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Saturday, 1 August 2015

[AfricaRealities.com] Rwanda: Kigali faces tough task ahead in shielding franc

 


Kigali faces tough task ahead in shielding franc (Rwanda) 

The East African
By Staff | The East African
1 August 2015

Rwanda's economic managers face the difficult task of crafting new monetary and fiscal interventions to rescue the country's weakening currency.

Central bank statistics show that the local currency has lost about 4 per cent to the dollar since January, against the projected 5 per cent annual depreciation rate, largely due to a higher import bill and strengthening of the US dollar.

While this is lower than the depreciation that has been experienced by regional currencies — the Kenyan shilling has declined by 11.8 per cent, Tanzania's 20.2 per cent and Uganda's by 20.6 per cent — it is the first time in recent years that the franc has depreciated rapidly, hitting a record high of Rwf800 against the dollar as of Wednesday, with a depreciation rate of more than 3 per cent before the close of the year.

But the official central bank exchange rate is Rwf 723, although it fluctuates between Rwf723 and Rwf 800 on the forex market.

Last week, the country's central bank accused speculators in the forex market of creating an artificial run on the currency, and vowed to crack down on those involved.

"Speculation has put a lot of pressure on the currency — normally the spread between the official exchange rate and market rate is a difference of about 2 per cent — but because of this speculation, in July only, it has gone up to 4 per cent," John Rwangombwa, Governor of the National Bank of Rwanda said at a press conference in Kigali on Wednesday.

Mr Rwangombwa said that the economic fundamentals of the country are still strong despite challenges related to the trade deficit as Rwanda continues to incur a high import bill due to its huge investment needs.

"From last week, we started increasing our interventions to smoothen out this crisis," said Mr Rwangombwa.

However, analysts say as a small open economy, Rwanda is susceptible to global shocks; at the same time, its shallow financial sector limits the effectiveness of the monetary policy instruments at the disposal of the central bank.

Rwanda also continues to face the challenge of uncertain donor flows which have been a major source of foreign exchange.

Donor announcements suggest financial support including project and budgetary loans and grants is expected to fall to its lowest level in a decade this year — slightly above 12 per cent of GDP, according to the International Monetary Fund.

Moreover, the gradual decline in foreign aid has put pressure on the import cover.

"The demand for foreign currency is higher than the intervention," a senior banker who did not wish to be named told The EastAfrican, adding that lower donor and private inflows to the country in recent months — linked to weak economic performance in rich countries has also denied the country foreign exchange.

"Europe and America are no longer giving as much donations to NGOs while commodity prices of the main exports have been falling. The situation has been worsened by lower tourist numbers due to weak economic performance in advanced economies plus the impact of Ebola," the banker added.

While the government has been working to expand the export base and promote export diversification over the past years to bring in foreign exchange, progress has been hugely undermined by the falling commodity prices on the international market witnessed most of this year.

In the first five months of 2015 compared with the same period of 2014, the Rwandan trade deficit improved slightly by 6.0 per cent to $679.22 million from $722.56 million as a result of decline in formal imports by 5.1 per cent in value compared with a slight decrease in formal exports by 2.1 per cent.

"Normally, our export import cover has been around 25 per cent; in June, it was around 18 per cent – this puts a lot of pressure on the foreign exchange demand, but the currencies in the region depreciated much faster towards the end of June /July, creating speculation across the region," said Mr Rwangombwa.

This volatility, combined with depreciation in a number of emerging markets, could put a strain on the private sector. In particular, local banks have borrowed heavily in foreign currencies. This vulnerability could trigger or exacerbate capital outflows.



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"Hate Cannot Drive Out Hate. Only Love Can Do That", Dr. Martin Luther King.
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[AfricaRealities.com] Rwanda: Despite impressive progress, questions raised over Kagame leadership

 


Despite impressive progress, questions raised over Kagame leadership style 

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President Paul Kagame celebrates after winning the 2010 election. If Rwanda's Constitution is amended, he will be eligible to run for a third term. FILE PHOTO | SIMON MAINA |  AFP

By Hilary Muthuma

Posted  Saturday, August 1  2015 at  13:58

IN SUMMARY

  • Perhaps a third term for President Kagame is what Rwanda needs. But wise leaders should know when to let go and trust others to carry on.
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Rwanda President Paul Kagame has presided over a remarkable transformation in the country, after the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi, with a skill rarely seen in Africa. He has been a sort of godsend — focused, strict, and running a disciplined state.

Donors hold him up as a shining example, and aid flows into Rwanda because he is a hands-on chief executive who makes things work. Even his harshest critics acknowledge that much has improved under his stewardship.

Progressive in many ways, President Kagame has pushed for more women in political office: Today Rwanda has the highest percentage of women in parliament in the world. He has also defused ethnic rivalry, the issue that led to the genocide.

President Kagame has made indisputable social and economic progress, expanding the economy by an average of eight per cent annually over the past 10 years, by wisely investing in infrastructure projects. 

Rwanda now has one of the fastest-growing economies on the continent, despite the fact that it doesn't have significant mineral deposits and is landlocked. 

One innovative way in which President Kagame monitors the performance of his government is by making his officials sign performance contracts, delineating specific economic targets and ensuring that they are met. He also does not tolerate corruption and wasteful expenditure.

By current Constitutional presidential terms limits, he should be out of office in 2017. But the Rwandan parliament has voted to amend the Constitution so that he can run again. 

President Kagame argues that the security and wellbeing of the Rwandan people cannot be reduced to the simple question of a third term. In any case, he contends, that decision is not his but Rwandans' to make. 

President Kagame is one of the most complicated leaders in Africa because he is both impressive and repressive. The question is not so much about his results but his methods. 

He has a reputation for being ruthless, and as the accolades have stacked up, so too has condemnation for his crackdown on his perceived enemies. 

Rwandan dissidents who have fled claim that President Kagame's Rwanda is one of the most straitjacketed countries in the world. Few people inside the country are comfortable speaking freely about the president, and many aspects of life are dictated by the government. 

Rwanda is unusual in Africa because it has always been tightly controlled. Before colonisation in the 19th century, there were few strong, centralised states in Africa. Rwanda, ruled by Tutsi kings, was one of them.

Rwanda today can probably best be described as a society with a technocratic leadership that utilises past authoritarian traditions to govern.

Rwanda is said to have one of the most efficient intelligence services in Africa. And, despite his authoritarian tendencies, President Kagame has become a symbol of progress in a continent with dysfunctional states. 

So, while the majority of Rwandans support the clamour for a third term, the minority who do not, rarely speak out for fear of reprisals. Rwanda is essentially a one-party state.

Groups like Amnesty International have produced many reports with claims of President Kagame's government clamping down on Rwandan society. 

Laws that criminalise acts of "sectarianism" and "genocide ideology," for example, are criticised for silencing any discussion of ethnicity. 

Some Hutus claim that Tutsis are favoured by the government under the guise of an affirmative-action programme designed to help "genocide survivors" — who by definition are tutsi. 

President Kagame has capitalised on his powerful connections and his record of achievement to deflect criticism. He also pointedly reminds the international community that it abandoned Rwanda in its hour of need, and so no one on the outside occupies the moral high ground.

There are those who argue that this is exactly what Africa needs: More leaders like President Kagame who have the skills to govern efficiently. 

Certain liberties, it is argued, are not so important because no one can enjoy freedom of speech when they are killing one another or when they are starving. Maintaining stability and providing essential basic needs is therefore seen as more important — that the end justifies the means. 

Perhaps a third term for President Kagame is what Rwanda needs. But wise leaders should know when to let go and trust others to carry on.

Hilary Muthuma is the registrar of Eelo University in Somaliland. 
hilgits@gmail.com

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"Hate Cannot Drive Out Hate. Only Love Can Do That", Dr. Martin Luther King.
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Posted by: Nzinink <nzinink@yahoo.com>
Reply via web post Reply to sender Reply to group Start a New Topic Messages in this topic (1)
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The hate of men will pass, and dictators die, and the power they took from the people will return to the people. And so long as men die, liberty will never perish.
I have loved justice and hated iniquity: therefore I die in exile.
The price good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men.
When the white man came we had the land and they had the bibles; now they have the land and we have the bibles.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Voice of the Poor, the Weak and Powerless.

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“The hate of men will pass, and dictators die, and the power they took from the people will return to the people. And so long as men die, liberty will never perish.”

“I have loved justice and hated iniquity: therefore I die in exile.

“The price good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men.”

“When the white man came we had the land and they had the bibles; now they have the land and we have the bibles.”