Calgary Herald

Another oil producer is under intense pressure to devalue its currency

- GHAITH SHENNIB AND SALEH SARRAR RATE CLIMBED

Libya’s UN-backed government is under mounting pressure to devalue its currency, joining other energy producers from Nigeria to Kazakhstan that have buckled in the face of tumbling revenue and domestic turmoil.

The dinar has been steadily weakening on the black market over the past year as the nation’s political rifts thwarted a recovery in oil output. It hit a record low of 7 to the dollar this week, according to currency dealers in Tripoli. The official rate is 1.4. The currency crisis is underminin­g Prime Minister Fayez alSerraj’s efforts to unite a country fractured by five years of conflict following the 2011 ouster of Muammar al-Qaddafi, leading instead to public discontent as prices surge. Libya is split between two rival administra­tions and militias vying for power in the holder of Africa’s largest oil reserves.

Officials from the Tripoli-based central bank attended meetings along with other government members earlier this month in Rome. There they discussed a possible devaluatio­n of the dinar and a removal or reduction in fuel subsidies, deputy minister of finance Abu Bakr al-Jafal said in an interview. Representa­tives of the central bank in eastern Libya also see a need for a devaluatio­n to crush the black market, but say they must be involved in the decision.

“Devaluatio­n is a must,” said Ali Jihani, an official at the eastern regulator, based in al-Bayda. “We might suggest making two exchange rates — one for national imports, and another higher one for business importers and personal transfers.”

But if officials in Tripoli attempt to impose a solution on the east, there “will be consequenc­es,” Jihani said by phone without elaboratin­g. While the oil-price slump has battered all energy producers, OPEC’s most vulnerable nations were dealt a double blow of sharply lower revenues and the increased risk of political turmoil.

This includes Algeria, Iraq, Libya, Nigeria and Venezuela, a group dubbed the ‘Fragile Five’ by RBC Capital Markets Ltd.

In Nigeria, a black market for foreign currency has boomed since the crash in oil prices strangled the inflow of dollars. The central bank has made several attempts to defend the naira after it plunged to a record in 2014, including a tightening of capital controls and restrictin­g banks’ ability to trade foreignexc­hange, as well a currency peg that deterred foreign investment and worsened the shortage of dollars firms need to pay for imports.

With the World Bank estimating inflation will average about 20 per cent this year in Libya, the Presidenti­al Council on Monday allocated 300 million dinars to import food and distribute it at fairer prices. Libyan officials have been forced to tap foreign reserves to keep the country running, and as revenues declined they also limited access to hard currency.

That made both ordinary citizens and importers reliant on the black market, and as demand for dollars outstrippe­d supply, the informal exchange rate climbed.

Ultimately, Libya needs to ramp up oil production to boost revenue and stabilize the currency. Output doubled to about 600,000 barrels per day since September when Khalifa Haftar, the general who holds sway over the nation’s east, seized key ports and ended a blockade. The National Oil Corp. says it could rise to 900,000 barrels even without major investment­s to fix oil infrastruc­ture.

But that wouldn’t generate the revenue needed to meet current spending and the production gains are fragile in the absence of a lasting political solution.

Pushing through a credible economic program that curbs the dinar’s collapse could lead to a surge in support for Serraj and his beleaguere­d government.

If it tries and fails, Haftar could be the one who benefits.

For a devaluatio­n to work, officials will need to also improve access to credit and hard currency, said Amr Farkash, a Libyan economic analyst. “If there are no support measures, the devaluatio­n will amount to a declaratio­n by the central bank that it is struggling and might have to do it again.”

Authoritie­s have discussed devaluatio­n before. “I’m surprised how the state is still reluctant to take these measures,” said Ahmed Sanussi, a commentato­r on Libyan issues based in Amman.

“The delay means the continuati­on of the crises and the non-stop increase of black market prices,” he said. Waiting means “a bigger devaluatio­n would be required in the future.”

 ?? MAHMUD TURKIA/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Officials from the Libyan Central Bank, above, attended meetings on the possible devaluatio­n of the dinar.
MAHMUD TURKIA/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Officials from the Libyan Central Bank, above, attended meetings on the possible devaluatio­n of the dinar.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada