Lawack, VivienneKaseke, Melissa Chinyangarara2018-08-142024-11-062018-08-142024-11-062018https://hdl.handle.net/10566/18110Magister Legum - LLM (Public Law and Jurisprudence)Zimbabwe is a Southern African country which has witnessed frequent bank collapses in the last two decades. This has eroded consumer and business confidence in the banking sector due to the irreparable financial prejudice suffered by most sectoral consumers. The side effect of this lack of trust in the sector has been the hoarding and preference of cash in most, if not all transactions, as opposed to the use of plastic money. Between April 2015 and March 2016, it is estimated that between US$3 billion and US$7.4 billion was circulating outside the banking system in the informal sector thus exposing the depth of mistrust crippling the banking sector. Together with other factors beyond the scope of this study, it is submitted that this lack of trust and confidence in the sector has contributed to the current cash shortage which, according to Latham and Cohen, has left .a black hole in the financial system that's crushing the rest of the economy'.enZimbabweSiloFinancial consumerConsumer protectionConsumer confidenceBank regulationPrudential regulationMarket conduct regulationDeposit protectionBank failureEnforcement of lawsConsumer Protection; Efficient and Effective Bank Regulation in ZimbabweUniversity of the Western Cape