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Tbilisi: For trust, dollar still trumps lari

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  • Tbilisi: For trust, dollar still trumps lari

    For trust, dollar still trumps lari
    By M. Alkhazashvili

    The Messenger, Georgia
    April 19 2005

    The Georgian financial sector is still highly dollarized. According to
    the data of the State Statistic Department, Georgian citizens save 70
    percent of their money in dollars, while 76.3 percent of commercial
    bank deposits are in dollars, as reported by Bankebi da Pinansebi
    (Banks and Finances).

    Over the last 18 months, savings have become less dollarized; in
    December 2003 86.1 percent of deposits were in dollars according to
    the National Bank of Georgia; by February 2005 this figure had fallen
    to 76.3.

    Nonetheless, valuation of long-term goods in Georgia remains in dollars
    and this can be explained by several factors. Firstly, while the dollar
    is a universal world currency, the circulation of the lari is limited
    even within Georgia. The lari is not in circulation in South Ossetia
    or Abkhazia; nor is it dominant in Javakheti, where ethnic Armenians
    predominate and the Russian ruble is the most common currency owing
    to economic reliance on the Russian base in Akhalkalaki. Even in
    Kvemo Kartli the ruble is frequently found together with lari.

    A second factor is that many Georgian families rely on money sent to
    them from abroad - and this money is mostly sent in dollars.

    Thirdly is the fact that, despite its gradual strengthening over the
    last fifteen months, the lari still does not command the full trust
    of the population. This is largely because of the Coupon fiasco in
    the first half of the 1990s, when people's savings were wiped out by
    the rapid devaluation of the coupon. The lari also devaluated as a
    result of the 1998 Russian financial crisis. Recently, of course,
    it is the dollar that has been devaluating; but this has so far
    had little effect on popular support for the dollar within Georgia.
    "Georgians still lack the trust in the lari which would help them
    to save in their own currency," says economist Demur Giorkhelidze as
    reported by Rezonansi.

    That the lari strengthened so quickly is one of the reasons for
    continued lack of trust in the Georgian currency, and fear of possible
    devaluation in the future. Furthermore, although the rate of the
    lari against the dollar is more or less the same as in the middle of
    last year, it should be noted that twice in the last twelve months
    the lari has suddenly, mysteriously strengthened, only to then fall
    back again. Late last year, for example, the dollar fell from 1.85
    lari to the dollar to almost 1.60 in just three or four days; only
    for it then to return to its former level.

    It is unclear why this should happen, although one plausible
    explanation put forward by some economists is that the government
    has been interfering with the exchange rate. Such economists argue
    that the strength of the lari is unsustainable, and that devaluation
    is inevitable. They say, for instance, that if the government spends
    money gained from privatization quickly this may well lead the lari
    to weaken.

    For Georgians to begin saving in lari, however, attractive bonds in
    lari need to be introduced. So far the few bonds that do exist are
    dollar-denominated.
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