Dollar bills. FILE | NATION MEDIA GROUP
Rwanda's
foreign reserves are expected to fall below the East African Community’s
convergence criterion of four months in the coming year, as the country
taps the stockpile to finance the construction of Bugesera Airport.
But
National Bank of Rwanda Governor John Rwangombwa says the import cover
will remain above the IMF’s three-month critical threshold.
Data
from the Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning shows the reserves
will slip from $1 billion to $989.2 million, reducing the import cover
to an average of 3.5 months in 2018.
The Bank is
expected to draw down $109.5 million of its reserves in 2017, and
business leaders expect this to put pressure on the exchange rate.
Account balance
In
2015/2016, when the reserves were under pressure due to falling
exports, increasing imports and a dollar firming against the franc, most
businesses registered a slowdown.
Commercial banks
also took a hit from the worsening current account balance after
recording a 70.5 per cent decrease in foreign assets. In absolute terms,
the lenders’ assets decreased by $39 million in the 12 months to
December 2015.
“We should expect the Rwandan franc to
be under pressure as demand builds up for foreign currencies,” said
Maurice Toroitich, managing director of KCB Rwanda. “This also means the
reserves will not be deep enough to finance imports.”
But
Mr Rwangombwa says the reserve levels are strong and projects that they
will cover four months of imports until the end of this year. The
reserves have been bolstered by the improving external balance of
payments and growing domestic production.
Imported goods
This
year, Rwanda expects $100 million, the last tranche of the $204 million
Standby Credit Facility from the International Monetary Fund. The IMF
made $102 million available for immediate withdrawal.
Implementing the “Made in Rwanda” policy has also encouraged domestic production of certain imported goods.
Foreign
direct investment is also expected to expand by Rwf42 billion ($50.3
million) in 2017, an 18.6 per cent increase. This is expected to
increase to $148.8 million, official data shows.
At
least $67 million is expected as foreign direct investment and $81.8
million as external loans to finance Bugesera International Airport in
2018 and 2019 respectively.
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