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- <text id=92TT0450>
- <title>
- Mar. 02, 1992: The Hunt for a Safe Ruble
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Mar. 02, 1992 The Angry Voter
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 41
- CURRENCY
- The Hunt for a Safe Ruble
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Without a stable exchange rate, will Russia's currency go the
- way of the Soviet Union?
- </p>
- <p>By John Greenwald--Reported by Fabienne Rens/Brussels and Ann
- Simmons/Moscow
- </p>
- <p> For bargain-hunting tourists, some of the cheapest deals
- on the planet these days can be found in the former Soviet
- Union. The choices are certainly limited, but Americans in
- Moscow with access to black-market rubles can, for example,
- enjoy a reasonable meal for as little as $3 or take home a
- room-size, handmade wool rug for less than $100. But the
- plunging value of the ruble that makes such deals available to
- foreigners has been a nightmare for the locals. Since Russian
- President Boris Yeltsin lifted price controls in January, a move
- that pushed the inflation rate to 200% that month, Muscovites
- say their money has fully earned the nickname fanera--plywood.
- </p>
- <p> That is no joke. The collapse of the ruble has triggered
- an urgent debate over how to stabilize the currency. Without
- sound money, experts say, the drive to bring capitalism to the
- former Soviet republics could come to a halt. "For people to
- have a currency that is valueless gives a sense of outrage that
- is very difficult for any government to deal with," says Scott
- Pardee, chairman of U.S. operations for the Yamaichi
- International securities firm. Concurs economist Steve Hanke of
- Johns Hopkins University: "An economy with dysfunctional money
- is like an engine that has run out of oil."
- </p>
- <p> The crisis has forced Russia to spend scarce U.S. dollar
- reserves as well as other hard currencies to prop up the ruble.
- Its commercial exchange rate stood at 70 to the dollar last
- week, improved from 114 to the dollar the week before. Rumors
- that authorities may act to strengthen the ruble further have
- spread waves of panic buying, with Russians forming two-hour
- lines at banks to turn in dollars for their homegrown currency.
- At many banks last week, people found to their dismay that
- rubles were virtually unavailable.
- </p>
- <p> But Moscow's intervention on foreign exchange markets is
- no substitute for long-term policies to stabilize the ruble. To
- achieve that goal, Yeltsin still counts on his January shock
- treatment, which eliminated price controls, to encourage
- farmers and manufacturers to produce more goods. That would
- bring supply in line with consumer demand and thereby moderate
- inflation. As inflation slowed, under this strategy, the ruble
- would become stable at home and freely convertible to dollars
- and other currencies on foreign exchange markets.
- </p>
- <p> To speed the transition to a stable ruble, Russia has
- asked the U.S. and its allies for $30 billion of hard currency
- over five years, in addition to food and other aid. The money
- would go into a fund Russia would use to buy rubles as a means
- of maintaining the currency's price. But critics argue that
- such a fund would swiftly run dry as ruble holders rushed to
- dump the money at the first sign of weakness.
- </p>
- <p> The harsh truth, these economists say, is that the ruble
- cannot become stable without an overhaul of the economy far more
- thorough than what Yeltsin seems willing to risk. With 90% of
- Russia's production, distribution and retail outlets still in
- the inefficient hands of the state, they contend, supply cannot
- rise enough to slow inflation and restore long-term value to the
- ruble. "This amounts to trying to square the circle," says
- economist Nicholas Eberstadt, a Harvard research fellow. "The
- first step should be to privatize the factors of production."
- Adds Francis Scotland, managing director of the Investment Bank
- Credit Analyst, a Montreal-based publication that tracks
- currency trends: "Trying to stabilize the ruble and make it
- convertible before you get to the root of hyperinflation just
- makes no sense."
- </p>
- <p> Some Western experts urge Russia to scrap the ruble
- altogether in favor of a new currency. Johns Hopkins' Hanke
- calls for creation of a "currency board," such as those used in
- Hong Kong and Singapore, that would circulate new cash and coins
- backed by dollars or other hard currency. The new Russian money
- would be as stable as the reserves behind it, Hanke argues,
- because holders could freely exchange their currency for
- whatever backed it up. The new money, he adds, would initially
- compete with the ruble but would soon drive out its rival.
- </p>
- <p> Other former Soviet republics are already turning their
- backs on the ruble. Ukraine will launch a new currency called
- the grivna this spring; Ukraine has made coupons for the money
- the sole legal tender in state-owned shops. Officially pegged
- at a rate of one coupon per ruble, the scrip fetches up to 13
- rubles on the Ukrainian black market. Belarus intends to issue
- its own new currency in April, and Moldova and Kazakhstan are
- planning to print new money as well. Such defections will flood
- Russia with ever more rubles as the neighboring republics begin
- exchanging the shaky currency for their own coin of the realm.
- The torrent could in turn thwart Russian attempts to stabilize
- the ruble at home.
- </p>
- <p> No wonder some experts in Moscow are predicting that the
- ruble will soon join the Soviet Union on history's trash heap.
- In an interview with the newspaper Rabochaya Tribuna, economist
- Yevgeni Petrakov foresaw the "downfall" of the ruble within
- several months and urged joint action by members of the
- Commonwealth of Independent States to ease the crisis. Other
- leading experts doubt that monetary reform by itself can
- revitalize the economy. "The main task now is not to manipulate
- finances," Oleg Yashin, first vice president of the Savings Bank
- of Russia, told Pravda. Rather, he declared, "it is to enable
- every enterprise to develop, operate at full capacity, freely
- sell the output on the market and worthily reward the work of
- its personnel."
- </p>
- <p> As laudable as these goals are, Russia simply may not be
- up to the challenge. Without money that both the Russian people
- and the rest of the world can trust, Yeltsin's vaunted reforms
- could prove to have as little enduring value as his country's
- beleaguered currency.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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