The challenge of financing for development in Latin America and the Caribbean

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The challenge of financing for development in Latin America and the Caribbean USG and Executive Secretary of the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) Financing for Development Regional perspectives and the role of the UN Regional Commissions Dialogue of the Executive Secretaries of the Regional Commissions with the UN General Assembly Second Committee UN Headquarters, New York, 23 October 2017

Agenda 2030 proposes a development paradigm shift in a complex context Financing Agenda 2030 will cost around 3 to 14 billion dollars annually, more trade and transfer of technology Crisis of multilateralism, growing economic nationalism A fragmented trading system with more protectionism and growing uncertainty An international system with few financial regulations (tax) and weak multilateral mechanisms to regulated the high degree of financiarization

Para alcanzar los Objetivos de la Agenda 2030 se requiere entre los 3 y los 14 billones de dólares anuales en total ESTIMACIÓN DE LAS NECESIDADES ANUALES DE FINANCIAMIENTO DE OBJETIVOS DE DESARROLLO SOSTENIBLE SELECCIONADOS (En miles de millones de dólares) 7000 7000 6000 5000 4680 4000 3000 2000 1000 0 195 1200 1560 Desarrollo Social Medio ambiente Energía Tierras y agricultura Infraestructura 940 300 70 800 Fuente: Naciones Unidas, Informe del Comité Intergubernamental de Expertos en Financiación del Desarrollo Sostenible (A/69/315), Nueva York, octubre de 2014.

Financial versus real economy: the great decoupling GLOBAL NOMINAL GDP, FINANCIAL ASSETS AND FINANCIAL DERIVATIVES, 1980 2014 (Trillions of dollars) Source: ECLAC, on the basis of Bank for International Settlements (BIS) and World Bank, World Development Indicators, 2015.

Latin America and the Caribbean: a MICs region in transition Region returns to positive growth rates of 1,2% In 2016 the region s exports are projected to fall 5% and its imports 9%, completing four years of contraction Fiscal reforms have increased public income Weak private public partnerships More external private flows: FDI (change trends), portfolio and remittances

Greater access to external private flows which have become the main source of external financing LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN: PRIVATE AND OFFICIAL FLOWS, 1980 2014 (In billions of US$ dollars) 250000 200000 Flujos Privados 150000 Flujos Oficiales (eje izq.) 100000 50000 0 FDI: 52% of the total private financial flows in LAC goes mainly to natural resource and service sectors and 5 6countries Migrant remittances: 24% of total private financial flows in LAC Private flows respond to different logic, incentives and objecives 50000 1980 1982 1984 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 Fuente: CEPAL (2016)

Mobilizing private resources towards Agenda 2030 requires to change the conversation with the private sector LATIN AMERICA: INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT BY SECTOR, PUBLIC AND PRIVATE, 1980 2015 (Percentages of GDP) Multiplicity of actors and sources of finance comes with more requirements and conditionalities that requires a strong public regulation to take strategic approaches Source: Sánchez, et al. (2017). Inversión en infraestructura en América Latina. Tendencias, brechas y oportunidades. Series Recursos Naturales e Infraestructura No 184. ECLAC. Santiago. a Period 1980 2006: Calderón, César and Luis Servén, (2010), Infrastructure in Latin America, World Bank Policy Research Working Paper, No. 5317, Washington, D.C., The World Bank. b Period 2007 2013: ECLAC and BID/CAF/CEPAL initiative.

Latin American Investment rate vis a vis other developing regions LATIN AMERICA AND SELECTED REGIONS: GROSS FIXED CAPITAL FORMATION, 1970-2015 (as a percentage of GDP) Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) and World Bank on the basis of official figures.

Improved domestic resource mobilization through a decade of fiscal reforms TAX REVENUES, LATIN AMERICA AND THE OECD, 2000 AND 2015 (In percentages of GDP) 12 12 14 11 2015 2000 16 17 17 17 18 16 15 14 12 13 21 21 21 21 21 21 19 15 16 13 14 10 23 25 18 18 27 22 32 32 30 20 21 16 34 34 Guatemala Dominican Republic Panama Peru El Salvador Mexico Paraguay Chile Colombia Nicaragua Venezuela Ecuador Honduras Costa Rica Bolivia Uruguay Brazil Argentina LA 18 OECD 34 Source: RevStat.

But tax revenues are regressive: highly dependent on indirect taxes and direct taxation remains particularly weak 12 TAX STRUCTURE, LATIN AMERICA AND THE OECD, 2014 (In percentages of GDP) 10 11 Gap 9 5 4 1 2 1 1 Income and profits Social security contributions Property Goods and services Others Source: RevStat. Latin America (18 countries) OECD (34 countries)

Tax evasion and trade misinvoicing need to be significantly reduced LATIN AMERICA: TAX COLLECTION AND ESTIMATED EVASION, 2015 (Percentages of GDP and billions of dollars) Estimated evasion: US$ 340 billion (6.7% of GDP) LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN: TAX LOSSES ASSOCIATED WITH TRADE MISINVOICING, 2004 2013 (Billions of dollars and percentages of GDP) Estimated tax losses: US$ 31 billion (0.5% of GDP) Soruce: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), Financing he 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development in Latin America and the Caribbean: the challenges of resource mobilization, (LC/FDS.1/4), Santiago, 2017. [Online: http://foroalc2030.cepal.org/2017/sites/default/files/17 00214_fds1 financing_the_2030_agenda_web.pdf ]

Effective control of tax evasion and illicit flows requires international cooperation and networking Illicit flows represent a huge transfer of financial resources out of developing economies Global Financial Integrity estimated that in 2014 outflows of illicit flows reached US$ 164 billion dollars for the region Illicit flows near FDI flows (US$ 167 billion for 2016) and represent more than twice the amount of remittances (US$ 62 billion in 2016) and roughly times the amount of ODA (US$ 16 billion) received by the region. The tax practices of multinationals must also be subject to regulation According to estimates for developed countries, particularly in Europe, the annual cost of tax avoidance through transfer price manipulation amounts to US$ 150 billion, BEPS is ok but we need to go beyond so multinationals pay taxed not only in their jurisdiction but in the place they make the gains Tax havens and offshore financial centers must also be regulated and these should comply with international standards on commercial banking.

Public debt exhibits varying levels of vulnerability LATIN AMERICA: GROSS AND NET PUBLIC DEBT, NON FINALCIAL PUBLIC SECTOR, 2015 (Percentages of GDP) THE CARIBBEAN: NON FINANCIAL PUBLIC SECTOR GROSS PUBLIC DEBT, 2015 (Percentages of GDP) Note: Data are for the general government for Brazil; central government for the Dominican Republic, Haiti and Honduras. Source: ECLAC, on the basis of official figures.

Role of development banks at national and regional level should be countercyclical and stronger on financial inclusion They are a source of medium and long term resources through investment finance for infrastructure and productive and social development. Subregional development banks have significantly increased the volume of resources they provide and their share of business in respect of multilateral development banks and by increasing sectoral diversification and financial intermediation SUBREGIONAL DEVELOPMENT BANKS SHARE IN TOTAL MULTILATERAL LENDING TO SUBREGIONAL MEMBER STATES, 2010 2013 (Millions of dollars and percentages) CABEI member States CAF member States CDB member States Share provided by subregional banks 44% 37% 22% Share provided by World Bank 15% 28% 30% Share provided by IDB 40% 35% 48% Source: prepared by the author on the basis of the annual reports of the relevant banks.

Financial inclusion requires innovative practices and instruments Financial inclusion is an unfinished business for the region LAC has the lowest levels of household financial inclusion In LAC, on average, only 45.8% of adults have at least one account at a financial institution This is below the global average (61%) other developing regions, Only 45% of small and Medium Sized Firms have access to the formal financial system while 67.5% of large firms have access to formal systems. Gap of 1.5 times

Financial inclusion should also guarantee equal access by gender to the formal financial system ACCOUNT AT A FORMAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTION (% AGE 15+), 2014 (Percentages) 88.9 92.3 40.7 35.0 44.0 40.3 50.3 52.1 57.8 22.9 21.5 26.7 25.0 12.5 female male female male female male female male female male female male female male Middle East & North Africa Sub Saharan Africa South Asia Latin America & Caribbean Europe & Central Asia East Asia & Pacific High income: OECD Source: Own elaboration based on World Bank data

Public debt servicing requirements severely limit Caribbean countries fiscal space and potential to achieve the SDGs 80 THE CARIBBEAN: PUBLIC DEBT SERVICE BURDEN, 2014 SMALL STATES: PUBLIC DEBT AND ENVIRONMENTAL VULNERABILITY, 2013 (Percentages of GDP) As a percentage of tax revenues 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 BHS JAM BRB ANT Average GRD KNA LCA BLZ VCT TTOSUR GUY DMA AIA MSR 0 10 20 30 40 As a percentage of goods and services exports Between 1990 and 2008 the cost of natural disasters in the Caribbean is estimated at 136 million USD in constant dollars of 2008 Source: IMF(2016) World Economic Outlook, UNEP Environmental Vulnerability Index 2000.

ECLAC is advocating to create a Resilience Fund with debt relief and the Green Fund Relief for 2 billion multilateral debt out of the total of 42 billion dollars Establish a Resilience Fund to restore and rebuild new infrastructure after disasters Countercyclical funds for addressing external shocks since Caribbean is ineligible to borrow concessional funds to rebuild and goes to market rates Adaptation to climate change infrastructure in coastal areas

In short: to implement the 2030 Agenda Global, regional and national governance: reduction of power asymmetries in the global and regional governance of monetary, financial, trade, technological and environmental matters institutional cooperation and coordination within and between countries through RECs and UN Ensure that private flows are a key contribution to financing for development these flows must be nested in a developing strategy Consolidate the role of ECOSOC in economic issues and create the intergovernmental body for tax matters and for technology transfer