Sri Lanka’s monetary instability has now ended, and the soft-peg with the US dollar is stable, under upward pressure with cash withdrawn by the Central Bank. But the president has put a monkey wrench on laws to stop money printing in the future. The question is, what is he smoking? This is relevant since President Maithripala Sirisena is against drugs and cigarettes. If he did not smoke anything, then the other question is, what are his advisor/advisors, who came up with this piece of advice smoking?
PRINTER-IN-CHIEF
“The proposed MLA prevents the CBSL from purchasing any government securities from the primary market. Given the global economic conditions, coupled with the impending large debt repayment, it could lead the country to default on its debt,” the president is reported to have said in a note to the cabinet.
“The lack of contingency support could have significant repercussions in a middle-income economy such as Sri Lanka that also does not have a mature domestic capital market to finance its budgetary operation adequately.” It is this ‘contingency support’ that led to Sri Lanka’s post-independent decline. Buying Treasury bills with printed money has been the biggest source of instability this country has faced since 1950, when the Central Bank was created, ending a currency board that kept the country stable for almost three-quarters of a century, through two world wars. But exchange and trade controls followed swiftly in the wake of T-bill purchases by the Central Bank, and Sri Lanka became a lagging nation in Asia. The 1970s were the worst.
The President is seeking to undermine over decades of work by classical economists, politicians, journalists and citizens who wanted to block money printing.
The President who has close relations with China should get his advisors who are giving dee ropes to check how the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) successfully operated a peg from 1993 to 2005, laying the foundation for most of their economic performance.
[pullquote]THE PEOPLE’S BANK OF CHINA MAY NOT PROVIDE LOANS TO LOCAL GOVERNMENTS OR GOVERNMENT DEPARTMENTS[/pullquote]
The PBoC did not buy Treasury bills but mopped up inflows to build a vast pile of foreign reserves, generating a current account surplus and a very strong exchange regime that was tighter than a currency board.
China’s relatively weaker economic performance now is partly due to monetary instability that is coming from the ‘flexible exchange rate’ of 2005. Th e president’s advisors, instead of going by the US Federal Reserve (which is a free-floating exchange rate whose reserves are all Treasury bills now), should check the PBoC law, which was reformed around 1987 after BOP crises and inflation. Money printing was decisively blocked in 1995 with very minor exceptions, which also required separate State Council approval. The bankrupt advisors should particularly read Articles 20 and 30 of the PBoC law:
“Article 29: Th e People’s Bank of China may not make an overdraft for the government, and may not directly subscribe or underwrite State bonds or other government bonds. Article 30: Th e People’s Bank of China may not provide loans to the local governments or government departments at various levels, to non-banking institutions, other units or individuals, with the exception of the specific non-banking institutions as decided by the State Council.”
The People’s Bank of China may not provide guarantees for any unit or individual. The president had also questioned the need to drop the Treasury Secretary from the Monetary Board. Th at the Treasury Secretary has been a source of instability and has stopped interest rates from going up is no secret. When P B Jayasundera was Treasury Secretary, there were two policy rates, showing that the Central Bank was not allowed to raise rates.
When R Paskaralingam was Treasury Secretary, 20% inflation was the routine. People were striking all over the place, asking for higher wages and factories were closed for weeks at a time.
CB INDEPENDENCE PRESUPPOSES SOUND MONEY
Having said that, people usually assume that a central bank is good for the freedom and prosperity of the people, pre-supposing that people running the agency are liberal and will support sound money.
If they are Mercantilist (or Keynesian, which amounts to the same thing) and prone to generating monetary instability, there is no point giving independence to the central bank. But unless it is given independence, the CB cannot implement stable policies even at a later stage when senior executives drop Mercantilism and start to follow basic (classical) economics.
Unlike high-performing East Asia, which had strong currencies and low inflation, Sri Lanka’s Central Bank did not have a good record on monetary stability. Th at is not just due to the Treasury Secretary.
In East Asia, the King of Thailand – advised by Western classicals – resisted creating a central bank for decades and later set one up hurriedly to avoid the Japanese setting up a more dangerous one. Both South Vietnam and South Korea, which came into US hands after World War II, did not have very good central banks, although Korea’s was better (not that the Soviet side was any better). The Philippines was the same.
Korea (that is partly why the term Korea had a certain meaning at one time and partly because the Japanese really messed up that country) had currency problems even during the Bretton Woods. But the government managed to win the Korean War.
South Vietnam was not so lucky, either in currency or in war. The Vietnam dong (Both South and North/ Liberation Dong) was a joke until 1993 when a stable exchange rate around 15,000/16000 dong laid the foundation for FDIs and an export boom. In Vietnam, old shopkeepers and roadside vendors still keep two US dollar notes for luck in their purse. Th e new rulers of Taiwan had learned a good lesson on how monetary instability helped Chairman Mao get recruits. Japan, despite being under US control, must have learned good lessons during the war, with not just the Yen but with Banana money and the like.
[pullquote]IT IS THE FINANCE MINISTER’S PRIME DUTY TO BALANCE THE BUDGET,AND, IF POSSIBLE, ACCUMULATE A SURPLUS FOR A RAINY DAY[/pullquote]
Malaysia and Singapore didn’t get independence immediately after World War II from Britain and did not come under State Department pressure to set up dollar-soft pegs and break the Sterling era. Neither did the Maldives or Mauritius for the same reasons. As a result, they had monetary stability. Singapore, in any case, had extensive experience with Banana money (notes under Japanese occupation), which must have helped. The British honoured all pre-war currency board notes.
MONETARY STABILITY IS A CLASSICAL IDEOLOGICAL CONVICTION
If those who manage the Central Bank do not believe in monetary stability, regardless of whether they are from the Treasury or not, there will be instability and REER targeting and the like. Goh Keng Swee, the economic architect of Lee Kwan Yew, explained later how the country had a stable exchange rate and kept a currency board despite having the finance minister as the head of the monetary authority.
“World Bank experts advised us against this since the chairman should be an independent person with sufficient authority to resist a finance minister’s request for money to finance a budget deficit,” Swee said. “It is the finance minister’s prime duty to balance the budget, and, if possible, accumulate a surplus for a rainy day.
Successive finance ministers have been doing just this. They do not need an independent Central Bank Governor to persuade them not to run budget deficits. Th e World Bank’s anxieties were misplaced.” Goh pointed out that deficit spending, financed by central bank credit to stimulate an economy, does not work in practice.
“This is admissible in theory, but in practice, since all modern states engage in foreign trade, a Keynesian stimulus will eventually lead to balance of payments deficits if the government does not exercise restraint in time.
“A part of the increased income people receive will be spent on imports, and when exports do not grow in proportion, a trade deficit will occur.” Our economy was and is both small and open. Financing budget deficits through Central Bank credit creation appeared to us as an invitation to disaster.
“There was no effective way of exchange control in an open trading economy like ours to deal with the inevitable balance of payments troubles.”
The 2018 balance of payments troubles did not come because money was printed for deficits, but because money was printed for rate cuts and to repay debt (buffer strategy) in April 2018 and to accommodate maturing swaps taken in 2013. It will take some years for the Central Bank to understand that there is little difference between term reverse repo injections and purchasing Treasury bills from auctions.
UNHOLY TREASURY-CB CO-ORDINATION
Direct purchases inject cash to DST accounts in state banks with the borrower as the Treasury. Term reverse repo or outright purchase auctions inject cash to all banks, public and private, which is then loaned to many customers. In August, more money was created by swapping Treasury dollars, with the Central Bank generating the second run on the rupee, which then became a full-blown crisis due to the confidence erosion as a result of the political turmoil.
[pullquote]FINANCING BUDGET DEFICITS THROUGH CENTRAL BANK CREDIT CREATION APPEARED TO US AS AN INVITATION TO DISASTER[/pullquote]
Creating money by buying dollars and not sterilizing them is fine if there was no ceiling policy rate. But with a ceiling policy rate at which money is printed, it is a disaster to make unsterilized interventions in the hope that excess liquidity will push down interest rates.
This column has also shown the dollar borrowing fiasco with the Ceylon Petroleum Corporation, which expanded the current account deficit. In this obviously, the Treasury also had to be complicit. Th e rupee-dollar Soros-Style swaps were also a result of Treasury-Central Bank complicity to artificially bring down rates.
The buffer strategy where state banks were overdrawn re-financed by printed money from the liquidity window to repay government bonds was also due to an unholy link between the Treasury and the Central Bank. The key unholy link is having the Central Bank as the agency for selling Treasury bills in the first place, and placing on them a burden of getting the lowest rate. Having a representative of the Central Bank governor in the Treasury bill tender committee to look after monetary policy interests is also an unholy link that should be done away with.
CB INDEPENDENCE MISUSED
The current administration has suffered terribly from monetary instability, as the Central Bank cut rates and printed tens of billions in rupees just as the credit system (read economy) recovered.
This administration came to power promising a ‘Social Market Economy’. But within months in 2015, money was printed. Th en came a deadly Real Effective Exchange Rate (REER) targeting exercise aimed at destroying the
monetary foundations of the nation to subsidise hard goods exporters by slashing wages of workers and by extension generating political instability. The Social Market Economy was a promise made to the people. It goes without saying that a Social Market Economy will not go out of the way to harm wage earners, low-income earners and small savers.
How did REER targeting come to operate?
Was there any discussion in Cabinet that a Mercantilist monetary policy oriented to hard goods special interest will be adopted to sabotage the Social Market Economy?
To the knowledge of this columnist, no such discussion took place, or a cabinet paper seeking approval to target the REER and destroy the rupee, presented. How is it that the Central Bank cannot even sell a $500 million bond but can take it upon itself to destroy the rupee without telling the politicians that it will lower living standards, destroy wages and capital? The monetary instability of the 1980s, where the currency fell despite balance of payments surpluses, discrediting the entire framework of the ‘open economy’ with high infl ation and high nominal interest was also based on implicit REER targeting.
Clearly, the Central Bank can do what it likes now, even without formal independence. In the old days, central banks could not devalue the currency without parliamentary sanction, especially before central banks were nationalized. When the Bank of England wanted to stop gold convertibility – float the pound – it had to go to parliament and get permission.
[pullquote]WHEN CONTROLS ARE PLACED ON SPECIFIC GOODS, AND THE CENTRAL BANK CONTINUES TO INJECT MONEY TO KEEP RATES LOW[/pullquote]
The British Parliament passed the Bank Restrictions Act to enable the pound to be floated and effectively devalued. The critical problem is that it was easier for classical economists or ordinary citizens or the media to point out the flaws when a central bank is private, rather than when it is state-owned. It is especially tricky when there is state worship. It is even more complicated when people like Indrajit Coomaraswamy are heading the agency because people in general and critics in particular know that he has no bad intentions towards the country and expects no personal profit. Th is columnist has also been given to understand that Sri Lanka’s Central Bank Governor is underpaid, which is also something that any future MLA should take care of. No one should become Central Bank governor out of altruism.
WEIRD POWERS FOR ADMIN MEASURES
The President has called for broader consultation of the proposed Monetary Law Act. Th ere is speculation that the new law will give the Central Bank even more powers to place ad hoc credit controls such as LTV ratios during currency troubles.
To say the least, this is weird. For a central bank that is supposed to be moving towards inflation targeting – however flawed – it is indeed surprising that they want to place greater reliance on administrative controls rather than rates. The Central Bank misled the government on taxing specific imports, gold, cars and placed loan-to-value ratios (on three-wheelers no less) to control imports instead of fixing its monetary policy errors. To institutionalize such powers is nuts.
When controls are placed on specific goods, and the Central Bank continues to inject money to keep rates low, the money will go somewhere, since liquidity is fungible. What happened in the 2018 instability was that most of the ‘saved credit’ went to buy bonds from fl eeing foreign investors. Can’t someone understand this, please?
NAUGHTY BOYS PLEDGE
This columnist can imagine that some people in the Central Bank do not understand soft-pegs or how to operate them since it is evident that, outside of some East Asian nations with strong currencies and some Gulf nations, such knowledge does not exist. But surely we must know by now that admin controls have no effect if cash is injected?
Even the IMF, which seems to have lost part of its knowledge about pegs, knows this one. Trade and exchange controls were one of the reasons that the IMF programme was suspended in 2018, and the naughty boys had to go to confession later and promise not to repeat the sin.
That is one of the reasons the programme was suspended last year. “In October 2018, we also required a minimum cash margin for the importation of certain non-essential consumer goods under Documents Against Acceptance terms,” the Central Bank and Treasury told the IMF to get the programme restarted.
“This temporary measure for motor vehicles was also introduced to ensure that banks do not take excessive risk in providing loans for car imports, given a surge in demand. In addition, in October 2018, we advised authorized dealers not to release FX for the conversion of Sri Lankan Rupees for making advance payments for the importation of certain non-essential consumer goods.”
These measures, which resulted in nonobservances of the continuous PC on non-introduction/intensifi cation of exchange restrictions under the arrangement and were inconsistent with our Article VIII obligations, were eliminated in March 2019. No further measures inconsistent with Article VIII obligations were introduced. “For the remainder of the programme, we will not impose or intensify restrictions on the making of payments and transfers for current international transactions; introduce or modify multiple currency practices; conclude bilateral payments agreements that are inconsistent with Article VIII, or impose or intensify import restrictions for balance of payments reasons.”
[pullquote]TRADE AND EXCHANGE CONTROLS WERE ONE OF THE REASONS THAT THE IMF PROGRAMME WAS SUSPENDED IN 2018[/pullquote]
Any requests from the Central Bank to legitimize or strengthen these admin controls in the new monetary law should be resisted by authorities. If inflation targeting is to work – flexible or otherwise – the Central Bank has to be weaned away from administrative controls to actual monetary policy. Although admin controls were largely dropped by A S Jayewardene, they have come back since the Rajapaksa regime and had worsened under the current government. Administrative controls (whether import controls, credit ceilings, LTV ratios, or overnight dollar position of banks) simply give the Central Bank more room to commit policy errors and delay actual policy adjustment which is to stop printing money (raise rates or float if the credibility of the peg has been lost).
Having a total credit limit, inclusive of bond purchases, has an effect unlike individual controls on specific imports. But gentle rate increases are the best. Shorn of all esoterics, inflation targeting with a floating rate works when a central bank with proper inflation index – like New Zealand – ended up generating a policy rate that was closest to the market, which prevented mal-investment and bubbles.
In the absence of pegging, there can be no BOP crises (forex shortages) in a floating exchange rate regime. If rates are below market, and the index is manipulated downwards through core-inflation, through hedonics, high inflation boom (food crisis, energy crisis) mal-investment (housing bubble) and economic collapses (Great recession, Depression) is the final outcome in a floating exchange rate as happened in the United States. While bubbles happen in floating rates, BOP crises and currency depreciations come earlier in soft-pegs like Sri Lanka even before a bubble fully develops.
MONETARY INSTABILITY ENDS – ON A RECOVERY PATH
Monetary instability has ended in Sri Lanka now. Th e Central Bank is no longer printing money through its liquidity windows to de-stabilize the peg, leaving private citizens to engage in growth-generating activities. Exporters can also cut domestic credit and convert dollars.
[pullquote]THE CENTRAL BANK IS NOT PRINTING MONEY TO CUT RATES NOW, UNLIKE IN 2015 AND 2018[/pullquote]
However, growth could fall sharply in the second quarter, given past experience (see Chart 1), after the currency falls. In the March quarter, there was hardly any inflation, as the currency collapse had just finished and there were still liquidity shortages. As a result, the GDP deflator was near zero. But the steep fall in tax revenues, the current account surplus shows the actual condition of the economy. Th is column had warned that too wide an inflation target (the IMF deal tolerated inflation up to 8 percent) while operating a peg will delay corrections and lead to monetary instability and stagflation. Th ere is likely to be stagflation in the near term as inflation overtakes growth. To the extent that the currency is allowed to bounce back, the adverse effects will be lessened. It took about 18 months for the credit system to fully recover from the 2015 soft-peg collapse and barely less than a quarter for the Central Bank to trigger another soft-peg crisis.
In 2019, the government should be able to deficit spend a little, without much harm, because private credit is negative. Since Mangala Samaraweera is not giving in to wholesale spending, the budget may not de-stabilize the credit system a lot.
But the fall in imports and the current account surplus in the first quarter have reduced revenues. Therefore, the Central Bank was right to keep a watch on rates and keep rates higher than the market. It was doubly so after the April blasts. The Central Bank is not printing money to cut rates now,unlike in 2015 and 2018.
At the moment, as had been pointed out by others, the central bank is keeping rates slightly above market with its floor 7.50 window and 7.70-7.80% repurchase auctions.
This columnist would say cut the rate further. As long as the ceiling rate is not reduced, there is no danger to the economy as rates can bounce back. However, if the ceiling rate is also cut, given the past experience of the Monetary Board’s unwillingness to allow short-term rates to go up, there are risks to monetary stability if revenues are inadequate. If the ceiling rate is kept high, the floor rate can be cut by maybe 250 basis points.
Rates will automatically move up if there is a credit spike due to state borrowings without any need for the Monetary Board to make decisions. This column has pointed out earlier that the sharp rate fall in late 2017 (effectively a rate cut) helped narrow the time of the recovery as the floor rate was low. In 2019, the Central Bank has been mopping up dollars and selling down its Treasury bill stock, strengthening the peg. When inflows are mopped up steadily, the peg becomes stronger than a currency board.
[pullquote]MEANWHILE, IN ANOTHER CONTROVERSIAL MOVE, THE CENTRAL BANK IS CUTTING DEPOSIT RATES, GIVING SUBSIDIES TO BANKS[/pullquote]
Dollar backing of the rupee is broadly around 91% now, up from a low of 71% in February 2019 due to a combination of mopping up (Net Foreign Assets growth) and cutting of the statutory reserve ratio, which led to a shrinking of the monetary base. The high SRR, in addition to causing monetary instability, is one reason for excessive nominal and real interest rates in Sri Lanka. But the principal reason for the high nominal interest is the monetary instability from the soft-peg. China is also suffering from the same problem now. It is not just Xi Jingping’s illiberalism and statism that are undermining the Chinese economy. Meanwhile, in another controversial move, the Central Bank is cutting deposit rates, giving subsidies to banks. The reason that it takes about a year or two for an economy to recover fully from a soft-peg collapse is because consumers need time to recover from lost incomes.
Businesses will expand and borrow when there is demand. In any case, it takes a few months to draw up an expansion plan. Th e destroyed capital never recovers. Th at is why even East Asian countries with depreciating currencies have poor infrastructure, in addition to lower salaries and export of labour to the Middle East.
If deposit rates are cut faster than market and lending rates do not fall, depositors themselves will seek other avenues of investment and speculation before businesses have time to formulate new plans for real investments.
It is one thing to remove the floor overnight policy rate, but it is quite another to force deposit rates down faster than the market further along the yield curve. Even in a depressed situation, it can lead to mal-investments. The planned flexible inflation targeting regime is unlikely to be much different from the past two years since it is the same type of flexible exchange rate and de facto inflation targeting as well as a mishmash of administrative controls and Nixon shocks.
However, according to recent statements made by the governor of Sri Lanka’s Central Bank, there is a broad understanding that printing money by purchasing government securities at weekly auctions is terrible.
This is a significant victory for the poor. The 2018 crises and bust were created with term reverse repo injections, not outright purchases of bills from banks. Reverse repo injections involve buying bills not from the Treasury but from banks, with the same results.
A buffer strategy also generated a shock by overdrawing a state bank to repay maturing bonds with printed money – not by the purchase of new bills. In the 2015/2016 liquidity was generated by term repo releases and an ‘operation twist’ to manipulate the yield curve. Like direct interventions in bill auctions and provisional advances, all such deadly monetary nukes need to be outlawed as well. From all accounts, a peg is going to be maintained for the foreseeable future.
The IMF will not allow a fully floating exchange rate until its loans are repaid, hence the ‘flexible this and flexible that’. In that case, for the protection of Sri Lanka’s poor and monetary stability, it is better to follow policy consistent with the peg. Such stability will also come by retaining the ability to issue Central Bank securities.
Persisting with lost generation economics will only spell doom.