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Eastern Caribbean stability faces a narrowing margin for error
Business
February 11, 2026

Eastern Caribbean stability faces a narrowing margin for error

THE Eastern Caribbean Currency Union’s role as a pillar of regional stability is being tested as high public debt and uneven fiscal discipline narrow governments’ ability to respond to shocks, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) said.

The pressure is not the result of a new crisis, but of a familiar imbalance. Economic growth has returned since the pandemic; fiscal space has not. Tourism and construction have lifted output, inflation has eased, and external buffers remain solid. Yet debt ratios have stopped declining, leaving governments more exposed just as growth begins to slow and global risks intensify.

Regional output is estimated to have expanded by about 3 per cent in 2025, driven largely by tourism operating near capacity. That pace is expected to moderate. Over the medium term, growth is projected to slow to around 2½ per cent as weak productivity growth, adverse demographics and limited room for public investment weigh on expansion. In that environment, the capacity to absorb future shocks — from hurricanes to global travel disruptions — is narrowing.

Public debt lies at the centre of the concern. Union-wide debt reduction has stalled, putting at risk the long-standing regional target of lowering public debt to 60 per cent of gross domestic product by 2035. While repeated natural disasters and development spending pressures explain part of the slippage, the IMF points to a structural shortfall: most member states have yet to implement binding fiscal frameworks that align annual budgets with the regional debt anchor.

The result is a currency union anchored by monetary discipline but weakened by fragmented fiscal policy. Without stronger coordination, the fund warns, adjustment is repeatedly deferred at the national level, eroding collective resilience and placing greater strain on the quasi-currency-board arrangement that underpins confidence in the Eastern Caribbean dollar.

Financial sector vulnerabilities add another layer of risk. Banks remain broadly capitalised, but non-performing loans continue to exceed supervisory benchmarks, with many impaired assets unresolved for years. Weak insolvency and foreclosure regimes slow balance sheet repair, while oversight of non-bank institutions — particularly credit unions — remains uneven across jurisdictions.

These frictions are constraining credit at a time when investment is needed to lift productivity. The IMF is urging tougher enforcement of provisioning and write-off rules, faster use of regional asset-management mechanisms, and the establishment of a regional financial standards body to harmonise supervision and reduce regulatory gaps.

For now, confidence in the system is holding. The Eastern Caribbean Central Bank’s reserve position remains stable, the currency-backing ratio is high, and large current-account deficits continue to be financed mainly through foreign direct investment. Even so, the IMF assesses the region’s external position as weaker than implied by fundamentals, underscoring its reliance on continued capital inflows and favourable global conditions.

Looking ahead, the policy challenge shifts from stabilisation to resilience. With tourism near capacity and fiscal buffers thin, future growth will depend less on demand and more on structural change — including deeper trade integration, improved shipping and airlift connectivity, streamlined administrative processes and reduced labour-mobility frictions.

Citizenship-by-investment programmes also feature prominently in the assessment. While they have supported investment and post-disaster recovery, uneven governance and limited transparency complicate fiscal planning and risk analysis. Strengthening regional oversight is therefore central to both macroeconomic management and credibility.

The IMF’s message is not that the currency union is in immediate danger, but that its margin for error is shrinking. Without deeper fiscal coordination and stronger regional accountability, the system risks settling into a fragile equilibrium — stable, but increasingly constrained.

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