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IMF expects sharp reduction in Caucasus and Cen. Asia growth rate

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  • IMF expects sharp reduction in Caucasus and Cen. Asia growth rate

    PanARMENIAN.Net

    IMF expects sharp reduction in Caucasus and Central Asia countries'
    growth rate 09.03.2009 22:06 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ At a conference held in Bishkek yesterday, organized
    by the National Bank of the Kyrgyz Republic and the IMF, senior
    officials from Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kazakhstan, the Kyrgyz
    Republic, Tajikistan, and Turkmenistan, and from international
    financial institutions discussed the impact and policy implications of
    the global economic crisis.

    Prime Minister Igor Chudinov of the Kyrgyz Republic noted in his
    opening remarks that the subject of the conference is important and
    timely. After the external price shocks, the Kyrgyz Republic, like
    other countries in the region, was confronted with the impact of the
    global financial crisis. Last year, it managed to maintain sustainable
    macroeconomic performance, but the outlook is getting more difficult,
    he said.

    IMF Middle East and Central Asia Director Masood Ahmed also stressed
    that the international financial crisis and global economic slowdown
    would impact economic prospects for the countries of the Caucasus and
    Central Asia. The IMF expects a sharp reduction in the region's growth
    rate from 6 percent in 2008 to less than 2 percent in 2009, he added.

    Conference participants agreed that the countries in the Caucasus and
    Central Asia region are increasingly being swept up by the spreading
    global crisis, with countries that are very reliant on Russia or have
    large external financing needs being hit hardest. Russia remains a key
    trading partner and a major source of remittances for most of the
    region, and the slowdown there is hurting growth via trade and
    remittance channels, spilling over to domestic demand. Returning
    migrant workers may create an additional burden. Commodity exporters
    in the region are suffering from the decline in global demand and the
    sharp drop in commodity prices, while those countries more closely
    integrated with international financial markets are experiencing
    serious financing constraints.

    The external dimension of the crisis is clearly reflected in the
    region's balance of payments. The average current account balance of
    the region will shift from a large surplus in 2008 to a small deficit
    in 2009. Government finances are similarly affected. With lower growth
    and commodity prices, the region's average fiscal position is moving
    from a surplus to a deficit.

    Pressures on financial sectors in the region have intensified,
    National Bank of the Kyrgyz Republic Governor Marat Alapaev noted,
    especially in those countries where banks face large external rollover
    needs, but also in other countries not directly exposed to the global
    financial difficulties. With the deterioration in economic and
    financial conditions, credit growth has come to a halt in many
    countries, and loan losses have started to rise. The large
    depreciation of the Russian ruble has put pressure on regional
    currencies, and participants noted that countries are faced with the
    challenge of maintaining competitiveness while ensuring stability in
    financial sectors with large external liabilities and foreign currency
    loans to unhedged borrowers.

    Country authorities in the region have been proactive in addressing
    the consequences of the crisis, but participants agreed that further
    policy actions would be needed to support growth and the poor, and
    safeguard financial systems. Actions already taken include liquidity
    provision, capital injections, disposal of problem assets, and the
    provision of deposit guarantees. Exchange rate adjustment is also
    helping a number of countries to absorb the large external shocks and
    stem the decline in reserves. The appropriate exchange rate response,
    however, participants noted, depends on country circumstances.

    Some countries have room for a fiscal stimulus to bolster
    demand. Commodity exporters in the region plan to draw on the assets
    they have accumulated in recent years of high commodity prices to
    support activity through public spending and to assist the financial
    sector. The smaller economies in the region, however, do not have such
    resources to support growth and the poor. Participants agreed that
    cushioning the impact of the crisis in these countries would therefore
    depend critically on the availability of increased aid flows from
    donors, said a press release issued by the IMF external relations
    department.
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