A bit OT but noticed rand/pound is now on 11.01
10.97 asking google.
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A bit OT but noticed rand/pound is now on 11.01
No DreamKing. If the Rand gets too strong, it could do damage to the economy - take exports for example.
Do you chaps think your currency is strong? When I first visited South Africa (1987) it was something like 2.5Rand for $1. You'll be better off by comparing your 'strong' currency to the Aus $. With the US$ the tables are a bit 'distorted' right now. Can anyone get a comparison table/graph for the last 20years between the ZAR and the rival AUS$ ? That will say more about real strengt/economical development![]()
We shouldn't have to rely on other countries for anything else but petrol. With a weaker rand it would forrce people to support local manufacturers, who in turn would grow and develop out into the export market. South Africa has the potential to produce so many essential goods for the surrounding developing African countries to comsume, it a shame we're not ambitious enough. There's no reason all these cheap plastics and electronics can be cheaper to bring from China if we had the ran around 10 to the $. This could also encourage overseas companies to set up their facotries here.
There are benefits to a strong rand of course, but you can't have your cake and eat it.
Weak rand or not, there's no way that we could compete with India and China in some industries. They have the sheer numbers, and people who are willing to work for peanuts. We on the other hand are held to ransom by unions. If our unions did not behave like a bunch of thugs, then there may be hope as the Indian and Chinese economies grow.But we might need to sacrifice cheaper prices in the short term to grow the economy in the long term. If it's cheaper to import something than produce it here, despite all our natural resources, then there is a problem. A weak rand makes it hard for the chinese to compete with local producers. Struggling local textile companies suddenly thrive for example. More jobs, more exports, more buying power. Thousands of other industries suddenly find feasibility to produce locally rather than import. In the longer run we begin to export these goods into Africa as a cheaper alternative. If we're just going to reply on getting all our goods from abroad where do you propose we're going to get the money from to do so ? Churn it in the service sector ? Not plausible.
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Ultimately I think it's already been agreed upon in fiscal policy that we're going to try weaken the Rand anyway. So the debate really is mute.
The government has taken no decision on weakening the rand but the matter is under discussion, President Jacob Zuma said in Pretoria on Thursday.
"We have not taken any decision, but those are matters we are looking at," Zuma said at a press conference held in Pretoria.
"Even economists don't have one view on the matter."
Zuma said that in his discussions with business people, some had argued for the weaker currency and others for a stronger.
"Economists don't easily agree on matters... but it is a matter that is occupying the minds of economists as well as the government."
He said discussions on the currency would form "part of some very special session", where many economic issues would be discussed.
Earlier this week, in its first assessment of the economy, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) recommended the lifting of South Africa's remaining foreign exchange controls and that authorities should intervene more actively against strength in the rand.
The OECD said the strong rand has hit exports and recommended that the government provide policy signals on the exchange rate and the direction of interest rates.
It said gains in the rand were hurting the ability to boost exports, while the volatility of the currency was provoking higher inflation.
Exchange rate volatility was a significant driver of inflation with rand depreciation having a bigger effect on prices than rand appreciation.
The OECD did not say what an appropriate level for the rand would be, but said any steps to limit volatility should be done within the policy of keeping inflation inside a 3-6 percent target range.
Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan has remained firm on using the existing policy to let markets determine the value of the rand.
I will if pushed however have a dig at your ability to read, because you haven't seem to have gotten that right at all.
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Do you think it will continue on this trend or will it go back past the R10/$ level soon?
Reason I am asking. I am importing something from the US and if the Rand strengthens another 25-50cents it will save me a considerable amount of money. But if it weakens again it will also cost me bit more.
Our currency is influenced and valued by market forces, the ANC has nothing to do with it
The first step forward would be stronger rand... Weaker the rand the more reliant we will be on mining, manufacturing and the likes.
One thing that people often forget in this type of debate is that new technology is often paid for and imported in USD. A stronger rand makes equipment used for automation and mass production cheaper. It enables companies to import better ways of producing, thus increasing the overall production capacity in the economy and therefore, in the long run, making it cheaper to produce things locally. As producing costs decrease with the introduction of newer and faster ways of manufacturing the initial loss is offset and profit margins rise.
Most of the successful economies have strong currencies, or have nothing to gain from having one because they are already developed and have modern production capacity in place and the technical skills to modernise present. North America, Canada, the UK, the EU, Australasia: these should be our models.
This will not be the trend. We have a massive, unskilled and entitled labour force. Automation and efficiency are not a priority. Labour intensive applications are (employment). We’re phucked!