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Business

Gov't to start IMF negotiations next month

BY JULIAN RICHARDSON Assistant business co-ordinator richardsonj@jamaicaobserver.com

Wednesday, January 25, 2012



The Government will begin negotiating a new agreement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) as early as next month, says Finance Minister Dr Peter Phillips.

Negotiating a new IMF deal is a key priority of the Portia Simpson Miller-led administration which swept into power less than a month ago, and Phillips announced yesterday that preliminary talks with an IMF delegation over the last week have set the foundation for that goal to be accomplished.

"We have mapped plans for continuing discussions with the IMF mission with a view to ultimately begin negotiations in the not too distant future and conclude as best as we can a set of understanding and an agreement on a programme," Phillips told journalists at a press conference in the finance ministry's executive boardroom.

Outlining the desired timeline going forward to reach a new IMF agreement, Phillips said that after next week's Cabinet retreat he will lead a team to Washington to meet with officials of the fund and other multilaterals, after which he expects an IMF mission to return later in February to undertake a more detailed analysis and hopefully begin negotiations for a new programme with the country.

Phillips said that both the IMF and Government agreed during the recent talks that the challenges faced by the country, in the face of worsening fiscal accounts and a slowdown in the global economy, needed to be addressed urgently.

"At heart we recognise that there has been a worsened fiscal situation in the near term and that there are significant weaknesses in our economic position in the medium term which has increased significantly Jamaica's vulnerability to economic shocks," he noted.

Phillips added that the Government is determined to get key reform programmes underway as fast as possible, including measures related to taxation, pension and the public sector wage bill.

"We think getting these reforms on the way is a matter of some urgency because the problems in the global economy exist now, our fiscal accounts are worsening now and we have to take control as fast as we can," declared the finance minister.

The IMF revised its 2012 global growth forecasts downward by 75 basis points on Monday to 3.25 per cent, slower than the four per cent pace it projected in September. Luis Brewer, head of the IMF delegation that visited Jamaica, noted that the country faces a daunting challenge against the background of the international economic uncertainties coupled with the country's high debt and low growth profile.

"I think we have made significant progress in the sense that we have a common view of the significant challenges that Jamaica faces in the context of an international economy that is in a dangerous state," said Brewer.

"I think Jamaicans have a very clear idea of where they stand and how they should proceed to advance in this very uncertain and volatile (time)," added the IMF executive.

The previous Jamaica Labour Party administration approached and got a US$1.23-billion stand-by agreement with the IMF in 2010. However, it was heavily criticised by the then Opposition for not meeting the targets set by the lending institution.

Phillips, then the Opposition spokesman on finance, had said that if his People's National Party were returned to office it would renegotiate the agreement.



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COMMENTS (9)

Crucial Bunny
1/28/2012
How is Jamaica going to pay off debt and reduce the working population and the same time? It cant be done.
Its like this. The IMF are the leeches on your back. Wherever they go things do not turn out well. My advice would be ''pay them what you owe and become self efficient. This organization is meant to do one thing and that's destroy a countries economy. Jamaica would do well to learn a few lessons from Cuba. A country that's been living under the yoke of sanctions for over 40 years.
diehardr sickheads
1/26/2012
Blaming or justifying past actions do not solve problems.The reality is jamaican voting pattern is base on like or hate or who can make life eaiser without individual sacrifice.The reality is jamaica is not earning,enough we are living above our means we dont read .maybe cutting of some of the benifits instead of making people lose work could be look at. my problem with the pnp is that they still believe in socalism,problem is jlp aproach to the freemarket was a top down and not a bottom up.
Norman Lee
1/25/2012
A new agreement would be helpful but collecting the taxes would go a long way to ease the pressure. Peter should tell us what was the performance of Audley's "cash back" tax collection program. He should consider some special agency to collect overdue taxes using all the means and measures available. This freeloading must stop!
Noel Richards
1/25/2012
I will give Peter Phillips credit for being more open than I expected about JA's general position. Acknowledging and diagnosing the problem is the first critical step towards the fix.
rohan thompson
1/25/2012
Hmm, PP u seem to have a grasp a wah really a gwaan. We await your budget to really get a feel for things.@red ants very good points, its not often that we agree, i suppose we will find out later how they will tackle energy.
Izett Gordon
1/25/2012
When CEOs become government leaders there is bound to be a problem. They are used to slashing budgets by laying off workers with a view to shore up the bottom-line. Is there any wonder then why the policeman answered Lucky Dube's question in the song Prisoner, "they don't build schools anymore, all them build are prisons." However, it ought not to escape us that it takes much more to finance a prisoner than three students. Focusing on the bottom-line can be dangerous to the nations health.
Meat Head
1/25/2012
Hopefully, the IMF prescription will not be Greek-like, cross-the-board austerity, because it does not lead to growth. That said, after 50 years, one would think that we would know that when we let political considerations dominate how we spend our resources, the economy suffers. Let's be smart for a change and invest in the areas of the economy most likely to generate a return, even if it upsets parts of the base. The country will be better off and the base will eventually be happy.
RED ANTS
1/25/2012
@Ramon,Reducing the workforce should be a last resort.that seem to be the bitter medicine in which was planning which you are supporting.No man can borrow their way out of debt because the more you borrow is the more you owe.You never asked these question when your party was in power,AS promise in 2007 he would increase production to drive the economy,he ended up borrowing more.Too much waste taking place,gov't spending too much on importation,energy and a lot more i could name.
Ramon Castro
1/25/2012
It is easy to be critical when in opposition. However, the real test come when you have to steer the economic ship. Does Jamaica generate enough revenue to meet its domestic financial obligations such as paying public sector workers and paying off years of borrowing from international lending agencies? Can the country borrow its way out of the economic doldrums? One way to get the country's financial house in order is to reduce the size of the public workforce and reduce bureaucracy and waste.

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