Egypt Committed To Flexible Exchange Rate Central Bank Deputy Says
CAIRO, April 18 (Reuters) - Egypt is committed to sustaining a flexible exchange rate to ensure the availability of foreign currency, the central bank's deputy governor said on Thursday, casino enligne a key condition under a $8 billion loan programme it signed with the IMF.
If you have any sort of concerns regarding where and ways to utilize casino enligne, you could call us at the webpage. Egypt allowed its currency to weaken sharply on March 6 after keeping it fixed to the dollar for casino enligne nearly a year. The overvalued currency led to an acute shortage of foreign currency and a slowdown in critical imports, including manufacturing inputs and consumer goods.
The devaluation was part a support programme agreed with the International Monetary Fund two weeks after Egypt announced a $35 billion real estate investment by the United Arab Emirates. Loan disbursements under the programme would be tied to sustained exchange rate flexibility, casino enligne the IMF said.
Deputy governor Rami Aboulnaga said in an interview with the Atlantic Council that Egypt was now resolved to keep its currency flexible.
"Whatever the price is, is something that the market will determine. Whether it's fair or not, it will only be set by the market and market dynamics," he said.
Egypt would ensure that different economic agents would be able to source foreign currency liquidity, "as opposed to the shortages and the bottlenecks that have prevailed in the past."
"This is one of the key objectives and benchmarks that we are eyeing," Aboulnaga said.
The central bank sharply devalued the currency three times between March 2022 and March 2023, but each time reverted to a fixed rate despite pledges to the IMF to shift to a flexible system.
A robust black market quickly developed, and at one point the currency weakened to as low as 72 pounds to the dollar compared to the official rate of 30.85 pounds.
Exchange rate uncertainty led Egyptians abroad to withhold sending earnings home, wreaking havoc on a top source of foreign exchange. Remittances plunged by nearly $10 billion over a year to $22 billion in the 12 months to end-June 2023.
"What we are seeing today is a resurgence in interbank volumes. We are seeing also the market being able to clear itself and we're seeing the liquidity finding its way back into the market," Aboulnaga said. (Reporting by Yomna Ehab and Hatem Maher; Writing by Patrick Werr; Editing by Leslie Adler and Josie Kao)