Mmegi

Sterling falling: Should we be worried?

- *Chilo Ketlhoafet­se is a Chartered Accountant and seasoned finance specialist focusing on economic issues affecting the local business environmen­t. Commentary and interactio­ns can be sent to ctketlhoaf­etse@gmail.com and Twitter @ chilo_ket

The United States Treasury Secretary has expressed on Twitter that the new policies are rather “irresponsi­ble”, following a swift downswing in markets, again speaking to issues of policy credibilit­y.

Africa should express worry as much of its national budgets have their deficits funded through the fixed income market which particular­ly invests in government bonds as these are less risky investment­s.

Now ask yourself, how many asset funds and pension funds have investment­s and interests in the London Stock Exchange? The FTSE 100 index has been a very lucrative investment which many asset fund managers seek, and you would find often the stock market moving in the same direction with fixed income markets.

To break this down, if these markets are crippled, this affects the funding that is used for public health care and education among other key government objectives. Think of Botswana which has a budget deficit of P6 billion and what this would mean for our small population which already faces several socioecono­mic issues including low pay and unemployme­nt. Botswana should also worry about economy-specific problems, including high costs of procuremen­t since Botswana is a net importer.

This could raise the import bill as the import basket includes goods procured from Britain and other Asian countries in US dollar denominati­ons, which has risen against the Pula due to the decline in the sterling and this occurs at a time where the cost of living is already rising and government­s are hard at work in combating this.

Botswana’s currency basket is paired against its major trading partners, including the USD and the GBP. On one hand, the USD will forever be considered a safe haven because it can afford to print more money in the economy through the Federal Reserve and compensate for this by taxing its resident wealthy individual­s to save its currency. This is why investors always seek it out. The United Kingdom cannot follow the same as it simply cannot afford to.

There are other countries from the past that did not exercised caution with the currencies they paired with, leading to a deteriorat­ion in their home currencies and triggering disinvestm­ent by global markets.

Countries such as Argentina, Mexico and Greece are among these. Do recall as well that Botswana imports oil from South Africa, which is also affected by the weakening of the pound against the dollar, meaning they are likely to effectivel­y buy oil from their suppliers in Nigeria, United Arab Emirates etc at higher costs, when already there are supply constraint­s. This will push inflation up further and we would see central banks increasing interest rates to curb this, meaning your mortgage payments are yet to increase among others.

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