Sunday, February 14, 2010

Let me get 'em dollar dollar bills

I thought I had found a bargain deal when I hailed down a tuktuk to take me from the Independence Monument to the Central Market for 2.5 riels. After I handed him 3 USD, he asked me if I minded getting change in KHR. He really meant 2 USD, womp womp.

Cash money (preferrably USD) makes the world go round
Today, 1 USD will buy you 4,100 KHR but unless you want to have a wallet overflowing with KHR, there is no need to swap these currencies. Cambodia’s economy is heavily dollarized with most entrepreneurs and businesses preferring to make transactions in USD.

The dollarization of an economy is almost expected in the aftermath, of a post-conflict country, and longer thereafter. The destruction of the financial and banking sectors coupled with the lack of trust in the government make for a weak local currency. In Cambodia's case, the 1975-9 Khmer Rouge regime left the national bank baseless and the Khmer people looking elsewhere for income. It was the large influx of international aid after the signing of the 1991 Paris Peace Agreements which supplied the country with the more stable USD, enabling the country to rebuild itself. Thus today's payments in USD is simply business as usual.

What are the implications of a dollarized economy for the Cambodian microfinance sector?
1. Those who use neither USD nor KHR
Microfinance is generally applied as a poverty-alleviating tool in developing countries. It has been very successful with poor micro-entrepreneurs but is not a one-size fit all solution to end poverty. Many Cambodians who are unaccounted for in national surveys, make in-kind transactions rather than use cash either because they do not have access to hard currency or do not have the means to earn income. So USD or KHR, keep in mind that microfinance does not address the needs the Cambodians who line the bottom of the pyramid.

2. If the global economy is living la vie en rose, so is the microfinance sector - and vice versa
During the 1990s NGOs, such as the GRET and ACLEDA, first provided small microcredit loans as a poverty-alleviating tool. Most of these programs were of course funded by international donors in USD throughout the course of the decade. When the National Bank of Cambodia (NBC) finally issued the law on banking and financial institution in 1999 to grant legal status to the NGOs turned microfinance institutions, private investment and international assitance programs continued to finance the MFIs in USD. The microfinance sector experienced more than a decade of unyielding growth ...until the global financial crisis brought on its havoc.

As integral players in Cambodia's economy, the microfinance operators and their clients move in tandem with the macro-level policy and regulations in which they function. Thus, today’s particular crisis has surfaced the damaging yet corrigible arrears of Cambodia's heavily dollarized economy. With the curtailing of international investments, the supply of the USD has run tight. Thus MFIs have faced increasing interest rates while their clients have been unable to meet their payment schedules.

Despite the injuries caused, crises like these create opportunities for microfinance institutions to restructure themselves and to realign their operations with their social mission.

2 comments:

  1. sweetheart! c'est exactement mon dernier cours de finance, la dollarisation de la monnaie cambodgienne,funny no? I thought of you so much that day!(your are a better teacher than my own one!)
    xxx
    ta mymy

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  2. Merci Mymy!! I wouldn't go so far haha, but thank you for following my blog and imagining yourself with me in Cambodia. You know you always have a cup of cafe waiting for you here =p bisous!

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