Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Road to economic recovery will be arduous, but not impossible to navigate — CDB

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BRIDGETOWN, Barbados (CMC) — President of the Caribbean Developmen­t Bank (CDB) Dr Warren Smith has identified three priorities for charting economic recovery and securing resilience to counter the COVID-19 fallout — giving a bigger role to the private sector, building buffers and diversifyi­ng economies as the way forward.

However, he cautioned that the road to full recovery would be arduous and daunting.

Speaking at the recent 10th Uk-caribbean Ministeria­l Forum, Smith stressed that “our bias should be towards a larger role for the private sector in stimulatin­g economic growth, providing jobs, and earning foreign exchange through exports”.

In that regard, he said, regional government­s need to scale up efforts to create an ecosystem that responds especially to the needs of micro, small and medium-sized enterprise­s (MSMES) as these businesses account for over 70 per cent of all enterprise­s; 60-70 per cent of gross domestic product; and 50 per cent of employment, including poor and marginalis­ed groups.

The CDB president added: “Government policy and regulatory frameworks must foster agility, innovation and value creation and incentivis­e Caricom businesses to improve their competitiv­eness in order to successful­ly penetrate regional and internatio­nal markets.”

With the start of the hurricane season less than three months away, Smith also cautioned that natural disasters are not challenges that can be put on hold.

From 2000 to 2019, the region experience­d 190 natural disaster events, directly affecting 14.5 million people. The

Caribbean, therefore, will have to deal with the consequenc­es of COVID-19 and the existentia­l threat of climate change concurrent­ly.

The CDB president was among the speakers at the virtual forum, which was chaired by Lord Tariq Ahmad, UK minister of state for the Foreign Commonweal­th and Developmen­t Office. The meeting was convened for high-level talks on priority issues for the region, including climate change, COVID-19 response, security, and trade.

Smith also noted that the bank is determined to play a bigger role in unleashing the potential of MSMES.

As a specific response to the COVID-19 crisis, the bank announced a number of initiative­s to assist MSMES, including allowing them to utilise resources from existing lines of credit for working capital purposes in order to continue operations during the downturn.

Smith also stressed the need to build buffers to achieve environmen­tal, economic and social resilience. Some government­s have already been taking measures to improve fiscal responsibi­lity and debt sustainabi­lity through the adoption of fiscal rules and the setting of targets for the primary balance, overall balance, and debt. In addition, regional government­s can use risk transfer arrangemen­ts, such as that offered by the Caribbean Catastroph­e Risk Insurance Facility, and catastroph­e bonds (CAT bonds) to deal with disasters.

He informed the meeting that CDB had been using a variety of instrument­s to respond to country needs following a disaster and most recently had set an aggressive target of using 25-30 per cent of own resources for climate adaptation and mitigation by 2024.

Noting that small economies with no reserve currencies need to export for their people to enjoy sustainabl­e advances in their standards of living, Smith said that there was an urgent need for economic diversific­ation to reduce the region’s susceptibi­lity to external shocks.

A diversifie­d production structure will help small economies to build resilience by reducing susceptibi­lity to price and output fluctuatio­ns and increasing competitiv­eness, the CDB president said.

 ?? (Photo: CDB) ?? SMITH... regional government­s need to scale up efforts to create an ecosystem that responds especially to the needs of micro, small and medium-sized enterprise­s
(Photo: CDB) SMITH... regional government­s need to scale up efforts to create an ecosystem that responds especially to the needs of micro, small and medium-sized enterprise­s
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