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Fiscal turning point: Jamaica’s first tax increase in a decade
Prof Andre Haughton.
Business, Columns
February 22, 2026

Fiscal turning point: Jamaica’s first tax increase in a decade

THE Jamaican Government has tabled new taxes in its budget for the first time in almost 10 years, as the country’s fiscal position weakens following back-to-back hurricanes Beryl in 2024 and Melissa in 2025. These shocks have strained public finances beyond what the normal budget can absorb and have caused revenues to fall short of projections, forcing the Government to increase borrowing while simultaneously expanding its tax base.

Hurricane Melissa alone imposed damage estimated at more than US$8.8 billion, roughly 41 per cent of GDP. Reconstruction, infrastructure repairs, and disaster response have created financing demands that exceed existing fiscal capacity. Faced with this gap and committed to maintaining its hard-won progress in reducing public debt, the Government now confronts a difficult but unavoidable constraint: financing recovery while preserving fiscal credibility.

Ministry Paper #17 outlines a package of tax increases and base expansions expected to generate approximately $29.4 billion in fiscal year 2026/27, with a further $15.6 billion in fiscal year 2027/28. Even with these measures, borrowing will increase in the near term because the fiscal shortfall created by hurricane damage exceeds the revenue gains from these new taxes alone. Reconstruction must be financed, and the Government must access capital markets to close the remaining gap.

Jamaica’s ability to borrow at sustainable cost has improved significantly as a result of its stronger sovereign credit rating. International credit agencies have recognised the country’s fiscal discipline over the past decade. Moody’s upgraded Jamaica’s sovereign rating to Ba3, placing it just below investment grade, while Fitch and S&P have maintained improving outlooks within the highly speculative category. These ratings allow Jamaica to borrow at significantly lower interest rates than in the past and ensure continued access to international capital markets. Preserving that credibility is essential, as any loss of confidence would immediately increase borrowing costs and weaken fiscal stability.

The new tax measures therefore serve a dual purpose. They generate revenue, and they reinforce investor confidence that Jamaica remains committed to fiscal sustainability even as borrowing increases temporarily.

“The deeper question is not whether the Government can raise taxes but whether an economy that is not expanding fast enough can sustain them.”

The measures span both traditional and modern tax bases. A new General Consumption Tax (GCT) will be applied to digital services consumed in Jamaica but supplied from abroad, yielding an estimated $0.3 billion initially and $4.2 billion annually thereafter once fully implemented. Special Consumption Taxes (SCTs) will rise on alcohol, cigarettes, and sweetened beverages, together generating more than $12 billion. The Environmental Protection Levy will increase from 0.5 per cent to 0.8 per cent, producing $3.6 billion, while the removal of GCT exemptions on motor vehicles for public officials will add another $1.3 billion. Tourism-related activities will see their GCT rate rise from 10 per cent to the standard 15 per cent, expected to generate $11.4 billion annually beginning in 2027.

According to the Government, each measure has its justification. Taxing digital imports corrects a long-standing inequity between domestic and foreign providers. Higher excise taxes on alcohol, tobacco, and sugary drinks align with public health objectives. Environmental levies help finance climate resilience. Tourism, having recovered strongly, appears capable of bearing a heavier fiscal load.

Jamaica, however, is not starting from a low-tax position. The General Consumption Tax already stands at 15 per cent. Personal income taxes reach 25 per cent and rise further for higher earners, plus NIS, NHT and Education Tax. Special Consumption Taxes apply across fuel, cigarettes, alcohol, and other goods. Additional levies are embedded in telecommunications, energy, and financial transactions. The Government is expanding an already extensive fiscal structure.

This raises a well-established economic constraint first articulated by economist Arthur Laffer: Beyond a certain point, higher tax rates produce diminishing returns. As tax burdens rise, behaviour adjusts. Investment slows. Informality expands. Compliance weakens. The tax base itself grows more slowly.

Taxation operates through incentives as well as arithmetic. When taxes rise from low levels, revenue increases because economic activity continues to expand. When taxes rise from already elevated levels, economic behaviour adjusts. Businesses delay investment. Consumers reduce formal transactions. Capital becomes more cautious and, in some cases, more mobile. In such circumstances the State collects more revenue per transaction but the number of transactions themselves grows more slowly. Furthermore, increasing taxes is a contractionary fiscal policy that is already in itself incongruent to economic growth.

Jamaica’s economic stability has been built on strong but narrow foundations. Public debt has fallen sharply from over 140 per cent of GDP in 2013 to approximately 70 per cent today. International reserves exceed US$4 billion. However, the country has not yet been able to generate the level of productivity and economic expansion required to sustain higher long-term growth, and the economy continues to depend heavily on external inflows such as tourism and remittances.

The deeper challenge extends beyond fiscal adjustment. Sustainable fiscal strength ultimately depends on expanding the productive capacity of the economy. Countries escape fiscal constraint by increasing output, investment, and exports. Growth expands the tax base naturally. Productivity strengthens fiscal capacity without increasing tax rates. The next phase is economic transformation.

This requires sustained investment in energy infrastructure, logistics systems, manufacturing capacity, and technological development. It requires improving productivity and expanding domestic production. It requires building an economy capable of generating sustained internal growth. Taxation can support recovery. Borrowing can finance reconstruction, creditworthiness preserves stability, however, it is productivity that will determine prosperity. Jamaica has demonstrated its ability to achieve fiscal stability. The country now stands at a decisive moment when its long-term fiscal strength will be determined not by its ability to access capital but its ability to expand production through increased productivity.

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