11
interest on
the reserve deposits, it has chosen not to do so. This was negatively
reflected in profitability of banks.
At present, CBU continues to use the reserve requirement instrument. However,
the initial rate of 30% for the loans with maturity up to 3
years has been cut
steadily to 20% for local currency deposits. The liquidity impact of the measure
was neutralised with the auctioning of Treasury bills yielding interest 1.5-2
percentage points higher than the rates ordinarily paid in Treasury bill auctions.
This step resulted in an improvement in the
income position of banks, since
required reserves are not remunerated.
Open market operations were never really used by the
Central Bank of Uzbekistan
since magnitude of securities issued by the Central Bank was very small and
access to these securities was restricted.
Even when issued, the Central Bank
securities earned negative interest rates in real terms that
made them less than
attractive to the limited number of players.
In common with other economies with the negative real interest rates and
low confidence in banks (which in Uzbekistan was
induced by the freezing of
bank deposits during currency conversion in 1993-1994), Uzbekistan has been
experiencing significant problems attracting deposits from the public. Individuals
12
preferred to hold cash for short-term transactions and foreign currencies (primary
US dollar) as long-term investments (see
Figure 1). This explains high-level cash-to-broad money ratio (see Table 2).
0
25
50
75
100
125
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
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