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Qatari riyal

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Qatari riyal
ريال قطري (Arabic)
ISO 4217
CodeQAR (numeric: 634)
Subunit0.01
Unit
SymbolQR and ر.ق
Denominations
Subunit
1100dirham
Banknotes
 Freq. usedQR 1, QR 5, QR 10, QR 50, QR 100, QR 200, QR 500
 Rarely usedQR 22 (commemorative)
Coins
 Freq. used25, 50 dirhams
 Rarely used1, 5, 10 dirhams
Demographics
User(s) Qatar
Dubai (until 1973)
Issuance
Central bankQatar Central Bank
 Websitewww.qcb.gov.qa
Valuation
Inflation5.42%
 SourceQatar Central Bank, 2022
Pegged withUS dollar (USD)
US$1 = QR 3.64

The Qatari riyal (sign: QR in Latin,[1] ر.ق in Arabic; ISO code: QAR) is the official currency of the State of Qatar. It is divided into 100 dirhams (Arabic: درهم).

History

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Until 1966, Qatar used the Indian rupee as its currency, in the form of Gulf rupees. When India devalued the rupee in 1966, Qatar, along with the other states using the Gulf rupee, chose to introduce its own currency.[2]

Before doing so, Qatar briefly adopted the Saudi riyal, then introduced the Qatar and Dubai riyal following the signing of the Qatar-Dubai Currency Agreement on 21 March 1966.[3] The Saudi riyal was worth 1.065 Gulf rupees, whilst the Qatar and Dubai riyal was equal to the Gulf rupee prior to its devaluation. Initially pegged with sterling at one shilling and six pence (1s. 6d.) per riyal, its value was changed to one shilling and nine pence (1s. 9d.) when sterling was devalued in 1967.

Following Dubai's entry into the United Arab Emirates, Qatar began issuing the Qatari riyal separate from Dubai on 19 May 1973. The old notes continued to circulate in parallel for 90 days, at which time they were withdrawn.[4]

Coins

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In 1966, coins were introduced in the name of Qatar and Dubai for 1, 5, 10, 25, and 50 dirhams. In 1973, a new series of coins was introduced in the same sizes and compositions as the earlier pieces but in the name of Qatar only. Only 25 and 50 dirham coins are now circulated, although smaller coins remain legal tender.[citation needed]

Image Value Diameter Mass Composition Edge Obverse Reverse Year of
Obverse Reverse first minted withdrawal
1 dirham 15 mm 1.4 g Copper-clad Steel Smooth Mintage dates both the Gregorian and Lunar Hijri calendars on top, the Emblem of Qatar at the center, and the lettering: "دولة قطر" in the bottom. The lettering "ONE DIRHAM", below that is the value (Older versions use Eastern Arabic numerals while newer ones use Western Arabic numerals), below that is the lettering "درهم", and below that is the lettering "STATE OF QATAR" 1973
5 dirhams 22 mm 2.83 g Copper-clad Steel Smooth Mintage dates in both the Gregorian and Lunar Hijri calendars on top, the Emblem of Qatar at the center, and the lettering: "دولة قطر" in the bottom. The lettering "FIVE DIRHAMS", below that is the value (Older versions use Eastern Arabic numerals while newer ones use Western Arabic numerals), below that is the lettering "دراهم", and below that is the lettering "STATE OF QATAR" 1973
10 dirhams 27 mm 7.52 g Copper-clad Steel Smooth Mintage dates in both the Gregorian and Lunar Hijri calendars on top, the Emblem of Qatar at the center, and the lettering: "دولة قطر" in the bottom. The lettering "TEN DIRHAMS", below that is the value (Older versions use Eastern Arabic numerals while newer ones use Western Arabic numerals), below that is the lettering "دراهم", and below that is the lettering "STATE OF QATAR" 1973
25 dirhams 20 mm 3.2 g Nickel-clad Steel Reeded Mintage dates in both the Gregorian and Lunar Hijri calendars on top, the Emblem of Qatar at the center, and the lettering: "دولة قطر" in the bottom. The lettering "TWENTY FIVE DIRHAMS", below that is the value (Older versions use Eastern Arabic numerals while newer ones use Western Arabic numerals), below that is the lettering "درهماً", and below that is the lettering "STATE OF QATAR" 1973
50 dirhams 25 mm 5.8 g Nickel-clad Steel Reeded Mintage dates in both the Gregorian and Lunar Hijri calendars on top, the Emblem of Qatar at the center, and the lettering: "دولة قطر" in the bottom. The lettering "FIFTY DIRHAMS", below that is the value (Older versions use Eastern Arabic numerals while newer ones use Western Arabic numerals), below that is the lettering "درهماً", and below that is the lettering "STATE OF QATAR" 1973

Banknotes

[edit]

Fixed exchange rate

[edit]

The Qatari riyal is pegged to the US dollar at a fixed exchange rate of US$1 = QR 3.64. This rate was enshrined into Qatari law by Royal Decree No.34 of 2001, signed by Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, Emir of Qatar, on 9 July 2001.

Article (1) states that the Qatari riyal exchange rate shall be pegged against the US dollar at QR 3.64, and sets upper and lower limits of QR 3.6415 and QR 3.6385 for the Qatar Central Bank's purchase and sale of dollars with banks operating in Qatar. Article (2) provides the Qatar Central Bank with the authority to determine the volume and the time of sale of US dollars and the associated conditions of such sales and payments. Article (3) cancels the earlier Royal Decree No.60 of 1975, by which the riyal was officially pegged to the IMF's special drawing rights (SDRs).[6][7][8]

Current QAR exchange rates
From Google Finance: AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD INR KRW
From Yahoo! Finance: AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD INR KRW
From XE.com: AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD INR KRW
From OANDA: AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD INR KRW

Note: Rates obtained from these websites may contradict with pegged rate mentioned above

Effect of the 2017 Qatar diplomatic crisis

[edit]

In response to the 2017 Qatar diplomatic crisis, banks in the countries blockading Qatar had to stop trading with Qatari banks. This led to a fall in liquidity offshore and a move away from the fixed exchange rate outside of Qatar, with up to QR 3.81 being required to buy 1 US dollar in late June 2017,[9] a situation that continued until December 2017.[10][11]

This also led to cessation of trading of Qatari banknotes outside of Qatar with certain banks in certain countries such as the UK.[12]

Within Qatar itself, however, the Central Bank of Qatar has continued to buy and sell US dollars at the fixed rate.

See also

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References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Qatari riyal (code: QAR; symbol: ﷼) is the official currency of the State of Qatar, subdivided into 100 dirhams and issued by the Qatar Central Bank.[1][2] Introduced on 19 May 1973 following Qatar's adoption of an independent monetary policy after the dissolution of the shared Qatar-Dubai riyal, it replaced the earlier joint currency that had circulated since 1966.[3][4] The riyal's value is maintained through a fixed peg to the United States dollar at a rate of 3.64 riyals per dollar, formalized by royal decree in 2001 to promote stability in Qatar's export-driven economy reliant on hydrocarbons.[5][6] This peg, upheld by the central bank's interventions in foreign exchange markets, has contributed to the currency's reputation for reliability amid global commodity price fluctuations.[7] Denominations include banknotes of 5, 10, 50, 100, and 500 riyals, alongside coins in dirham increments, reflecting the central bank's efforts to modernize circulation while accommodating Qatar's cash-based transactions in retail and labor sectors.[8]

Characteristics

Symbol, Codes, and Subunits

The Qatari riyal is designated by the ISO 4217 alphabetic code QAR and numeric code 634 for international financial transactions and standards.[9] Its primary symbols include QR in Latin script and ر.ق in Arabic, which facilitate representation in both domestic and global contexts.[1][10] These identifiers were standardized to align with the currency's role following Qatar's adoption of the riyal as its unit of account. The subunit of the riyal is the dirham, with 100 dirhams equivalent to one riyal, enabling precise denomination of fractional values in pricing and payments.[11][10] In practice, dirhams appear on lower-value coins for everyday transactions, though electronic transfers and rounding to whole riyals predominate in retail and digital commerce due to the prevalence of cashless systems.[1] The Qatar Central Bank maintains oversight of the riyal's codes, symbols, and subunit structure, issuing guidelines for their uniform application across banknotes, coins, and financial instruments to ensure consistency and prevent discrepancies in circulation.[12] This role supports the currency's stability within Qatar's fixed exchange regime, with the bank managing issuance volumes that exceeded 8 billion riyals in new banknote series introduced in late 2020.[8] The issuance and management of the Qatari riyal are governed by legislation vesting exclusive authority in state institutions. The Qatar Monetary Agency was established by Law No. 7 of 1973 to handle currency matters after Qatar terminated its currency union with Dubai on May 9, 1973.[13] This role shifted to the Qatar Central Bank upon its creation via Law No. 15 of 1993, which was replaced by Law No. 13 of 2012 to modernize oversight of monetary policy and financial institutions.[14][15] Law No. 13 of 2012 designates the mintage of banknotes and coins as the exclusive prerogative of the state, exercisable only by the Qatar Central Bank, prohibiting private or parallel issuance.[16] Riyal-denominated notes and coins produced under this authority serve as legal tender for all debts, public and private, throughout Qatar, with mandatory acceptance enforced by the bank's regulatory powers. The law further authorizes the bank to withdraw or demonetize unfit or superseded denominations via decree, while maintaining exchange facilities for a defined period post-demonetization.[17] Counterfeiting measures are integrated into circulation regulations, granting the bank authority to seize fake notes detected in bank submissions, deduct their nominal value from the submitting institution's reserves, and impose penalties for negligence in verification.[18] These provisions ensure the riyal's integrity as the sole medium of exchange, barring historical exceptions during transitions from prior currencies like the Gulf rupee or Qatar-Dubai riyal.[19]

Historical Development

Origins Under British Protectorate

Prior to the formal introduction of the riyal, Qatar, as a British protectorate since 1916, relied on a patchwork of foreign currencies reflecting its pearling-based economy and regional trade ties, including Maria Theresa thalers, British sovereign gold coins, and the Saudi riyal introduced in 1927.[20] The discovery of oil in 1939, with commercial production commencing in 1949, generated revenues that exposed the limitations of this system amid the decline of pearling due to Japanese cultured pearl competition in the 1930s, necessitating a more stable medium for hydrocarbon transactions and local commerce.[21][22] The shift toward a dedicated Gulf currency accelerated with the adoption of the Gulf rupee, issued by the Reserve Bank of India from 1959, which circulated at par with the Indian rupee and facilitated trade under British oversight in protectorates including Qatar.[21] This arrangement persisted until India's rupee devaluation by 36.5% on June 6, 1966, prompting Qatar to temporarily adopt the Saudi riyal on June 11, 1966, to preserve value amid fears of imported inflation from the devalued rupee.[23] In response, Qatar and Dubai signed the Qatar-Dubai Currency Agreement on March 21, 1966, establishing the Qatar and Dubai Currency Board to issue a unified riyal pegged 1:1 to the pre-devaluation Gulf rupee, thereby replacing the Gulf rupee and insulating the local economy from external monetary shocks.[24][25] The board's inaugural banknotes, denominated in riyals for values of 1, 5, 10, 25, 50, and 100, entered circulation on September 18, 1966, marking the riyal's practical origins as a regional instrument backed by sterling reserves under British influence.[23] This monetary union reflected pragmatic alignment between Qatar and Dubai to manage oil windfalls independently, while anticipating Britain's planned withdrawal from east of Suez by 1971, as outlined in treaties like the 1916 Anglo-Qatari agreement that subordinated external affairs to London.[21] The riyal's stability during this period supported Qatar's fiscal expansion, with oil exports rising from negligible volumes in the 1940s to over 100,000 barrels per day by the late 1960s, underscoring the currency's role in transitioning from protectorate-era dependencies.[25]

Formal Introduction and Early Stabilization

The Qatar Monetary Agency (QMA) was established on May 13, 1973, via Law No. 7, assuming central banking functions including currency issuance to support Qatar's post-independence monetary sovereignty.[26] On May 9, 1973, Qatar terminated its currency board agreement with Dubai, which had jointly issued the Qatar-Dubai riyal since 1966, paving the way for an independent Qatari currency.[27] The QMA launched the Qatari riyal into full circulation on May 19, 1973, with initial banknote denominations of 1, 5, 10, 100, and 500 riyals, printed by Bradbury Wilkinson & Co. in the United Kingdom; these notes featured designs incorporating Qatari cultural motifs such as dhow boats, falcons, and traditional architecture, replacing the prior joint currency at par value.[27][28] Early stabilization of the riyal relied on the QMA's management of foreign reserves accumulated from hydrocarbon exports, rather than a formal exchange rate peg, which would not be adopted until 1980. The 1973 OPEC oil embargo triggered a quadrupling of global crude prices from approximately $3 to $12 per barrel, dramatically boosting Qatar's oil revenues and providing a robust fiscal base for currency confidence amid the kingdom's transition to full independence in 1971.[29] This influx— with oil production ramping up from the Dukhan field discovered in 1940—enabled the QMA to maintain approximate parity with regional currencies like the Saudi riyal through reserve interventions and controlled issuance, fostering economic integration via payments in stable foreign currencies for exports.[30] Without these revenues, the new riyal risked volatility from limited diversification and small domestic production base. By 1976, surging liquidity demands from the oil export boom prompted the QMA to introduce a 50 riyal banknote, expanding the denomination set to accommodate higher transaction volumes in a rapidly growing economy; this addition reflected annual oil revenue increases exceeding 200% in the mid-1970s, as Qatar's output aligned with OPEC quotas.[27] The QMA's oversight ensured seamless integration of the riyal into daily commerce and international trade settlements, laying groundwork for sustained value retention despite the absence of a fixed peg.[30]

Reforms and Redesigns Post-2000

The Qatar Central Bank issued its fourth series of banknotes in 2003, incorporating updated designs that highlighted Qatari heritage alongside contemporary motifs to enhance visual appeal and national identity.[19] This series replaced earlier issues and laid the foundation for subsequent enhancements in durability and aesthetics.[31] In September 2008, the bank released revised versions of the 1 riyal, 5 riyal, 10 riyal, and 50 riyal denominations, focusing on improved print quality and initial security upgrades to address emerging counterfeiting risks.[28] These updates coincided with Qatar's accelerating economic activity, as liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports propelled GDP growth from $17.5 billion in 2000 to $84.7 billion by 2008, elevating transaction volumes and necessitating more robust currency features. The fifth series debuted on December 18, 2020, marking a comprehensive redesign with the introduction of the 200 riyal note to accommodate high-value payments in an economy where GDP had reached $141.4 billion by 2019, largely from LNG revenues exceeding 77 million tons annually.[19] New anti-counterfeiting elements, including advanced watermarks, metallic security threads, and microprinting, were integrated to counter global forgery trends amid rising circulation demands.[32] In July 2025, the 1 riyal note received minor revisions to its state emblem, Arabic numerals, and issuance date, ensuring alignment with updated national symbols while maintaining compatibility with existing circulation.[33]

Denominations

Coins

The Qatari riyal is subdivided into 100 dirhams, with coins issued by the Qatar Central Bank in denominations of 1, 5, 10, 25, and 50 dirhams, alongside a 1 riyal coin equivalent to 100 dirhams.[34][35] In current circulation, the 25 and 50 dirham coins predominate for small transactions, while lower denominations such as 1, 5, and 10 dirhams remain legal tender but see limited practical use amid Qatar's shift toward digital payments.[6][36] Modern coins employ durable base metals for cost efficiency and longevity. The 25 dirham coin weighs 3.2 grams with a 20 mm diameter, composed of nickel-clad steel; the 50 dirham coin is heavier at 5.8 grams and 25 mm in diameter, also nickel-clad steel. Lower-value pieces, like the 1 dirham, utilize copper-plated steel at 1.5 grams and 15 mm diameter. Designs on these coins incorporate Qatar's state emblem on the obverse, featuring two crossed swords beneath a traditional dhow sailing vessel flanked by palm trees, evoking maritime heritage and national sovereignty; the reverse typically displays the denomination and minting year in Arabic and English.[37] Earlier series from the 1970s used copper-nickel for some denominations, such as the initial 25 dirhams at 20 mm diameter.[38] The 1 riyal coin, valued at QR 1, has been produced in bimetallic form since pattern trials around 2000, though it circulates infrequently compared to dirham coins and serves more as a higher-value option for exact change.[39]
DenominationCompositionWeight (g)Diameter (mm)Primary Design Elements
1 DirhamCopper-plated steel1.515State emblem (obverse); denomination (reverse)
25 DirhamsNickel-clad steel3.220State emblem with dhow and palms (obverse)
50 DirhamsNickel-clad steel5.825State emblem (obverse); denomination and year

Banknotes

The first series of Qatari riyal banknotes was issued on 19 May 1973 by the Qatar Monetary Agency under Law No. 7 of 19 June 1973, comprising denominations of 1, 5, 10, 50, 100, and 500 riyals.[19] Subsequent series followed in 1983, 1996, and 2003, maintaining the same denominations without introducing new values, though designs were periodically updated for aesthetic and security purposes.[19] In 2007, enhancements to the fourth series included transparent windows on the 100 and 500 riyal notes, along with tactile features for the visually impaired on lower denominations, marking an evolution in security and accessibility.[19] The fifth series, introduced by the Qatar Central Bank on 13 December 2020, fully redesigned all notes and added a 200 riyal denomination, resulting in seven values: 1, 5, 10, 50, 100, 200, and 500 riyals.[19] [40] Front designs across the series incorporate traditional geometric patterns, the Qatari flag, native flora such as dreama trees, and the coat of arms, while reverse sides depict elements of Qatari heritage including traditions, Islamic history, culture, flora and fauna, education, sports, and economic development.[8] [40] Security features in the fifth series advanced further with innovations such as IGNITE and PUREIMAGE security threads, alongside hybrid substrates combining paper and polymer elements in select denominations like the 5, 100, and 500 riyals to enhance durability against wear and environmental factors.[41] [42] On 2 July 2025, the Qatar Central Bank updated the 1 riyal note in the fifth series, incorporating a modified state emblem, Western-style numerals, and a wider security band to comply with prevailing regulations, while prior versions remain legal tender.[33] The 500 riyal denomination, the highest value, facilitates high-volume transactions and reserve holdings, reflecting Qatar's economy oriented toward large-scale financial operations.[43]
SeriesIntroduction YearDenominations (riyals)
First19731, 5, 10, 50, 100, 500
Second19831, 5, 10, 50, 100, 500
Third19961, 5, 10, 50, 100, 500
Fourth2003 (with 2007 updates)1, 5, 10, 50, 100, 500
Fifth2020 (with 2025 1 riyal update)1, 5, 10, 50, 100, 200, 500

Exchange Rate Regime

Fixed Peg to the US Dollar

The Qatari riyal (QAR) has maintained a fixed exchange rate peg to the United States dollar (USD) at 3.64 QAR per USD since June 1980, initially on a de facto basis through central bank operations. This arrangement was formalized into law by Royal Decree No. 34 of 2001, which enshrined the rate and empowered the Qatar Central Bank (QCB) to enforce it via direct market interventions, including purchasing USD at rates not exceeding 3.6385 QAR and selling to counteract deviations.[25][44] Such interventions ensure the riyal trades within a narrow band around the peg, minimizing fluctuations that could arise from speculative pressures or capital flows in Qatar's open economy. The peg's rationale stems from the causal linkage between Qatar's export revenues—predominantly from liquefied natural gas and oil, both denominated and settled in USD—and the need for import cost predictability. By aligning the riyal's value directly with the USD, the regime eliminates exchange rate risk for trade transactions, which constitute a significant portion of GDP, and obviates the complexities of managing an independent monetary policy amid shallow domestic financial markets. This contrasts with floating-rate peers in resource-dependent economies, where currency volatility has historically amplified boom-bust cycles; the fixed peg instead anchors inflation expectations and facilitates fiscal planning tied to hydrocarbon windfalls.[25][45] Empirically, the peg has demonstrated resilience across multiple global commodity price swings, including the oil price collapses of 1986, 1998, and 2014–2016, without requiring devaluation or major realignments, as the QCB's operations have absorbed imbalances effectively. Backing this stability are Qatar's foreign exchange reserves, which exceeded $50 billion as of late 2023—ample to cover over 20 months of merchandise imports—providing a credible commitment mechanism that deters speculative attacks and reinforces market confidence in the regime's sustainability.[46][47] The International Monetary Fund has affirmed that this framework continues to serve Qatar's monetary objectives well, prioritizing value preservation over short-term flexibility.[46]

Resilience During Geopolitical Pressures

During the 2017 Qatar diplomatic crisis, a blockade imposed by Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, and Egypt on June 5 sought to economically isolate Qatar and pressure its foreign policy, yet the Qatari riyal's fixed peg to the US dollar at 3.64 QAR per USD endured without devaluation, supported by interventions from the Qatar Central Bank utilizing foreign reserves exceeding $340 billion, including over $300 billion managed by the Qatar Investment Authority.[48][49] The blockade disrupted traditional trade routes, prompting Qatar to rapidly diversify imports via airlifts and new partnerships with Turkey and Iran, which mitigated supply shocks and preserved currency stability despite initial liquidity strains in the forward market where 12-month contracts spiked to 525 basis points premium.[50][51] Efforts by the blockading states to induce a currency crisis through artificial depression of riyal trading in parallel markets failed, as empirical exchange rate data from 2017 to 2021 reveal the official peg maintained deviations of less than 0.1% from 3.64 QAR/USD, with the Qatar Central Bank actively defending the rate amid black-market premiums that peaked but did not force a break.[52][53][54] Qatar's hydrocarbon export revenues, redirected through alternative channels, and substantial reserves buffered against capital outflows, contrasting with vulnerabilities observed in flexible exchange regimes during similar commodity-dependent state crises.[55][56] The blockade's resolution via the Al-Ula Declaration on January 5, 2021, which lifted restrictions and restored diplomatic ties without preconditions altering Qatar's monetary framework, underscored the peg's robustness, as post-lift economic indicators showed no lingering depreciation pressures and affirmed the policy's efficacy for resource-reliant economies facing geopolitical isolation over alternatives prone to speculative attacks.[57][58][59] This resilience empirically debunked predictions of peg collapse, highlighting how ample liquid assets and credible defense mechanisms outweighed blockade-induced stresses.[60][52]

Economic Role

Qatar's hydrocarbon sector, dominated by natural gas and liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports, provides the primary economic foundation for the riyal's value and convertibility under its fixed peg to the US dollar. The country holds the third-largest proven natural gas reserves worldwide, estimated at 843 trillion cubic feet, concentrated in the North Field shared with Iran.[61][62] As the third-largest LNG exporter globally with an 18.8% market share in 2024, Qatar's shipments—primarily to Asia under long-term contracts denominated in US dollars—generate substantial foreign exchange inflows.[63][64] These earnings accounted for 83% of government revenues in 2023, directly bolstering the central bank's reserves and enabling the riyal's peg since 2001 without devaluation pressures.[65] The riyal's historical stability causally tracks global hydrocarbon price fluctuations, reflecting the sector's outsized role in fiscal and external balances. During the 2014–2016 oil price collapse, when Brent crude dropped below $30 per barrel, Qatar faced fiscal deficits yet preserved the peg through drawdowns on accumulated reserves from prior booms, avoiding the currency strains seen in less buffered exporters.[66] Post-2017 price recovery to over $70 per barrel correlated with fiscal surpluses and riyal resilience, even amid the 2017–2021 blockade.[67] Hydrocarbons continue to comprise approximately 40% of GDP as of 2023, with diversification into non-oil sectors like construction and finance providing marginal offsets but not altering the core reliance on energy exports for currency backing.[68] The Qatar Investment Authority (QIA), funded by hydrocarbon surpluses, further reinforces this link as an implicit guarantee against volatility. Managing $557 billion in assets as of 2025—invested diversely in global equities, real estate, and infrastructure—the fund accumulates fiscal windfalls, smoothing revenue cycles and curtailing imported inflation risks that could erode purchasing power.[69] This strategic reserve mechanism, rooted in export-driven accumulation, sustains confidence in the riyal's peg amid commodity swings, prioritizing long-term stability over short-term spending.[64]

Monetary Policy and Central Bank Oversight

The Qatar Central Bank (QCB), established under Law No. 13 of 2012, holds a mandate to promote monetary and financial stability, with price stability achieved primarily through adherence to the fixed exchange rate peg rather than independent interest rate adjustments.[70][14] This framework constrains conventional monetary autonomy, as Qatar's policy stance aligns closely with that of the U.S. Federal Reserve to maintain the riyal's parity at 3.64 QAR per USD, a rate fixed since 2001.[12][46] To manage domestic liquidity and support the peg, the QCB employs tools such as compulsory reserve requirements—currently set at 4.5% of banks' average total deposits, held unremunerated on a daily basis—and open market operations, including repurchase agreements and liquidity injections or withdrawals via government securities.[12][71] Direct foreign exchange interventions occur within narrow bands, where the QCB buys U.S. dollars at rates not exceeding 3.6385 QAR and sells at no less than 3.6415 QAR to defend the peg against deviations.[44] These measures prioritize liquidity control over interest rate targeting, reflecting the peg's role as the dominant nominal anchor in an economy dominated by hydrocarbon exports invoiced in dollars. Empirically, this approach has yielded low and stable inflation, averaging around 3% annually from 1980 to 2024, with recent years showing rates below 2% amid global pressures, contrasting with higher debasement in unanchored fiat systems.[72] The peg's rigidity, while limiting flexibility for countercyclical easing, has empirically mitigated risks of fiscal dominance and hyperinflation common in resource-rich autocracies lacking external anchors, as evidenced by Qatar's avoidance of the double-digit spikes seen in peers like Venezuela or Nigeria during commodity booms.[46] This outcome underscores the causal efficacy of dollar linkage for trade-dependent stability over discretionary policy ideals.

References

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