Reuters
Bahrain may need to raise its market interest rates to protect its currency and must refrain from having its central bank lend money to cover the government’s budget deficit, the International Monetary Fund said.
In a statement released after annual consultations with the Bahraini government, the IMF repeated earlier warnings that more steps by Bahrain to cut its deficit were “urgently needed†to stabilise state finances and support the Bahraini dinar’s peg to the US dollar.
It then went further, saying: “Gradually raising interest rate differentials vis-a-vis the United States through the stepped-up issuance of government securities could also help discourage capital outflows and rebuild reserves.â€
The spread of Bahrain’s three-month interbank offered rate over the US dollar London interbank offered rate has already expanded to 113 basis points from 74 bps since the end of 2014. The IMF did not say how wide the spread might need to become.
“Directors also stressed the importance of discontinuing central bank lending to the government,†the IMF added. It did not give details of the central bank’s loans to the government; such lending is considered unsound policy by many economists because it can fuel inflation and undermine the currency.
Bahrain lacks the ample financial and oil reserves of its neighbours and has been hit harder than them by a reduction in its export revenues due to slumping oil prices. The IMF’s statement projected it would run an overall fiscal deficit of 12.2 percent of GDP this year.