@scooby. This is an interesting topic ... I'm glad we can discuss it thoroughly.
With regard to the debt gdp ratio, I looked at the issue in post 17, 19, 20 and 21. But what I’m addressing is the maths behind the figures that suggest no incremental increase in GDP, but in fact a decrease. Which implies debt productivity is zero. Do you agree? Look at the figures and ratios in the economic monthly page 39 below.
http://www.centralbank.g...ns/mer/2010/CSept10.pdf
If CBK is targeting a competitive rate for exporters then that’s what forex dealers are referring to as manipulation. The CBK would also need hard currency to make payments on their SDR allocations and Eurodollar purchases (both of which have gone up by over $320 million each).
If I recall correctly money supply is a function of net domestic assets and net foreign assets, the former being currently driven by domestic credit growth and the latter by CBK forex reserve accumulation. Yes interest rates play a factor but I believe CBK is trying to target a NFA/money supply target of 20%. That ratio has fallen from 30% to 22% over the last two years meaning that money supply is rising but foreign assets aren't. Does that make sense?
The World Bank is not buying gold; The 57 billion in Gold was a typo; we own only 57 million. To the best of my knowledge RAMP Africa is not buying gold but making eurodollar bond purchases most of which are probably issued by the World Bank themselves. What is the investor policy when the World Bank proposes to buy bonds its issuing?
From the CBK's point of view, all this is done to cushion reserves and make payments on government bills. By all fronts mentioned above the CBK is either managing reserves or making some sort of payment. So our reserve assets are diversified mostly into cash (diversified currency), bonds (US), SDR (IMF). Is there a risk to this strategy?
“We are the middle children of history man, no purpose or place. We have no great war, no great depression. Our great war is a spiritual war, our great depression is our lives!" – Tyler Durden