A high-level of dollarisation, largely attributable to the presence of United Nations personnel and peacekeepers in the early 1990s, has largely been the reason for a relatively stable Khmer riel. The recognition of foreign currencies as valid legal tender under statute ensured the existence of a competing currency in the market, enforcing discipline on the central bank by preventing manipulation of interest rates, inordinate expansion of money supply and ensuring that inflation remains relatively low.
Read moreEverything must be sacrificed: Marx, the Khmer Rouge, and Money Abolition
Cambodia is the only country in the modern era to have had money, had that money abolished, and then had money reinstated. Shiller, in the article mentioned previously, mentioned - without detail - that Marxist Communism supported the idea of societies without money. This, of course, is correct. But I should emphasise that Marx went further than just support the abolition of money. In fact, this was central to Marxism.
Read moreA New Model for Urban Displacements: The White Building Evictions
Phnom Penh has an extensive history of forced evictions, many of them violent.
Read more