PHNOM
PENH, Aug. 22 (Xinhua) -- Global rating agency Moody's Investors
Service said Thursday that despite rapid growth, the small size and the
narrow diversification of Cambodia's economy constrained its B2 rating.
The
limited effectiveness of monetary policy due to a high rate of
dollarization was also a rating constraint, the rating agency said.
Cambodia's
B2 sovereign bond rating and stable outlook reflected Moody's
assessment of the country's "very low" economic and institutional
strengths, its "low" government financial strength, and its "low"
susceptibility to risks from financial, economic and political events,
it said in a statement.
According
to a just-released Moody's report titled "Credit Analysis: Cambodia,"
the country's GDP per capita is one of the lowest amongst all
Moody's-rated countries.
However,
economic growth following the end of the civil conflict in 1991 has
been rapid, supported by a shift to a more open economy and strong
capital inflows.
The
statement said Moody's expected the country's GDP growth to remain at 7
percent through 2013 and 2014, aided by higher foreign direct
investment, a recovery in exports, and an uptick in construction
activity. At the same time, growth was increasingly supported by rapid
private sector credit expansion.
The
rating agency said Cambodia's "very low" institutional strength
reflected the lack of transparency, weak governance, and the limited
scope of its monetary policy.
Moody's
noted that 96 percent of Cambodia's total deposits were
foreign-currency denominated, which had rendered reserve requirements as
the primary tool for influencing credit conditions, thus constraining
the choice of policy instruments.
The
budget deficit had consolidated noticeably from the peak seen in 2009,
but remained above the peer median, it said, adding that Cambodia
financed its deficits mainly using aid flows.
"This situation has in turn limited efforts to raise tax and resulted in some fragmenting of expenditure," the statement said.
While
current account deficits were high, they were easily financed through
official transfers, aid flows, and foreign direct investment.
Consequently, foreign reserves had been edging higher.
The
agency added that Cambodia's susceptibility to event risks was low --
despite its exposure to global demand and volatile oil prices -- because
it had sufficient buffers to counter risks to trade flows, a relatively
stable government, and a sound banking system.
1 comment:
Yup, Yup, Hun Sen and his pigs lost the election!!!
Khmer people have spoken!!!
People around the world have spoken!!!
Hun Sen and his pigs must go!!!
HUN SEN Vietminh/Vietcong, GO HOME!!!
Hun Sen, dégage avant qu'il soit trop tard!!!
ហ៊ុនសែន ចុះចេញ ទាន់មឹនទាន់ហួសពេល!!!
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