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Sudan Announces Managed Currency Float amid Economic Crisis

Sudan said Sunday it was ditching its fixed exchange rate and adopting a managed float, in line with an IMF program but at the risk of fanning already-smoldering popular discontent.

It is the latest of a series of reforms by the joint military-civilian government that has ruled Sudan since mass protests led to the military ouster of strongman Omar al-Bashir in April 2019. 

The move aims to stem a rampant black market that has seen the local pound recently trade at around 400 to the dollar, while the official rate was fixed at 55 pounds to the greenback.

It is expected to shift the official rate towards black market levels -- sending prices higher even as citizens already grapple with an inflation rate that topped 300 percent last month.

Finance Minister Gibril Ibrahim urged people to tolerate the impact of the policy change, saying in a press conference that it "will require a high patriotic spirit" and "cooperation". 

Sudan's central bank said in a statement the transitional government had decided on "reforming and unifying the exchange rate system by applying a managed flexible exchange rate system". 

Closing the yawning gap between the official and black market rates is central to a reform program agreed last year with the International Monetary Fund.

The U.S. embassy in Khartoum said on Twitter that "we welcome the Sudanese government's courageous decision to move forward today with exchange rate reform." 

"This decision will also help Sudanese companies and attract international investment as both local and foreign companies will no longer encounter difficulties doing business in Sudan because of the dual exchange rate."

Washington recently removed Sudan from its state sponsors of terrorism blacklist, another move Khartoum hopes will unlock debt relief, aid and foreign investment.

- Cushioning the blow -

Sudan's economy was decimated by decades of US sanctions under Bashir, mismanagement and civil war, as well as oil-rich South Sudan's 2011 secession.

Protests have flared in recent weeks in several areas of the country over skyrocketing prices, alongside bread and medicine shortages.

The central bank said its policy shift, which follows the recent appointment of a new cabinet tasked with tackling the economic crisis, is "imperative" to help achieve stability.

It is one of several painful IMF mandated reforms, which also include reducing costly subsidies, aimed at securing debt relief and attracting investment. 

The finance minister and the central bank governor, Mohamed al-Fatih, said the exchange rate policy shift will be cushioned by international donors financing a project aimed at supporting poor families from Monday.

The program offers $5 dollars per month each to around 80 percent of the country's 45 million people.

The central bank governor said Sudan has also begun applying a dual banking system, instead of solely Islamic banking, in a move allowing international banks to operate in the country.

The exchange rate policy shift comes amid concern that Sudan's level of foreign currency holdings are approaching exhaustion.

If the central bank is to be successful in drawing transactions away from the black market, then reserves need to stand at around $5 billion, Mohamed el-Nayer, a Sudanese economist, told AFP. 

Authorities have not lately disclosed the level of reserves.

Asked if the country had enough reserves, Ibrahim replied that funds had lately been received, but did not specify the origin or amount. 

But the recent shortages of bread as well as of fuel point to the possibility that foreign reserves are "severely lacking", Nayer said.

Bashir's fall nearly two years ago came after months of protests against his autocratic rule that were triggered by his cash-strapped government effectively trebling bread prices. 

In October, Sudan signed a peace deal with rebel groups that observers hoped would end long-running conflicts in the country's far-flung regions.

Last month, the government approved this year's budget and it is aiming for inflation of 95 percent by end-2021.

Source: Agence France Presse


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