Returning to sustainability
4. The authorities have recognized the critical nature of their
financial situation and have expressed a firm commitment to restoring
sustainability. In this context, they recently announced the
intention to approach their external private sector creditors to seek
debt service relief.
5. In the mission's view, a credible plan for returning to fiscal
and external viability, safeguarding the currency peg, and creating
conditions for durable economic growth would have to contain at least
three key elements:
Policies to address immediate risks: To mitigate the
risk that external payments difficulties arise while a medium term
framework is being formulated and consultations with creditors take
place, ongoing efforts to secure bilateral and multilateral lending
should be combined with a tightening of macroeconomic policies.
A sustainable medium-term framework: There is a need
to design and implement a macroeconomic framework, which-together with
possible relief from a debt operation-closes the large projected
medium-term financing gaps and reduces the public debt burden to safer
levels.
Supportive structural reforms: A comprehensive
package of fiscal, monetary and financial sector reforms should be
implemented to facilitate the required medium-term effort and increase
the resilience of the economy against adverse shocks.
Addressing immediate risks
6. The low level of reserves warrants a tighter macroeconomic policy stance in the short term.
While the foreign financing gap for 2006 is largely closed, further
steps to contain demand and reduce balance of payments pressures are
still justified because of very large financing needs next year and the
importance to demonstrate policy commitment as creditors are being
approached. In this regard, the most recent increase in reserve
requirements (effective September 1) is welcome, although the
authorities need to monitor monetary developments closely and take
additional action if this proves insufficient to mop up excess
liquidity. In the fiscal area, the better-than-expected budget
execution during March-June should be maintained during the remainder
of the fiscal year to achieve a primary surplus of at least 3˝ percent
of GDP. To this end, restraint in current and capital expenditures
remains critical, along with a successful implementation of the General
Sales Tax (GST), which has so far been satisfactory. The authorities
should continue to resist pressures to dilute the GST base and remain
prepared to adopt corrective actions should its revenue yield fall
short of projections.
Developing a sustainable medium-term framework
7. The authorities' commitment to fiscal and balance of payments
sustainability should be reflected in a credible medium-term
macroeconomic framework. In this context, the framework should aim
at eliminating balance of payments and fiscal financing gaps over the
next five years, significantly reducing the debt burden, and allowing
for a recovery of international reserves.
8. The medium-term framework could build upon a combination of
additional fiscal effort, continued monetary restraint, and relief from
the envisaged debt operation. To illustrate this point, the mission
simulated an active scenario that comprises both a front-loaded fiscal
effort to raise the primary surplus to about 4˝ percent of GDP during
2007-09 and about 4 percent of GDP thereafter, and monetary restraint
to keep the expansion of commercial bank credit below nominal GDP
growth. This adjustment seems feasible without compromising the
prospects for economic growth, and would require that the authorities
save the bulk of currently projected petroleum revenues. In addition,
current government expenditure-particularly the public wage bill-would
need to rise at a significantly lower rate than nominal GDP. On the
assumption that debt service relief from private creditors will become
available, this package could achieve the goals of filling the
financing gaps, gradually reducing the public debt burden and
replenishing international reserves.
9. A swift and successful completion of the intended debt operation would be a critical component of the outlined framework.
The mission commends the government for pursuing agreement on this
matter in the context of a close and constructive dialogue with its
private creditors.
Supportive structural reforms
10. To help maintain the required fiscal effort over a prolonged
period of time, the authorities should undertake a broad set of
supportive structural fiscal reforms, including:
o Modernizing tax administration: After the
GST-implementation phase is completed, the authorities should seek to
strengthen their tax administration, including through a reorganization
away from tax types and toward business processes and common functions,
such as taxpayer services, audit, and collection enforcement.
o Tax reform: To support the buoyancy of the tax system in
the medium term, the authorities should streamline their system of
fiscal incentives, including by eliminating business tax holidays under
the Fiscal Incentives Act, terminating import duty exemptions for
specific organizations, and converting import licenses into tariffs. To
ensure a more stable level of revenues, the authorities should also
substitute the revenue replacement duty on fuels with a specific excise
tax, and establish an automatic adjustment mechanism for fuel prices.
o Pension reform: The non-contributory pension plan for
public servants (PSP) harbors substantial liabilities for the
government budget in the future, and the authorities should consider a
phase-out of the PSP for new entrants (who would still be covered by
the general social security system) and parametric adjustments, such as
introducing a contribution from beneficiaries, increasing the years of
required service, and/or raising the retirement age.