IMF Staff Country Reports

St. Lucia: 2023 Article IV Consultation-Press Release; and Staff Report

March 8, 2024

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Format: Chicago

International Monetary Fund. Western Hemisphere Dept. "St. Lucia: 2023 Article IV Consultation-Press Release; and Staff Report", IMF Staff Country Reports 2024, 068 (2024), accessed 12/6/2025, https://doi.org/10.5089/9798400270109.002

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Summary

The 2023 Article IV Consultation highlights that St. Lucia’s tourist-dependent economy has rebounded strongly after the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic and the commodity import price shock due to Russia’s war in Ukraine. Output is currently near the pre-pandemic level, while higher government revenue has narrowed the fiscal deficit. The gross domestic product growth projection in 2023, at 3.2 percent, is lower than 2022 as tourism demand continues the recovery and the economy approaches the existing production capacity. Afterward, it is projected to gradually decline toward a potential rate of 1.5 percent in the medium-term. With output approaching full recovery, the priority is to start rebuilding fiscal and financial buffers and place public debt on a solid downward trend, anchored on the regional debt ceiling, through growth-friendly fiscal consolidation and fiscal rules. In the banking sector, it is important to reach full compliance with the regional central bank’s provisioning requirements. The momentum of reforms to address disincentives to bank lending should be maintained by passing legislation to expedite loan collateral appropriation. Draft legislation to strengthen the regulation and supervision of credit unions should be passed, and the planned asset quality review carried forward.

Subject: Credit, Credit bureaus, Economic and financial statistics, External sector statistics, Financial markets, International organization, Monetary policy, Money, Public debt, Revenue administration

Keywords: Caribbean, CARTAC country, CARTAC TA, Credit, Credit bureaus, External sector statistics, full employment, Global, investment portfolio, St. Lucia economy