Country Report Costa Rica March 2009
| Publication Date | March 2009 |
|---|---|
| Publisher | EIU |
| Product Type | Report |
| Pages | 23 |
| ISBN Number | not applicable |
| Product Code | EIU01387 |
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Summary
Outlook for 2009-10
- The success of the government's policies to mitigate the economic downturn will be a crucial determinant of the ruling party's prospects in the February 2010 general elections. The PLN is early favourite to win the elections.
- Economic policy will focus on the recently announced Plan Escudo, an ambitious emergency economic stimulus and social protection plan.
- We forecast that the non-financial public-sector (NFPS) balance will turn from a small (0.2% of GDP) surplus in 2008 to deficits of 4% of GDP in 2009 and 3.7% of GDP in 2010.
- The global economic outlook continues to deteriorate at an alarming rate. We now forecast that global GDP will contract by 0.8% (down from a rise of 0.2% in our February report), with the recession synchronised across all regions.
- A worsening domestic outlook has prompted a further downgrade to our forecast for Costa Rican growth, to a contraction of 0.8% in 2009 (down from last month's forecast of 0.5% growth).
- After a sharp widening in 2008, the current-account deficit is forecast to narrow in 2009, to 4.3% of GDP, owing mainly to falling domestic demand and lower import prices.
Monthly review
- The PLN government's popularity has rebounded in early 2009, and with the opposition PAC still losing popularity, the PLN is early favourite to win next year's elections.
- The government has started to implement measures contained within the Plan Escudo, which was launched in January. These include the reduction of interest rates offered by state banks.
- Nine companies have applied for permits to provide telecommunications services following the opening of the sector mandated by the DR-CAFTA, which came into effect for Costa Rica in January.
- A sharp fall in revenue from customs taxes led to a widening of the fiscal deficit in January. This has led the Ministry of Finance to announce measures to strengthen tax collection and consider some expenditure cuts.
- Economic growth fell again in December, according to the monthly index of economic activity, the third consecutive month of falling output.
- Falling domestic demand and lower average oil prices led import spending to fall by 33.3% year on year in January, with all categories of import seeing a sharp decline.
Source: Country Report
This report covers the following industry codes:
SIC Code: 49
NAICS Code: 22
Content
- Highlights
- Outlook for 2009-10: Domestic politics
- Outlook for 2009-10: International relations
- Outlook for 2009-10: Policy trends
- Outlook for 2009-10: Fiscal policy
- Outlook for 2009-10: Monetary policy
- Outlook for 2009-10: International assumptions
Delivery Details
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