IMF says public sector reform needs urgent attention
An International Monetary Fund (IMF) team, which ended its review of Jamaica’s performance under the current Stand-by Agreement Thursday, has warned that reform of the public sector cannot be delayed any longer.
The team said that there was broad agreement on the need to accelerate the public sector’s wage negotiations, and that further delays pose significant risks and uncertainty to the government’s fiscal accounts.
Team leader Uma Ramakrishnan told a briefing at Jamaica House on Tuesday that it was also acknowledged that wage negotiations should be anchored on a forward-looking medium-term compensation framework, to sustainably reduce the wage bill and release resources for the much needed social and growth-enhancing spending. “Going forward, it is important to rethink the extensive and inequitable system of allowances and the overall pay structure in the public sector,” she said.
“More fundamentally, reforms to a large and inefficient public sector cannot be delayed any further. Achieving greater efficiency requires a scale back of the roles, responsibilities, and overall size of the public sector. Strengthening the procurement process would also ensure a timely execution of capital projects,” the IMF representative said.
In her statement at Thursday’s press briefing, Ramakrishnan said:
“The IMF team reached a preliminary agreement with the authorities on a set of policies that aims at completing the second review under the SBA. Consideration by the IMF’s Executive Board is tentatively scheduled for October 2017. Upon approval, an additional SDR 126 million (about US$180 million) will be made available for Jamaica, bringing the total accessible credit to about US$790 million. The Jamaican authorities continue to view the SBA as precautionary, and use it as an insurance policy against unforeseen external economic shocks beyond Jamaica’s control.
“Jamaica’s economic programme continues to deliver strong results, supporting high confidence and increasing job creation. All quantitative performance criteria and structural benchmarks at end-June 2017 were met. The central government’s primary balance surplus exceeded the programme target by a healthy margin, mainly from buoyant corporate income tax. Non-borrowed international reserves also over-performed, and inflation is anchored within the Bank of Jamaica’s target range of four to six per cent.
“The Jamaican economy is rebounding, despite the impact of weather swings in 2017. Growth has been positive for nine consecutive quarters, with strong performances especially in tourism, construction, and manufacturing. Unemployment reached 12.2 per cent in April 2017 – a 7-year low – along with a sustained expansion in the labour force. For FY17/18, economic activity is projected to expand by 1.6 per cent, slightly lower than anticipated, as flooding adversely impacted agriculture. Over the medium term, economic expansion is expected to be around 2.5 to 3.0 per cent, as sustained reforms yield higher investment and productivity dividends.
“There was broad agreement on the need to accelerate the public sector’s wage negotiations; further delays pose significant risks and uncertainty to the government’s fiscal accounts. It was also acknowledged that wage negotiations should be anchored on a forward-looking medium-term compensation framework to sustainably reduce the wage bill and release resources for the much needed social and growth-enhancing spending. Going forward, it is important to rethink the extensive and inequitable system of allowances and the overall pay structure in the public sector.
“More fundamentally, reforms to a large and inefficient public sector cannot be delayed any further. Achieving greater efficiency requires a scale back of the roles, responsibilities, and overall size of the public sector. Strengthening the procurement process would also ensure a timely execution of capital projects.
“There was broad consensus on anchoring monetary policy on price stability, with a flexible and market-determined exchange rate. In this regard, the team commends the BOJ for the successful introduction of the BOJ Foreign Exchange Intervention and Trading Tool (B-FXITT) in June, creating a transparent and market-based exchange rate price discovery mechanism. Going forward, the BOJ intends to limit FX interventions to smoothing volatility and countering disorderly FX market conditions. Ongoing improvements in the monetary policy toolkit and introducing FX buy auctions to build reserves, combined with clarity in the BOJ’s policy and communication, will improve liquidity management and policy signaling.
“Major institutional reforms in the financial sector are under way. In addition to the resolution regime for financial institutions, revisions to the BOJ Act are under consideration to crystalise the central bank’s mandate around price stability, along with a governance framework and balance sheet strength that support that mandate.
“The IMF team met with Prime Minister Andrew Holness, Finance Minister Audley Shaw, Bank of Jamaica Governor Brian Wynter, State Minister Fayval Williams, State Minister Rudyard Spencer, Ambassador Nigel Clarke, Acting Financial Secretary Darlene Morrison, Planning Institute Director General, Wayne Henry, senior government officials, as well as members of the private sector, labour unions and civil society. The team would like to thank the Jamaican authorities for their hospitality and collaboration.”