Jamaica: el FMI aprueba un crédito de 68,8 millones de dólares
IMF approves US$68.8 million disbursement to Jamaica
The executive board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) on Wednesday completed the fifth review of Jamaica’s economic performance under the program supported by a four-year, SDR 615.38 million (about US$932 million at the time of approval) arrangement under the Extended Fund Facility (EFF).
The completion of the review enabled an immediate disbursement of an amount equivalent to SDR 45.95 million (about US$68.8 million). The Board made the decision based on lapse-of-time procedures, without a formal meeting. The EFF arrangement was approved on May 1, 2013.
According to the IMF, the program is on track. Jamaica’s economic performance under the authorities’ economic program supported by the EFF has remained strong. All quantitative performance criteria for end-June 2014, as well as the continuous quantitative program targets and structural benchmarks, were met. Gains from Jamaica’s demanding reform program are emerging.
Jamaica has recently regained market access — raising valuable financial resources — and its external position has strengthened, helped by gains in competitiveness. Earlier projections of a gradual pickup in economic activity and employment and moderating inflation are playing out, although dampened in the near term by the effects of the recent drought. Growth is projected to reach just over 1 percent in 2014/15, while inflation is trending down to about 8 percent. However, downside risks remain relatively high.
Comprehensive and timely implementation of the government’s economic strategy — supported by the international community — should foster recovery, job creation and declining poverty. A swift removal of regulatory and financial impediments to investment would provide a much needed boost to growth and job creation, while keeping Jamaica’s public debt on a sustainable path is critical for growth over the medium term.
In that regard, locking in the substantial gains from the fiscal consolidation hinges on accelerating the modernization of the public sector, enhancing the efficiency of public expenditure, and strengthening revenue administration. To deliver private financing for growth-enhancing investment, the authorities’ agenda to reform the financial sector aims to continue improving its regulatory and supervisory framework.