Opinion | By Thomas Chidamba
THE RESERVE Bank of Zimbabwe’s abrupt suspension of the gold retention policy for small-scale miners exposes a deeper inconsistency at the heart of its monetary strategy.
The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) had initially endorsed the 90% retention threshold as a tool to boost foreign currency inflows and support artisanal miners.
Yet within the same policy cycle, the central bank conceded that the framework faced operational hurdles.
It cited “implementation challenges” at Fidelity Gold Refinery and acknowledged that many small-scale miners remain outside the formal banking system.
That admission forced a swift policy reversal.
The MPC resolved to suspend the measure while “appropriate logistics” are put in place, raising questions about the readiness of the policy at launch.
This sequence, endorsement followed by retreat, reflects more than a technical adjustment.
It points to a recurring gap between policy ambition and execution within Zimbabwe’s monetary framework.
The contradiction is stark.
The central bank highlights strong foreign currency inflows, reporting $3.35 billion in the first two months of 2026, largely driven by gold exports.
Yet the same sector faces structural barriers that prevent it from fully participating in the policy meant to support it.
This disconnect weakens the credibility of the broader monetary framework.
It also complicates the Reserve Bank’s commitment to “stay the course”, including maintaining a policy rate of 35% to anchor inflation expectations.
Consistency is central to monetary policy credibility.
When a key export incentive is introduced and quickly suspended, it raises doubts about policy coordination and preparedness.
The implications extend beyond gold.
The suspension comes at a time when authorities are promoting the Zimbabwe Gold (ZiG) currency as a stable unit backed by reserves.
Policy reversals risk undermining confidence in that effort, particularly in sectors where financial inclusion remains limited.
The episode also highlights a structural issue: a large portion of Zimbabwe’s mining economy operates outside formal financial systems.
Without addressing that constraint, policy tools that rely on banking channels will continue to face friction.
The gold retention reversal is therefore not an isolated event.
It reflects a broader pattern where policy design outpaces institutional capacity.
For investors and market participants, the signal is clear.
Predictability remains fragile.
For policymakers, the lesson is equally clear.
Execution must match ambition if credibility is to be sustained.










