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Growth & Jobs | Nearshoring, green industry can help boost growth in the Caribbean

Published:Tuesday | April 25, 2023 | 12:05 AM
 Carlos Felipe Jaramillo, World Bank vice-president for Latin America and the Caribbean
Carlos Felipe Jaramillo, World Bank vice-president for Latin America and the Caribbean

WASHINGTON:

Latin America and the Caribbean economies have proven relatively resilient in the wake of increasing debt stress, inflation, and rising global uncertainty. But new headwinds in the form of lower commodity prices, higher interest rates in developed countries, and China’s unsteady recovery could potentially turn the region’s prospects bleak.

In order to boost much-needed growth, countries should preserve their hard-won resilience and seize the unique opportunities global economy trends offer in nearshoring - moving production closer to home markets, and the green industry, according to a new World Bank report, ‘ The Promise of Integration, Opportunities in a Changing Global Economy’.

The report estimates that regional GDP will grow by 1.4 per cent in 2023, a lower-than-expected rate. Rates of 2.4 per cent are expected for 2024 and 2025, too low to make significant progress in poverty reduction.

“The region has largely recovered from the pandemic crisis, but unfortunately, is back to the low growth levels of the previous decade,” said Carlos Felipe Jaramillo, World Bank vice-president for Latin America and the Caribbean. “Countries need to urgently accelerate inclusive growth so that everyone benefits from development, and this will require maintaining macroeconomic stability and taking advantage of the opportunities trade integration offers today.”

After recovering from the pandemic, the region has managed with relative success the multiple crises caused by the Russian war in Ukraine and the uncertainties surrounding the global economy. Both poverty and employment are mostly back to pre-pandemic levels, while average inflation, excluding Argentina, is expected to decline to 5.0 per cent in 2023 after reaching 7.9 per cent in 2022.

LEAST INTEGRATED

According to the report, the region’s overall resilience is the result of hard-won progress in macroeconomic management over the past two decades. Preserving this progress will be paramount.

However, on average, fiscal imbalances remain high, expected at 2.7 per cent of GDP in 2023, further eroding an already tight fiscal space, and debt levels are estimated to reach 64.7 per cent of GDP this year, slightly down from 66.3 per cent in 2022. Furthermore, the recent bank failures in the US and Europe introduce additional uncertainty. Its resonance in LAC’s banking system and capital flows remains to be seen.

“The LAC region remains one of the least integrated, while trade openness and FDI flows have mostly been stagnant or decreasing over the past 20 years, countries should find ways to gain attractiveness and take advantage of the nearshoring trends,” said William Maloney, chief economist for Latin America and the Caribbean at the World Bank. “In addition, leveraging the region’s extraordinary comparative advantage in sustainable energy production, commodities necessary for emerging green industries, and the region’s unique natural capital offers a new potential source of growth but will require policies to facilitate access to global markets, capital, and technology.”

The report suggests a series of integration-advancing policies countries should consider to seize these opportunities. This includes long-term policies such as reducing systemic risks, boosting traditional and digital infrastructure investments, and improving human capital, as well as short-term options such as preserving macro stability, promoting customs and transport regulatory advances, and improving export and investment promotion agencies.