HomeNewsOpinionInsolvent Sri Lanka should cancel its central bank

Insolvent Sri Lanka should cancel its central bank

A currency board may be a better fit for the country as it navigates a perilous financial future

April 29, 2022 / 10:19 IST
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Representational image. (Image: AP)
Representational image. (Image: AP)

Bloomberg

What was good for Sri Lanka under British colonial rule 75 years ago may be worth a try again. Or at least that’s what Mark Mobius, the former emerging markets guru at Franklin Templeton Investments, seems to be suggesting. To regain the confidence of investors, the bankrupt Indian Ocean island could consider swapping its central bank with a currency board, he says.

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Mobius has a point. A central bank with discretionary power over domestic interest rates wields enormous power, but not all can exercise it responsibly. If powerful politicians — like Sri Lanka’s President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and his brothers — are going to wreck fiscal management with disastrous tax cuts and ruin agriculture with a ban on fertilisers, and if the monetary authority is simply going to enable that recklessness by printing money, then the country may be better off ditching the bank in favour of a set of rules.

Ultimately, that’s what a currency board boils down to: a protocol. Anything that requires judgment — such as setting interest rates, bailing out troubled lenders, helping the government raise funds on the cheap — goes out the window. National money is backed 100 percent (or more) with liquid, risk-free assets held in the foreign anchor currency. In other words, a pure currency board for Sri Lanka won’t resemble Argentina between 1991 and 2001: That system had too many cheat days in its diet. The right model is the Hong Kong Monetary Authority.