Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Singapore dollar devalued after worst ever slump

Singapore dollar devalued after worst ever slump

It's hard to say anything more about where the Singapore economy is headed since the experts keep changing their tune. Even fortunetellers will be embarrassed if they flopped like the Ministry of Trade and Industry's recent economic forecasts.

Meanwhile, the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) devalued the Singapore dollar today but, thank goodness, only by about 1.7 percent, according to Bloomberg.

That's only an estimate since MAS uses a secret currency exchange rate trading band that goes up and down with trade and the economy, or so it is believed.

But thank goodness anyway because a sharper drop would have hurt consumers since everything has to be imported including chicken and rice.

This is the second time MAS has changed tack in six months. It stopped letting the Singapore dollar rise against other currencies in October last year to help Singapore compete in the world market. But with exports continuing to fall, it has now devalued the Singapore dollar.

MAS sees no reason for any further weakening of the Singapore dollar because the economy has "sound fundamentals and a resilient financial system".

That's nonsense as far as the economy is concerned – it's in free fall.

Gross domestic product plunged unexpectedly sharply – by 19.7 percent --in the first three months of this year compared with the previous quarter, the Ministry of Trade and Industry reported today. That's worse than the 16.4 percent slump between October and December.

Never before has the Singapore economy contracted so sharply since the government began compiling such data in 1976, says the Wall Street Journal.

The ministry now forecasts the economy will shrink by six to nine percent this year.

This is the third time it has lowered its forecast in recent months. First it forecast between two percent growth and one percent slump this year. Then on January 21, it said the economy would be shrink by two to five percent this year.

Will it be right this time?

God only knows.

The ministry's powers of economic divination seem to have been rattled by the crisis as the economy gets worse and worse.

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