Arab Times

Portugal logs lowest deficit since ‘return’ to democracy

-

LISBON, March 25, (RTRS): Portugal slashed its budget deficit last year by more than half to 2.1 percent of gross domestic product, the lowest level since its return to democracy in 1974 and beating the 2.5 percent target agreed with Brussels.

Public debt rose, however, an issue of come concern in a country that only recently needed an internatio­nal bailout to keep afloat.

Official data showed on Friday the budget gap ended for the first time below the European Union’s 3 percent threshold, reinforcin­g the government’s hopes to exit the bloc’s excessive deficit warning procedure later this year as it expects the gap to narrow further.

“Portugal will finally leave the excessive deficit procedure behind. The exit will reinforce confidence in our economy at home and abroad, increasing our capacity to invest in reforms that boost our competitiv­eness,” Finance Minister Mario Centeno told a news conference.

“In the years to come our deficit will remain clearly below what is required,” he said, referring to the 3 percent limit.

The primary balance, discountin­g debt payments, was a surplus of 2.2 percent of GDP last year.

If Eurostat, the European Union’s statistics agency, confirms the estimates, the European Commission is likely to discuss Portugal’s case in April to see whether to end the procedure of strict deadlines and targets applied to countries that fail to comply with the gap limit.

Portugal’s National Statistics Institute put this year’s deficit at 1.6 percent, in line with the target set in this year’s budget. In 2015, the deficit was 4.4 percent.

Still, the country’s gross public debt rose last year to 130.4 percent of GDP from 129 percent in 2015, ending just short of 2014’s record high of 130.6 percent. The INE said it expected it to fall to 128.5 percent this year.

“The headline (deficit) number is obviously positive ... However, it is only when the debt-GDP ratio begins to decline that we can talk about an improvemen­t in the country’s economic and financial conditions,” said Filipe Garcia, head of Informacao de Mercados Financeiro­s consultant­s in Porto.

The minority Socialist government, which came to power in late 2015 and is backed in parliament by the hard left, has managed to combine budget consolidat­ion with a reversal of the austerity measures imposed by previous administra­tion under the country’s 2011-14 internatio­nal bailout.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait