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Iraqi Dinar Buzz Updates
Iraq Dinar 1 Usd 1
2012-04-24 00:12:55
Hello Dinar Readers!
I’m very pleased to present an exclusive interview done by one of our
awesome forum moderators, Ward Welch. He was able to correspond with
foreign correspondent Raber Aziz and get the answers below.
Enjoy!
Interview with Raber Aziz:
“removing of the three zeros from the Iraqi Dinar and its effectsâ€
By Ward Welch
April 12, 2012
Ward Welch: Mr. Aziz, thank you very much for taking my questions today.
For
years now we’ve been hearing about the CBI’s plan to “remove the zerosâ€
from the Iraqi Dinar and equalize the value of the IQD with the other
major currencies of the world, including the American Dollar.
With
the success of the recent Arab summit in Baghdad, and the imminent
release of Iraq from the United Nations sanctions (Chapter 7), what are
your thoughts concerning this subject?
Raber Aziz: I think the removing of the zeros
will have its own benefits and consequences for the country alike. It
will be good for Iraq to remove the zeros because this address; when the
Iraqi dinar is strong in the face of US dollars it will help keep
inflation down as much as possible. It will also facilitate, for Iraq,
economic cooperation with the international banks as it will increase
the international confidence and credibility of it the new Iraqi Dinar.
Also, it will reduce the size of the bank notes in circulation and will
simplify Iraq’s payment system.
But
the having a new and strong Dinar is expected to have consequences as
well. one of the consequences will be money laundering. The CBI has said
the zero-removing process, which is expected to take place in September
as it has announced, will see the bank re-print 30tr dinars ($26bn)
and the process of switching currency will last a full year where both
the old and new currencies will be dealt in the market. This is too long
a period and could witness lots of money laundering, as well as fraud.
Ward Welch: With Iraq taking its place in the
world as a completely sovereign nation and a major power in the Arab
world, how can Iraq continue to trade with the world using a highly
undervalued currency? Certainly the impetus of the GOI and the CBI must
be to rectify this condition very soon or risk losing billions of
dollars (trillions of IQD) in foreign investments in Iraq.
Raber Aziz: Iraq cannot continue to trade with
the world using the current undervalued currency. Iraq’s current money,
printed after the 2003 US-led war, is 150 times bigger in quantity than
the Swiss edition of the Iraqi Dinar used in the country. Iraq’s
smallest bill used in the markets is the 250 Dinar bill (approximately
US$0.2) and this is definitely not a good currency for the country that
sells over 2 million bpd of oil (over 6 billion US Dollar per day).
Besides, Iraq is planning to increase its oil production to reach at
least 6 million bpd in the next few years and ultimately 12 million bpd.
That’s even three times and six times the size of Iraq’s current
revenues. This will mean Iraq’s annual revenues will hit US$210 in the
coming days and over US$400 billion ultimately. And for this, Iraq
requires a currency with strong value in the world market.
Ward Welch: With this new economic power in hand, will this increase the desire of Kurdistan to gain complete independence and sovereignty?
Raber Aziz: The
desire of the Kurds to become independent is, and has always been,
there with or without the economic power in hand. Every single Kurd
dreams of an independent Kurdistan state. Though economic boom is a
factor for any nation to proclaim independence, in the case of Kurdistan
there are other factors that determine whether the Kurds want to be
independent from Iraq or not. The first of these factors will be an
international recognition of a Kurdish state. Who is ready to recognize a
Kurdish state in north of Iraq? Kurds first need guarantees that if
they proclaim independence their state will be recognized on an
international level and be protected by some of the world’s super
powers, among them the US. Another factor will be the Kurds’ relations
with the regional nations. Kurdistan, I mean the greater Kurdistan that
spans Turkey, Syria, Iraq and Iran, and the Kurdish part of Iraq as
well, is a landlocked country. Kurdistan cannot survive without strong
friendly relations with these countries in case they wanted to become
independent.
Ward Welch: How will this rebirth of economic
power in Iraq effect the relationship between the political blocks?
(Will the new wealth encourage them to put religious, secular, and
tribal differences aside and truly work together?)
Raber Aziz: I don’t think that it will result
in the political blocs putting their differences aside. Iraq’s Prime
Minister Mr Nouri al-Maliki who has been controlling power over the past
few years has unfortunately been playing on a very sensitive cord,
namely sectarianism. He has appointed many of his Shiite Dawa Party
officials as ministers or high-ranking officials in the government and
has been running many other ministerial and senior positions like the
ministries of interior, defense, national security as acting minister
despite him being the PM. He has been rejecting candidates of the rival
al-Iraqiya list, the main Sunni bloc in Iraq, for the empty ministries
each time with a different excuse since the end of 2010 when the
political blocs finally, after an 8-month impasse came to a
power-sharing deal, in Erbil, to form the new cabinet. And, last year,
his Shiite dominated government started removing Sunni academics on
charges of belonging to the former Baath Party. They detained about 600
former Iraqi army officials on charges of planning a coup by the end of
2011 when the last US troop left Iraq, and also started hunting down
other top Sunni leaders in the country on terror charges, among them VP
Tariq al-Hashimi for involvement in 150 armed attacks. Therefore, it is
not easy to undo these, and thus the sectarian disputes which are in
fact the core of the political disputes as well, will remain.
Ward Welch: Thank you very much for your valuable time sir.
Raber
Y. Aziz is a Kurdish journalist and blogger from Erbil, the capital of
the semi-autonomous Kurdish Region. He works for AKnews as English News
Editor and is formerly their Managing Editor.