FEB. 5 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — In Kazakhstan, the Central Bank resumed its work as the country’s financial regulator after a three-month hiatus, increasing interest rates by 1 percentage point to 17%.
Daniyar Akishev, the Central Banker, is at the helm again, it seems. He even ordered a handful of interventions in the currency market in January, something he had ruled out since his appointment last November.
Now, Kazakhstan watchers expect monetary policy to become more stable and predictable in the coming months. The next policy meeting will be held in six weeks, one week before a parliamentary election on March 20.
Still, many don’t see Mr Akishev’s position as an independent one. He is a seasoned Central Bank employee, but it is clear that he is not as free as many Western Central Bankers are.
A recent symbolic move could corroborate this view. This week, Kazakhstan’s President Nursultan Nazarbayev signed a decree that makes the Central Banker’s signature on the back of banknotes redundant.
Only eagles, monuments and the President’s handprint will continue to feature in Kazakhstan’s colourful currency.
The Central Banker’s signature is a convention that most countries in the world adopt.
Kazakhstan will now join a handful of countries that don’t feature their Central Banker’s signature on banknotes. This group includes China, Japan and Uzbekistan.
This might be, essentially, a final step by the Kazakh government to strip the Central Bank of the independence it gained under former governor Grigory Marchenko who left in 2013.
Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved
(News report from Issue No. 266, published on Feb. 5 2016)