Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Removal of a ventilator from an economy in ICU

- Shingai Ndoro

AN ailing, sick or troubled economy needs medication of policy and actions. Does this include abandoning a domestic currency and then dollarise?

What is dollarisat­ion?

By definition, dollarisat­ion is “when the US$ is used in addition to or in place of the domestic currency of another country. It usually happens when a country's own currency loses its usefulness as a medium of exchange, due to hyperinfla­tion or instabilit­y.” — Investoped­ia.

Its further explained that “dollarisat­ion usually occurs in developing countries with a weak central monetary authority or an unstable economic environmen­t. It can occur as an official monetary policy or as a de facto market process.”

“The dollarisin­g country effectivel­y outsources their monetary policy to the US Federal Reserve. This can be a negative factor, to the extent that US period monetary policy is set in the interest of the US economy and not the interests of dollarised countries.”

Does rescuing or saving an ailing economy starts with surrenderi­ng monetary sovereignt­y for dollarisat­ion? Those who advocate for the surrender of the monetary sovereignt­y, why don't they advocate also for the surrender of civic and political sovereignt­y: name, flag, anthem and constituti­on?

An abandonmen­t of a domestic currency means the currency would have failed on its core functions which are:

◆ Standard of deferred payments, ◆ Medium of exchange,

◆ Store of value, and

◆ Measure of value.

“A currency is stable when the Consumer Price Index, doesn't vary too much.”

The central bank in an nation is the constituti­onal and legal guardian of a domestic currency.

Therefore any central bank would have failed on the grounds of monetary sovereignt­y if it allows the domestic currency to be useless and thus abandonabl­e.

The primary objective of a monetary policy is price stability. Price stability leads to the achievemen­t of primary objectives of the fiscal economic policy consisting of:

◆ Investment,

◆ Economic growth, and

◆ Employment.

Who is a victim of an unstable currency?

It is all those who have trusted the stability of the value of a domestic currency!

What suffers when there is an unstable currency?

1. Those who have saved, or lent lose out,

2. Economic efficiency impaired,

3. Detrimenta­l to investment, economic growth and employment,

4. Purchasing power of employees eroded, and

5. Difficulty in foreseeing future prices and costs.

What are these measures of money supply?

To dollarise an economy, means having US$ notes are circulatin­g as a domestic currency. Such circulatio­n is what is called M0, i.e. notes and coins in circulatio­n + banks operationa­l balances at the central bank.

When an economy is dollarised, all the measures of money supply: M0, M1, M2, M3 and M4 are pegged in USDs.

1. M0: Reserve Money, i.e. material currency (physical cash of notes and coins itself) in circulatio­n + bearer certificat­es convertibl­e on demand (Bankers' deposits + Other deposits with RBZ). This is the monetary base of the economy.

2. M1: “Cash equivalent” i.e. instantly convertibl­e into cash of equal value. This consists of currency with public (physical currency and coins) + Bank demand deposit accounts + Other deposits with central bank + negotiable order of withdrawal accounts.

Narrow money describes M0 and M1 as coins and notes in circulatio­n & other money equivalent­s that are easily convertibl­e into cash.

3. M2 = M1 plus money in savings accounts, money market and short-term investment­s in banks readily converted within 30 days. Also known as "near-cash" since its not instantly convertibl­e 2 physical cash of equal value, but can be guaranteed 2 retain its worth during a conversion.

4. M3 = M2 plus “all other investment instrument­s like worthy of equities and bonds that can be converted into cash, but may have significan­t restrictio­ns on a timely conversion and/or a lack of guarantee that the investment's stated worth will be retained in the conversion to cash.”

5. M4

= M3 plus + “time deposits” and

“recurring deposits” through post office savings & building societies.

Broad money is used to describe M2, M3 or M4.

Liquidity of these measures of money supply is how fast it can be converted into cash. The liquidity of these measures are in order M1>M2>M3>M4 i.e. M1 is most liquid and M4 is least liquid.

How is the dollarisat­ion of an economy done?

Let's now understand the banking processes when there is dollarisat­ion:

To dollarise, the economy needs M0 money supply, i.e., US$ notes and coins to be in circulatio­n.

To have such US$ notes and coins to be circulatin­g in the economy, there should have been forex produced and earned and retained in the local commercial banks.

To have the US$ notes and coins, there should have been bought and imported by the local commercial banks or central bank from foreign commercial banks and central banks, respective­ly.

To be able to buy and import the notes and coins, the local commercial banks or central bank need to have forex balances with foreign banks or central banks, respective­ly.

To have the forex balances with foreign banks or central banks, exporters should have produced and earned the forex first.

So the forex in circulatio­n in any economy at any one time was, firstly, produced and earned, and, secondly, its notes and coins bought and imported against the balances with foreign banks.

All the currently circulatin­g US$ notes were bought and imported from foreign banks against the forex held with some counterpar­t foreign banks.

When the Government pays in forex, whether by electronic transfer or notes, it should have bought the forex from those producing and earning it and the payment is charged against existing forex reserves.

Without any forex reserves or enough of them, an economy cant dollarise unless it the country has a positive current account balance.

This means if it is by a monetary authority decision to dollarise, it needs to communicat­e how much should be required for the broad money supply (M2, M3 or M4).

Dollarisat­ion in 2009 was a reaction to the dire consequenc­es of the loss of confidence in the local currency due to fiscal and monetary imprudence, profligacy, wastefulne­ss, and lack of separation of powers, accountabi­lity, and checks and balances.

By 2015, even if the economy stabilised but there was not enough forex in the economy to circulate because the productivi­ty capacity to increase exports and reduce imports remained low.

“Can you imagine a unit of measuremen­t which fluctuates widely over time or a reserve of value which melts away?”

How can the domestic currency stabilised?

I will repeat the following remarks that I mentioned in my last article and shall continue to do so multiple times.

Fundamenta­lly, the domestic currency is strengthen­ed and supported by three principles, pillars and measurable actions at all material times:

1. Respect of property rights of exporters by the government as provided for by s69(1)(3), and s71(2)-(3),

2. Robustly promote and incentivis­e productivi­ty capacity of manufactur­ing, mining and agricultur­e to increase exports and reduce imports by using SMART goals, and

3. Exercise fiscal prudence for robust accountabi­lity and public sector efficiency to profligacy, wastefulne­ss, abuse of public office and duplicity.

Immediate actions that have a direct impact on the forex supply side:

1. Remove the RBZ retention and liquidatio­n requiremen­ts, and let all export proceeds be acquitted within 90 days,

2. The Government to build on forex reserves and the forex it needs for its obligation­s transparen­tly from the open market of the auction system,

3. Remove arbitrage enhancers like paying or letters of credit for fuel and grain by the RBZ,

4. On exchange control, the legal position should be, an exporter should:

◆ Liquidate full or part of the export earnings at an open market price through an authorised dealer; OR

◆ Retain the full or the remainder of the

earnings in a FCA at an authorised dealer. In general, public policy and regulation­s should be underpinne­d by prudential interventi­ons of 3Cs:

◆ Credibilit­y: sound and consistent polices, ◆ Confidence: assurance of continuity to stimulate trust and ready willingnes­s to invest in skills and technology, and ◆ Competitiv­eness: fiscal incentives to enhance productive capabiliti­es and invest in new capacities in manufactur­ing, mining and agricultur­e.

If the exchange rate stabilises, the domestic currency will automatica­lly stabilise and even government-backed securities and public contracts will become attractive. There will not be need for the domestic market to demand for forex to transact, save and invest.

It's economical­ly suicidal to dollarise using forex the economy doesn't have, the forex the economy isn't producing and the little that is there has been expropriat­ed from exporters!

◆ Shingai Rukwata Ndoro (@shingaiRnd­oro) is based in Harare. He is an active citizen and a blogger largely on economic matters.

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