South Sudan abandoned its official fixed exchange rate and moved to a floating rate on Tuesday, Finance Minister David Deng Athorbei said. The central bank had held onto a fixed official rate of 2.95 South Sudanese pounds per dollar even as the currency fell steadily in value on the unofficial market after conflict erupted in the world's newest nation in December 2013.
"The current fixed exchange rate of South Sudan Pound against US dollar will be abandoned," Deng Athorbei said on state television late on Monday. As of midnight Monday-Tuesday, he said the level of the pound "will be based on market forces." The South Sudanese pound was quoted by dealers in the open market at 16 to the dollar on Tuesday. Traders and ordinary South Sudanese have struggled to secure dollars to pay for even basic imports or other essential items as the conflict has cut oil production and global crude prices have slid.