Home GCC GCC The dirham adventure

GCC The dirham adventure

by Executive Contributor

If the newspapers are to be believed in the UAE at the moment, the Emirati Central Bank is under increasing pressure to revalue the dirham. Rhetorical headlines like “Do we need a revaluation?” are being splashed across the pages of major dailies, fuelling expectations that the UAE government will be acting on the issue. While expatriates looking to send money home may feel the pinch, there are more overriding issues behind the government’s caution in revaluing the dirham.

In line with Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) plans for a united currency, the UAE pegged the dirham to the US dollar. However, plans for a so-called Gulf dinar appear to be falling apart. The first to break ranks was Oman at the beginning of the year, when it pulled out of the single currency and declared its willingness to follow its own monetary policy. Bahrain has also made sounds about abandoning the peg, though it was Kuwait which took action in late May to move to a mixed currency basket on which to value the dinar. Ever since, the Kuwaiti dinar has charted a slow but steady course away from the US dollar.

The UAE has maintained its belief in single currency union, despite its failure to meet with the entry conditions. It is not alone, as Qatar too is in a similar position. The primary reason in both cases is the excessive amount of inflation in their economies, occasioned somewhat by both imported inflation and the dramatic growth rates both states are facing. However, as the UAE central bank governor, Sultan Nasser bin Suwaidi, told reporters in mid-September, “Our commitment to the dollar peg is a collective decision by all GCC central banks. We are not ready to change it.”

Perception is feeding the problem

The reason for the dollar peg seems easy enough to understand. As most of the revenues coming to the GCC area are priced in dollars, and the size of the local economies is small, riding on the back of the US Federal Reserve’s decisions makes sense.

The problem facing the UAE central bank is unusual. High growth and inflation as well as low interest rates and a weakening currency are beginning to feed into each other. Imported inflation is also beginning to fuel inflation concerns in the UAE. Although officially at 9.3%, many economists suspect the CPI rate may be higher due to the unsophisticated basket used to assess the figure. Imported inflation largely comes through the increase in prices for goods and services bought outside of the US dollar area, affecting around 60% of all imports coming into the UAE.

While imported inflation is making up around a quarter of the overall inflation picture in the Emirates, the overwhelming problem remains supply and demand in the marketplace. Rent and accommodation make up around half of the inflation increase for the CPI, and in a sense this is a reflection of the strong growth rates in the country. Equally, the CPI inflation picture is beginning to feed its own expectations, with consumers now factoring in its presence.

Monetary supply has also been playing a strong role in fuelling inflation. M2 money supply grew by 23.2% in year-on-year terms in December 2006, while the provision of consumer credit has also grown considerably. Overall, this excess money supply has been affecting consumption patterns, thus feeding back into the CPI.

Monetary supply has grown at rates well above those of growth in GDP since 2000, although there are signs that they are beginning to reach a level of convergence. Still, this money supply growth indicates that excess liquidity is flowing into the economy. With few long-term savings instruments available, and most deposits kept in highly liquid forms in the banking system, the economy is swimming in excessive cash.

The difficulty for the central bank is in how to control this excessive monetary supply, cool growth and keep inflation under check. However, with few monetary policy tools to speak of, the central bank is put in a difficult situation. Despite the efforts of many large state investment vehicles, such as Abu Dhabi’s ADIA, to try and sterilize money supply by moving large amounts away from the internal Emirati economy, the effect is insufficient. Although these entities have the ability to limit money supply in terms of revenues from oil sales coming into the economy, they can do little to influence the overall market.

As a result of this thinness of monetary controls, the idea of being overly adventurous with the dirham takes on a new meaning. A simple revaluation of the currency may do more harm than good, encouraging further imports and consumer spending, thus further worsening the inflationary picture.

As the UAE economy seeks to move into being more export-oriented away from traditional sources such as oil and gas revenues, the dollar peg takes on a different meaning. The UAE could be said to be using this period of weak dollar activity to try and encourage the development of a more diverse economic base. However, the price in the short term is inflation and the complaints of residents that their dirham is not going as far as it used to.

With the Indian rupee gaining 14% on the dirham since the first of the year, and the euro gaining some 17%, expatriate workers are starting to worry. Although this fall in value may put pressure on them in the short term, until the central bank is able to install more complex monetary control mechanisms, the peg to the dollar may simply have to stay put.

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