are scarce in Zimbabwe, driving up their prices in US dollar terms and making life here more expensive than in neighbouring countries, while an estimated 80 percent of the population has been driven into poverty. The crisis has left Zimbabwe's health services in tatters, with government doctors and nurses on an indefinite strike to demand higher wages after hyperinflation turned their salaries into pittances. Even if the doctors were on the job, public hospitals and clinics have no money to buy medicine or equipment, no clean water, and often scant supplies of electricity. Most teachers have left the classroom to eek out a living elsewhere, and end-of-year examinations taken in November have yet to be graded after the markers demanded their wages in foreign currency, the Herald said on Friday.

Schools were supposed to re-open this week for the new academic year, but government has already pushed back the start of classes by two weeks since students don't yet know if they passed. The breakdown in the national infrastructure has allowed a cholera epidemic to spread across Zimbabwe, claiming more than 2 100 lives, according to UN estimates. Meanwhile, chronic shortages of food are starting to bite again this year, as rural households' supplies from last year's harvest are running out months before the new crops will be ready. The World Food Programme says five million people - nearly half the population - are dependent on food aid. The crisis shows little sign of abating with government deadlocked after disputed elections last year. Mugabe and opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai signed a power-sharing deal four months, which has yet to be implemented.


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Item location: Essex, United Kingdom
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