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Office of the Chief Economist, Latin America and the Caribbean

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Economic reviews

The economic review examines the economic and financial outlook for the Latin America and the Caribbean region.

Our events are a platform for experts from all over the region to come together and share their insights and perspectives on the critical conjunctural macroeconomic challenges and opportunities facing our region.

Despite continued progress on reducing inflation, LAC continues to grow more slowly than any other region of the world and increasing its dynamism and job creation potential faces new and daunting challenges. First, higher and more persistent inflation than anticipated in the advanced countries has slowed global interest rate declines which constrains regional monetary authorities¡¯ ability to loosen monetary policy. Second, higher interest payments on debt consume an increasing share of government revenue impeding progress on reducing deficits and creating fiscal space for necessary public investment. Third, rising tariffs have driven up uncertainty around the nature of the global trade order, threaten market access for exports, and call into question the nearshoring project. Fourth, increased return migration will, in some cases, stress local labor markets and dampen remittances. Fifth, organized crime, and the violence that accompanies it continues to expand, reducing the quality of life of citizens, dampening economic growth, and undermining the integrity of public institutions. Progress on the fiscal front, as well as continued productivity related reforms to make the region more able to negotiate a changing environment are needed.

The report highlights the progress made on inflation and, despite some resistance in the last mile, the resulting fall in interest rates that will ease pressures on debt service and investment. However, growth is projected to remain low, debt remains high, private and public investment is depressed, and the region appears to be missing the boat on nearshoring FDI. The need to generate more fiscal space, reduce the high corporate tax burden, and mitigate persistent inequality have moved wealth taxes to center stage. But traditional wealth taxes on financial assets face challenges due to the ease of moving and hiding assets which will be difficult to control without elusive global coordination. A viable alternative is a tax on real estate which is less mobile, easier to track, and less of a distortionary burden on economic activity, given the low initial rates. Property taxes also have the potential to reduce the excessive dependence of subnational governments on federal transfers. For property taxes to play a greater role, there must be improvements in property valuation which can be engineered through the use of digital platforms and centralized land registries.

Latin America and the Caribbean has made slow but consistent progress addressing the imbalances induced by the pandemic in an international environment that is just now showing signs of stabilizing. Despite favorable macroeconomic management, high interest rates and fiscal imbalances remain challenging while growth rates remain lackluster due to long-standing structural issues. Looking forward, an aging workforce and rising violence will increasingly complicate policy. This report focuses particularly on weak competitive forces as a source of low productivity, low growth, and low welfare in LAC. It emphasizes the need for effective competition institutions, pro-competition regulatory frameworks, complementary policies to improve the capabilities of workers and firms, and enhanced innovation systems, to prepare local industries to reach the technological frontier and face global competition. Furthermore, the report underscores the need for reforms to prevent large businesses from exerting undue political influence over policy decisions.

Latin America and the Caribbean continues to face adverse global headwinds: high interest rates, modest G-7 growth, soft commodity prices and uncertain prospects in China will all depress growth. Well-grounded policy responses have led to largely recovering employment and income losses from the pandemic and falling rates of inflation. However, the region faces the mutually reinforcing triple challenges of low growth, limited fiscal space, and citizen dissatisfaction. Expanding digital connectivity offers a possibility to make progress on all three fronts.

To maximize the social benefits of connectivity as well as to ensure that it does not exacerbate spatial, educational, gender or racial inequalities, three challenges are important to address: first, expanding coverage to the remaining unconnected areas as well as improving the quality of service; second, increasing the productive use of existing infrastructure, and; third, as with any other infrastructure "hardware," investments in "software" - such as digital and traditional skills, managerial capabilities, supportive regulatory frameworks, and deeper financial markets are critical.

The Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) region has proved to be relatively resilient in the face of increased debt stress, stubborn inflation, and uncertainty arising from the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Income and employment have largely recovered from the pandemic, poverty has receded, and markets remain guardedly optimistic about the near future. However, global uncertainty is rising, including a recent wave of bank failures in the US and Europe. Strengthening resilience, both on the health and macroeconomic fronts, will be paramount.

Progress remains pending in both vaccination coverage and health system preparedness, while the institutionality of macroeconomic policy in some countries is being questioned. The evolution of the global economy is providing two new areas of opportunity for the region: the trend toward nearshoring-moving production closer to the US and European markets-and the imperative to combat climate change, which is giving the region a new comparative advantage in sun, wind, hydro, and natural capital. Taking advantage of these will require greater integration into the global economy. Yet, paradoxically, in the face of these opportunities. LAC is becoming less integrated. Trade intensity has largely stagnated, and foreign direct investment (FDI) to most countries has declined.

Beyond the long-term structural reforms needed to reduce systemic risk, raise the level and quality of education, invest in infrastructure, and ensure well-functioning financial markets, this report calls to preserve the reputational gains of the past 20 years in terms of macro stability and streamlining regulation dealing with customs and transport to lower the cost of doing business in the region. Export promotion agencies and investment promotion agencies can also help as they have proven track records. A comprehensive approach to both shorter- and longer-term reforms could move LAC toward a renewed and more dynamic engagement with the global economy.

As the COVID©\19 crisis recedes, Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) is back to work and looking forward. Reported deaths related to the pandemic are low and have plausibly converged to global levels. Yet low vaccination rates in some countries leave them vulnerable to new variants. In most countries, gross domestic product (GDP) and employment have fully recovered their 2019 levels, although forecasted growth rates might be said to be ¡°resiliently mediocre¡±: banking systems appear sound, and rising debt burdens are manageable so far, but growth is not expected to exceed the low levels of the 2010 decade. Poverty in terms of income (monetary poverty) has largely receded with the economic recovery, but the longer©\term scars of the pandemic in terms of education and health have planted deep seeds of future inequality. Redressing these problems and undertaking the structural reforms needed to reach higher levels of growth and reduce poverty remain central on the policy agenda. The new and unwelcome entrant in the policy space is inflation. While comparable to advanced country levels and well managed by regional monetary authorities, inflation nonetheless is being propelled by forces that may give it more staying power than originally hoped. Finally, public deficits induced by the pandemic and the need to finance critical government programs and directions have opened a fiscal gap and led to constrained fiscal space. The need to close the fiscal gap, put debt on a sustainable footing, and generate fiscal space to finance necessary physical and social investments has led to a search for new revenues and in particular to pressure to increase income taxes. In looking at any tax hike, concerns center on the possible depressive effects on growth, overall progressivity, and possible incentives for informality. This report presents new evidence on these effects for value added taxes (VAT) and income taxes. It also advocates for steps to cut wasteful government spending and increase government efficiency - both to generate substantial resources and as an entry point to a broader agenda of state modernization and generating public trust.

          

Other events

Technology adoption in the region has been slow and limited, with technical and management capacities falling well short of those in leading countries. Changing this dynamic is urgent, but how can it be done?

The Office of the Chief Economist for Latin America and the Caribbean, the Uruguayan Ministry of Economy and Finance, and the Uruguay Innovation Hub invite you to join experts, business leaders, and policymakers for a thought-provoking event on the future of innovation in the region, and how it can be part of sustainable growth strategies. 

This is also an opportunity to celebrate the tenth anniversary of the World Bank¡¯s book "" which is part of the World Bank Group Productivity Project series and to preview the upcoming report, "Recovering the Lost Century of Growth: Building Learning Economies in Latin America and the Caribbean." 

You can check the agenda, content of the sessions and information about the speakers here.

LCRCE BBL: Skilled Migration and the Growth of Caribbean Nations
Presentation by: Lucas Zavala
Date:  December 5, 2023

This note explores the conditions under which skilled migration can facilitate the growth of small nations. A simplified model is developed to link migration and growth through two key mechanisms: the evolution of domestic skilled labor and the contribution of foreign earnings to local demand and investment. A review of existing evidence in the Caribbean reveals substantial frictions in both channels. Future research can help alleviate these frictions by gathering data on remittances and migration from sending countries, as well as evaluating policies that encourage return migration.

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What are the latest developments in the informality literature in the Latin America and the Caribbean region? What are the lessons and the challenges going forward?  Join the discussion in a 2-day workshop, with top academic researchers and learn about the lessons we have learned and the open questions. This workshop was hosted by the Chief Economist Office for Latin America and the Caribbean Region at the World Bank and organized jointly with the University of Maryland and the LACEA Labor Network. 

You can check the agenda, content of the sessions and information about the speakers here.

There is a revival of Industrial Policy as an instrument to create jobs, foster innovation, improve productivity and accelerate growth. Its effectiveness depends on the tools used for implementation, the process employed to target specific industries, firms or activities, and the preparedness of the economy in terms of institutions, infrastructure, and in particular, human capital. Human capital is an essential ingredient both in the design, implementation and undergirding of Industrial Policy through at least four channels. The first, and most extensively explored, is the quality of the labor force. The second involves encouraging innovation through better reallocation of inputs, including inventors. The third, pertains to the quality of entrepreneurs and managers, which leads to better decision-making and managerial practices.

Finally, improving the level of human capital within the governments enhances institutional capacity, thereby increasing the government?s ability to effectively target its tools, evaluate those targets, and shield them from political pressures and market failures.

You can check the agenda, content of the sessions and information about the speakers here.