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#3310: Haiti's economy gets worse... (fwd)
From:nozier@tradewind.net
Published Thursday, April 20, 2000, in the Miami Herald
Haiti's economy gets worse
Nation plagued by spending, inflation BY DON BOHNING
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti -- A government spending binge, the lack of a
parliament, higher petroleum prices and political turmoil have plunged
the Haitian economy to depths not seen since an international
embargo against a de facto military regime that ruled from 1991 to
1994. ``If an economist wants to see for himself what development is
not, he should visit Haiti right away,'' says Claude Beauboeuf, an
economic consultant, university lecturer and commentator with a
doctorate in economics and international affairs from the University of
Miami.
A foreign economist characterized the current economic situation as
``dire,'' with little prospect of improvement in the near or midterm
future.Remittances by Haitians from abroad are among the biggest source
of dollars for Haiti, estimated between $400 million and $1 billion
annually. Drug money also is a significant but unknown contributor to
the economy. International financial assistance has dried up because of
the lack of a parliament required to approve many projects and
increasing international frustration with the government. By some
estimates, it has lost at least $500 million in aid in the last
three years. In addition, the U.S. Congress has put a hold on what
little direct U.S. assistance was going to the government. Yet, observed
one international financial official, ``they [the government] are
spending money like it's going out of style. We're wondering how best
to react to the situation so the poor people in Haiti don't suffer.
``But,'' added the official, ``the donor community is not really
willing to give the money to the government in Port-au-Prince. We're
trying to be careful so that our actions are not seen as a vote of
confidence in the government.'' There are few economic bright spots,
although Haiti's assembly industry -- mostly value-added apparel -- is
holding steady at about 20,000 employees, construction is still strong,
and most little new investment there is going into wireless
communications. The gourde, the Haitian currency unit, has depreciated
from about 16 to one U.S. dollar late last year -- where it had been for
the past several years -- to between 20 and 21 recently. Some are
predicting the exchange rate could reach 40 to 45 gourdes to the dollar
in coming months. The gourde's depreciation, say economists, has been
fueled by deficit government spending and a growing concern about the
current uncertainty that has prompted people to convert gourdes into
dollars. The gourde's fall has brought an upsurge in the cost of living,
with inflation now running at an annual rate of nearly 24 percent, based
on a 1.9 increase in February, compared with about 8 percent for the
last fiscal year. It had been as high as 40 percent under the military.
An informal survey of market prices for several basic commodities show
recent increases ranging 12 percent for rice to 25 percent for sugar and
cement. Despite the crunch, government spending has gone unchecked,
according to economists. An International Monetary Fund agreement had
called for a deficit of 800 million gourdes for the current fiscal year.
That was reached in the first three months -- October through December.
The IMF revised the deficit spending upwards to a 1.1 billion-gourde
deficit, which was nearly reached by the end of January. The spending
spree began about 10 months ago, including road work, beautification of
public squares and other such items, among them more than $700,000 for
13 Mercedes taxis and 12 four-wheel-drive Isuzus, even though there
are no tourists. The vehicles were turned over to the chauffeurs union,
which is close to the government, and which is expected to eventually
repay the government for them. At the same time, the government refuses
to raise the price of gasoline at the pump, where at $1.60 per gallon,
it is among the lowest in the hemisphere. ``They have lost $6 million a
month in incoming revenue [because of no petroleum price increases] that
they could use for government expenditures and that figure is 25 percent
of their domestic government revenue source,'' according to one
economist. Meanwhile, a privatization program that would help attract
new investment byupgrading such rundown state-owned facilities as the
port, airport, telephone and electric companies, is dead in the water.
Under a timetable given by the government to the World Bank a year ago,
bids were to have been called for and contracts signed for all but the
electric company by late last year. Nothing has happened in months.
The World Bank, in a March 17 letter to the U.S. Agency for
nternational Development, which had been funding a technical assistance
credit for the privatization effort, said it was ending the program
March 31. ``No concrete progress has been made since last autumn in
moving the program forward due to [the] lack of political will . . . to
advance these reforms,'' said the letter signed by Raj Nallari, director
of the Bank's Caribbean Management unit. It added there there was no
reason to grant U.S. aid for the program under present conditions.
``There's no way I can see things getting any better over the next
couple of years,'' said a foreign economist. ``Even if we had elections,
it would take until next year for international aid money to start
flowing in here.''