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Saturday, August 16, 2014

Printing Kyat Notes In Burma Driving Hyper-Inflation

(Translation of news article direct from the ELEVEN MEDIA on 11 August 2014.)

Counting mountains of kyat notes in Burma.
Despite horrible hyper-inflation being persistent over last few decades Burmese government is still relying on printing high denomination Kyat notes to finance the enormous budget deficit in recently-quasi-democratic nation of sixty millions after more than six decades of Socialist and military rules.

But, according to Dr. Zaw Oo the principal-economic-adviser to the President, nowadays the notes printing is under direct control of the Union Bank of Myanmar the central bank of Burma. He also pointed out the fact that the Union Bank is constantly telling the government to keep strictly the annual budget deficit at not more than five percent of the GDP (Gross Domestic Product) of Burma.

Dr. Zaw Oo was giving a talk on Challenges Being Faced By Burma’s Economic Reforms held at the Economic Development Offices of MDRI (Myanmar Development Resource Institute) the government economic think tank in Naypyidaw.

He added that successive military governments in the past sixty years had been printing large amount of notes to satisfy the massive budget deficits over the years as there were no other alternative ways to finance the deficit.

All together 6,331.80 billion kyats in 2010-11 financial year, 6,722.62 billion in 2011-12, and 9,046.19 billion in 2012-13 were printed in Burma’s top-secret Wazi Printers and the amount printed in last 2013-14 financial year so far is slightly less than previous financial year 2012-13.

“We should not be printing as much cash as we want just because we have a good printing press. The sovereign power to print cash is now legally with the Union Bank and all money printing physically is now controlled by the Union Bank.

To print cash our Central Bank must have sufficient underlying financial resources to link and those resources right now are our foreign reserve in strong currencies like US$ and EURO. We are stockpiling those foreign reserves and printing only enough cash backed by appropriate reserve currencies.

And right now to maintain that economically sound principal we and the central bank are basically telling the government not to allow budget deficit to go beyond five percent of GDP,” said Dr. Zaw Oo.

Is Burma’s Annual GDP Growth Real Economic Growth?

Burma’s annual GDP has been steadily growing since 2009 at the impressive rates of 4.9% (2009), 5.3% (2010), 5.9% (2011), 6.5% (2012), and 6.8% in 2013. But the inflation rate has also been growing at 8.2% (2009), 7.7% (2010), 4.2% (2011), 5.5% (2012), and 6.5% in 2013.

The result is many economists saying that the GDP growth has been mainly due to overly-generous money creation not real economic growth as the government has been claiming.

Even many pro-government members of parliament has been calling Thein Sein Government to scrutinize and basically kill non-essential projects proposed and being implemented by various ministries so that to considerably reduce the massive Budget deficit now standing at 9.8 trillion kyats from last four financial years.

Burma’s past annual budget deficits were 2,159.534 billion kyats in 2011-12 financial year, 1,953.712 billion in 2012-13, and 2,926.898 billion in 2013-14. For current financial year of 2014-15 the budget deficit is running at 2,751 billion kyats and still growing and people concerned are now worrying that the horrifying hyper-inflation during last military government is coming back sooner than later.

But the government’s Finance Minister Win Shein still insists publicly that even though forecasted budget deficit for this financial year seems to be high but in reality the actual budget deficit at the end of the financial year will be much lower as most ministries have always overestimated their respective budgets.