Jamaica Gleaner

The multilater­al system must act boldly

- Justin Robinson/ Guest Columnist

THE COVID-19 global pandemic is going to trigger a major global recession. While Caribbean countries are not yet at the epicentre of the pandemic, as the global travel and tourism industry faces a sudden stop, their travel- and tourism- and remittance-dependent economies will be at the epicentre of the economic fallout from the coming global recession.

The major advanced countries around the world are engaging in massive monetary and fiscal stimulae in an attempt to mitigate the short- and mediumterm economic damage from disruption­s to aggregate demand, supply chains and the financial system.

While China is still debating its fiscal response, the United States is proposing a fiscal stimulus package of approximat­ely US$1 trillion to US$2 trillion ‘One trillion dollars’ or approximat­ely 5 per cent of GDP, while all the fiscal measures announced by Eurozone members to date amount to €27 billion, which is around 0.25 per cent of the Eurozone’s GDP. Japan is working on a new spending package of up to €30 trillion (US$280 billion), which is around 0.005 per cent of GDP), including cash payouts to households and subsidies to tourism companies hit by a slump in overseas visitors. These fiscal measures are in addition to the extraordin­ary measures being undertaken by central banks in the abovementi­oned countries.

Barbados has announced a stimulus package of BDS$150 million (US$75 million), which is around 1.5 per cent of GDP. Caribbean economies have limited fiscal space and are hardly in a position to undertake major stimulae, but doing nothing, or too little, will lead to long-lasting economic damage well after the health crisis has passed.

On March 4, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, IMF, made US$50 billion in loans available to deal with the coronaviru­s, including US$10 billion of zero-interest loans to the poorest IMF member countries. On March 16, the IMF said it “stands ready to mobilise its US$1 trillion lending capacity to help our membership”.

In the same statement, the IMF said it has US$200 billion in current lines of credit, some of which could be used for this crisis, and that they have “received interest from about 20 countries and will be following up with them in the coming days”. It also mentioned that it is aiming to boost its debt relief fund to US$1 billion from its current level of US$400 million.

On March 3, the World Bank announced an initial package of up to US$12 billion in loans for countries to help cope with the effects of the coronaviru­s. Some US$8 billion of the funding is new loans and the remaining US$4 billion is redirected from current lines of credit.

While these initiative­s are laudable, they are inadequate for the needs of the heavily travel and tourism and remittance-dependent economies of the Caribbean, which will likely not qualify for concession­ary finance. It is therefore critical that the multilater­al financial institutio­ns act more boldly to assist these economies at this time of need.

Many persons who don’t even possess a passport will lose their lives or have their lives upended by this global calamity if the multilater­al financial institutio­ns do not act in a more timely, bolder and more innovative manner, as major central banks are doing.

The Developmen­t Bank of Latin America, CAF, the IMF, and Inter-American Developmen­t Bank, IDB, should act boldly and provide travel and tourism and remittance-dependent developing economies with temporary access to concession­ary finance to help fund emergency health care

‘Caricom should seriously consider a concerted and coordinate­d appeal for temporary access to concession­ary finance.’

 ?? AP ?? The tourism and travel market is looking gloomy for Caribbean economies.
AP The tourism and travel market is looking gloomy for Caribbean economies.

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