IMF Predicts Economic Growth of 5.7 Percent This Year For Belize

WASHINGTON, DC – The International Monetary Fund (IMF) Tuesday said that the COVID-19 pandemic has had a severe impact on Belize in 2020, leading to a 16.7 percent contraction in real gross domestic product (GDP) and an increase in public debt to an unsustainable level of 133 percent of GDP.

currfundsThe Washington-based financial institution said that to address this situation, the John Briceno government presented a Medium-Term Recovery Plan (MTRP) to guide the recovery and lower public debt to 85 percent of GDP in 2025 and 70 percent of GDP by 2030.

It said the authorities are hoping to achieve the financial plan through the implementation of fiscal consolidation, growth-enhancing structural reforms, and debt restructuring.

“Encouraging progress towards restoring debt sustainability was made in 2021, including by implementing sizable fiscal consolidation and by completing a novel debt for marine protection swap with The Nature Conservancy, which not only reduced public debt by 12 percent of GDP in 2021, but also enhanced the protection of the marine environment going forward.”

The IMF said that economic activity is recovering strongly and that real GDP expanded by 9.8 percent in 2021 and is projected to grow by 5.7 percent in 2022 and 3.4 percent in 2023 led by the recovery of the tourism sector.

It said the end of period inflation increased to 4.9 percent in 2021 and is projected at 5.2 percent for 2022 as the war in Ukraine and related economic sanctions keep global energy and food prices elevated.

The country’s fiscal position improved significantly in the financial year 2021, with the primary balance increasing to 1.7 percent of GDP, led by a sharp cyclical recovery of revenue and a decline in expenditure due to fiscal consolidation, and public debt declining to 111 percent of GDP in 2021. “Going forward, the primary balance is projected to decline to minus 0.1 percent of GDP in financial year 2022 due to measures adopted by the government to mitigate the rise in fuel prices, and to stabilize at near 0.6 percent of GDP during financial year 2023-32 in a passive scenario with no additional measures.”

The IMF said public debt is projected to continue falling to 85 percent of GDP by 2032, although it would continue to be assessed as unsustainable in the absence of additional measures as it would remain above the 70 percent of GDP threshold for sustainability over the next decade.

The IMF executive said in its assessment of the Belize situation, said that the key policy priority is to restore debt sustainability, adding that this requires preserving the fiscal savings achieved in 2021, ensuring that the measures adopted to mitigate the rise in fuel prices are temporary, and implementing additional fiscal consolidation and growth-enhancing structural reforms with the goal of increasing the primary balance to 2.5 percent of GDP in 2025 and reducing public debt to 60 percent of GDP by 2031.

The directors said that anchoring this strategy on a medium-term fiscal strategy with clear targets and specific measures would enhance its credibility.

They said fiscal consolidation should rely on both revenue and expenditure measures and that following the implementation of expenditure-based consolidation in 2021 and a temporary relaxation in 2022, the authorities should consider raising revenue by broadening the tax base and enhancing revenue administration, while containing current expenditure and expanding targeted social and resilience spending.

“Executing these plans will be challenging given limited capacity, political pressures, rising energy and food prices, and downside risks. In this context, it will be key to prepare contingency plans in case public debt does not fall as planned, including additional revenue and expenditure measures and debt operations.”

The directors said implementing growth-enhancing structural reforms would accelerate the reduction in public debt and reduce the burden on fiscal consolidation.

They said a key priority is to strengthen the business climate by improving access to credit for small medium enterprises (SMEs), reducing entry barriers for new businesses; enhancing human capital and infrastructure; reducing crime by providing adequate resources to law enforcement and social programs; and building resilience to climate change and natural disasters by adopting a DRS focused on improving structural, financial, and post-disaster resilience and based on a consistent multi-year macro-fiscal framework.

The IMF directors said that restoring public debt sustainability would also strengthen the currency peg and lower external imbalances.

“Belize’s external position is assessed as weaker than justified by medium term fundamentals and desirable policies. Reducing the current account deficit to its equilibrium level and improving reserve adequacy requires preserving the fiscal savings achieved in 2021, ensuring that the measures adopted to mitigate the rise in fuel prices are temporary, and implementing additional fiscal consolidation and growth-enhancing structural reforms.

“It also requires reducing central bank financing to the government and strengthening central bank independence,” the directors said, adding that the authorities should continue seeking financing for their ambitious climate change mitigation and adaptation agenda.

“Belize’s updated Nationally Determined Contribution presents the country’s ambitious plans for 2021-30, including large reductions in greenhouse gas emissions by restoring ecosystems and expanding renewable energy, and actions to adapt to climate change in agriculture, tourism, and fisheries.

“As these actions will be beneficial for Belize and the world, the authorities should continue seeking financing from donors and bilateral and multilateral creditors,” the IMF added.