The time has come to permanently retire all our Caribbean currencies
Abstract
Abstract. The currencies of Caribbean countries have now outlived their usefulness, and have become a liability. They were devised at a time when most payments were made using notes and coin, issued in distant metropolitan centres. Scarcity of the means of payment was a severe hindrance to commerce. In response Currency Boards were set up, to issue local currency as needed in the colonies. The system worked well because the local currency issue was backed by an equivalent value of Sterling, in a global system of fixed exchange rates. In contrast, nowadays payments are made mostly by electronic communication, credit and debit cards, cheques and drafts, with settlement over digitized bank accounts. In today’s world an own currency has become a liability for small economies, limiting access to international goods and services, exposing residents to risks of currency devaluation and inflation, eroding the value of domestic savings, increasing economic inequalities, providing a tool for unproductive government spending, and diverting attention from the need to increase productivity and enhance international competitiveness.
Keywords. Dollarisation, Exchange rate, Fixed exchange rate, Foreign currency, Currency board, Open economy.
JEL. F31, F32.Keywords
References
Armstrong, E. (2010). A History of Money and Banking in Barbados, 1627‑1973, Kingston, Jamaica: University of the West Indies Press.
Bulmer-Thomas, V. (2012). The Economic History of the Caribbean since the Napoleonic Wars, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Eichengreen, B. (2011). Exorbitant Privilege: The Rise and Fall of the Dollar and the Future of the International Monetary System, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Hanke, S. (2021). A Money Doctor’s Reflections on Currency Reforms and Budget Constraints, forthcoming in Hanke, Merrifield and Poulson, Editors, Using Rules-based Fiscal and Monetary Policy to Solve the Debt Crisis, Washington, DC: The Cato Institute.
Hanke, S. (2021). Avoiding Latin America’s Currency Disasters, inFocus, Winter 2021.
Hanke, S., & Schuler, K. (1995). Alternative Monetary Regimes for Jamaica,” study for the Private Sector Organisation of Jamaica, Kingston, Jamaica, August 1995.
International Monetary Fund, (1999a). The Eastern Caribbean Central Bank ‑ Institutional Arrangements and Issues in a Currency Union, Staff Memorandum No.99/70,
International Monetary Fund, (1999b). The Bahamas ‑ Selected Issues and Statistical Appendix, Staff Memorandum No.99/186.
Varela, G., & Lovo, S. (2016). Much More to Competitiveness Than Exchange Rates, World Bank blog, December 22, 2016.
Worrell, D. (1987). Small Island Economies: Structure and Performance in the English‑speaking Caribbean Since 1970, New York: Praeger.
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1453/jeb.v8i3.2259
Refbacks
- There are currently no refbacks.
.......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Journal of Economics Bibliography - J. Econ. Bib. - JEB - www.kspjournals.org
ISSN: 2149-2387.
Editor: [email protected] Secretarial: [email protected] Istanbul - Turkey.
Copyright © KSP Library