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More Zimbabwe Bank Jobs at Risk as Lenders Push Digitization

More Zimbabwe Bank Jobs at Risk as Lenders Push Digitization

(Bloomberg) -- After shedding 8% of their workforce last year, Zimbabwean banks may cut more jobs in 2020 as the economy shrivels and the sector increasingly shifts away from cash and toward digital services.

“The banking industry, just like the rest of the economy, will suffer negative growth this year, which could result in even more job cuts,” said Sijabuliso Biyam, the chief executive officer of the Bankers Association of Zimbabwe. “The sector is now driven by technology. If the economy was doing well, those people who have been made redundant could have been redeployed elsewhere, but sadly that is not the case.”

At least 300 of the 4,000 employees in the industry lost their jobs last year, according to the Zimbabwe Banks Allied Workers Union, more than five times higher than those dismissed in 2018. An economy that probably shrank 6.5% in 2019, an inflation rate of more than 440%, and a cash crisis that has seen foreign currency evaporate from the country is forcing banks to provide digital services.

“The year 2019, was not a good year for workers in the banking sector,” said Shepherd Ngandu, assistant secretary general at the labor union. “The workers lost their jobs due to digitalization and changing work methods.”

Standard Chartered Plc’s local unit, First Capital Bank Ltd., CBZ Holdings Ltd. and BancABC Zimbabwe Ltd. were among lenders that cut jobs, he said. An unidentified money transfer agency fired 45 workers, while voluntary redundancies also took place at Old Mutual Ltd., Ngandu said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Godfrey Marawanyika in Harare at gmarawanyika@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Stefania Bianchi at sbianchi10@bloomberg.net, Vernon Wessels, Alastair Reed

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