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The lost half decade in Latin America and the Caribbean

The Greater Caribbean This Week

Norman Girvan

According to the Preliminary Overview published by the United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC); in 2002 aggregate output in the region contracted by 0.5 percent and real income per person fell by 1.9 percent.

 

This inevitably impacted the living conditions of the region's 515 million people. Seven million more sank into poverty. Unemployment rose from 8.4 to 9.1 percent of the work force. Average real wages fell by 1.5 percent and inflation doubled to 12 percent.

ECLAC draws attention to the fact that the slowdown began as long ago as 1997. The Executive Secretary, Jose Antonio Ocampo, speaks of the "lost half decade" of the Latin American and Caribbean region.

25 of the 34 countries covered by ECLAC are members of the Association of Caribbean States (ACS) in the Greater Caribbean region. The GDP figures for 24 of these are shown in the accompanying table, broken down into ACS sub-groups.

13 of the 24 experienced a fall in real income per person in 2002. Of the other 11, only 4 managed an increase in excess of 2 percent. In 15 of the 24 also suffered a worsened growth performance by comparison with 2001.

The countries with falling per capita income include those of the Group of 3, containing 70 percent of the ACS population; three of five Central American countries; six of 14 Caricom countries and one of three non-grouped countries. Thus it is likely that real income per person fell for the Greater Caribbean region as a whole in 2002.

There is some consolation to be found in the incipient recovery noted by ECLAC beginning in the second quarter of 2002. If the recovery continues through 2003 ECLAC foresees modest growth of 2.3 percent for the year.

The root of the problem, as become clear from the ECLAC report, lies in the nature of Latin America's insertion into the world economy coupled with the impact of several unfavourable international economic developments since the onset of the Asian financial crisis in 1997.

Chief among these are conditions in international financial markets, the 2001-2002 recession in the United States, and declining terms of trade for non-oil exporting economies.

There is a lesson to be drawn from this on the strategic value of increasing integration within and among regional groupings such as the ACS, Caricom, Central America, the Andean Group and Mercosur. Regional integration can mitigate the impact of external changes, reducing vulnerability and heightening the resilience of the economies of the region.

GDP change 2001-2002

 

GDP

Per capita GDP

 

2001

2002

2001

2002

Latin America & Caribbean

0.3

-0.5

-1.2

-1.9

Latin America (20 countries)

0.3

-0.5

-1.2

-2.0

Caribbean (1)

1.8

1.9

1.1

1.2

ACS Members

 

 

 

 

Group of 3

 

 

 

 

Colombia

1.4

1.6

-0.4

-0.1

Mexico

-0.4

1.2

-1.9

-0.3

Venezuela

2.9

-7.0

1.0

-8.7

Central America

 

 

 

 

Costa Rica

1.0

2.8

-1.2

0.7

El Salvador

1.9

2.3

0.0

0.4

Guatemala

2.4

1.9

-0.3

-0.7

Honduras

2.7

2.0

0.1

-0.6

Nicaragua

3.0

0.5

0.3

-2.1

Non-grouped

 

 

 

 

Cuba

2.5

1.4

2.1

1.1

Dominican republic

2.7

4.0

1.0

2.3

Panama

0.4

0.4

-1.1

-1.1

Caricom

 

 

 

 

Antigua & Barbuda

4.3

0.0

4.0

-0.3

Barbados

-2.2

-0.4

-2.6

-0.7

Belize

4.7

3.7

2.6

1.7

Dominica

-5.2

-6.0

-5.2

-5.9

Grenada

-3.3

3.4

-3.6

2.7

Guyana

2.3

2.0

1.9

1.7

Haiti

-0.7

-1.5

-2.5

-3.3

Jamaica

1.8

2.0

0.9

1.1

St Kitts & Nevis

2.0

-2.5

2.7

-1.8

St Vincent & Grenadines

0.3

4.0

-0.3

3.4

St Lucia

-5.0

1.0

-6.1

-0.1

Suriname

n.a

n.a

n.a

n.a

Trinidad & Tobago

3.3

2.7

2.8

2.2

 

 

 

 

 

Note:(1) Caricom excl. Haiti

 

 

 

 

Source: based on ECLAC data

 

 

 

 

 

Professor Norman Girvan is Secretary General of the Association of Caribbean States. The views expressed are not necessarily the official views of the ACS. Feedback can be sent to mail@acs-aec.org.

January 3, 2003

 

Read previous columns:  

 COLUMNS

DATES

2002: Crime and corruption top the political agenda December 27, 2002
From Nafta to Cafta December 20, 2002
Ibero-Americans Mull Secretariat December 13, 2002
Cuba, CARICOM Cement Ties December 9, 2002
ACS raises $1.1 Million December 3, 2002
ACS meets in Belize November 22,
Flood, Sweat and Tears November 15, 2002
Can Caribbean Tourism be Reinvented? November 11, 2002
Wilton Park Conference on Cuba November 1, 2002
Caribbean-Central America Trade October 26, 2002
Two Thirds Of Central Americans Favour Regional Integration October 21, 2002
Facilitating OCT Cooperation October 11, 2002
Europe's Remaining Dependencies October 4, 2002
Be Offensive in Services September 27, 2002
Services In The Island Caribbean: Neglect Them At Your Peril September 20, 2002
Caricom's Trade Negotiations: A Daunting Agenda September 13, 2002
Regional Cooperation in the Private Sector August 31, 2002
National Politics, Regional Economics August 23, 2002
Economic Contraction and Fiscal Crisis in the OECS August 16, 2002
South American Summit: A Strategic Opportunity August 9, 2002
Human Development in the Caribbean August 2, 2002
Problems with UNDP Governance Indicators July 26, 2002
Relaunch of Central American Integration July 19, 2002
The Caribbean Sea is special July 12, 2002
CARICOM and the ACS July 5, 2002

Treatment of Small Economies

June 28, 2002

Economic Performance in the Island Caribbean

June 21, 2002

Rum Talk

June 14, 2002
Multidimensional vs. Military Security June 7, 2002
EU-LAC Summit: Side Shows and Hidden Agendas May 27, 2002
US Farm subsidies will impact the Greater Caribbean May 17, 2002

Globalization not just Economics

May 10, 2002

Tourism must be Sustainable

May 2, 2002

Eu-lac Summit: Civil Society involvement

April 26, 2002
The EU and Central America: Conflicting Agendas April 19, 2002
Europe, Latin America and the Caribbean: a Fragmented Partnership April 12, 2002
Early warning for Natural Disasters April 5, 2002
Monterrey Summit: Promises, Promises? March 28, 2002
NAFTA Parity:Certain Restrictions Apply March 22, 2002
Private Sector Mobilises March 15, 2002
The Future is Here March 8, 2002
Humanising the FTAA March 1, 2002
US-Central America Free Trade Talks February 22, 2002
Carnival realising the potential February 12, 2002
Bridging Caricom and Central America February 6, 2002
Special and Differential Treatment and the WTO February 1, 2002
Protecting the Caribbean sea January 24, 2002
Thinking the unthinkable - nuclear shipments January 17, 2002
Caribbean airline cooperation - A $60 million question January 12, 2002
A matter of Freedom January 4, 2002
Towards the greater Caribbean zone of cooperation December 27, 2001
Opec funding and the ACS December 20, 2001
Consolidating the Greater Caribbean December 13, 2001
Meeting in Margarita December 7, 2001
Aids, Anthrax and the WTO November 29, 2001
The Dilemma of the DOHA: New Round or No? November 22, 2001
Rescuing Caribbean Tourism pt. 2 November 15, 2001
Rescuing Caribbean Tourism pt. 1 November 9, 2001
Business Co-operation and Caribbean Trade
 

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