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| Neav Chanthana, deputy governor of the National Bank of Cambodia (NBC), or Central Bank, speaks during the Second Annual NBC Macroeconomic Conference in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Sept. 29, 2015. Cambodia has designed strategies to give riel (local currency) a boost so as to reduce dollarization, which represents about 80 percent of the currencies circulated in the country, the Central Bank's senior officials said Tuesday. (Xinhua/Phearum) |
Cambodia aims to reduce dollarization
Xinhua | 29 September 2015
PHNOM PENH -- Cambodia has designed strategies to
give riel (local currency) a boost so as to reduce dollarization, which
represents about 80 percent of the currencies circulated in the country,
the Central Bank's senior officials said Tuesday.
Dollarization in Cambodia measured by the ratio of foreign currency
deposit to broad money augmented from 36 percent in 1993 to 70 percent
in 2003 and continued to increase to around 80 percent in 2013, Neav
Chanthana, deputy governor of the National Bank of Cambodia (NBC), or
Central Bank, said at the Second Annual NBC Macroeconomic Conference.
"The government and the NBC have prepared policies and action plans
on the promotion of the use of riel in order to reduce dollarization in a
long term. These action plans will be implemented soon," she told the
conference, which was attended by about 200 policymakers, bankers,
economists, and researchers, among others.
"Local currency savings and other payment transactions in local
currency will increase the usage of riel," she said. "The establishment
of local currency deposit insurance was also found to increase the
public's confidence on the banking system and encourage local currency
deposits."
U.S. dollars flooded into the Cambodian economy through the
intervention of the United Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia
(UNTAC) in their peace operations in the country in 1993.
Chanthana said the Cambodian economy has reaped many benefits of
dollarization by attracting more foreign investors, developing the
financial sector, enhancing the Cambodian economic integration
regionally and globally as well as protecting the economy from the Asian
financial crisis in 1997.
"However, dollarization also presents risks and vulnerabilities since
the speed and size of the economy and the financial sector have grown
remarkably," she said.
She added that although dollarization is a key challenge for the
Cambodian economy, immediate de-dollarization by conducting
administrative measures is not an optional choice since Cambodia's
economy operates as a free market economy and still depends on foreign
capital inflows.
"Implementing these measures too soon and all at once would cause the
capital outflow and a black market which circulates foreign currency.
Thus, the result of vigorous administrative measures would lead to the
imbalance of macroeconomic growth," she said.
NBC's director general Chea Serey said over 90 percent of bank deposits and loans are made in U.S. dollars.

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