REELING from decades of economic mismanagement, Zimbabwe is banking on gold to shore up revenue and tackle the upshots of rampant hyperinflation, corruption and coronavirus restrictions. Global gold prices have surged more than 30% this year, topping a record US$2 000 an ounce in August, as the precious metal became a safe haven for investors in the face of COVID-induced volatility. The landlocked southern African country boasts vast gold reserves, alongside chrome, diamonds, platinum and another 40 other minerals. The government is eyeing gold as a possible magic bullet for an economy forecast to contract by a tenth this year, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF). According to official figures, gold production in the first eight months of 2020 rose 10%, driven especially by output from small-scale miners. Plans are underway to reap US$12 billion from mining by 2023, mainly through gold. The sector already accounts for 60% of Zimbabwean exports, raking in around US$$1 billion a year, and represents half of the southern African country's foreign direct investment. “Mining will be a leading sector in sustaining high and shared growth,” Finance minister Mthuli Ncube said in a pre-budget statement last month. Gold is expected to bring in US$4 billion a year by 2023, followed by platinum at US$3 billion, although the government gave few details about how such a huge increase from current figures will be achieved. And experts warn that the ambitious plans face big hurdles. One is that miners, particularly small-scale miners, are not happy with the system which requires them to sell their gold to the State-owned buyer, Fidelity Printers and Refiners. Under regulations set by its owner, Zimbabwe's central bank, a maximum of 55% is paid to small-scale miners in foreign currency, with the remaining 45% in the Zimbabwean dollar, which is notorious for its weakness. “The money is not coming in(to) the formal system,” economist Persistence Gwanyanya told AFP. The government has promised new regulations to stem gold leaving the country illegally. Even so, policy inconsistency and delayed payments for bullion deliveries are frustrating the few international mining companies operating in the country. Large-scale gold producers are subjected to a more generous 70% foreign currency threshold for their sale proceeds. But analyst Robert Besseling, head of the Exx Africa business risk consultancy, said growing back the economy on buoyant global gold prices was “unrealistic”. Mining sector “growth will be impeded by foreign exchange shortages and a weakening national currency, as well as rampant hyperinflation,” Besseling told AFP, adding that investors were likely to be put off by economic and political instability. “Companies are struggling to secure inputs, and export capacity is already at a limit due to poor infrastructure.” Mining giant RioZim, the country's top producer, halted production in June after failing to cover its operational expenses. For the moment, however, the government has yet to get a handle on gold be