Nepal: Nepal’s economy
is entering a pronounced slowdown due to the impact of the months-long import
ban and the government's low capital spending.
photo: pratap magar / tkp
In this year’s annual budget, the government had announced an eight
percent economic growth. But after six months, the mid-term review slashed the
rate to 4.5 percent.
“The growth outlook still remains subject to an unusually high
uncertainty,” said Hem Raj Regmi, deputy director general at the Central Bureau
of Statistics, the country’s national statistical agency.
“Based on the current normal situation, we have estimated the economy
to grow by 4.5 percent this fiscal year.” Last fiscal year, Nepal recorded
5.8 percent growth.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has also downgraded Nepal’s growth
rate from its initial estimate. The IMF said the economy is expected to expand
by 4.4 percent this fiscal year—from mid-July 2022 through mid-July 2023.
It had previously estimated a five percent annual growth.
“Nepal’s
real GDP growth is supported by the ongoing recovery of tourism, strong
agriculture sector performance in the first half of the year and resilient
remittances,” according to the IMF statement issued on Tuesday.
“Nepal
remains vulnerable to shocks, from volatile and higher global commodity prices
and from natural disasters and weather variability,” the IMF said.
According to Regmi, the economy grew at 0.8 percent in the first
quarter of the current fiscal year, the lowest year-on-year growth in the past
seven years. “It was due to slowed trade, construction and mining sectors.”
Mining and quarrying and the construction sector suffered the most,
posting negative growths of 29.2 percent and 24 percent respectively.
“The main reason behind the slump in the construction sector is the
lack of cash flow," said Rabi Singh, president of the Federation of
Contractors' Associations of Nepal. “Development works have been moving at a
snail's pace. The government still does not have enough funds.”
According to Singh, the contractors have yet to get payments totalling
around Rs70 billion from the government.
“The prices of all construction materials, except cement, have gone
up,” he said, adding that the construction sector faced a double whammy: the
government fund mobilisation in development projects remained dismal, and
banks, from where contractors borrow, are facing a liquidity crisis.
The IMF, which has the mandate to oversee the global financial system,
said the slowdown in imports dampened tax collections in the first half of the
current fiscal year, and this necessitates expenditure rationalisation in the
mid-year budget review to maintain fiscal discipline and debt sustainability.
The temporary import restrictions, primarily aimed at reducing the
rapid post-pandemic growth of imports, were removed in December.
The IMF has suggested Nepal adopt a cautious monetary policy to bring
the still elevated inflation down towards the Nepal Rastra Bank’s seven percent
target and to allow the economy to grow without placing undue pressure on
international reserves.
The year-on-year consumer price inflation remained at 7.26 percent in
mid-January 2023 as compared to 5.65 percent a year ago.
High inflation and slow economic growth cause problems for investors.
Such a situation prevents consumers from spending. The overall demand for goods
slumped by 28.28 percent during the first quarter of the current fiscal year,
the Confederation of Nepalese Industries said in its December 2022 report.
The IMF said that the much-needed monetary policy tightening last year,
together with the gradual unwinding of Covid support measures, helped moderate
credit growth and contributed to the moderation of inflation stemming from the
global commodity price shock caused by the Ukraine war.
As a result, and in the context of resilient remittances, external
pressures eased, and international reserves stabilised in the first half of
2022-23.
The IMF, however, has flagged concerns about large boom-bust credit
cycles in Nepal’s
financial sector. This means credit may have grown to excessive levels and borrowers'
repayment capacity eroded due to higher lending rates.
“Bank asset quality has deteriorated, reflecting a decline in the
repayment capacity of borrowers due to higher lending rates and rising
leverage, a concern that is moderated by banks’ capital-adequacy ratios that
are above the regulatory minima,” according to the IMF.
The IMF said Nepal’s
monetary policy should focus on maintaining a cautious and data-driven stance
supported by macroprudential measures. “This will help avoid large boom-bust
credit cycles, which can create financial sector instability and are not
supportive of sustainable growth.”
It said that Nepal Rastra Bank, the central bank, needs to ensure
appropriate reclassification of loans and close monitoring of the impact of a
potential deterioration in the repayment capacity of borrowers.
The IMF has suggested that reducing the cost of doing business and
barriers to foreign direct investment would support growth, especially in
sectors such as high-value agricultural products, information technology,
energy, and tourism.
The IMF team led by Jarkko Turunen visited Kathmandu
on February 15-28.
They held discussions with a range of stakeholders in the context of
the 2023 Article IV consultation and the combined first and second reviews of
the authorities’ economic programme supported by the IMF’s Extended Credit
Facility (ECF).
The Nepali authorities and IMF staff reached a staff-level agreement on
the policies and reforms needed to complete the combined first and second
reviews under the ECF.
The agreement is subject to approval by the IMF Executive Board. The
approval would make available about $52.2 million, bringing total disbursements
under the ECF thus far to about $156.6 million, from a total of about $375.8
million that Nepal
is supposed to get.
sangam prasain
kathmandupoat
0 Comments