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Wednesday, April 23, 2025

IMF: T&T economy to contract by minus 4.5%

in 2020

by

Curtis Williams
1834 days ago
20200415
The IMF in Washington, DC.

The IMF in Washington, DC.

Shutterstock

ky­ron.reg­is@guardian.co.tt

The In­ter­na­tion­al Mon­e­tary Fund’s (IMF) has pro­ject­ed that T&T’s econ­o­my will con­tract by 4.5 per cent for 2020.

The IMF’s pro­jec­tions for T&T come as the coun­try and the rest of the world grap­ple with the fall­out from the COVID-19 pan­dem­ic. How­ev­er, the IMF’s da­ta in­di­cat­ed that the coun­try is ex­pect­ed to re­bound in 2021 with growth pro­ject­ed at 2.6 per cent.

Pre­vi­ous­ly the IMF pro­ject­ed the T&T econ­o­my would grow by 1.5 per cent in 2020 and for the years 2021 to 2024, the fore­cast­ed growth was at 2.3 per cent, two per cent, 1.6 per cent and 1.7 per cent re­spec­tive­ly.

How­ev­er, the IMF’s new pro­jec­tions do not show a re­vised fore­casts for the years 2022 to 2024.

Mean­while, the growth pro­jec­tions for Latin Amer­i­ca and Caribbean has dra­mat­i­cal­ly de­creased as well. The IMF re­cent­ly re­leased Chap­ter 1 of its World Eco­nom­ic Out­look Re­port en­ti­tled “The Great Lock­down”, which in­di­cat­ed that the re­gion would con­tract by mi­nus 5.2 per cent for 2020.

This dif­fers from the pre­vi­ous Jan­u­ary pro­jec­tion of 1.6 per cent growth for 2020. For 2021, the IMF project a 3.4 per cent growth, a 1.1 in­crease over the Jan­u­ary pro­jec­tions.

The IMF Eco­nom­ic Coun­sel­lor Gi­ta Gopinath not­ed that It is very like­ly that this year the glob­al econ­o­my will ex­pe­ri­ence its worst re­ces­sion since the Great De­pres­sion (1929), sur­pass­ing that seen dur­ing the glob­al fi­nan­cial cri­sis of 2008.

She said: “The Great Lock­down, as one might call it, is pro­ject­ed to shrink glob­al growth dra­mat­i­cal­ly.”

Gopinath in­di­cat­ed that a par­tial re­cov­ery is pro­ject­ed for 2021, with above trend growth rates, but the lev­el of GDP will re­main be­low the pre-virus trend, with con­sid­er­able un­cer­tain­ty about the strength of the re­bound.

She ar­tic­u­lat­ed that much worse growth out­comes are pos­si­ble and may even be like­ly. Gopinath in­di­cat­ed that these out­comes would fol­low if the pan­dem­ic and con­tain­ment mea­sures last longer, emerg­ing and de­vel­op­ing economies are even more se­vere­ly hit, tight fi­nan­cial con­di­tions per­sist, or if wide­spread scar­ring ef­fects emerge due to firm clo­sures and ex­tend­ed un­em­ploy­ment.

Gopinath not­ed that the eco­nom­ic shock of the cur­rent cri­sis is large and the out­put loss as­so­ci­at­ed with this health emer­gency and re­lat­ed con­tain­ment mea­sures like­ly dwarfs the loss­es that trig­gered the glob­al fi­nan­cial cri­sis.

Ac­cord­ing to Gopinath: “In nor­mal crises, pol­i­cy-mak­ers try to en­cour­age eco­nom­ic ac­tiv­i­ty by stim­u­lat­ing ag­gre­gate de­mand as quick­ly as pos­si­ble.”

She con­tin­ued: “This time, the cri­sis is to a large ex­tent the con­se­quence of need­ed con­tain­ment mea­sures. This makes stim­u­lat­ing ac­tiv­i­ty more chal­leng­ing and, at least for the most af­fect­ed sec­tors, un­de­sir­able.”

Gopinath not­ed that the fore­cast for the glob­al econ­o­my laid out in its re­port re­flects the in­sti­tu­tion’s cur­rent un­der­stand­ing of the path of the pan­dem­ic and the pub­lic health mea­sures re­quired to slow the spread of the virus, pro­tect lives, and al­low health care sys­tems to cope.

Nev­er­the­less, she ac­knowl­edges that there re­mains con­sid­er­able un­cer­tain­ty around the fore­cast, the pan­dem­ic it­self, its macro­eco­nom­ic fall­out, and the as­so­ci­at­ed stress­es in fi­nan­cial and com­mod­i­ty mar­kets.


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