Tough stance taken by central banks in East Africa to contain
currency volatility is bound to face real test in 2020, with regional
currencies projected to come under pressure as the world takes a
wait-and-see the end game of US-Iran hostility.
The
US-Iran hostility has ignited a surge in crude oil prices with
indicative Brent crude price rising to an average of $72.01 a barrel, up
from $65.50 in December last year, a development that is bound to have
direct impact on petroleum import bills in the region.
The
economies were already facing an increased demand for imports,
dwindling exports, rising inflation and foreign debt servicing
obligations. And although subdued oil prices, an increase in tourist
numbers and growing remittances were credited for the largely stable
currency regime in recent years, there was also deliberate effort to
contain inflation at below five per cent in Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania,
which was core to maintaining strong currencies.
Last
year, Kenya and Tanzania took drastic but administrative measures to
tame currency volatility. Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) governor Dr
Patrick Njoroge whipped forex traders against speculative trading,
silenced analysts from forecasting on the shilling and implemented
direct interventions to stem volatility.
The
CBK was accused by among others the International Monetary Fund of
deliberately managing the shilling instead of letting it to free float,
the result of which has been an alleged overvalue of the local currency
by 17.5 per cent.
The Kenyan currency
has maintained a prolonged stability exchanging at an average rate of
Ksh101 to the dollar despite persistent volatility in the global market.
In Tanzania, the same tough stance saw the
government crackdown on foreign exchange bureaus, revoking 100 licences
and banning the use of unofficial data.
The
effect has been a steady currency whose only short episode of fast
depreciation was in January and February 2019 driven by interest rate
hikes in the US market.
On average,
the Tanzanian shilling depreciated against the dollar by 1.7 per cent in
2018/19 compared with two per cent in the preceding year, trading at an
average of Tsh2,293.08 to the dollar.
“The
stability of the shilling was largely explained by low inflation and
sustained prudent monetary and fiscal policies,” said Bank of Tanzania
in its 2018/19 annual report.
For
Kenya it meant a build-up of foreign exchange reserves to $8.8 billion
(5.5 months of import cover), to provide cover and a buffer against
short term shocks.
In Tanzania, the reserves stood at $5.2 billion by August 2019, and in Uganda they stood at $3.3 billion by end of June 2019.
“With
most central banks adopting accommodative policy stance, we expect the
prospect for high yields propelling inward foreign portfolio flows which
will support the domestic unit,” said Churchill Ogutu, research analyst
at Genghis Capital.
In October 2019,
CBK released a report on the Assessment of Exchange Rate Misalignment
in Kenya whose verdict was that Kenya’s exchange rate was largely
consistent with economic fundamentals.
This
was based on the finding that misalignment of the local currency real
effective exchange rate declined on average from 4.1 per cent in
2010-2013 to 2.6 per cent in 2014-2017.
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HIGH INFLATIONConsumers in the region are expected to dig deeper into their pockets, thanks to a rise in the cost of living due to high inflation.In Tanzania, inflation rose to 3.8 per cent in November, from 3.6 per cent in October data from the National Bureau of Statistics shows.In Kenya, inflation stood at 5.56 per cent in November, up from 4.95 per cent in October, due to a rise in the cost of some foodstuff, the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics said.In Uganda, the annual headline inflation for the year ending November 2019 rose by three per cent from 2.5 per cent in the year ended October 2019. The Uganda Bureau of Statistics attributed it to a rise in the annual core inflation to 2.9 per cent from 2.6 per cent.
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