Should Ugandans be worried by the recent pronouncement that Bank of Uganda (BoU) has made losses for the...
last 10 years?
I think we should not have sleepless nights over that diversionary issue.
All that matters, from a macroeconomic point of view, is whether BoU has the ability to do its job, which is to control inflation, maintain financial sector stability and help to close the output gap – pursue policies that support economic growth.
last 10 years?
I think we should not have sleepless nights over that diversionary issue.
All that matters, from a macroeconomic point of view, is whether BoU has the ability to do its job, which is to control inflation, maintain financial sector stability and help to close the output gap – pursue policies that support economic growth.
Avoiding losses
is a distant fourth objective that the Central Bank cannot prioritise
given the nature of fiscal policy management in Uganda, which is what
should give us sleepless nights.
It may be argued that
BoU can never be insolvent as long as people use the currency it issues
that allows it to operate at a profit with core earnings derived from
seigniorage.
This is the difference between the face value of the money it issues and the cost of printing that money.
However, this is not an option since printing money is not done for profit and can counteract the core duty of controlling inflation.
However, this is not an option since printing money is not done for profit and can counteract the core duty of controlling inflation.
The central bank, like the military and health sector, delivers a
public good and should not be judged on the profit and loss basis. That
said, avoiding balance sheet losses should not be entirely ignored by
central bank since losses can impair the effectiveness of monetary
policy.
When losses result in a negative net worth,
the government should simply recapitalise the Central Bank by an
injection of either cash or government securities.
The losses can arise from two sources. First, when operating
expenses exceed operating income. Second, when net valuation losses from
the revaluation of assets and liabilities and any impairment losses
exceed operating income.
Specifically, the losses can
arise from: open market operations; sterilization of foreign currency
inflows; domestic and foreign investments; credit and guarantees; costs
associated with financial sector restructuring; direct or implicit
interest subsidies; and non-core activities of a fiscal or quasi-fiscal
nature.
Over the last 10 years, the major problem for
BoU has come from open market operations, and nature of domestic and
foreign investments.
The current Public Debt and Other
Financial Liabilities Management Framework for Uganda (2018/2019 to
2022/2023), requires BoU to conduct monetary policy primarily using
repos and reverse repos.
The former is the rate at
which commercial banks borrow from BoU while the latter is the rate at
which the BoU borrows from the commercial banks.
The
Framework also states that BoU will bear the cost of these operations.
As of June 2019, the domestic debt due to Treasury bills (T-Bills)
issued by the BoU for monetary purposes was Shs3.71 trillion.
The interest payment on T-Bills was Shs465.8 billion and Shs364.5 billion in 2017/2018 and 2018/2019 respectively.
These outflows from the BoU were not for profit ventures but mere stabilisation of the economy as a public good.
Regarding
revenues from investments abroad, the BoU has not fared any better
given the downward trend in interest rates on the US treasury bonds,
which is a major influence on earnings from foreign reserves.
The rate has fallen from 15.9 per cent in September 1981, to 2.5 per
cent in December 2008 and 0.95 per cent in March 2020. Domestically, BoU
can hardly earn from lending to commercial banks that held 80 per cent
(Shs2.97 trillion) of its own T-Bills in June 2019. To conclude, the
government should simply drop the narrative of BoU making losses and
reward the stabilisation of macroeconomics through annual
capitalisation.
Mr Muhumuza is a development policy analyst committed to inclusive growth.
fmatwooki@yahoo.com
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