KUWAIT CITY - Kuwait’s decision to stop pegging itsdinar to the dollar
has only confirmed speculation that oil-rich Gulf states will not be
able to meet a 2010 target to launch their single currency, economists
said on Monday.
“Certainly, the decision casts a serious doubt over the Gulf states’
ability to launch their single currency in 2010... I think such a step
is difficult now. It’s premature,” said Saudi National Commercial Bank
chief economist Saeed al-Shaikh.
“It makes it much more difficult to prepare the necessary groundwork
for a single currency... It’s a step backward,” Shaikh told AFP.
The Gulf Cooperation Council, which groups energy-rich Bahrain, Kuwait,
Oman, Qatar, United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, has already taken a
number of measures in its bid to launch a monetary union and a single
currency by 2010.
But last year, Oman said it would not be able to meet the target date
while some countries have reportedly expressed reservations on a number
of criteria, fuelling speculation that the launch date may not be met.
In a surprising decision on Sunday, Kuwait pegged the dinar to a basket
of currencies, more than four years of linking it to the dollar in
preparation for the single GCC currency.
“Kuwait’s decision clearly confirms that the GCC states will not be
able to launch their single currency in 2010... There is not enough
time for them to meet the target date,” Saudi economist Abdulwahab
Abu-Dahesh said.
Kuwaiti officials moved to assure GCC partners that the decision did
not mean withdrawing from the single currency, although they stressed
the decision was taken due to the slow process and to curb inflation.
“Kuwait will continue to work towards achieving the GCC single
currency... We will comply with all the economic and fiscal criteria
necessary for the single currency,” Finance Minister Bader al-Humaidhi
said in a statement.
He said the decision was taken to curb rising inflation that reached
four percent due to the weak dollar, and to cut the cost of Kuwaiti
imports from countries other than the United States.
State Minister for Cabinet Affairs Faisal al-Hajji said the move was
taken because the process for a GCC single currency “was moving slowly.”
Shaikh said Qatar and the UAE “could resort to similar decisions in a
bid to offset soaring inflation rates,” resulting from the weak dollar.
GCC states have agreed to a number of monetary union criteria but
failed to reach a consensus on several key issues.
The main stumbling blocks include agreement on an inflation rate, which
has soared in Qatar and UAE and the lack of political willingness by
member states to relinquish part of their independence in favour of a
single currency.
“I think the main problems for the single currency right now are the
high inflation rates, most of it imported, and the weak dollar. GCC
states can’t determine if the dollar weakness is chronic or temporary,”
Abu-Dahesh said.
Kuwaiti economist Hajjaj Bukhdour said the emirate’s decision has
“dealt a heavy blow to the GCC monetary union and single currency and
the 2010 target year is now impossible to meet.”
“For now, we have to say goodbye to the GCC single currency. I think
they need several more years to launch it and that would require Kuwait
reverting to the dollar peg which requires time,” Bukhdour said
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Kuwait dumps dollar
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