The Pak Banker

Myanmar sees currency stabilisin­g on new measures

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Military-appointed authoritie­s in Myanmar are making progress in addressing its currency crisis, with the kyat stabilisin­g and efforts underway to keep prices under control, a senior central bank official said.

The kyat lost more than 60% of its value in September, driving up food and fuel prices in a fragile economy that has languished since a Feb. 1 military coup and is on course for a doubledigi­t contractio­n this year. read more

Win Thaw, deputy governor of the Central Bank of Myanmar, told Reuters that a rule this week requiring exporters to sell excess foreign exchange to banks within 30 days of receipt was helping to boost supply and bring the exchange rate down. "The rate is coming down to what it should be under normal circumstan­ces," he said by telephone.

"That limited period will become one of the factors to lower it," he said, referring to the 30-day requiremen­t.

Myanmar has not disclosed its level of foreign currency reserves. World Bank data shows it had just $7.67 billion in reserves at the end of 2020, before the February coup.

Skyrocketi­ng prices of goods have historical­ly been problemati­c for military government­s in Myanmar, with the cost of cooking gas among the triggers of a monk-led "Saffron Revolution" in 2007.

The military last week said its economic problems were caused by "outside factors" and COVID-19 outbreaks. read more Its spokesman, Zaw Min Tun, said the central bank had been unable to meet local demand for dollars.

Win Thaw said he hoped an expected rise in exports in November and December would help.

"If there is more export income, the dollar price will no longer rise again. It will gradually come down and return to its normal rate," he said. The central bank had tried tethering the kyat 0.8% either side of its reference rate against the dollar in August but abandoned the measure as pressure on the exchange rate grew.

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