YANGON: Myanmar’s currency has plunged more than 7% over the past
month to the lowest since it was floated last year, raising concern
about economic stability in Asia’s newest democracy.
The drop
coincides with a construction boom in Myanmar’s commercial capital,
Yangon, which is fuelling demand for dollars as builders import
equipment and materials, part of a scramble by investors to tap one of
the world’s last frontier markets after an easing of sanctions by
Western countries.
Money changers such as Kyaw Naing say people
are hoarding dollars, expecting further rises, in the first major bout
of currency speculation since Myanmar emerged from military rule in
March 2011 and introduced political and economic reforms.
“We are
getting fewer customers now because people don’t want to sell their
dollars, because they know the value will rise even higher,” Kyaw Naing
said, holding a fistful of the kyat currency in his hole-in-the-wall
stall in Yangon.
The sliding kyat is welcome relief for rice
farmers and other exporters but has prompted concern over the stability
of Myanmar’s tiny, long-isolated economy, posing one of the biggest
challenges yet for policy makers who introduced a managed float of the
currency in April 2012.
“It’s quite clear that the plunging kyat
has already had a strong impact on the import industry and it will
affect consumers,” said a senior official from the Ministry of Commerce,
noting Myanmar’s average April-May import bill of US$30mil a day was
about 17% higher than last year.
A disastrous “Burmese Way to
Socialism” introduced after a 1962 coup followed by sweeping
nationalisation and decades of military mismanagement have left Myanmar
heavily dependent on imports for basic needs, from edible oils to
condensed milk and medicine, official data shows.
“The plunging
kyat has had a strong negative impact on importers of all goods
medicines, electronic appliances, computers, edible oil, diesel, you
name it,” said Soe Tun, a director of several businesses including Farmer, the country’s biggest car showroom.
Western
academics and economists advising the government, however, say the
currency has been overvalued and needs to fall to help farmers, the vast
majority of whom have yet to benefit from the country’s reforms.
source: The Star Online
http://biz.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2013/5/25/business/13157798&sec=business
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