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Fixed or floating exchange rates: which serves the Caribbean better?

World View

By Sir Ronald Sanders

IS the fixed currency exchange rate between the United States and some Caribbean countries affecting the latter’s international competitiveness?

This is a question that deserves review as Caribbean countries struggle with difficult economic conditions caused, in part, by the rapid change in their terms of trade and the value of currencies in which such trade occurs.

Nine of the 14 independent Caribbean Community (CARICOM) countries have currencies whose values are tied to a fixed exchange rate with the US dollar: the Bahamas, Belize, Barbados and the member states of the Eastern Caribbean Currency Union, Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica, Grenada, St Kitts-Nevis, St Lucia and St Vincent and the Grenadines.

There is no evidence to suggest that these countries are performing more competitively than other countries in CARICOM that have a floating exchange rate. Indeed, based on economic performance over the last decade, particularly as guaranteed markets for exports have disappeared and trade rules have changed significantly, the economies whose currencies are not fixed to the US dollar have done better.

Small states face real difficulty in competing with other countries across the world in the free trade environment that has developed since the 1960s. While it was possible in previous decades to prop-up economies through import substitution protected by high tariff walls, those days are over. Businesses now have to stand on their own, competing with foreign businesses in their own market and for a place in export markets. The issue of competitiveness is now central to the success of any small state in finding work for its people, including its annual school leavers.

The ability to compete is determined by many factors, such as natural resources, available capital, skill levels, cost of production and productivity. Additionally, good communications, transport infrastructure and efficient, proportionate and cost effective bureaucracies are all necessary for international competition. It goes without saying that a stable and peaceful environment is also vital.

The list may seem long and complex - because it is. There is no silver bullet that determines economic success and full employment. The recipe is multi-faceted and made up of fast-changing ingredients. An important element in the list is the exchange rate of local currency in international trade, particularly for countries whose economies are as open as those in CARICOM and which are reliant on tourism as export earnings.

Until recently, a system of international trade dominated by the US dollar has existed. Created since 1947, the system represented a degree of hegemony never previously seen. In this context, the decision taken in the 1960s to link Caribbean currencies to the US dollar was a compelling policy step, especially in the light of the then existing world trading pattern and geographical factors in the region. Among those factors were dominant trade with the US in goods and services, including tourism, and significant aid and investment from the US.

However times have changed. Aid and investment from the US has dwindled. Businesses in the region now have to be competitive on world markets and in their domestic markets against imports from which there can no longer be import duty protection. The rules of the World Trade Organisation, which give no special or differential treatment to small states, have put an end to protection of local businesses. The unequal reciprocal arrangements of the Economic Partnership Agreement between the European Union (EU) as a bloc and individual Caribbean states also put a detrimental nail in that coffin.

For its own domestic purposes, the US government has adopted policies designed to keep its dollar strong against other currencies. Therefore, for those countries whose currencies are fixed to the US dollar, the cost of their exports to, and tourism from, other major markets is expensive and uncompetitive. Local manufacturers, farmers and service providers also face severe competition in their own domestic market from non-US countries.

To re-enforce the point, tourists to CARICOM countries as a whole are mainly non-US. Therefore Caribbean countries, whose currencies are tied to the high-value US dollar, are prohibitively expensive for non-US tourists. Further, the US is no longer the principal source of Caribbean imports. Consequently, the cost of imports from non-US sources is high and raises the cost of living.

The currency link to the US dollar brings no benefit other than for exports and imports to and from the US. In essence the only market where the region operates on a level playing field is the US.

World trade is increasingly no longer dominated by the US or by the US dollar. The Chinese yuan, the Japanese yen, the EU euro, British sterling and even the Hong Kong dollar are assuming growing importance. China trade rivals the US globally. Indeed, for many countries in the world, China is now their main trading partner. In the Caribbean, imports of Chinese products are so high that China enjoys a large trade surplus with the entire region (including those countries with which it does not have diplomatic relations).

While there are many challenges that governments and the private sectors in CARICOM countries need to address so as to deal effectively with the problem of a lack of economic competitiveness, a fixed exchange rate tied to the US is one policy that should be scientifically reviewed. Setting their exchange rates against a basket of currencies, particularly the currencies of countries with whom their trade is increasing such as China, and those from which the majority of their tourists come, would seem to be considerably more advantageous. By continuing to tie their currencies to the US dollar, the countries that do so also seem to be linking their fortunes to the policies of the US alone - policies that are made rightly in the interest of the US alone.

In a world dominated by free trade, a fixed exchange rate appears to be an anachronism and inimical to the international competiveness of Caribbean countries. The fixed exchange rate between the US dollar and the currencies of the nine CARICOM countries named earlier, may be contributing to a weakening of their international competitiveness. It would be useful if the governments were to commission an independent study by leading Caribbean economists - and there are many capable of doing the job - to provide objective advice on the exchange rate.

If the nine can’t do it together, the governments of the Eastern Caribbean Currency Union should consider it.

Sir Ronald Sanders is a senior fellow at Massey College, Toronto, and at the Institute of Commonwealth Studies, London. Responses and previous commentaries: www.sirronaldsanders.com.

Comments

banker 8 years, 11 months ago

The fixed peg to the American dollar benefits the fiscal policy of the Bahamas because of the reserves system. It is currently one big shell game. A great majority of the reserves are "paper" reserves with questionable value. For example, a government note denominated in American dollars ends up being tallied as part of the reserves, instead of actual cash. Various financial instruments in the banking system are counted towards the reserves if they are denominated in American dollars. At any given time, they are not particularly liquid, nor is their value guaranteed.

In the meantime, the banking system and government agencies have excess liquidity of funny money (Bahamian dollars) solely because it is not convertible, and cannot be used to support imports, and as a result, the government will borrow that money domestically.

Because of this mechanism, this debt is almost invisible to the credit rating agencies who look only at the GDP and debt denominated in a convertible currency. A good example of this is the $1 billion dollars that the government owes NIB in unfunded contributions. The iceman cometh eventually, and this is currently swept under the table, and not factored into any econometric valuations.

Another type of shell game is that if an organisation accumulates foreign currency that is domiciled in the Bahamas, the government can borrow from that pot, denominate the repayment in American dollars and that note is now part of the reserves.

If the Bahamian dollar were allowed to float, market forces would find the real value against a traded, convertible fiat currency, and the devaluation would be an economic shock from which the country could not recover. The only real way out this mess, and the charade game that the government calls fiscal policy, is to dollarise the economy. Barring that, the only way to relieve the shock, is to devalue the peg slowly until the economy can take the shock of dollarisation. Either way is not very a very pretty scenario for the average Bahamian. Endemic, structural unemployment is at an all-time high. The first pillar of the economy, tourism is a dated product in decline. Financial services, the second pillar is a disaster area, with all of the major players either selling their book of business or contemplating a complete withdrawal from the arena.

The Bahamas, especially the current incarnation of a kleptocracy called the PLP, has studiously resisted efforts to diversify the economy, so unfortunately, the short and long term prospects for Bahamians are quite bleak.

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