· The
countries included in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC)--Saudi Arabia,
Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates--have, with
the exception of Kuwait, pegged their currencies to the U. S dollar for
over the past ten years or so. Kuwait has allowed its currency to
float in a narrow band but, in May of this year, formally abandoned the
dollar peg and switched to a basket of currencies. The UAE's
dirhams per us dollar, as an example of the stability in the exchanges
of all the five non Kuwaiti currencies and Kuwait's dinars per dollar
are shown in the first chart. By the end of September, the Kuwaiti
dinar had appreciated by slightly more than 4% since the peg was
abandoned.
· At the conclusion of the recent GCC
annual meeting, the Qatari Prime Minister, Sheikh Hamad bin Jassem
al-Thani said the group, excluding Kuwait, had decided to keep the
dollar peg. However, doubts regarding the resolve of the
individual countries have begun to surface. All six of the
gulf countries have been experiencing rapid and rising price
increases. For the three countries that report monthly data, year
to year price increases are running between 5 and 7% as shown in the
second chart. Current data for inflation in Bahrain is woefully
lacking. The latest report is for the year 2005. While the
consumer price index rose only 2.6%, this represented a substantial
change from the deflation that had taken place earlier. Current
inflation data for Qatar and the U.A.E are also scarce, but the recent
annual data are of concern. In 2006, the consumer price index rose
9% in the U.A.E. and 12% in Qatar. The inflation rates for the
three countries that have only annual data are shown in the third
chart. Inflation pressures were a factor in Kuwait's decision to
abandon it peg in May.
· Data on the GCC countries can be
found in the country sourced data in the EMERGEMA database and
in the IFS database.
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