At a fund-raising breakfast meeting held at the Hyatt Regency on June 26, political leader of the People’s National Movement (PNM) and Prime Minister of T&T, Dr Keith Rowley returned to an issue that he holds strong views on—the devaluation of the T&T currency.
In his remarks, Dr Rowley said, “I want to end on this note: There is a sentiment, largely coming from businesspeople, that the way to fix our problem is to devalue the currency. We had that advice since September 2015 (when the PNM was elected to office) and we did not take it because we believe that devaluation is a short-term, line of least resistance that would have far-reaching consequences for the majority of people.
“Because it’s simple; if you have US dollars and the Government devalues the currency, it does not give anybody any more US dollars. But what it does is that it makes everything more expensive.
“So what about the people who have no US dollars, who are the vast majority of people in the country? What you are saying to us is that the solution to the country’s problem is to make everything more expensive for the people of this country.
“And you may not believe this, that is the view of some economists teaching at the University; that we are living beyond our means, which is true, and the way to solve it is just to, with a stroke of a pen, devalue the currency and put the population in its place where you pay the real price, meaning wherever the currency goes, that is what you will pay.
“Ladies and gentlemen, that is not the role of the Government. The role of the Government is not to set out to create hardships for people by following theories and theses. The role of the Government is to give the people a chance to survive and to give their children a future...
“I can tell you now, we do not consider devaluing the currency. What we consider is to try to maintain the gains we have made by trying to earn more. First, we try to preserve the earnings that we have, we try to earn more and be realistic and let it work for us so that we can give our children and grandchildren a future that the country gave us.”
In the interest of continuing the dialogue on changing the exchange rate regime—I prefer to use the term flotation, which is continuous, rather than devaluation, which is a discrete measure—it would be useful to make the following points:
1) Dr Rowley stressed that devaluation does not give anybody any more US dollars.
Comment—The Prime Minister is absolutely correct that a devaluation (flotation) of the TT dollar would not, in the short term, generate more US dollars for the country.
One of the reasons that countries with floating currencies, like Jamaica, have declining debt stock is that with a static exchange rate, every time there is a fiscal challenge, such as a decline in the main export earner, the government goes out and borrows money or draws down on its savings to address the fiscal gap.
But T&T does NOT have to base its adoption of a floating exchange rate on any foreign country because we have the experience of flotation of the TT dollar in April 1993 to fall back on. How much hardship was created by the flotation of the TT dollar in April 1993?
What our experience from April 1993 indicates is that an appropriate flotation of the TT dollar would GENERATE MORE TT DOLLARS.
One way to illustrate this is by creating a simple model based on the T&T reality:
Country A is T&T, a small, energy-dependent nation with a static exchange rate that is facing a $9 billion deficit because of a decline in the price and production of its main export earner, natural gas.
To fund this fiscal deficit, the minister of finance of this country plans to borrow $8 billion and source $1 billion from its sovereign wealth fund.
Country B is also a small, energy-dependent country, that is similar to Country A in every way, except for the fact that it has a floating exchange rate.
So let’s say country A expects to earn US$4 billion from the taxes and fees generated by its energy sector. With the static exchange rate of $6.80 to US$1 that US$4 billion generates TT$27.2 billion.
With a floating exchange rate of $9 to US$1, that US$4 billion in energy earnings would generate $36 billion. The difference in revenue between the static exchange rate and the floating exchange rate countries is $8.8 billion.
In this simple model, therefore, the $9 billion deficit vanishes almost by magic.
With a floating rate, the adjustment of the exchange rate generates more TT dollars for the same amount of US dollars earned.
The simple act of floating the TT dollar does several things. By generating more TT dollars for the same amount of US dollars earned, flotation:
• Reduces the need for the Government to borrow to fund its fiscal deficit, which goes a long way to permanently solving Country A’s fiscal and debt problems;
• Slows down the depletion of Country A’s official foreign reserves because it would eliminate the need for the Central Bank to sell US$100 million a month of state-earned foreign exchange in support of the exchange rate;
• Potentially slows the depletion of the Heritage and Stabilisation Fund by not requiring the Ministry of Finance to withdraw funds every time there is a shortfall in energy revenues;
• Makes Country A’s non-energy and even its energy sectors more competitive, especially those manufacturers that maximise the addition of value on local products. One good example is that the flotation of the TT dollar may lead to the development of an industry that goes downstream from the anhydrous ammonia produced by Tringen, a company on the Point Lisas Industrial Estate that is majority (51 per cent) owned by National Enterprises Ltd. NEL’s largest shareholder at 66 per cent is Corporation Sole;
• Slows down the capital flight that has taken place in T&T in the last 10 years as the authorities have made access to foreign exchange more and more difficult. Flotation would quite likely lead to the repatriation of some of the billions of US dollars that have been squirrelled away in the last 10 years; and
• Would encourage retailers and distributors to change their business models to focus more on exports.
And, by the way, US$4 billion is not an unreasonable estimate of what the Government earns from the energy sector.
According to the Ministry of Trade and Industry’s Year in Review 2023, last year total exports from T&T increased from $55.3 billion to $89.1 billion, with non-energy exports increasing by 15 per cent from $15.6 billion to $17.9 billion. That means, according to the Ministry of Trade, that energy exports totalled $71.2 billion (US$10.5 billion).
2) Prime Minister Rowley also opined, at the PNM fundraiser last month, that a devaluation has “far reaching consequences for the majority of people, who do not have access to foreign exchange.”
Comment: By generating more TT-dollar revenue, a flotation gives the Government the ability to subsidise basic goods, increase the distribution of food and utility cards and CDAP (the chronic disease assistance programme) to those most in need. The Government can also strengthen the social support systems by increasing grants, for example.
3) In an interview with former Guardian Media journalist Khamal Georges in January 2020, Dr Rowley said, “Those who have access to foreign currency are the beneficiaries of a devaluation. Some of the voices you hear calling for a devaluation, they know why they are calling for it. It is not in defence of Mr T&T. A devaluation overnight could hand them more billions of T&T dollars.”
Comment: This is also true. But the questions that arise are these:
Which T&T entity has access to the most US dollars?
And, using Dr Rowley’s argument, which entity stands to benefit the most from a flotation?
Surely, the answer to both questions is the Government.