ArabianBusiness.com - Middle East Business News
Saturday, 06 September 2008 | 10:52 UAE time

YOUR DIRECTORY /

Print this page Print this page | Email this to a friend Email this to a friend | Discuss this article (1 Comments) |

GCC defends dollar peg, single currency deadline

by Mohammed Abbas on Sunday, 11 May 2008
INFLATION BATTLE: Gulf states plan to stick with their dollar pegs and the 2010 deadline for establishing a currency union, Kamal said. (Getty Images)

Gulf Arab states will not revalue their currency pegs to the weak dollar despite soaring inflation, and plan to stick to a deadline for currency union by 2010, the chairman of a meeting of finance ministers said.

Dollar pegs in all Gulf states except Kuwait compel their central banks to track the US Federal Reserve - which has introduced a series of rate cuts - although in the Gulf inflation is spiralling and economies are booming.

"There is no revaluation... it is as it is," meeting chairman Qatari Finance Minister Youssef Hussein Kamal said of Gulf currency pegs to the dollar late on Saturday.

Story continues below
advertisement

Qatar currently chairs the six-member GCC, which also includes Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Oman, Bahrain and the UAE.

"The schedule [for currency union by 2010] is there and is on track," Kamal told reporters after the meeting in the Qatari capital.

He said GCC finance ministers and central bankers would meet to review the 2010 currency union plan during the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan, which this year starts around the end of August and the beginning of September.

Gulf policymakers said last year the 2010 deadline would be hard to meet as consensus crumbled on how to deal with spiralling inflation and the weak dollar.

RELATED: Qatar casts doubt over monetary union deadline

But GCC central bankers have more recently been upbeat on overcoming technical hurdles. (Reuters)

RELATED: Gulf in fresh push to hit single currency deadline

Print Print | Email Email | Discuss this article |



USER COMMENTS (1 COMMENTS)

Freegold
Posted by Ivo Cerckel, Siquijor, Philippines on 11 May 2008 at 17:13 UAE time


The GCC needs Freegold, a freely floating price of gold, as an alternative to the dollar regime.
Freegold makes gold the natural vehicle to temporarily or eternally store one’s wealth in, in order to be able to later convert it into tangible wealth.
Freegold in the central banks’ strong-rooms has the same role to fulfill as the Mona Lisa in the Louvre-museum in Paris.
A wealth reserve which would now be in the strong room (the Louvre) of a monetary union.

As the GCC central bankers argue, there are no technical hurdles which cannot be overcome by 2010.

CLICK HERE TO POST A COMMENT

Add your Comment
All posts are sent to the administrator for review and are published only after approval. ArabianBusiness.com reserves the right to remove any comment at any time for any reason. Please keep your responses appropriate and on topic.
Name *
Remember me on this computer
Email *
(Your email address will not be published)
City
Country
Subject *
Comment *
Notify me of further comments
Security Code * Code


Please click post only once - your comment will not be published immediately.

RELATED LINKS

  1. Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC)»

 EMAIL ALERTS

  1. Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC)

  2. Politics & Economics



BUSINESS FEATURES

Crackdown

Dubai is turning the screw on white-collar crime, with a string of dramatic high-profile arrests.

Riyadh legal

Saudi lawyers are reaping the rewards of a scramble by international firms to find local partners.

Ka$hakhstan

Gulf states are leading the charge into Kazakhstan with its vast and untapped commodity wealth up for grabs.

ArabianBusiness.com/Jobs - Middle East Jobs Search
  1. Commercial / Real Estate Lawyer
    Industry: Legal
    Location: Dubai, UAE
  2. Junior Consultant, TMC
    Industry: Legal
    Location: Abu Dhabi, UAE
Browse all jobs »

BUSINESS INTERVIEWS

Heal the world

Acclaimed economist and UN adviser Jeffery Sachs on his formula to make poverty history.

Safety matters

Richard Carroll on the importance of preparation when it comes to emergency services.

MORE FROM ARABIANBUSINESS.COM