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Authorities Defend Monetary Policy Amid Renewed Dram Rise

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  • Authorities Defend Monetary Policy Amid Renewed Dram Rise

    AUTHORITIES DEFEND MONETARY POLICY AMID RENEWED DRAM RISE
    By Hovannes Shoghikian

    Radio LIberty, Czech Rep.
    Nov 27 2007

    Armenia's Central Bank (CBA) insisted on Tuesday that it is doing its
    best to slow down the renewed appreciation of the national currency,
    the dram, against the U.S. dollar which is prompting growing concern
    from local manufacturers.

    The dram has gained a further 5 percent in value against the dollar
    since the beginning of this month, continuing its dramatic appreciation
    that began four years ago. It is currently trading at 304 per dollar,
    sharply up from the December 2003 level of 566 per dollar. One dollar
    was worth as little as 280 drams in currency exchange shops across
    Yerevan at the weekend.

    According to David Sargsian, head of the CBA's Department on Financial
    System Policy and Analysis, the bank bought a record-high $25 million
    in cash on Monday to stabilize the exchange rate at the existing level.

    "We are acquiring hard currency in the market to prevent drastic
    exchange fluctuations," Sarkisian told RFE/RL. He reiterated the
    CBA's position that the dram's strengthening is the result of the
    U.S. currency's worldwide weakening as well as soaring cash remittances
    from Armenians working abroad.

    However, local economists critical of the government remain
    unconvinced, arguing that the dram is also strengthening against
    the euro. Some of them also renewed speculation that the Armenian
    authorities themselves have been engineering the exchange rate
    fluctuations to benefit government-connected importers of basic
    commodities and to siphon off a large part of the multimillion-dollar
    remittances.

    "The reasons for the dram's appreciation are more artificial
    than natural," claimed Tatul Manaserian, a former opposition
    parliamentarian.

    Another prominent government critic, former Prime Minister Hrant
    Bagratian, said in a newspaper interview published on Tuesday that the
    CBA directly contributed to the dram's latest surge by raising from 8
    percent to 12 percent the proportion of hard currency reserves which
    Armenian commercial banks must deposit with the CBA. He said the move
    only encouraged them to convert their dollar assets into drams.

    But Sargsian insisted that the measure's impact on the exchange rates
    has been minimal. He also said that the CBA's decision was aimed at
    curbing inflation which has also been on the rise of late.

    The CBA's explanation for the exchange rate fluctuations has been
    repeatedly endorsed by the International Monetary Fund and the World
    Bank. The IMF underscored on Monday its continuing support for the CBA
    and the Armenian government, disbursing a new $5.2 million installment
    of its Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility, a three-year lending
    program aimed at strengthening macroeconomic stability in the country.

    "The Central Bank of Armenia is committed to tightening monetary
    policy to keep inflation low, while maintaining a flexible exchange
    rate regime," Takatoshi Kato, the IMF's deputy managing director,
    said in a statement.
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