Did you actually read the whole article you quoted from?
Yes, it is true that poor government policy destroyed the Zimbabwe economy (just as poor government policy is destroying ours) and damage to the economy preceded hyperinflation. However the failed economy did not cause hyperinflation, it only reduced government revenue. Hyperinflation started when the government responded by printing money to pay current expenses rather than altering policy or reducing spending.
Hyperinflation can’t occur in the absence of a huge expansion of the money supply.
[quote=DomoArigato][quote=paranoid]If you want to becom another zimbabwe, go for it.[/quote]
Hyperinflation in Zimbabwe was due to destruction of productive capacity, not due to monetization of existing debt:
Hyperinflation in Zimbabwe began shortly after destruction of productive capacity in Zimbabwe’s civil war and confiscation of white-owned farmland. Food output capacity fell 45%, manufacturing output 29% in 2005, 26% in 2006 and 28% in 2007, and unemployment rose to 80%.