Bolivia's Challenges
BOLIVIA FACES GOOD PROSPECTS FOR ECONOMIC AND
SOCIAL REFORM
By Mark Weisbrot and Luis Sandoval
New report explains why external
indebtedness, pressures are unlikely to change government’s agenda
For the complete report,
click here
Washington, DC: Bolivia’s new
government, led by President Evo Morales, has a good chance to deliver on
its promises to reverse the country’s long-term economic failure and help
the poor, according to a new report by the Center for Economic and Policy
Research (CEPR). The paper, “Bolivia’s Challenges,” focuses on the
country’s external sector and assesses its vulnerability to pressures
associated with external public debt and debt relief, grants and foreign
borrowing, and trade.
Bolivia’s new government took office in January with a strong mandate for
reform -- to increase economic growth and alleviate poverty. Real GDP per
capita in Bolivia is less today than it was 27 years ago and 63 percent of
the country lives below the poverty line, despite the country having
completed numerous structural reforms advocated by multilateral lending
institutions and operating under IMF agreements almost continuously for the
last 20 years.
“There is no doubt that the policies of the past have failed,” said Mark
Weisbrot, co-author of the paper and co-director of CEPR. “The main question
is whether Bolivia’s new government will be able to pursue economic policies
that are potentially more successful – and I think the prospects are good.”
Among the reasons for a positive outlook:
-- An increase in revenues from natural gas have significantly improved
Bolivia’s fiscal situation, due to a controversial hydrocarbons law passed
last year that increases royalties paid by foreign investors and opens
contracts up to re-negotiation. The federal budget deficit for 2006 is
projected at 3.0 per cent of GDP, down from 8.8 percent in 2002.
-- The cancellation of debt from the IMF and World Bank eliminates 36
percent of the Bolivia’s external debt. If the Inter-American Development
Bank also cancels its debt, then about 70 percent of Bolivia’s external debt
would be cancelled.
-- The country’s current IMF agreement is set to expire at the end of this
month (March 2006). For reasons explained in the paper, the IMF is unlikely
to play its traditional “gatekeeper” role for foreign loans and grants.
-- The impact of trade preferences under the Andean Trade Preferences and
Drug Enforcement Act (ATPDEA) -- whether or not Bolivia signs a new Free
Trade Agreement with the United States -- is likely to be minimal, as the
preferences affect less than 2 percent of the Bolivia’s exports.
As a precautionary measure and to help smooth the country’s transition to
non-concessional and domestic borrowing, the report recommends that the
Bolivian government try to arrange a line of credit with the Venezuelan
government. Venezuela’s lending from its surplus foreign exchange reserves
to Argentina and Ecuador has been a very important source of financing for
those countries, and will almost certainly be available to Bolivia should it
become necessary. Opening a line of credit in advance – one that it is not
expected to draw upon in the foreseeable future – would significantly reduce
some risks of financial instability.
Another move that could further improve the Bolivian government’s short-term
and long-term fiscal situation would be to reverse the privatization of the
country’s public pension system. As noted by the IMF, this privatization has
created very large, long-term transition costs, as the income from current
payroll taxes is not available to pay current retirees. By returning to a
“pay-as-you-go” system as the United States has, the government’s fiscal
deficit could be substantially reduced.