‘Dollar crisis’ being seized upon by unethical traders to hike prices
UNB
Publish: 18 May 2024, 04:21 PM
Dhaka,
May 16(UNB): As it watched the country's foreign exchange reserves keep
draining away, from the peak of $48.1 billion in August 2021 to a net figure
that may be less than $13 billion today, Bangladesh Bank became engaged in
studying the minutiae of different types of calculations and definitions of a
country's reserve holdings, and all their different interpretations, like an A
Levels Macroeconomics student.
The convoluted
discussion it created around the country's reserves - this formula, that formula,
IMF manuals, and payouts from the reserve in the form of loans that were not
initially disclosed, have all contributed to a cloud over the entire situation
for a while now. Consumers are forced to grapple with all kinds of different
information becoming and some unethical traders are cashing in on this by
increasing prices arbitrarily.
As a result, common
people are suffering as businesses and different trading syndicates have taken
to using the pretext of 'the dollar crisis' to hike prices. Talking with common
people, economists and businesses, the correspondent got this opinion.
Mohammed Alam, 50, from
Charfashion in Bhola, has been working in the Moghbazar area of Dhaka as an
electrician for the last 17 years. He is self-employed and works on call if
anybody needs an electric line installed, a fan to be setup, etc.
For the last one month,
since Eid ul Fitr, Alam has been charging a minimum bill of Tk500 for any call
leading to a home visit. Till Eid this year, and for the longest time in fact,
this service was charged Tk300.
"We would not be
able to provide service if anyone offered below Tk500, as prices of food,
medicine, utility bills, our own expenses have shot up since the dollar crisis
started. Why can't our service bill increase," said Alam.
Alam himself had to ask
the UNB correspondent, if there is really a dire emergency over the reserves,
because almost all shopkeepers have started charging a higher price for any
product.
When Alam asked about
the reason behind the higher price, they always replied "price hiked due
to the dollar crisis in Bangladesh."
Ekabbar Ali, 60, from
Jamalpur Meladhoh Upazila, has worked as a rickshawpuller for the last 25
years, living in the capital's Rampura area. He is now charging a minimum fare
of Tk 30-40 for the same distance that he used to charge Tk20 to at times Tk25 till
Eid ul Fitr.
Ali said that the garage
from which he leased out 'his rickshaw' had increased the daily deposit it
charged from its pullers each day. Everything increased recently claiming a
'dollar crisis'.
"The prices of
food, medicine, and all our bills have increased due to the dollar crisis.
Imports had soared, as a consequence prices of almost all goods and services
rose. If rickshaw fare is not increased, we cannot survive," Ali said with
absolute conviction.
Habibur Rahman, a
grocery trader in Bara Moghbazar rail gate area, said that his suppliers are
hiking prices several times a week, again claiming higher price of dollars. So
they (traders) have to sell goods at an additional rate.
The central bank of
Bangladesh provides 3 figures of Bangladesh's foreign exchange reserves,
measured by three methods.
Bangladesh Bank's 'total
reserves' fell to $23.77 billion (May 14) after meeting the liabilities of
March and April to the Asian Clearing Union (ACU). Total reserves is a method
of BB, which also includes the reserves money spent in the export development
fund (EDF).
According to the IMF's
BPM6 method, the gross reserve figure is $18.32 billion. While actual or usable
reserves are slightly less than $13 billion. In calculating actual usable
reserves showed excluding different debt liabilities. This method is also
followed by the IMF to understand the financial health of Bangladesh.
According to a central
bank official, the amount of usable reserves is slightly less than $13 billion,
which is referred to as net reserves in the media. This calculation of reserves
excludes the money repaid for loans from the Export Development Fund, as well
as the dollars held as SDRs by the IMF.
However, the central
bank never publishes the net reserve data officially.
Dr Ahsan H. Mansur,
executive director of the Policy Research Institute and a former senior
economist at the IMF's Washington office, told UNB that the gross reserves are
now $18 billion-plus. It means reserves are not at risk yet.
But there is a lack of
confidence in the money market and macroeconomic situation, and the reserves of
Bangladesh remain in an unstable situation, he said.
Uncontrolled money
laundering has created a sense of alarm over the Bangladesh economy, which is
bringing instability in reserves and macroeconomic management as well, Dr
Mansur pointed out.
Dr Zahid Hussain, the
former chief economist of the World Bank in Dhaka, said that there are two
principal risks associated with rapidly dwindling forex reserves. One is the
inability to make dollar payments, which would usually be required for imported
goods. The associated fall in imports may lead to increased prices in domestic
markets.
END/UNB/AI/ssk
