International Monetary Fund Says Guyana’s Economy Will Continue to Experience Record Growth

WASHINGTON, DC – The International Monetary Fund (IMF) says the Guyanese economy continues to experience record growth, supported by the government’s modernization plans and unparalleled oil and gas sector expansion.

Stock market concept with oil rig in the gulf and oil refinery industry background,Double exposureThe Washington-based financial institution executive board in its assessment of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) country, said Guyana’s external position at end-2022 is assessed to be moderately stronger than the level implied by fundamentals and desired policies.

“Guyana’s debt-sustainability analysis (DSA) indicates that the risk of overall and external debt distress remains moderate, with debt dynamics improving significantly with incoming oil revenues.

“Overall real GDP (gross domestic product) growth is projected to grow 38.4 per cent in 2023 and on average of 20 per cent per year during 2024-28,” the IMF executive board said.

It said Guyana’s very favourable medium-term growth prospects are accompanied by upside risks,  key among them being further oil discoveries that would continue to improve growth prospects, and downside risks, inflationary pressures and the appreciation of the real exchange rate beyond the level implied by a balanced expansion of the economy.

The IMF said that adverse climate shocks, and volatile or lower than projected commodity prices, may also negatively impact the economy.

“The key challenges are managing large resource revenue inflows to ensure macro-economic stability and sustainability, while investing steadily in people, physical infrastructure, and institutions.

“Given the medium-term risks of inflationary pressures and real exchange rate appreciation beyond the level implied by a balanced expansion of the economy, staff recommend a continued focus on maintaining macroeconomic stability through an appropriate policy mix,” the IMF executive board stated.

It said staff assess the 2023 policy mix to be appropriate, with fiscal policy increasing public investment to address the large development needs, and broad money growing in line with non-oil GDP.

“Staff welcome maintaining debt sustainability and a balanced growth path through moderating fiscal impulses over the medium-term, while continuing to address development needs.”

The IMF said Guyana’s commitment to fiscal discipline is welcome and allows for a balanced growth path, with moderating fiscal impulses projected to achieve a zero overall fiscal balance by 2028.

It said gross international reserves and substantial saving in the National Resource Fund (NRF) are expected to continue to accumulate in the medium-term.

The IMF staff has recommend Guyana adopting over the medium-term a comprehensive medium-term fiscal framework (MTFF).

“As a fiscal anchor, staff recommend setting a path for the non-oil primary balance (as a percent of non-oil GDP) consistent with the ceilings the withdrawals from the NRF of oil revenues which aim to ensure inter-generational equity.

“ The MTFF should encompass further modernizing the public financial management framework, to contain a clear medium-term fiscal anchor, a transition path, and an operational target. Staff recommend periodic expenditure reviews to ensure macroeconomic stability and preserve competitiveness by setting the pace of public investment to take into account absorption and institutional capacity constraints of the economy.”

The IMF said that the staff also recommend continuing close monitoring of macroeconomic and financial indicators, tightening monetary policy stance, and using macroprudential tools as needed. In the medium term, staff recommends a review of the exchange rate framework to ensure that it best serves the economy.

The IMF executive board said that he Guyanese economy has tripled in size since the start of oil extraction in 2019, from one of the lowest GDP per capita in Latin America and the Caribbean in the early nineties.

It said oil production is ramping up rapidly, supporting the highest real GDP growth in the world in 2022 (62.3 per cent).

“With the help of oil revenues, first transferred to the budget in 2022, the government has started investing heavily to address large development needs. Fundamentals remain strong and there are no signs of inflationary pressures or overheating as of yet.”

It said that Guyana’s oil reserves per capita are one of the highest in the world and that going forward, oil production will continue to expand rapidly as four new fields will come on stream by end-2028.

“Sustained real non-oil GDP growth is also expected, as the government continues to invest in human capital, lower energy costs, and build infrastructure, including for climate change adaptation. Real GDP is expected to continue to grow extremely fast in 2023 (38.4 percent) and on average of 20 per cent per year during 2024-28.”

“On the upside, further oil discoveries would continue to improve Guyana’s long-term economic prospects and a construction boom would support higher short-term growth than projected.

“The main downside risks are overheating, leading to inflationary pressures and appreciation of the real exchange rate beyond the level implied by a balanced expansion of the economy. Other downside risks include highly volatile commodity prices and adverse climate shocks as well as governance concerns, which could negatively impact the economy,” the IMF added.