Economist: Barbados foreign reserves in free fall

(Barbados Nation) The Freundel Stuart administration is in danger of losing control of the BD$2 to US$1 exchange rate, says former Central Bank Governor Dr DeLisle Worrell.

He argues this was likely if Government continues to spend more than it earns, as it has been doing for much of the last decade.

“The Central Bank’s foreign reserves continue to be in free fall, with the failure of Government’s corrective strategy. The current costs of Government operations exceeded revenues by $288 million between April and December last year, and Central Bank’s lending to the public sector increased by $372 million during the year. Unless this gap is closed foreign reserves (forex) will be exhausted and Government will lose control of the exchange rate,” Worrell warned in his March Economic Letter released this week.

Barbados’ economy needs an adequate amount of forex – 12 weeks of imports being the benchmark – to enhance confidence in the stability of Government’s monetary policies and to protect our exchange rate. Without it we would be unable to comfortably pay our international debts, buy oil to power the country, food, essential medicines and equipment, and defend our BD$2 to US$1 currency peg.

Worrell, who was fired last February by Minister of Finance Chris Sinckler, said the accelerating loss of foreign reserves in 2017 is evidence of the failure of Government’s adjustment policies. Reserves, which fell $246 million in 2016, declined by $274 million in 2017. Since December 2012 the Central Bank has lost over $1 billion of foreign exchange.

He contended that last May’s budget was intended to arrest the decline in forex which had driven the level below the critical minimum of 12 weeks of imports at December 2016. The main adjustment tool was the National Social Responsibility Levy (NSRL), which was expected to provide $218 million in tax receipts. In fact, between April and December 2017 the NSRL yielded $97 million.

“The NSRL has had an adverse effect on economic growth. In the absence of the tax, the Barbados economy might have achieved another 0.5 per cent on top of the one per cent growth rate actually attained. That represents a loss of about $50 million of national income. The foreign exchange fee was [also] introduced in the May Budget to complement the NSRL by slowing the outflow of foreign exchange.

“However, shortages of foreign exchange persisted, mainly because Government was obliged to repay $137 million of foreign debt. Foreign lenders were unwilling to roll over this debt because of Government’s poor credit rating. The third element of adjustment in the May 2017 Budget was an across-the-board reduction of $82 million in Government expenditure. Actually, total expenditure increased by $57 million between April and December. The largest items of expenditure are wages, subsidies to state enterprises and interest on money Government borrowed to fund previous years’ deficits,” Worrell stated.

The economist further noted that Government’s much touted Barbados Sustainable Recovery Plan 2018 does not address this issue. That plan has been described by the Barbados Private Sector Association and the Barbados Workers Union – both signatories to it – as a framework which now needs an implementation strategy to make it an operational plan.

Despite this deteriorating situation, Worrell thinks all is not yet lost for Barbados. He said things can improve if “the emergency taxes that are strangling private business” are removed, and public sector spending is cut to eliminate the current account deficit.

“In my paper The Road to Prosperity I have calculated that an immediate cut of 10 per cent in subsidies, and redundancy of 1,500 public workers would suffice. That will halt the foreign reserves slide and open the way for discussions with the IMF on a programme of financial support for a practical, well-designed strategy for public sector renewal. The full implementation of the seven-point strategy recommended in The Road to Prosperity will cure our economy of the twin illnesses of Government overspending and public sector ineptitude, and release the pent-up enterprise of our dynamic private sector.

“Barbadians must insist that our Government preserve our country’s reputation for taking tough short-term measures in the interest of future prosperity,” Worrell concluded.