Washington, DC:
On June 22, 2021 the virtual 2021 Article IV mission for St. Kitts and
Nevis concluded.
The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on St. Kitts and Nevis’
tourism-dependent economy has been severe, despite timely government
actions that kept domestic infections in 2020 the lowest in the Western
Hemisphere. A rebound in tourism should prompt a strong recovery from
2022 onward, but risks to the outlook are significant. Containing the
pandemic and supporting the economy are near-term policy priorities. As
the recovery takes hold, policy focus should shift to rebuilding fiscal
buffers by resuming to save part of the Citizenship by Investment (CBI)
revenues, preparing the financial system for exit from the temporary
support measures and pursuing structural reforms to support
productivity, economic competitiveness, and human capital.
St. Kitts and Nevis entered the Covid-19 pandemic from a position of
fiscal strength following nearly a decade of budget surpluses.
A significant part of the large CBI revenues were prudently saved, reducing
public debt to below the regional debt target of 60 percent of GDP and
supporting accumulation of large government deposits.
Prompt government action helped to contain the pandemic’s public health
impact.
At the onset of the pandemic in March 2020, the government swiftly
restricted inbound travel, introduced safety protocols including a
month-long national lockdown, and procured protective and medical
equipment. The subsequent reopening of borders from end-October 2020 has
been accompanied by strict safety protocols. The response measures
effectively mitigated the pandemic’s human cost with St. Kitts and Nevis
having had the lowest per capita case count in the Western Hemisphere and
no mortalities in 2020.
But the impact on the economy has been severe.
The complete halt in cruise ship arrivals and very few stayover tourists
since the first quarter of 2020 compounded on the pandemic’s disruptions on
domestic activity. In response, the government introduced tax waivers,
deferrals and incentives, and the Social Security Board provided
unemployment benefits to affected insured workers. In parallel, the
regional and national financial supervisors swiftly introduced temporary
response measures, including loan moratoria, that supported liquidity and
effectively mitigated the pandemic’s financial system impact. Nonetheless,
the pandemic resulted in an estimated annual decline in GDP of 12½ percent,
and the general government’s
[1]
first fiscal deficit (4.7 percent of GDP) since 2010, financed by drawing
down on its sizeable deposit buffer
Containing the pandemic and supporting the economy remain the key
near-term policy priorities.
The government has made rapid progress toward its end-October vaccination
target of 70 percent of the population (about a quarter of the target
population is fully vaccinated and 65 percent have received the first
dose). As the recently instated partial lockdown in response to budding
community spread confirms, herd immunity has not
yet been reached, and should remain the number one priority to save lives
and livelihoods. Fiscal relief measures should be kept in place until the
recovery firmly takes root. Maintaining robust levels of public investment
would further support activity.
An expected rebound in tourism sets the stage for a strong recovery
from 2022 onward, but risks to the outlook remain significant
. We project a small further decline in GDP of 1 percent in 2021, followed
by 10 percent growth in 2022. The pre-pandemic GDP level is expected to be
reached in 2024. However, the recovery path could be derailed should the
pandemic impose sustained disruptions on the anticipated pace of tourism
inflows and domestic activity. Other risks include financial sector
uncertainties, natural disasters, and lower-than-expected CBI receipts.
Once the recovery is firmly established, the government should resume
its policy of saving part of the CBI revenues to build fiscal buffers.
As a small, natural disaster-susceptible country dependent on tourism and
historically volatile CBI revenues, St. Kitts and Nevis needs significant
buffers. Higher buffers would also provide more fiscal space to mitigate
contingent and long-term fiscal pressures, including possible further
reacquisitions of lands swapped as part of the 2012-14 sovereign debt
restructuring, and a possible future need to buttress the national pension
system that under current projections will start to run deficits and begin
depleting its reserves if corrective measures are not taken in due course.
Staff simulations suggest that maintaining an overall budget surplus of
at least 2 percent of GDP would support a robust pace of buffer
build-up.
Assuming annual CBI revenues of 9 percent of GDP, the savings would allow
reducing public debt to around 40 percent of GDP
and rebuilding deposits to close to a quarter of GDP by the end of the
decade, which would provide a significant buffer against both
macro-economic and natural disaster shocks. The room for government
investment would be modest, at around 3 percent of GDP annually, but could
be expanded by policy measures such as reducing the government wage bill,
reforming tax incentives and strenghtening public investment efficiency.
Higher-than-assumed CBI revenues could also create more room for
investment, albeit part of the additional revenues should be saved
(including as additonal buffer against contingent fiscal pressures). Lower
CBI revenues would increase the necessity of policy adjustment and possibly
additional borrowing, which would lead to a slower reduction of government
debt.
Financial sector policies should increasingly focus on building
readiness for the exit from temporary support measures.
The financial system remains stable and benefits from sizeable buffers, but
the pandemic’s full asset quality impact will become apparent only upon the
expiry of the loan moratoria. National authorities should therefore review
and formalize operationalizable crisis management plans in close
coordination with the ECCB. Long-standing high non-performing loans and
elevated investment portfolio risks in the systemically significant bank
should be more decisively addressed. In addition, a more robust divestment
plan for the remaining lands from the sovereign debt swap should be
pursued, based on updated valuations for the unsold lands, a revised
cost-sharing agreement between the bank and the government on any
shortfalls from original valuations, and a more active strategy to attract
potential investors, including closer coordination with the CBI program.
Further supervisory guidance, including on loan moratoria expiry and loan
loss provisioning, can support timely balance sheet repair of the non-bank
sector. Legislative reforms to streamline foreclosure processes would
facilitate asset recovery efforts. Continued efforts to strengthen
compliance with international AML/CFT standards and transparency and
oversight of the CBI program can help mitigate risks to correspondent
banking relationships.
There is room to strengthen productivity growth, economic
competitiveness, and human capital.
GDP per capita growth in the last two decades has been relatively weak and
convergence with the U.S. has stopped. Growth has been held back by weak
productivity growth as investment has been high, which may partly reflect
the limits of a small-island economy. However, several reforms might help
boost productivity growth and export competitiveness, including using the
CBI program to attract investment beyond the tourism sector, upgrading
skills through focused training programs, better aligning the education
system with the needs of the labor market, and making it easier for small
firms to access credit, including through reforms that facilitate use of
non-fixed asset as loan collateral.
We would like to thank the authorities of St Kitts and Nevis for the
very friendly and fruitful discussions.
[1]
The general government refers to the consolidated public finances
of St Kitts and Nevis.