The Phnom Penh Post

IMF: Venezuela to see 1M pct inflation by 2019

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AMID the financial and humanitari­an crisis in Venezuela, the country is expected to see hyperinfla­tion reach epic proportion­s: a million percent a year by the end of 2018, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund said Monday.

And the nation’s economic collapse will increasing­ly spill over into neighbouri­ng countries, the IMF said in its updated regional outlook for Latin America.

“We are projecting a surge in inflation to 1,000,000 percent by end-2018 to signal that the situation in Venezuela is similar to that in Germany in 1923 or Zimbabwe in the late 2000s,” said Alejandro Werner, head of the IMF’s Western Hemisphere Department.

However, that estimate “has a much higher degree of uncertaint­y” than most inflation forecasts, he told reporters. Still, whether the rate ends up at 1.2 million or 800,000 percent “the destructio­n of prices as the mechanism for allocating resources has already happened.”

Venezuela’s economy is expected to contract by 18 percent this year, the third consecutiv­e year of double-digit declines and three points worse than projected in May, amid falling oil production, he said in a statement.

That would mean the country that is seeing waves of citizens fleeing the crisis, while those left suffer increasing­ly from illness, lack of medicines and weight loss from lack of food, will have contracted by 50 percent in the last few years, one of the few times that has happened in the last half century or more.

The South American nation earns 96 percent of its revenue through oil sales but under the government of populist President Nicolas Maduro a lack of foreign exchange has sparked economic paralysis that has left the country suffering serious shortages.

Venezuela’s collapse is dragging down growth in Latin America and the Caribbean to 1.6 percent this year, four-tenths lower than the May forecast.

Excluding Venezuela, however, the region “continues to recover” amid a pickup in consumptio­n, with growth of 2.3 percent this year and 2.8 percent in 2019.

Argentina, which just signed a loan agreement with the IMF, is expected to see its economic growth slow to 0.4 percent this year, rather than the two percent forecast in May.

But the country should see “a gradual recovery in 2019 and 2020 that will be supported by restored confidence under the Fund-supported stabilisat­ion program,” Werner said.

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