The Reserve Bank's most important role is to create and enact monetary policies. According to the bank's website, as the only producer of Zimbabwe's bank notes and coins, it regulates the amount of money in circulation. However, since a range of foreign currencies is currently in use for domestic transactions, the bank's ability to control money supply is limited. The Reserve Bank also looks after the country's gold, as well as purchase and refine precious minerals like diamonds, gold and silver through its subsidiary
Fidelity Printers and Refinery. The bank serves as an advisor to the government, providing the government with daily banking services. It is also active in promoting
financial inclusion policy and is a member of the
Alliance for Financial Inclusion.
Farm Mechanisation Programme In 2007 and 2008, the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe ran a programme which was stated to be designed to support commercial agriculture and the 'new' farmers that had resulted from the
Fast-track land reform. The plan was to purchase agricultural equipment and distribute it to farmers by bank loans. It was called the Farm Mechanisation Programme. The stated purpose was to enhance productivity on the farms through mechanisation. The equipment included combine harvesters, tractors, disc ploughs, planters, harrows and generators. The bank established a US$200 million fund for the programme. Unfortunately the main beneficiaries of the program were "well to do people (government Ministers, senior government officials, Judges among others)," people who had received large chunks of land under fast-track land reform. Equally unfortunate, many of the beneficiaries did not repay the loans. Rather than other remedies, the RBZ chose to seek a legislative solution, and eventually in 2015 the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe Debt Assumption Act was passed where the government took over the debts of the RBZ, including the Farm Mechanisation Programme debts. Following in 2022 the government initiated a second RBZ Farm Mechanisation Programme called the Belarus programme as the equipment was provided from
Belarus. The programme was in multiple phases, US$51 million in phase one, and US$52 million in phase two, with additional phases to come. In phase one 474 tractors, 60 combine harvesters, 210 planters and five lowbed trucks were distributed under loan agreements. The government indicated that the majority (98%) of those loans were repaid by the farmers. ==Relevancy==