Jamaica is not the only country in the Caribbean undergoing exchange rate adjustment. Trinidad and Tobago that has had a long period of steady exchange rate versus the US dollar is now seeing its currency lose value.
At least one company, National Flour Mills speak of shortage of foreign currency to do their business.
While devaluation has been commonplace for some time in Jamaica, the country’s neighbor, Trinidad and Tobago who have had seen a steady exchange rate versus the US dollar for years, at around $6.30 has now seen a near 5 percent devaluation of their currency with the rate falling from $6.32 in October last year to $6.63 currently for a devaluation of 4.7 percent against the United States currency.
The rate could slip even more, with the price of oil on the world market below US$50 a barrel starving the country that is highly dependent on oil revenues to fuel its economy, coupled with high levels of inflation over a number of years while the exchange rate remained stable.
Jamaican dollar has lost close to 5 percent in its value this year against the United States dollar, taking the exchange rate over $125 to the US even as inflation for the year to date is negative. Since the start of 2015 the local dollar has fallen from $114.66 to the current rate of $125.43 a decline of 9.4 percent and beating the rate of inflation for the same period by 8.5 percent.
TT$ drops 4.7% with US$ shortage
May 24, 2016 by