Sierra Leone’s currency, the Leone, has lost over 100 percent of its value to the US Dollar since 2016, according to the country’s apex bank, underlining a deep-seated crisis that has refused to budge.
By Abubakar Jalloh
The Bank of Sierra Leone noticed the general public in a press release dated 20 August, 2019 that it is illegal under the country’s laws to quote prices in foreign currencies.
The law states that all prices in the domestic market have to be in Leones.
However, the bank operates in an atmosphere of weak law enforcement. in that regard given that large parts of Section 26 (4) of the Bank of Sierra Leone Act, 2019 are violated.
A deep seated problem is that a huge part of Sierra Leone’s economy is dollarized with impunity.
The prices of renting a house, booking for hotels and flight tickets, car rentals, consulting fees, wages of foreign workers are among the economic activities almost constantly quoted in US dollars instead of the legal tender, the Leone.
However, illegal dollarization is not the only currency problems of Sierra Leone.
The Bank of Sierra Leone depends heavily on exports, especially that of mineral resources to build its foreign exchange reserves to be able to influence the exchange rate of the Leone in the international foreign exchange market.
However, mineral export is very volatile.
The share of mineral exports fell from 90 percent in 2013 to 30 percent in 2018, according to latest figures from the National Advocacy Coalition on Extractives (NACE).
Even a booming natural resource sector in the early 2010s could not make the exchange rate appreciate; suggesting that the exchange rate in Sierra Leone depends little on capital inflows, including Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in mineral extraction, in agriculture, manufacturing, construction and service, international aid, loans from lending institutions such as the World Bank and IMF, remittance etc.
It seems the real exchange rate is more depended on terms of trade (import and export) than capital inflows.
The prices of exports including minerals, agriculture and manufacturing are fixed in the international market.
Exports of minerals have fallen so sharply primarily because of the dramatic fall in prices of minerals in the international market since 2013.
Moreover, capital inflows have favored natural resources at the expense of agriculture and manufacturing.
It suggests that government contractors, especially in construction and service, are the winners and farmers and local producers are the losers in a booming natural resource-based economy.
Sierra Leone imports almost everything including high-tech goods, fuel, basic staple and textile to meet local demand.
High food imports reflect the trade deficit problems or rapid depreciation of the exchange rate.
The Ministry of Agriculture said last year that Sierra Leone spent $350-400 million on food imports alone, about 10 percent of the GDP in 2018.
It implies that the low productivity of agriculture and manufacturing sectors contribute greatly to weakening the local currency or sharply depreciating the exchange rate.
Government spending in construction and service is perceived to have fallen dramatically over the years like exports of minerals.
The government depends heavily on mineral revenue to construct roads and houses, provide public service such as education, healthcare, and transportation.
Therefore, Sierra Leone’s economy has been suffering from a very painful recession since 2013.
The World Bank says on its website that “Sierra Leone’s economy grew by 7.8 percent on average during 2003-2014 but contracted by 21 percent in 2015 following the Ebola outbreak and a decline in the price of iron ore, the main export product”.
The working population is losing their hard-work or livelihood to inflation.
Workers including health workers and teachers with fixed income have seen their standard of living going down dramatically.
Prices of basic food commodities including the staple rice usually go through the roof.
For example, a 50kg bag of rice cost 200 000 Leones (about $24) in 2018 but the price for this most basic of foodstuffs has increased to an average of 300 000 Leones (about $30) per bag in 2019, signifying a nearly 67 percent increase in prices.
The price of a peak tin powered milk (400g) has increased by over 65 percent in one year or from 25 000 Leones (about $3) in 2018 to 38 000 Leones (about $3.8) in 2019.
The currency crisis has intensified further inequality and poverty in Sierra Leone society.
The 7 million residents of this former British colony have a GNI per capita of only $500 in 2018, according to the World Bank.
Sierra Leone ranked 184 out of 189 countries in the United Nations Human Development Index (HDI) in 2018.
Figures from the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) in 2017 show that the West African country surfers from one of the world’s highest maternal mortality ratio of 1,165 deaths per 100,000 live births.
The way forward
This socio-economic scenario suggests that the local currency or Sierra Leone’s monetary economy could be a curse rather than a blessing in a setting of weak law enforcement.
Therefore, Sierra Leone must implement its laws to boost the Leone, economists believe.
Authorities will have to clamp down on black markets or parallel economies including illegal dollarization fraught with corruption, money laundering and organized crime.
The private sector will continue to quote prices in US Dollar with impunity if local laws such as the Bank of Sierra Leone Act, 2019 are not effectively enforced.
Moreover, FDI, especially in mineral extraction, would contribute less to job creation, economic growth and institutional building if the laws are largely violated.
NACE says contribution of mineral extraction to GDP fell from 1.4 percent in 2013 to 0.7 percent in 2019.
Therefore, agriculture and manufacturing policies must be geared towards increasing local production that might help reduce imports and help boost the Leone in the international currency market.
The private sector could also contributes less to local productivity if FDI does not employ nationals.
The Local Content Act of 2016 that makes provisions for the private sector to employ citizens must be implemented.
Effective law enforcement and empowering and training citizens might reduce the number of foreign workers.
Nobody knows with precision how much the Leone loses value to the US Dollar whenever foreign workers and companies repatriate their wages and profits to their respective countries.
However, laws cannot implement themselves.
Strong and accountable state, political and social institutions are needed.
Protecting citizen’s rights to voice their concerns and grievances is a first step toward building social institutions that could, among other things, demand that laws be implemented.
The more voices are heard the more Sierra Leoneans might perceive a strong, self-interested stake and mobilize to defend their political and economic wellbeing.
Stakeholders including the government of Sierra Leone and development partners, civil society and media should promote reforms aimed at protecting civil liberties and human rights.
ABJ/APA