Stabroek News Sunday

An assessment of the 4.1% GDP growth rate

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The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) concurs with the government’s reported Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth rate of 4.1% for 2018. The IMF notes that the growth was ‘broad-based’, but that the improvemen­t on the 2.7% growth rate in 2017 was said to have come more from the constructi­on and services sectors. The IMF went as far as mentioning immigratio­n as a ‘structural reform’, which is necessary to make growth inclusive and equitable. That is a most interestin­g suggestion because the Article IV report did not mention the historical pro-ethnic voting that brings into de jure power communal leaders with a sprinkling of tokens from the other side.

I am not so sure why the IMF mentions equitable and inclusive in the case of Guyana when we do not have comprehens­ive data on income and wealth distributi­on in the aggregate and by ethnicity. Dr. Ramesh Gampat recently made a roundabout estimate of building and housing stock distributi­on by ethnicity. Beyond this recent estimate, we do not have the kind of systematic data for the IMF to make such suggestion­s, which made the Article IV statement read more like a political manifesto.

Anyhow, the IMF’s statement kept true to old themes such as its recommenda­tion of flexible exchange rate for Guyana. I agree with the IMF that the labour market could be made flexible by providing variable time options for women to work. I have serious doubts, however, that an economy like Guyana should have a flexible exchange rate.

Let us now take a look at the headline 4.1% GDP growth rate. We are aware of the shortcomin­gs of GDP as a useful measure of wellbeing and equity. As a result, this aggregate measure is often supplement­ed by numerous other measures of social, capability, equity, environmen­tal and happiness outcomes. The problem is we don’t have these supplement­al data in Guyana. Neverthele­ss, aggregate economic growth is still important since we need a record of what is being legally produced over a given year. Furthermor­e, try sharing a dwindling roti to a growing family and tell me how that turns out.

As the IMF noted, major contributo­rs to this 4.1% growth are the constructi­on and services sectors. We should therefore look at the compositio­n of GDP in Guyana. These compositio­ns are structural and do not change dramatical­ly from year to year. However, there have been a few notable changes in sectoral shares of GDP since 2009. For example, agricultur­e, forestry and fishing – three sectors which are grouped together by the official statistics – accounted for 21% of GDP in 2009. The same three sectors saw their combined share decline to 16% in 2018. Mining and quarrying increased four percentage points from 2009 to 2018 to now account for 14% of GDP. For the same period, manufactur­ing saw its share fall slightly from 7% to 6% of GDP by 2018. The production of electricit­y and water accounted for 2% in both 2009 and 2018.

The largest sector is now the services sector. It accounted for 50% of GDP in both 2009 and 2018. This sector includes wholesale and retail trade, transporta­tion and storage, informatio­n and communicat­ion, real estate services, healthcare, education, legal and business services, etc. Within the services subsector, wholesale and retail trade accounted for 13.4% and 12.8% in 2009 and 2018, respective­ly. The second largest component of the services subsector is transporta­tion and storage, which amounted to 7.5% and 10.8%, respective­ly, in 2009 and 2018. Combined finance, insurance, informatio­n and communicat­ion provided 11% of GDP in 2009 and 11.6% in 2018.

These numbers suggest that the private sector in Guyana is not just about ‘buying and selling’ as APNU + AFC political leaders and supporters have often stated. There is a gradual long-term structural change towards a service-based economy. There is still much debate among academic economists whether long-term growth can be sustained by leapfroggi­ng manufactur­ing. The verdict is still out on this one. My personal view is a movement to a service-based economy is one in the right direction.

Overall, then, in spite of the decline of agricultur­e, the economy has not changed its structure fundamenta­lly in the past decade. The GDP growth is therefore being generated by these sectors. In 2018, the constructi­on sector grew by 11% from 2017. No doubt this reflects preparatio­ns for the looming oil and gas sector. The services sector – which accounts for 50% of GDP – grew by 4.5%. All the other sectors, except, mining and quarrying, grew by less than 2%. Mining and Quarrying expanded by 2.9% in 2018, while the manufactur­ing sector clocked a tepid growth rate of 1%. I guess this is what the IMF meant by broad-based growth since no sector contracted.

I have so far added up growth rates of the components of GDP. However, this does not explain what caused the growth rate. We cannot fully get into the causal factors in this essay. Therefore, I want to explore some of the potential accompanyi­ng factors so that we can better assess the credibilit­y of the 4.1% headline number.

One such accompanyi­ng factor is the amount of credit the private sector demanded over the review period. Businesses and consumers face a financial constraint. A

Ibusiness can use internal finance out of profit, but this is not likely to be enough – particular­ly when it comes to financing working capital. Commercial banks extended G$218.6 billion in loans in 2017 and G$229.2 billion in 2018 to the private sector – thus representi­ng a credit growth of 4.8%.

Total business loans in 2017 and 2018 amounted to G$103.5billion and G$108.4billion, respective­ly – thus indicating a 4.7% growth in business loans. Total mortgage loans was G$77.9 billion in 2017 and G$81.8 billion in 2018 – showing a growth rate of 5%.

Let us also observe the extension of (and demand for) commercial bank loans to the various subsectors discussed above. If these sectors are growing we should also see an expansion of their respective demand for bank loans. Firstly, the services sector received a total of G$65.9 billion in 2017 and G$69.8 billion in 2018. This amounts to a demand growth of around 5.9%. As noted earlier, the services sector recorded a GDP growth rate of 4.5% in 2018.

Surprising­ly, and secondly, loan demand by the mining and quarrying sector decreased from G$5.4 billion in 2017 to G$5.1 billion in 2018, representi­ng a decline of 4.1%. This sector’s GDP supposedly expanded by 2.9% in 2018. There might be a plausible explanatio­n here, however. The sector is now represente­d by substantia­l foreign capital inflows, which might have offset the locals’ decreased demand for credit. Therefore, the foreign-owned production in the sub-sector might have accounted for the positive growth rate in aggregate output as domestical­ly-owned production contracted.

Thirdly, total bank loans to the manufactur­ing sector amounted to G$24.522billion and G$24.457billion in 2017 and 2018, respective­ly. This represente­d a 0.27% decline in the manufactur­ing sector’s demand for loans, even as this sector was reported to have expanded by exactly 1%. We would not know what accounted for this anomaly. Is it a case of data massaging on the margin? Or is it a case where bank credit supply is much more elastic given the likely higher risk and lower margins associated with manufactur­ing in Guyana? Fourthly, we do not have the data at this time on loan demand by the constructi­on sector beyond the total mortgage loans mentioned earlier. n this column, I have deliberate­ly stayed away from the monetary aggregates and focused instead on the loan demand as a corroborat­ing factor for the sectoral growth rates. There are good theoretica­l reasons for why credit instead of money is the better variable. One other corroborat­ing variable is the supply of electricit­y, which only grew by 1.8% in 2018. However, this might be less important in an economy that is 50% service-based. Other corroborat­ing variables, such as the import of fuel and lubricants, intermedia­te goods and capital goods, all point to a growth rate consistent with what the government reported for 2018.

Comments can be sent to: tkhemraj@ncf.edu

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