An Echelon Media Company
Monday June 3rd, 2024

Sri Lanka has to hike rates, before a float to end forex crisis: Bellwether

HISTORY REPEATS: Fed is set to take the punch bowl away after lying about ‘supply chain disruptions’ and firing an aggregate demand bubble. Sri Lanka with a Latin America style sterilizing central bank has to look out.

ECONOMYNEXT – Sri Lanka should raise interest rates immediately and float the currency without too much delay to put an to end to the ongoing misery on the import trade and head off a monetary meltdown and shortages that will lead to severe social unrest as well as default.

At the current policy rates, and sterilization of interventions, forex problems will get worse and the non-financial sector will get hammered from the fallout.

Some of the outcomes have already been explained in previous columms.

Related

Sri Lanka’s monetary meltdown will accelerate unless quick action is taken: Bellwether

Sri Lanka should prepare to float, and promote parallel dollarization: Bellwether

The Finance Minister hit an own goal with the ‘relief package’ by boosting consumption and imports with billion US dollar spending spree which will make that much more difficult to generate savings in the economy to repay debt and stabilize the exchange rate.

A successful float – following a rate hike – will end forex shortages in the figurative ‘couple of weeks’ and make fuel available for power and industries. It will also make available dollars for food imports as construction and other sectors slowdown.

There need be no food shortages from the fertilizer fiasco.

Sri Lanka’s food and beverage imports – including sugar imported for moonshine and after the ethanol ban – are around 1.5 billion US dollar a year, while building materials are also 1.5 billion US dollars, machinery and equipment are around 2.0 to 2.5 billion US dollars.

But for the diversion of dollars to happen, rates have to rise. The biggest mistake a central bank can do is to accommodate the harvest failure with more money printing and low rates.

Monetary history is littered with central banks which accommodated such ‘supply shocks’ with loose policy and has led to external collapses. The anti-bullionists of the UK also blamed a harvest failure for the plight of the pound around 1800 – and its error was amply explained by David Ricardo.

In then Ceylon at the time, the printing of Rix dollars led to a collapse of the Ceylon paper note against the Madras Star Pagoda and soaring prices in Colombo and the poor paid the price through malnutrition.

A harvest failure, like the cancellation of a coal plant, makes it less easy to generate savings to repay foreign debt and has the effect of driving up interest rates to divert savings from other areas.

A tourism recovery will not solve the forex crisis

The pick-up in tourism will not help with the foreign exchange shortages, though it certainly has the potential to generate more savings at the correct interest rate.

Tourism revenues will simply boost imports as sector workers spend the money and travels around.

Owners of hotels will do urgent repairs and later pay back loans which will be also be loaned back to others, which will trigger more investments and imports.

However their saving are available to be captured by the government, either directly though SLDBs if dollar savings accounts are allowed, or indirectly through bond markets if dollars are force converted.

Even if the banks buy bonds with the loan repayments, some of it will be go to state workers as the 5,000 rupee salary hike which will end up as imports.

The lesson here is that as long as money printing continues including to sterilize, interventions (reserves for imports), forex shortages will be created on top of the tourism receipts.

However tourism receipts will create the potential for more savings provided the central bank stops printing money and allows the government to capture the savings at a market determined interest rate.

That the Covid tourism downturn created the economic crisis was a red herring from the beginning.

The economic and forex crisis was created by money printed to keep interest rates down: nothing else nothing more.

That has been the case throughout history of pegged exchanges, whether in the case of Sri Lanka, sterling float of 1897, the Sterling crises after Keynes, the collapse of the Bretton Woods, Latin America, Korea or Zimbabwe.

For 70-years this has been the problem in the country, though the exact triggers of the money printing may change.

In 2008 and 2009, the central bank under Nivard Cabraal/W A Wijewardena resisted fiscal dominance through several ruses, after that money has been printed willingly through also various ruses to keep rates down.

Mercantilists and others in Sri Lanka have attributed currency troubles to imports, trade deficits, current account deficits, to rupee bond holders and now tourism.

That is why a higher level of export has also not helped the forex crisis.

Sri Lanka should hike rates by at least 200 basis points before a float to slow credit and reduce imports through a slowdown of economic activity.

This columnist would not predict a post-float exchange rate but kerb rates and Undiyal rates are already around 240/250.

But bigger rate hike of 300 basis points to 9.0 percent will make sure that the currency does not fall too far.

Many importers are experiencing severe difficulties and have been paying that price and that is why the rate is at those levels.

Sri Lanka should reverse the current policy and allow domestic forex earners to keep dollars in deposits to help fund the dollar loans of banks to the government.

The dollar surrender requirement of taxes should be replaced by dollar payments of taxes and utility bills by exporters and hotels.

Negative Interest Rates

The current Central Bank Governor lifted price controls on bonds started by the Governor W D Lakshman and allowed market rates to go up. A correction has happened.

However the relief package will require more funds.

There is now strong demand at least for 3-month bills.

The wholesale monetization of bonds is no longer taking place. Selling large volumes of three month bills by itself is not a bad strategy since high rates will disappear quickly once monetary stability is restored.

However it is clear that the central bank cannot sell down its Treasury bill stock permanently and re-build reserves to repay bonds without restoring the spot market and buying dollars.

At the moment any bills sold from its permanent portfolio ends up as collateral in the overnight liquidity window.

The dollar conversion rules also tend to undermine pegs which are already weak by creating liquidity.

In Sri Lanka the central bank is liberally giving rupees overnight at 6.0 percent – which is better than printing money to target the middle of the corridor – but not by much.

In Sri Lanka most dollars flow in to the better managed foreign and local banks which generally do not borrow from central bank windows.

The central bank is also conducting rep auctions to take back excess rupees, which is good.

However it cannot really alleviate the policy error of the mandatory surrender rules imposed on the export and services revenues, which creates more money on a peg which is already broken.

Conversion rules are negative

However the larger negative fallout will be that the new conversion rules will also reduce inflows to the country. This will in turn reduce savings and tend to require a higher interest rate than otherwise to keep the economy in balance.

If there are no dollar deposits, state banks which have loaned dollars will not be able to raise dollars to fund their dollar liabilities which were financed with borrowings.

The correction of the net foreign assets position outside of the central bank which was happening due to exporter deposits will also be more difficult without service sector dollars being saved.

Commercial Bank negative net foreign assets position fell to 563.4 billion rupees by end September from 824 billion rupees a year earlier.

With tighter conversion rules kicking in therefore, the situation will stop improving as more and more people will hold dollars outside the country and many other service related inflows could dry up.

The higher swap premia is also sign of the stress. The price control on swap interest rates is also a cascading policy error.

Why a VAT hike

The budget has raised taxes. Due to politics and the reluctance to reverse a VAT cut, the tax system has got complicated and large companies have been hit.

This column has said several times before that a hike of VAT to 20 percent is better for the poor. Such a VAT hike would have been preferable to a steep currency fall and very higher inflation for the general public, especially the less affluent.

Even now VAT could be raised to 20 percent. That will be steady revenues and will help prevent a too deep fall in the currency.

The budget has avoided raising income taxes and wealth taxes which kill future jobs, which is one bright spot.

Finance Minister Basil Rajapaksa had also acknowledged that the state workers are problem, defying the JVP view that had dominated politics since 2004.

He has also said that state enterprises were a national liability and not national assets as maintained by the JVP in 2003/4 and adopted as state policy since then.

However with inflation already created by money printing in 2020 and 2021 beginning to trigger unrest among state worker unions he has suddenly raised salaries.

Therefore the interest rate cannot be the same as earlier. Talk of ‘budget neutral’ re-allocation is a polite fiction. Supplementary estimates will come soon, though inflation will push up taxes.

Float

Sri Lanka is now operating without a working exchange rate regime. The peg is no longer working at current interest rates and reserves are being given for imports. ‘Reserves for imports’ is a clear sign of a broken peg.

A working monetary regime is a must for any country to end forex shortages.

That is why the IMF insists of a float as a prior action. This is the ‘magic’ of an IMF program.

The float stops interventions (suspends convertibility) and induces dollar earners to bring down money and sell. However the key benefit is that is stops the need to sterilize interventions with printed money, which automatically leads to a balancing of imports and outflows.

More information on floating and pegged regimes can be found here Why Sri Lanka’s rupee is depreciating creating currency crises: Bellwether

Under an IMF program the currency is usually re-pegged – loosely – and the central bank starts buying dollars to rebuild reserves after paying for all imports. This loose peg is unstable, and also needs higher than normal rates to work.

The loose re-pegging sometimes results in very steep falls and a credible peg is not restored. That is why IMF programs sometimes fail and the Argentina program in 2018 failed.

However once the peg is re-established the central bank can collect dollars. At the moment the central bank is borrowing dollars abroad to avoid raising rates and repay debt, while boosting imports trough sterilized interventions.

From the foregoing it can be seen that repaying debt on a net basis also requires a higher interest rate to curb domestic consumption and investment and generate the required savings to repay debt.

Any government to government inflows will help.

Is foreign debt unsustainable?

In any pegged exchange rate country foreign debt is not unsustainable on an absolute basis. It depends on the political willingness to impose the squeeze on the economy required to repay debt.

In Sri Lanka is certainly possible to generate the savings of 6 billion dollars required to repay debt, since private savings rates are high in Asian nations.

Whether foreign debt is sustainable or not depends on the total domestic credit, the interest rates which are required to squeeze domestic consumption and investment to generate savings to repay foreign debt.

This is not happening at the moment, as shown by the steady fall in reserves and the indebting of the central bank through swaps.

The relief package has therefore reduced the likelihood of the debt being sustainable. A 5.0 percent growth rate is likely to increase the likelihood of making the debt unsustainable.

The current administration seems to be banking on growth to reduce debt. The rating agency Moody’s has made similar comments.

This is an error. Higher the economic growth the more unsustainable the external debt, as consumption and investment will go up, reducing savings for external debt.

The IMFs debt sustainability equation involving economic growth as a factor in making (total) debt sustainable no longer applies if the peg is broken and reserves are leaching for imports and there is also no operating float.

These formulas involving growth do not apply with a broken peg (like Sri Lanka has now). If there is a credible peg or a floating exchange rate, higher growth will help reduce the debt. But in their absence higher growth will worsen the external hit and make external default more likely.

That Sri Lanka’s economic policies similar to those of German the deadly social democrats of the Weimar Republic would result is rapid rises in dollar debt and likely default was warned earlier.

Related

Sri Lanka’s Weimar Republic factor is inviting dollar sovereign default: Bellwether

How Sri Lanka’s IMF-backed ‘Young Plan’ fired a foreign debt death spiral: Bellwether

A central bank which builds foreign reserves essentially take money out (so-called below the line) and invests them abroad, depriving them for use. Repaying foreign debt is the same.

It is ‘savings stupid’ as the saying goes.

Floating Rate Bonds

However is not likely to happen with a policy rate at 6.0 percent.

With a dysfunctional forex market without spot trading it is not possible to buy dollars and collect reserves or enable CPC or the Treasury to buy dollars with rupee money rose.

Dysfunctional forex markets can drive interest rates to very high levels.

The budget deficit is already set at 10 percent for 2022.

A 6.0 percent policy rate is not going to cut it though the higher market rates help a great deal.

2022 will not be pretty. A rate hike and a wider corridor are needed. A 200 to 300 basis point hike would be preferable before a float.

A one off rate hike will end the reluctance of investors buy bonds.

However this can be solved to some extent by introducing floating rate bonds indexed to the three month bill yield. It also has the advantage of bringing down interest costs fast after the economy is stabilized.

But will also increase the risk on coupon payments. All this shows the need to raise rates and get over it.

As soon as bond markets get used to the rate, the currency can be floated. Raising rates to some extent can be done regardless of whether a decision is made to go for an IMF program.

An IMF program will be better, but IMF programs are also based on the same principles. That is why IMF programs require a float as a prior action as said before. That reserves can be used for imports is a Mercantilist myth that is found is countries with currency crises.

Without a working forex market all bets are off.

An IMF program can fail later due to the so-called “disorderly market condition rule” DMC with even with unsterilized interventions (a currency board principle) which makes rates go up sharply.

This is because unsterilized interventions are not made at a single exchange rate but a flexible rate. Unlike Malaysia which fixed the rate after the East Asian crisis and maintained it, Argentina had failed due to unsterilized interventions made at different levels.

IMF program

In any case a float is what the IMF does to stop sterilization injections, this is what the US Fed did in 1971, the Bank of England in 1933 and after declaring war in 1914. It is a standard trick.

However IMF programs have other advantages.

a) Even if a country does the correct things, it may not raise confidence among external investors due to dented credibility and the past record in past bad policy and overt statism.

b) Instead of just selling land assets it is better to bundle the privatizations into a private sector development budget support loan. The government can privatize Sri Lanka Insurance easily and a number of other state agencies.

c) There is no specific IMF performance criterion in programs that strictly enforces depreciation. Floats are required to end contradictory monetary policy and depreciation is kind of byproduct. It is temporary if consistent deflationary policy is followed.

d) The REER index is below 100. However with two years of inflationary policy and broad money also having grown and state sector wages gone up, going back to the status quo is almost impossible since the entire price structure has already changed. But whether or not the exchange rate appreciates after a float is a matter of domestic operations and the interest rate.

e) The reversion to a 15 or 20 percent VAT is better for the poor than currency collapses and ongoing inflation as said before.

f) Under an IMF program, a clean floating exchange rate is not encouraged as pegging is required for the central bank to collect dollars and settle the loan. In other words the currency will be pegged again. That peg has to be managed on classical principles like GCC countries and East Asia and not the ‘flexible’ snake oil peddled by US mercantilists. Whether or not it appreciates is a matter for domestic operation of the central bank.

g) Sri Lanka has done well to negotiate a funding package from India. The credit line can be used to generate cash for the Treasury including through the oil credit. But for that to happen a working exchange rate regime is needed to match inflows to outflows and the credit line dollars to be sold for cash. Credit line dollars should not be surrendered to the central bank to create money and boost the monetary base. All of this can be consolidated into an IMF program.

h) A distressed debt exchange will reduce the corrective squeeze on the economy. This squeeze is higher due to lost confidence conversion rules which has discouraged savings and encouraged perverse behaviour. But the funding lines will reduce the pressure.

As said earlier whether or not the external debt is sustainable depends on the corrective measures a government can credibly take. That is a political decision. Sri Lanka has one or two maturing bonds in a year of about 1 to 1.5 billion US dollars.

Sudden default should not be encouraged. It is likely to trigger cross-default clauses in multiple other contracts including term loans and private contracts if there are any, and make it very difficult to import foods and other essential on top of it.

i) There is no harm in encouraging parallel dollarization. It will reduce the burden on domestic reserve money and allow transactions to be cleared directly.

More on parallel dollarization can be found here. Sri Lanka should prepare to float, and promote parallel dollarization: Bellwether

Already pressure is growing for dollarization in multiple areas as predicted.

A key point to remember is that no debt re-structuring will work unless there is a credible exchange rate regime in place to transfer wealth out after the DDE. The country will not be able to repay the re-structured debt and will be exactly the same place as now after the re-structuring without a working exchange rate regime.

Already pressure is being seen in energy. In the first quarter droughts will come. Pressure has come faster due to the breakdown of the coal plant. It is better to float before the dry season in February and March when there will be more pressure to fund energy sector losses with credit.

A fuel pricing formula and a fuel surcharge on electricity should also accompany a float – or even if there is no float.

This column has shown earlier how energy subsidies are a weak link in monetary stability both in Sri Lanka and Latin America. It is now being seen.

Fed tightening is also looming. Most soft-pegs collapse when Fed tightens as they do not raise rates in tandem and economic growth continues. Latin America which was relatively stable during the Bretton Woods, collapsed like nine-pins due to active policy rates and open market operations to sterilize interventions.

Though gross reserves are at 3.0 billion, the central bank’s liabilities are bigger – which means its external borrowings are greater than the reserves there are in fact no reserves to intervene.

The central bank faces the prospect of defaulting – to the IMF for example – not just the government.

Unless rates are raised and working monetary regime restored – a float will achieve this at a lower interest rate – Sri Lanka’s current path is unsustainable and market dollarization may be the result.

This column is based on ‘The Price Signal by Bellwether‘ published in the July 2021 issue of the Echelon Magazine. It is updated with recent data and the impact of the relief package. To read Bellwether columns as soon as they are published, subscribe to Echelon Magazine at this link.

To reach the columnist: BellwetherECN@gmail.com

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Leave a Comment

Leave a Comment

Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Water levels rising in Sri Lanka Kalu, Nilwala river basins: Irrigation Department

Sri Lanka Navy assisting in rescue operations (Pic courtesy SL Navy)

ECONOMYNEXT – Sri Lanka’s Irrigation Department has issued warnings that water levels in the Kalu and Nilwala river basins are rising and major flooding is possible due to the continuous rain. People living in close proximity are advised to take precautions.

“There is a high possibility of slowly increasing prevailing flood lowline areas of Kiriella, Millaniya, Ingiriya, Horana, Dodangoda, Bulathsinhala, Palinda Nuwara and Madurawala D/S divisions of Ratnapura and Kalutara Districts, up to next 48 hours,” it said issuing a warning.

“In addition, flood situation prevailing at upstream lowline areas of Ratnapura district will further be prevailing with a slight decrease.

“The residents and vehicle drivers running through those area are requested to pay high attention in this regard.

“Disaster Management Authorities are requested to take adequate precautions in this regard.”

The island is in the midst of south western monsoon.

DMC reported that 11,864 people belonging to 3,727 families have been affected due to the weather in Rathnapura, Kegalle, Kilinochchi, Jaffna, Mullaitivu, Kalutara, Gampaha, Colombo, Galle, Matara, Hambantota, Puttalam, Kurunegala, Kandy, Nuwara Eliya, Anuradhapura, Polonnaruwa, Badulla, Moneragala, and Trincomalee districts.

Meanwhile, the Meteorology Department stated that showers are expected on most parts of the island today.(Colombo/June3/2024)

Continue Reading

UNP gen secy defends call for postponing Sri Lanka poll, claims opposition silent

The UNP party headquarters in Pitakotte/EconomyNext

ECONOMYNEXT — United National Party (UNP) General Secretary Palitha Range Bandara has defended his call for postponing Sri Lanka’s presidential election by two years, claiming that his proposal was not undemocratic nor unconstitutional.

Speaking to reporters at the UNP headquarters Monday June 03 morning, Bandara also claimed that neither opposition leader Sajith Premadasa nor National People’s Power (NPP) leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake have spoken against his proposal.

“I have made no statement that’s undemocratic. My statement was in line with provisions of the constitution,” the former UNP parliamentarian said.

He quoted Section 86 of Chapter XIII of the constitution which says: “The President may, subject to the provisions of Article 85, submit to the People by Referendum any matter which in the opinion of the President is of national importance.”

Sections 87.1, 87.2 also elaborates on the matter and describes the parliament’s role, said Bandara.

“I spoke of a referendum and parliament’s duty. Neither of this is antidemocratic or unconstitutional. As per the constitution, priority should be given to ensuring people’s right to life,” he said.

“Some parties may be against what I proposed. They may criticse me. But what I ask them is to come to one position as political parties and make a statement on whether they’re ready to continue the ongoing economic programme,” he added.

Bandara claimed that, though thee has been much criticism of his proposal for a postponement of the presidential election, President Wickremesinghe’s rivals Premadasa and Dissanayake have yet to remark on the matter.

“I suggested that [Premadasa] make this proposal in parliament and for [Dissanayake] to second it. But I don’t see that either Premadasa nor Dissanayake is opposed to it. To date, I have not seen nor heard either of them utter a word against this. I believe they have no objection to my proposal which was made for the betterment of the country,” he said. (Colombo/Jun03/2024)

Continue Reading

300 of 100,000 trees in Colombo considered high risk: state minister

ECONOMYNEXT – Trees in Sri Lanka’s capital Colombo are being monitored by the municipal council, Army and Civil Defense Force as the severe weather conditions continue, State Minister for Defense Premitha Bandara Tennakoon said.

“Within the Colombo Municipal Council city limits, there are 100,000 trees. Of these, around 300 are considered high risk,” Tennakoon told reporters at a media conference to raise awareness about the current disaster management situation.

Not all trees required to be cut down he said. “We can trim some of the branches and retain them.”

The problem was that buildings in the vicinity of the tree had cut branches on one side, causing it to become unbalanced, the minister said.

New laws would be brought in so provincial/municipal institutions could strengthen enforcement of building codes.

“We don’t have a single institution that can issue a warning about a tree. Not one to tell us what trees can or cannot be planted near a road.

“Trees should be suitable for the area. Some trees have roots that spread and damage roads, buildings. When the roots can’t go deep, they tend to topple over.

“Now Environment Day is coming up, and anyone can go plant a tree by the road. We have to take a decision about this. We have to enforce laws strongly in future.” (Colombo/June3/2024)

Continue Reading