PACIFIC ISLANDS UNRIVALLED FOR REMOTENESS AMONG THE SMALL Country Size and Remoteness from Major Markets Average GDP-weighted distance from markets (km) 16, 14, 12, 1, 8, 6, 4, 1k 1k 1m 1m 1bn All Countries Pacific Caribbean Population (logarithmic scale)
DIFFERENT TYPES OF ECONOMY Growth by Source 6% 5% 4% 3% 153% Natural resource & cash crops Growth driven by inflows of tourists and remittances Low growth, sustained by public sector 2% 1% % -1% Timor PNG Solomons Samoa Vanuatu Fiji Tonga Palau Tuvalu Kiribati Marshalls FSM Public sector Agriculture Other industry Construction Services Natural resources Overall Latest Decade, Constant Price LCU
Small Remote Countries Higher Costs of Production Additional costs of production by industry in small remote countries (Alan Winters & Pedro Martins, 24) Additional Costs of Production (Percentage of Production Costs in Median Economy) 7% 6% 5% 4% 3% 2% 1% 1.6 million people 197, people 12, people % Electronic Assembly Clothing Hotels and Tourism
Remoteness and Income Indications of an Inverse Relationship Remoteness and Income in Small Countries (Population < 1.5 Million) 8, 7, Incomes per capita (PPP adjusted) 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, All countries Pacific countries Log. (All countries) 1, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 1, 11, 12, 13, 14, Average distance from market (km)
INCREASED AGGLOMERATION AS A GLOBAL TREND Economic Activity (GDP per square kilometre)
Kiribati Budget Redistribution Aid, Fishing revenues, and RERF 212 Total revenue and grants 172.8 Revenue 9.9 Tax revenue 27.1 Personal income tax 7.2 Company tax 4.7 Import duties 15.2 Other taxes (hotel).1 Nontax revenue 63.8 Fishing license fees 58.4 Other 5.4 External grants 81.9 Total expenditure 184.2 Current expenditure 12.6 Wages and salaries 47.9 Subsidies to public enterprises 6.6 Other current expenditure 48.1 Development expenditure 81.6 Overall balance -11.4 Financing (RERF) 11.4 Almost 4 in 5 formal sector workers are public servants or public enterprise employees Primarily from public enterprises Import demand mainly derives from public sector salaries and purchases Fishing licence fees = 31.7% of expenditure Aid receipts = 44.5% of expenditure Sovereign wealth fund = 6.2 % of expenditure
Conventional Wisdom Conventional problem: Aid supports large public sectors squeezes out the private sector [weakens governance] reduces growth Conventional solution: Reduce public sectors improve the business environment private sector will grow will generate taxes to pay for public services aid will dwindle economy will be self-reliant
Rethinking Conventional Wisdom Reduce public sector Consider impacts on private sector. And even if large how can it improve public service delivery? Private sector will grow And it should, but may not generate sufficient revenues or jobs Improve business environment Yes, but keep in mind what is really needed in a small economy and that regulatory capacity (or market institutions) will be challenged Aid will dwindle Yes, some forms of aid and in some countries. But it could take new forms and modalities. Take a long term view
Saving in good times to spend in bad times Tuvalu Trust Fund Value Tuvalu Consolidated Investment Fund Value 14. A$m 16. A$m 13. 14. 12. 12. TTF Year-end Target Value 1. 11. 8. 1. TTF Year-end Actual Value 6. CIF Balance 4. 9. 2. CIF Balance (without additional donor contributions) 8. 25 26 27 28 29 21 211 212. 25 26 27 28 29 21 211 212
Five Sources of Volatility Concentration of Exports High Import Dependence Significance of Remittances Importance of Aid Vulnerability to Natural Disasters Shocks to key natural resource or cash crop exports Economic downturns in tourism source countries Fuel price shocks Food price shocks Economic downturns in remittance source countries Tightening of labour market access Demographic shifts in diasporas Can mitigate overall economic volatility Can contribute to overall economic volatility (due to donor project cycles or aid policy changes by donors) Cyclones, floods, earthquakes, tsunamis Effects of climate change
Four Key Fiscal Policy Responses / Assets / Debt Address Quality of Spending / Grants Trust funds / sovereign wealth funds Reserves Cash balances Concessional loans from IFIs Loans from bilateral donors Domestic borrowing, bank overdrafts Protects service delivery in the event of revenue shortfalls, without increasing deficits Augments value of other fiscal buffers Grants from bilateral donors Grants from IFIs (for countries as high risk of debt distress)
Case study: Natural Disasters in Samoa Samoa: Fiscal Responses to Successive Natural Disasters 8 8 6 6 4 4 2 2-2 FY6 FY7 FY8 FY9 FY1 FY11 FY12 FY13(e) FY14(f) FY15(f) -2 tsunami cyclone
Case study: Natural Disasters in Samoa Samoa: Fiscal Responses to Successive Natural Disasters 8 8 6 6 4 4 2 2-2 FY6 FY7 FY8 FY9 FY1 FY11 FY12 FY13(e) FY14(f) FY15(f) -2 tsunami cyclone
Case study: Natural Disasters in Samoa Samoa: Fiscal Responses to Successive Natural Disasters 8 8 6 6 4 4 2 2-2 FY6 FY7 FY8 FY9 FY1 FY11 FY12 FY13(e) FY14(f) FY15(f) -2 tsunami cyclone
Case study: Windfall Gains in Solomon Is Solomon Islands: Paying Down Debt and Building Up Cash Balances in the Good Years 7 35 6 5 25 4 3 15 2 1 5-1 -5-2 -3 28 29 21 211 212 213(f) -15
Case study: Windfall Gains in Solomon Is Solomon Islands: Paying Down Debt and Building Up Cash Balances in the Good Years 7 35 6 5 25 4 3 15 2 1 5-1 -5-2 -3 28 29 21 211 212 213(f) -15
Case study: Windfall Gains in Solomon Is Solomon Islands: Paying Down Debt and Building Up Cash Balances in the Good Years 7 6 5 4 3 2 1-1 -2-3 28 29 21 211 212 213(f) 7 6 5 4 3 2 1-1 -2-3