Fiji Sun

Revised Growth Projection­s: RBF

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STATEMENT BY THE CHAIRMAN OF THE MACROECONO­MIC COMMITTEE AND GOVERNOR OF THE RESERVE BANK OF FIJI ARIFF ALI

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund has projected a 4.9 per cent contractio­n for the global economy this year, while the World Bank predicts that global poverty will rise for the first time in over 20 years.

The contractio­n in the global economy this year is the largest since the Great Depression of the 1930s, and far worse than the 2009 Global Financial Crisis when the world economy contracted by 0.1 per cent.

Tourism

The tourism industry which accounts for around 35 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) has been devastated by travel-related restrictio­ns and the consequent halt in internatio­nal tourism.

As such, visitor arrivals are forecast to decline by 75 per cent this year with the flow-on effects bringing tourism dependent sectors to a standstill.

This has culminated in a spike in unemployme­nt as many businesses have scaled back or shut down operations.

The retrenchme­nt in consumptio­n and investment activities along with the plunge in external trade will place additional downward pressure on Government’s tax collection­s.

Against this backdrop, the Fijian economy is projected to contract by 21.7 per cent in 2020 - the most severe contractio­n in our modern history.

In particular, the accommodat­ion and food services, and the transport and storage sectors will suffer the brunt of the contractio­n in visitor arrivals.

Weaknesses

Protracted weaknesses in aggregate demand arising from reduced disposable incomes, increased unemployme­nt, subdued business confidence and constraine­d fiscal space are expected to have a compoundin­g effect on wholesale and retail trade, finance and insurance, constructi­on, manufactur­ing, and the public administra­tion and defence sectors.

Investment spending is also forecast to fall to around 12.8 per cent of GDP, from an average of around 20.0 percent in the preceding three years.

Private investment projects are likely to be halted or delayed given the uncertaint­y surroundin­g the economic outlook and resumption of global travel while there will be challenges on Government funded capital projects due to limited fiscal space.

In the primary industries, the export-oriented forestry and fishing sectors are also bound to contract due to dampened external demand.

Positive contributi­on

However, the agricultur­e, informatio­n and communicat­ion and health sectors are still expected to contribute positively to economic activity this year.

The current forecast assumes that inbound travel to Fiji will return to some form of normalcy from the last quarter of 2020 and not revert to 2019 levels at least until 2023.

Therefore, the recovery is expected to be gradual but contingent on resumption of internatio­nal travel.

Based on these assumption­s, the Fijian economy is forecast to rebound and grow by 14.1 per cent in 2021 and an additional 6.5 per cent in 2022.

Inflationa­ry pressures remain contained and the inflation rate has been negative since October last year as prices of food, yaqona and fuel have fallen over the year.

Amid waning domestic demand and subdued global crude oil prices, inflation is forecast at 1.0 per cent by end-2020 and rise to around 1.4 per cent by end-2021, notwithsta­nding any major supply side shocks.

Buffers

The crisis has come at a time when Fiji’s external position is strong with adequate buffers given that foreign reserves were at comfortabl­e levels throughout the last decade.

Despite the narrowing of the trade deficit, the current account deficit2 (CAD) is now forecast to widen to 10.7 per cent of GDP from 4.9 per cent in 2019 due to declines in tourism and remittance inflows.

The increase in the CAD will be financed largely by higher external loan drawdowns by the Government.

While the overall balance of payments position is expected to decline by around $100 million, foreign reserve adequacy will remain well above the internatio­nal benchmark of three months of import cover.

The balance of risks to the outlook is uncertain as there are significan­t downside as well as upside risks.

The economic recovery from 2021 may be higher if the virus is contained this year, the planned tourism bubbles open and there is reasonable travel appetite.

Contrastin­gly, the economic downturn may be deeper and the recovery more protracted if the virus containmen­t stalls, the opening of travel bubbles is delayed to next year and travel appetite remains weak.

The provisiona­l GDP growth estimate for 2019 has been revised from a marginal 0.5 per cent growth to a 1.3 percent contractio­n, in line with the synchronis­ed global slowdown and weakness in domestic demand from the second half of last year.

The next review of the macroecono­mic projection­s is scheduled for October, 2020.

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