Nepal’s foreign exchange reserves are on a record-breaking streak.
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The reserves reached Rs1.84 trillion in mid-February, according to the country’s central bank, and are inching towards the Rs2 trillion mark as investment stalls and import contracts.
“As we export labour and buy
goods from the money the workers send home, we are a consumption-based economy.
So, based on the data—the accumulation of foreign exchange reserves and drop in
imports—the implication is, we are not spending,” he said. “This shows the
economy has slowed down.”
But if a country has a
consistent GDP growth rate, it is a good sign that the economy is stable and
hence accumulation of reserves boosts the economic growth rates.
The central bank said in its
monthly report that the year-on-year remittance inflows increased by a whopping
21.6 percent to Rs839 billion in the first seven months of the current fiscal
year.
The growth has been
attributed to ever-increasing migrant departures to foreign lands in search of
better income.
In the first seven months of
the fiscal year, more than 400,000 Nepalis left the country on work permit
visas, according to the central bank data.
The cost of rising migrant
worker departures has started to become real and visible, with industries
ranging from restaurants to dairy and retail to footwear, all suffering a drop
in customers.
Economists say that as over a
million young people leave the country each year for foreign jobs, consumption
has curtailed.
“Youngsters were the
customers of the restaurants, bars and coffee shops. And these eateries were
also primarily reliant on them," Pramod Jaiswal, former president of the
Restaurant and Bar Association, who owns Mela Restaurant, told the Post in a
recent interview.
Recently, Nepal’s Dairy
Development Corporation issued a press statement saying that due to the ongoing
economic slowdown, people’s buying capacity has eroded, resulting in a huge
pile-up of dairy products in warehouses.
Those involved in Nepal’s
once budding footwear sector said that after Covid, Nepal saw a massive youth
exodus, and the manufacturers lost their key customers, dampening the growth of
the burgeoning industry.
The footwear sector estimates
that the average Nepali citizen buys less than two pairs of shoes a year due to
the drop in their incomes.
Economist Keshav Acharya said
import growth has been gradually declining, which suggests a contraction in
consumption, the country’s key economic indicator to fuel growth.
“The government, too, has not
been able to spend the capital budget which has affected economic activities,”
Acharya said. “No expenditure means fewer jobs.”
As the capacity utilisation
of domestic industries is 60 percent, the manufacturing industry is also facing
a subdued demand, he said.
“Many businesses, which
started laying off workers after the Covid pandemic, are continuing to do so
due to low economic activities.”
Most shutters in major market
hubs have been closed, the footfall of customers in hotels and restaurants has
declined, and even small vegetable vendors are saying that sales have dropped,
Acharya said.
Also, in the past two years,
problems have been seen in cooperatives due to which depositors could not use
their savings, Acharya said. There are problems in microfinance companies as
well.
Anarchy is growing in the
financial sector as borrowers are openly saying that they won’t repay their
bank loans, said Acharya.
Non-performing loans in the
banking and financial sector have peaked.
The amount, which should have
been injected into the local economy from the banking and financial sector as
well as cooperatives and microfinance sector, has withered.
“Even the private sector has not injected money into the economy,” said Acharya. “This also resulted in demand contraction. The private sector confidence has declined. Except in the hydro sector, investment in other areas has dried.”
For instance, Nepal built two
international airports to boost tourism income by spending over Rs65 billion,
but no international flights go there. Insiders say no one is taking ownership
of the project to make the projects financially viable.
Tourism entrepreneurs say
successive governments are hiding their shortcomings and as a part of their
'buck-passing' strategy, blame geopolitics for the projects' failure.
According to the Nepal Rastra
Bank, the year-on-year imports decreased by 2.3 percent to Rs897.94 billion in
the first seven months of the current fiscal year.
The export also declined by
7.07 percent to Rs86.83 billion in the review period.
The foreign exchange reserve
is used on imports, including paying foreign loans, Acharya said.
The data of the National
Statistics Office shows an economic growth of 3.5 percent in the first quarter mid-August 2023 to mid-October 2023 of the current fiscal year. This suggests
Nepal is growing at a sluggish pace due to a contraction in economic
activities.
kathmandupost
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