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Labrish
Nyuuz
Zimbabwe’s gold riches are stuck outside its own markets
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[QUOTE="Munyaradzi Mafaro, post: 81967, member: 636"] Zimbabwe fumbles the bag on massive gold reserves through outdated selling tactics. The nation consistently ships raw mineral wealth abroad while local systems suffer currency shortages and investment droughts. Experts point toward the Zimbabwe Stock Exchange and Victoria Falls Stock Exchange as missing links that could turn physical mining into financial instruments. Financializing these resources would stop wealth from exiting the country solely as a commodity and create legitimate assets for traders. Current setups mostly benefit centralized buyers or informal channels, while regular citizens see zero returns. Smuggling and weak price discovery mean value bleeds out before it aids national accounts or pension funds. Most locals currently labor inside mines rather than holding gold-backed investments. Real value creation happens when markets trade gold-linked shares or bonds instead of just bullion. The ZSE could offer local currency instruments to hedge against inflation for domestic savers. Meanwhile, the VFEX handles foreign capital and creates a regulated path for offshore money that avoids external commodity brokers. Aligning mining regulations with capital markets would legitimize artisanal operations and capture tax revenue. This structural shift transforms a simple natural resource into deeper economic stability. Keeping things static guarantees the country remains just a supplier rather than a financial hub. [/QUOTE]
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Labrish
Nyuuz
Zimbabwe’s gold riches are stuck outside its own markets
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