Tanzanian currency falls for 7th week


Tanzania’s shilling fell for a seventh week in the longest stretch of losses in almost three years as declining commodity exports led to a lack of dollars in East Africa’s second-biggest economy.

Bloomberg News reported that inflows of United States currency dried up amid lower agriculture earnings and fewer tourists, according to Commercial Bank of Africa’s Head of Money Markets Hakim Sheikh.

The value of coffee exports fell 28 per cent in March from a month earlier, while tea dropped 4.3 per cent and tobacco plummeted 75 per cent, according to central bank data. Tanzania has the
widest external current-account deficit in East Africa after Burundi, the International Monetary Fund said.

“There’s a shortage of dollars in the market because there’s no inflow from agriculture and tourism,” Sheikh said by phone from Dar es Salaam on Friday. “There’s a big demand for dollars coming from the oil companies and construction sector.”

The shilling has depreciated 0.7 per cent in the past five days and is East Africa’s worst performer this year, falling 4.4 per cent. It retreated 0.1 per cent to 1,663 per dollar. in Tanzania’s commercial capital. The currency’s run of weekly losses is the longest since an eight-week period that ended in July 2011.

The nation’s external current-account deficit is seen at 13.9 per cent this year, compared with the sub-Saharan African average of 3.6 per cent, according to the IMF. That’s prompted the government to cut spending in an effort to meet a target of 5 per cent, the IMF said in a statement dated May 15.

The “shilling appears to be somewhat overvalued in real effective terms,” the IMF said.

Dollar inflows may pick up when the agricultural harvesting and exporting period happens from June to November, while tourism peaks in the second half of the year, Albert Ngusaru, head of Treasury at FBME Bank Limited, said by phone from Dar es Salaam.

“In the first few months of the year Tanzania does not have a lot of inflows,” he said. “The economy is highly dependent on flows from agriculture and tourism.”

Source: punchng.com

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