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IMF Official Rejects 'Conspiracy Theories' About Dram Appreciation

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  • IMF Official Rejects 'Conspiracy Theories' About Dram Appreciation

    IMF OFFICIAL REJECTS 'CONSPIRACY THEORIES' ABOUT DRAM APPRECIATION
    By Shakeh Avoyan and Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    June 15 2006

    A senior official from the International Monetary Fund endorsed on
    Wednesday the Armenian authorities' assurances that the continuing
    strengthening of the national currency is not artificial, dismissing
    widespread claims to the contrary as baseless "conspiracy theories."

    James McHugh, head of the IMF office in Yerevan, reiterated the fund's
    view that the Armenian dram's exchange rate is purely market-based. He
    said the Central Bank of Armenia (CBA) is right to assert that the
    dram's more than 30 percent appreciation against the U.S. dollar over
    the past two-and-a-half years is the result of increased inflows of
    hard currency into the country.

    But many Armenians trust claims by opposition leaders and other
    government critics that it has been engineered by the authorities
    with the aim of benefiting government-connected importers of key
    commodities. The dram's renewed strengthening against the dollar which
    began last month sparked fresh accusations of currency manipulation,
    again putting the CBA on the defensive.

    McHugh was at pains to dispel this widely held perception as he
    answered questions from journalists skeptical about the official
    explanation for the exchange rate fluctuations during a seminar
    organized by the CBA. "I think it's like believing in the supernatural
    or believing in UFOs. You can tell someone that there is no aliens
    and that there is an absence of evidence of it, but people will still
    go on believing in it," he said with frustration.

    "I firmly believe that market forces are determining the exchange
    rates," he added.

    The CBA chairman, Tigran Sarkisian, made the same point on Tuesday,
    again citing a steady rise in cash remittances sent home by hundreds
    of thousands of Armenians working abroad. According to the bank, the
    cash transfers totaled at least $1 billion last year and were up 26
    percent during the first quarter of this year.

    McHugh suggested that the real figure might be even higher as many
    Armenians "systematically underestimate the amount of remittances
    they receive" and pointed to multimillion-dollar foreign investments
    in Armenia's booming construction sector. He also argued that the
    dollar has lost much of its value against other major currencies like
    the euro and the British pound in recent years.

    "If your point is that the appreciation of the dram is unusually high,
    that is not borne out by facts," he told an economics reporter.

    "I don't see that the dram-dollar rate is unusual vis-a-vis other
    major currencies."

    The IMF official also endorsed that CBA argument that the stronger dram
    has kept consumer price inflation in Armenia in single digits amid a
    worldwide surge in the prices of oil and other basic commodities. "It's
    very important from a social equity perspective that the Central
    Bank maintains its strong commitment to maintaining price stability,"
    he said.

    Critics will counter that the dramatic exchange rate change has hit
    hard a large part of the country's population which is dependent
    on cash transfers from their relatives working in Russia, Europe
    and the United States. Some of them have also pointed to a lack of
    transparency in inter-bank currency trading which supposedly sets
    the dram's exchange rate.

    In addition, there are concerns about the stronger dram's negative
    impact on the growth of Armenian exports which economists believe
    is vital for the country's sustainable development. Some local
    export-oriented firms have already reported losses resulting from
    the increased cost of their products abroad.

    Paradoxically, converting drams into dollars in currency exchange
    offices in Yerevan and outside it is now far more difficult than it
    was in the past. Retail currency traders routinely cite a shortage
    of dollar notes, something which is at odds with the official theory
    about Armenia being flooded with the greenback.
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