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Gamba News : Central Bank Forecasts Economic Growth at 6.5 Percent
Recent data
released by the Monetary Policy Committee of the Central
Bank of the Gambia indicated a revised growth projection of
6.5 percent for the Gambian economy in 2008, down from 6.9
in 2007. This is premised on the decreased activity in
building and construction and groundnut trade.
Available
data also indicates that government budget, including
grants, registered a surplus of 0.1 percent of
GDP in 2007, whereas excluding grants translated to a budget
deficit of 1.0 percent of
GDP.
At a press
conference held at the Central Bank last Friday, Mr. Bamba
Saho, Governor of the Central Bank of the Gambia, revealed
that in the year to end- January 2008, growth in money
supply decelerated to 3.9 percent from 22.6 percent in 2007.
‘Quasi
money grew by 11.2 percent whilst narrow money contracted by
2.3 percent. Reserve money grew by a minuscule 0.1 percent
compared to 12.8 percent a year earlier,” he elucidated.
Total
revenue and grants, he went on, increased to D3.6 billion in
2007, or 16.8 percent from 2006. ‘Domestic revenue
comprising tax and non-tax revenue rose by 13.7 percent to
D3.4 billion and was D106.1 million higher than the budget
estimate of D3.3 billion.”
According
to Governor Saho, the inter-bank foreign exchange market
continues to be vibrant. ‘The volume of transactions in the
inter-bank market, measured by aggregate purchase and sales
of foreign currency, increased to US$1.7 billion compared to
US$1.2 billion in 2006.”
‘The
banking sector remains sound and profitable. The industry
risk-weighted capital adequacy ratio was 23.9 percent in
December 2007, over and above the required minimum of 8.0
percent” he observed.
The Central
Bank Governor went on to reveal that headline inflation,
measured by the National Consumer Price Index, rose from 2.0
percent in January 2007 to 5.1 percent at end-January 2008.
This however compared to end-December 2007, consumer price
inflation decelerated by 0.9 percent.
“Food price
inflation was 8.4 percent in January 2008 compared to 2.1
percent a year earlier. Non-food inflation also rose, albeit
by about half a percentage point, to 1.4 percent. Core
inflation, which excludes prices of energy and volatile food
items, accelerated slightly from 3.4 percent in January 2007
to 4.2 percent at end-January 2008,” Governor Saho noted.
The outlook
for inflation, he noted, is influenced not only by domestic
factors but international developments as well. “Mirroring
the moderate growth in the monetary aggregates as well as
the strengthening of the Dalasi and low inflationary
expectations, inflation is forecast at about 5.0 percent at
end-December 2008.”
There are
however upside risks to the inflation outlook relating
primarily to the continued increase in global and commodity
prices and the outcome of the 2008 budget, Governor Saho
noted.
In
conclusion, The Central Bank Governor reaffirmed the
Monetary Policy Committee’s resolve to continue to monitor
changes in economic conditions and respond appropriately in
order to discharge its mandate to maintain price stability.
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