especially the metals and minerals powering the green transition. Governments in Latin America are keen. So are the Democratic Republic of Congo and Zimbabwe. But it is Indonesia that is leading the
Nigerian industrialist Benedict Peters’ Bravura Holdings will start production at a Zimbabwean lithium project in 2025. African art: A billion-dollar moment Seth Onyango27 April 2023 Africa’s fine art market is gaining more visibility, fueled by a surge of demand from international and, increasin...
There is no station building, not even a sign stating the station name. The spray of Victoria Falls came into view on the right-hand side when the train was 15 minutes away from Victoria Falls Station. National Railways of Zimbabwe's Web site states that the journey is a 12-hour one. ...
From2007 until 2009, Zimbabwe's inflation/price level went up by80 billion percentin only one month. Citizens then stopped using local currency, instead turning to barter when they could, and the economy came to a screeching halt. This is known as hyperinflation and it takes drastic and di...
it seems quite plausible to me that we could see much higher inflation a year or two from now, particularly if the economy manages to get back on track and unemployment falls to more normal levels. I’m not talking about a trip to Zimbabwe, or even a return to the 1970’s, but infla...
Such insights can help inform the business plan, the business strategy and, perhaps, the organisation’s entire business model. Marketing intelligence informs the sales and marketing strategy and is a subset of the market intelligence report. Having said that, much of the work involved in creating...
understanding that it would be worth less and less the longer they waited. More money flooded the economy, and its value plummeted to the point where people would paper their walls with practically worthless bills. Similar situations occurred in Peru in 1990 and in Zimbabwe between 2007 and 2008...
like the Bahamas, Zimbabwe, and Panama.8For some time after the founding of the U.S. Mint in 1792, Americans continued to use Spanish coins because they were heavier and presumably felt more valuable.9
and year-over-year growth of 89.7 sextillion percent.4The three-month process involved expunging the Zimbabwean dollar from the country’s financial system and solidifying theU.S. dollar,theBotswana pula, and theSouth African randas the country’s legal tender in a bid to stabilize the economy...