WASHINGTON, DC:
The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) concluded the
Article IV consultation
[1]
with the Republic of Moldova on December 20, 2021. The Board also approved
the authorities’ requests for arrangements under the Extended Fund Facility
(EFF) and the Extended Credit Facility (ECF). A
related press release
was issued separately.
The economy is recovering after a sharp economic downturn in 2020 that was
due to the COVID-19 pandemic and a drought. Real GDP growth is projected to
rebound by 7.5 percent in 2021 driven by buoyant domestic demand, supported
by robust credit and wage growth as well as strong remittance inflows.
Inflation accelerated, driven by the recovery in demand and surging energy
and food prices. The fiscal deficit is projected to reach 5 percent of GDP
in 2021 owing to higher crisis-related spending. Public debt has edged up
to 34 percent of GDP and the external position has deteriorated due to
rising global commodity prices and the pickup in domestic economic
activity.
The hard-earned progress in ensuring shareholder transparency,
fit-and-proper ownership, and strong governance in Moldovan banks has
boosted the resilience of the financial sector in the face of the ongoing
crisis. Steps to safeguard the independence, financial autonomy, and strong
governance of the National Bank of Moldova have promoted macro-financial
stability, while recent improvements to financial integrity have helped
safeguard the financial sector against illicit financial flows.
Despite significant progress, broad governance and structural weaknesses
continue to impede sustained improvement in the living standard of Moldovan
citizens. Rule of law and anti-corruption frameworks remain weak. Public
spending is inefficient and poorly targeted, with low-quality and
inaccessible infrastructure. High emigration, particularly among the
better-educated Moldovans, continues to hold back human capital
accumulation. A weak business environment constrains private investment and
productivity.
Downside risks continue to beset the outlook. External risks include a more
severe or protracted fallout from the global energy crisis, a weaker than
anticipated global recovery, and spillovers from geopolitical tensions that
could have negative spillovers for trade, capital, and remittance flows,
and complicate prudent policymaking. Domestically, risks include new waves
of Covid-19 infections and scarring of balance sheets from renewed
unemployment and business closures. Moreover, a re-emergence of political
instability, pushback from vested interests, or reform fatigue could hurt
confidence, limit external financing options, and exacerbate the loss of
professional expertise from key governmental bodies, further degrading
Moldova’s already weak implementation capacity.
Executive Board Assessment
[2]
The Executive Directors welcomed the strong commitment of the new
authorities to tackle long-standing governance vulnerabilities and leverage
broad support from international partners to advance development
objectives. Noting the challenging economic environment, precipitated by
the 2020 drought, the pandemic, and the energy crisis, Directors urged the
authorities to build on the hard-won gains from the previous Fund
arrangement and undertake the needed reforms to sustain the post-pandemic
recovery, address pressing developmental needs, and strengthen Moldova’s
governance and institutional frameworks.
Directors agreed with the need for a sound policy mix to support the
recovery and the development agenda, while ensuring fiscal and debt
sustainability. They welcomed the new budget with targeted support on the
healthcare system, social assistance programs, and business activity, as
well as measures undertaken to address the energy crisis. Directors also
stressed that the under-execution of approved Covid-related crisis measures
emphasizes the need to address longstanding capacity constraints and called
for continued CD support by international partners.
As the recovery takes hold, efforts should focus at improving domestic
revenue mobilization, increasing public spending efficiency, decisively
addressing fiscal risks emanating from state-owned enterprises, and
continuing efforts to improve budget quality and transparency. Such
measures would be vital to ensure fiscal and debt sustainability and
achieve the development agenda.
Noting that the inflation targeting regime remains appropriate, Directors
encouraged the National Bank of Moldova (NBM) to continue to act
proactively to ensure inflation expectations are firmly anchored. They also
emphasized the need to step up efforts to improve the NBM’s policy
credibility and effectiveness, strengthen the monetary transmission
mechanism, and continue promoting exchange rate flexibility to address
Moldova’s vulnerability to external shocks. Directors also called for
decisive actions to respond to significant vulnerabilities in the non-bank
financial sector, strengthen the AML/CFT regime and follow up on the
recommendations of the latest MONEYVAL report. Decisive progress on asset
recovery is particularly important.
Directors commended continued efforts by the authorities to strengthen the
National Bank’s independence, governance, transparency, and accountability
as well as the authorities’ plans to bolster the financial sector
supervisory, financial crisis management, and macroprudential frameworks in
line with the recommendations in the 2021 Financial Sector Stability
Review.
Directors underscored that decisive program implementation of structural
reforms to enhance governance and address longstanding and widespread
institutional vulnerabilities remains critical. In addition to continued
efforts to address weaknesses in fiscal and central bank governance and in
financial sector oversight, Directors called for reforms in market
regulation, especially in the energy sector, rule of law, and
anti-corruption. Such measures would foster inclusive, private sector-led
and sustainable growth and accelerate Moldova’s income convergence with its
European peers.
[1]
Under Article IV of the IMF's Articles of Agreement, the IMF holds
bilateral discussions with members, usually every year. A staff
team visits the country, collects economic and financial
information, and discusses with officials the country's economic
developments and policies. On return to headquarters, the staff
prepares a report, which forms the basis for discussion by the
Executive Board.
[2]
At the conclusion of the discussion, the Managing Director, as
Chairman of the Board, summarizes the views of Executive Directors,
and this summary is transmitted to the country's authorities. An
explanation of any qualifiers used in summings up can be found
here:
http://www.IMF.org/external/np/sec/misc/qualifiers.htm
.
|
Moldova: Selected Economic Indicators, 2017–2022 1/
|
|
|
2017
|
2018
|
2019 2020
|
2021
|
2022
|
|
|
|
|
|
Prelim. actual
|
Proj.
|
Proj.
|
|
|
(Percent change, unless otherwise
indicated)
|
|
Real sector indicators
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Gross domestic product
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Real growth rate
|
4.7
|
4.3
|
3.7
|
-7.0
|
7.5
|
4.5
|
|
Demand
|
5.9
|
6.0
|
3.7
|
-5.8
|
6.9
|
4.5
|
|
Consumption
|
4.7
|
3.3
|
2.9
|
-5.9
|
6.5
|
4.0
|
|
Private
|
5.3
|
3.9
|
3.3
|
-6.8
|
7.1
|
4.4
|
|
Public
|
1.1
|
-0.2
|
0.5
|
-0.5
|
3.8
|
2.2
|
|
Gross fixed capital formation
|
8.0
|
14.5
|
11.9
|
-2.1
|
5.8
|
5.6
|
|
Net Exports of goods and services
|
-11.1
|
-13.0
|
-3.8
|
0.8
|
-4.2
|
-4.6
|
|
Exports of goods and services
|
10.9
|
7.2
|
8.2
|
-15.5
|
11.1
|
6.5
|
|
Imports of goods and services
|
11.0
|
9.7
|
6.2
|
-8.9
|
7.9
|
5.6
|
|
Nominal GDP (billions of Moldovan
lei)
|
178.9
|
192.5
|
210.4
|
206.4
|
232.5
|
255.6
|
|
Nominal GDP (billions of U.S.
dollars)
|
9.7
|
11.5
|
12.0
|
11.9
|
13.0
|
13.6
|
|
Consumer price index (average)
|
6.5
|
3.6
|
4.8
|
3.8
|
4.0
|
6.2
|
|
Consumer price index (end of
period)
|
7.3
|
0.9
|
7.5
|
0.4
|
7.9
|
5.0
|
|
GDP deflator
|
6.2
|
3.2
|
5.4
|
5.4
|
4.8
|
5.2
|
|
Average monthly wage (Moldovan lei)
|
5695
|
6,443
|
7,356
|
8,104
|
8,619
|
9,328
|
|
Average monthly wage (U.S. dollars)
|
308
|
383
|
419
|
468
|
483
|
496
|
|
Unemployment rate (annual average,
percent)
|
4.1
|
3.1
|
5.1
|
3.8
|
5.5
|
3.0
|
|
|
(Percent of GDP)
|
|
Saving-investment balance
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Foreign saving
|
5.7
|
10.6
|
9.3
|
7.5
|
11.3
|
10.2
|
|
National saving
|
16.5
|
13.7
|
15.9
|
18.2
|
14.9
|
16.4
|
|
Private
|
14.1
|
11.5
|
14.0
|
19.6
|
16.6
|
18.7
|
|
Public
|
2.4
|
2.3
|
1.9
|
-1.4
|
-1.7
|
-2.3
|
|
Gross investment
|
22.3
|
24.3
|
25.2
|
25.7
|
26.2
|
26.6
|
|
Private
|
19.3
|
21.2
|
21.9
|
22.0
|
22.7
|
22.9
|
|
Public
|
3.0
|
3.1
|
3.3
|
3.7
|
3.5
|
3.7
|
|
|
Moldova: Selected Economic Indicators, 2017–2022
(concluded)
|
|
|
2017
|
2018
|
2019 2020
|
2021
|
2022
|
|
|
|
|
|
Prelim. actual
|
Proj.
|
Proj.
|
|
Fiscal indicators (general
government)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Primary balance
|
0.5
|
-0.2
|
-0.8
|
-4.6
|
-4.5
|
-5.2
|
|
Overall balance
|
-0.6
|
-0.8
|
-1.4
|
-5.1
|
-5.2
|
-6.0
|
|
Stock of public and publicly
guaranteed debt
|
32.7
|
30.3
|
27.9
|
35.0
|
37.1
|
40.0
|
|
|
(Percent change, unless otherwise
indicated)
|
|
Financial indicators
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Broad money (M3)
|
9.4
|
7.8
|
8.2
|
19.6
|
15.6
|
9.3
|
|
Velocity (GDP/end-period M3; ratio)
|
2.3
|
2.3
|
2.3
|
1.9
|
1.9
|
1.9
|
|
Reserve money
|
11.2
|
17.7
|
7.6
|
18.8
|
9.8
|
9.3
|
|
Credit to the economy
|
-3.4
|
4.1
|
11.5
|
10.3
|
15.0
|
10.0
|
|
Credit to the economy, percent of
GDP
|
21.3
|
20.6
|
21.0
|
23.6
|
24.1
|
24.1
|
|
|
(Millions of U.S. dollars, unless
otherwise indicated)
|
|
External sector indicators 2/
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Current account balance
|
-555
|
-1212
|
-1112
|
-893
|
-1469
|
-1384
|
|
Current account balance (percent of
GDP)
|
-5.7
|
-10.6
|
-9.3
|
-7.5
|
-11.3
|
-10.2
|
|
Remittances and compensation of
employees (net)
|
1,494
|
1,669
|
1,729
|
1,669
|
1,893
|
2,006
|
|
Gross official reserves 3/
|
2,803
|
2,995
|
3,060
|
3,784
|
4,298
|
4,056
|
|
Gross official reserves (months of
imports)
|
5.3
|
5.4
|
6.2
|
6.1
|
6.5
|
5.8
|
|
Exchange rate (Moldovan lei per
USD, period average)
|
18.5
|
16.8
|
17.6
|
17.3
|
…
|
…
|
|
Exchange rate (Moldovan lei per
USD, end of period)
|
17.1
|
17.1
|
17.2
|
17.2
|
…
|
…
|
|
Real effective exchange rate
(average, percent change)
|
10.5
|
9.1
|
2.1
|
5.3
|
…
|
…
|
|
External debt (percent of GDP) 4/
|
70.4
|
65.5
|
62.7
|
64.8
|
63.7
|
63.8
|
|
Debt service (percent of exports of
goods and services)
|
12.6
|
14.7
|
13.4
|
15.8
|
12.2
|
11.4
|
|
Sources: Moldovan authorities; and
IMF staff estimates.
|
|
1/ Data exclude Transnistria.
|
|
2/ Balance of Payments (BOP)
classification is revised in line
with the Sixth Balance of Payments
Manual.
|
|
3/ Includes SDR allocation in 2021
(about US$236 million).
|
|
4/ Includes private and public and
publicly guaranteed debt.
|
|