The Capital

Currency black market rates show Algeria’s economic pain

-

ALGIERS, Algeria — In a square near the center of Algiers, currency traders carry wads of euros, pounds and dollars, hoping to exchange them to those worried about the plummeting value of the Algerian dinar.

This black market for foreign currencies is among the signs of the economic woes plaguing Algeria. The state, reluctant to allow the exchange rate to adjust fully, has proven incapable of limiting demand among the population as confidence in the dinar remains low.

The widening parallel exchange rate underscore­s how everyday Algerians have lost buying power as the government has juggled competing priorities, trying to combat inflation and maintain state spending, subsidies and price controls that keep people afloat.

In the oil-rich North African nation, business owners are rumored to be dumping assets and scrounging up euros on the black market so their wealth isn’t stuck. Middle-class people also rely on euros and dollars to buy things in short supply like medicine, vehicle parts or certain foods.

Two weeks ago, the official exchange rate allowed 1 euro to be sold for 145 Algerian dinar, while on the same day, currency traders were selling 1 euro for nearly 241 dinars on the black market.

Rabah Belamane, a 72year-old retired teacher from Algiers, told The Associated Press that the official rate is a fiction and that his pension doesn’t go as far as it used to in either dinar or euro.

“The real value of the dinar is on the informal market, not in the bank, which uses an artificial rate to lie to the public,” Belamane said.

Algeria has long been known for having among the region’s most closed economies. It limits the amount of foreign currency its citizens can access to a modest tourism allowance.

The government estimates roughly $7 billion worth of foreign currency trades hands on the country’s black market.

From Lebanon to Nigeria, experts warn that having two parallel exchange rates can distort a country’s economy, discourage investment and encourage corruption. Algeria has historical­ly been reluctant to lower the official value of the dinar, worried that devaluatio­n will spike prices.

Traders are intimately aware that the gap between the official and black market exchange rate can narrow or widen by the day. They expect it to swing up as Ramadan approaches.

“In recent days, the supply of euros has been lacking, which explains how it has shot up,” trader Nourdine Sadaoui told the AP.

That shortage may make purchasing certain goods difficult for Algerians. But some in government believe it reflects the success of import restrictio­ns and laws limiting how many euros can be brought into the country.

Hicham Safar, the head of a finance committee in the lower house of Algeria’s Parliament, said earlier this month that he “welcomed” such concerns. The growing chasm between the official and black market rates meant fewer euros are getting into the country, he said.

“There’s no more overchargi­ng on imports,” he said on television station Echourouk, citing efforts by customs officials to better regulate imports through the Bank of Algeria and minimize the use of foreign currency.

For decades, steady oil and gas revenue allowed Algeria to import everything from toothpicks to industrial machinery. The country’s large import market concentrat­ed economic power in the hands of a small group of businessme­n known to overbill clients and stash profits abroad, including in European and Emirati banks.

Since President Abdelmajid Tebboune took power, the country has targeted the so-called oligarchs, including businesses active in imports. Throughout his tenure, the costs of basic goods in Algerian dinars have swung and imports have been further limited.

 ?? ANIS BELGHOUL/AP ?? A man holds Algerian and European banknotes Feb. 9 in Algiers. The value of the Algerian dinar has recently swung wildly on the country’s black market.
ANIS BELGHOUL/AP A man holds Algerian and European banknotes Feb. 9 in Algiers. The value of the Algerian dinar has recently swung wildly on the country’s black market.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States