By NEIL HARTNELL
Tribune Business Editor
nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
The government has not used all the economic stimulus tools available to it, the deputy prime minister revealed last night, having kept some in reserve in case the COVID-19 pandemic is “prolonged”.
K Peter Turnquest, pictured, in a messaged reply to Tribune Business inquiries, warned that the government will have to make “additional interventions to jumpstart the economy” once major tourist markets such as the US, Canada and Europe stabilise and the outbreak is brought under control.
He also urged Bahamians to brace for the fact that economic recovery will likely be “slow and anemic”, rather than an immediate bounce back, with the “tail end” of the pandemic taking a long time to ease.
Confirming that the government has additional stimulus ammunition in its arsenal, besides the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) $200m Rapid Credit Facility, that it has yet to fire, Mr Turnquest declined to detail what is available to it.
“It’s important that we keep those in the event this crisis is prolonged,” he told this newspaper. “Additionally, we can reasonably expect that the tail of this crisis, once it subsides, will be long and the recovery will be slow and anemic.
“We will need additional interventions to jump-start the economy once our source markets are stabilised.” Mr Turnquest, while not revealing all the cards in his hand, effectively confirmed that the $20m small business loan support initiative - and expansion of the unemployment benefit safety net to cover self-employed and temporarily laid-off workers - are just the first salvo in the Government’s plans.
Many observers believe it needs to do much more, involving hundreds of millions, if not billions, of dollars in stimulus to prevent the Bahamian economy’s collapse at a time when it has lost a tourism industry that generates more than 40 percent of its annual economic output and up to 50 percent of total employment.
While The Bahamas will never come near to matching them, the US is trying to stitch together a $1 trillion stimulus package while the UK is providing £330bn in financial support to its own small business community.
James Smith, former minister of state for finance, yesterday suggested that The Bahamas had always known about its vulnerability to a total travel and tourism shutdown but had never wanted to confront this reality or reduce its dependency on a single industry and one source market (the US) for 85 percent of its visitors.
He warned that the weekend’s wave of resort closure announcements, and temporary industry lay-offs, could drive The Bahamas’ national jobless rate as high as 30 percent with gross domestic product (GDP) dropping as much as 10-20 percent below forecast by June 2020.
“I think it’s one we always knew was there way down inside, but we never wanted to look at it,” he told Tribune Business. “In our case, 100 percent of our room capacity is off-line for at least a month.
“Our largest employer is the Government, with 25,000 workers, and our labour force is about 180,000 to 200,000 workers. In that labour force the tourism sector, directly and indirectly, may be about 50 percent. Back of the envelope, you could get maybe 60,000 workers or one-third of your labour force out of work.
“You could look at an unemployment level approaching 30 percent or in the high 20 percents. That’s the immediate impact in the next month or so. I don’t think we figured that the hotels would immediately close down. You can understand why, but it’s almost without notice.”
Mr Smith added the tourism sector’s shutdown, and resulting unemployment and reduced spending power, would depress aggregate demand in an economy where consumer spending generates up to 70 percent of total economic activity.
“There are other parts of the community that depend on their [tourism workers] expenditure, Mom and Pop stores and small outlets,” he said. “It’s going to be pretty tough. That kind of creeps through the economy in a very insidious kind of way. It’s a multiplier effect.”
As for GDP, Mr Smith said: “We’re just about at the end of the first quarter, and the original projection was for flat to negative growth this year. That was before the virus, and if we project another three months to half a year and more with the virus, between now and June it will shave 10 percent off GDP in terms of lost income.
“The US is predicting at least 20 percent for them, and we tend to follow the US rate closely. We’ll take an unprecedented hit, exceeding any of the other crises we’ve been through, I think.
“We always have to bear in mind that at least 20 percent of the economy has not rebounded from Dorian, Grand Bahama and Abaco, so they’re not making much contribution to GDP. The impact is 10 percent at a minimum, but it could go as high as 20 percent.”
Comments
birdiestrachan 4 years ago
doc did say unemployment would be 6% That was not so even in his wildest dreams. Now reality has stepped in.
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