* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Guatemala
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Competitiveness and Growth in Guatemala D. Artana, S. Auguste, M. Cuevas, and J. Diaz Washington DC, September 2007 CIEN - FIEL 1 Slow Economic Growth Per capita real GDP Real GDP 1950-1980 2.2 5.0 1980-1990 -1.5 0.9 1990-2006 1.1 3.2 1950-2006 1.3 3.9 Remark: After the lost decade and civil war, other countries in the Central America region recovered or exceed pre 80s growth rates. Guatemala did not. Why? What has changed in Guatemala or the world? CIEN - FIEL 2 Slow Growth Across the Board… Potential growth of GDP by economic sector 0.12 0.10 0.08 0.06 0.04 0.02 INDUSTRY AGRICULTURE CIEN - FIEL 2004 2001 1998 1995 1992 1989 1986 1983 1980 1977 1974 1971 (0.04) (0.06) 1968 (0.02) 1965 - SERVICES 3 Low Investment in Guatemala • GFCF/GDP – Guatemala: =13% – Latin American Average= 23% – Fast growing economies in East Asia=22% • Average private GFCF/GDP 1970-2003 – Latam=16% – Guatemala= 10%. CIEN - FIEL 4 Private Gross Fixed Capital Formation as a ratio of GDP (constant prices) As a Consequence…Low Capital Accumulation 35% 30% 25% Costa Rica 20% Chile 15% El Salvador Guatemala 10% 5% 0% 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 CIEN - FIEL 5 Poor TFP Growth • Standard growth decomposition -Average annual TFP growth close to 0% over five decades (Loening, CIEN) -Method may be overestimating HK contribution and thus underestimating true TFP growth • Harberger´s “real cost reduction” -RCR yields positive annual trend growth (1.7% 1986-2001) -HK contribution source of divergence… • Compare with Costa Rica (over 2%), Chile (over 3%) CIEN - FIEL 6 Is it Costly International Finance? (i.e. aggregate financial constraint) Low I & Growth Barriers to investment Costly International Finance Lack of Opportunities Costly Local Finance * Aggregate Financial * Financial constraints Constraints * Weak Regulation * Poor Debt * Banking system Management and regulations Low Appropriability Low Social Returns * Corruption * 'Forex' Risks * Tax pressure * Tax regulation * Too-little self discovery * High Cost (infr. costs) * Externalities * Spillovers * Coordination failure * Crime CIEN - FIEL Low Competitiviness Low Supply of Compl. Inputs (HK and Infr.) 7 Not Costly International Financing • Strong BOP and dynamic international resource flows… • …but resource inflows mostly consumed (not invested). • External financing not likely to be a binding constraint from macro perspective. CIEN - FIEL 8 Is it Costly Local Finance? Low I & Growth Barriers to investment Costly International Finance Lack of Opportunities Costly Local Finance * Aggregate Financial * Financial constraints Constraints * Weak Regulation * Poor Debt * Banking system Management and regulations Low Appropriability Low Social Returns * Corruption * 'Forex' Risks * Tax pressure * Tax regulation * Too-little self discovery * High Cost (infr. costs) * Externalities * Spillovers * Coordination failure * Crime CIEN - FIEL Low Competitiviness Low Supply of Compl. Inputs (HK and Infr.) 9 Local Financing Better than Comparator Group: Cluster Analysis Unweighted Averages Repressed High Guatemala Cost Low Cost Percentage Spreads 66.6 13.0 10.0 6.3 Real Interest Rate -16.8 13.3 8.5 5.6 8.2 10.4 13.8 25.0 2 48 -- 79 Saving/GDP Number of countries Source: Author’s calculations on the basis of WDI data (corresponding to 2004/2005) CIEN - FIEL 10 Domestic Financing not a Binding Constraint • From an aggregate perspective, terms and availability of domestic financing are adverse,… • …but no worse than comparator countries. • Domestic financing not likely to be a binding constraint at this moment. CIEN - FIEL 11 Is it Low Social Returns? Low I & Growth Barriers to investment Costly International Finance Lack of Opportunities Costly Local Finance * Aggregate Financial * Financial constraints Constraints * Weak Regulation * Poor Debt * Banking system Management and regulations Low Appropriability Low Social Returns * Corruption * 'Forex' Risks * Tax pressure * Tax regulation * Too-little self discovery * High Cost (infr. costs) * Externalities * Spillovers * Coordination failure * Crime CIEN - FIEL Low Competitiviness Low Supply of Compl. Inputs (HK and Infr.) 12 Literacy Rates LAC 110 105 100 100 95 90 Literacy Rate Literacy Rate Lower-Middle Income 80 70 Guatemala 60 90 85 80 75 70 50 Guatemala Gua 65 40 60 0 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 GNI per capita 0 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 6,000 7,000 GNI per capita CIEN - FIEL 13 8,000 Net Enrollment Ratio Secondary School LAC 100 Net Enrollment Ratio, Secondary School (%) Net Enrollment Ratio, Secondary School (%) Lower-Middle Income 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 Guatemala 20 10 0 1,000 2,000 3,000 GNI per capita 4,000 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 5,000 CIEN - FIEL Guatemala 0 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 GNI per capita 6,000 7,000 14 8,000 70 Gross Enrollment Ratio, Tertiary Education (%) Gross Enrollment Ratio, Tertiary Education (%) Gross Enrollment Ratio Tertiary Education 60 50 Lower-Middle Income 40 30 20 Guatemala 10 0 0 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 70 60 50 LAC 40 30 20 10 5,000 GNI per capita Guatemala 0 0 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 6,000 7,000 GNI per capita CIEN - FIEL 15 8,000 Public Expenditure in Education as Percentage of GDP (year 2004) LAC 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 Guatemala 0 0 1,000 2,000 3,000 GNI per capita 4,000 5,000 Public Expenditure in Education as a % of GDP Public Expenditure in Education as a % of GDP Lower-Middle Income 7 6 5 4 3 2 Guatemala 1 0 CIEN - FIEL 0 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 GNI per capita 6,000 7,000 16 8,000 Conclusions about stock of HK • Low stock of human capital • Strong gender and racial differences in education – Illiteracy rate higher among women and indigenous groups – 60% of illiterate people belong to indigenous groups and 67% of them are women. • Some Recent Improvement. Part of the lack of human capital is due to older cohorts (inherited) CIEN - FIEL 17 If a factor is scarce its compensation should be high Thailand Guatemala Ecuador Brazil Paraguay Peru Mexico Chile United States Colombia Panama Latin America Average Bolivia Nicaragua El Salvador Honduras Costa Rica Argentina Venezuela Uruguay Dominican Rep. Taiwan 0 0.05 0.1 0.15 0.2 0.25 Guatemala has the Highest Returns to Education in LATAM. Private returns have not declined during the last 20 years in spite of strong increase in schooling (showing that HK is still scarce) CIEN - FIEL 18 Poor Quality Education • Bratsberg and Terrell 2002), Guatemala 64 out of 67 countries in terms of “quality” (only Haiti, Mexico and Dominican Republic have lower quality) And Inequality in Education Non-Indigenous Groups 0 0 .2 .5 .4 Density Density .6 1 .8 1 1.5 Indigenous Groups 6.5 7 7.5 Fitted values 8 8.5 6 CIEN - FIEL 7 8 Fitted values 9 10 19 Infrastructure • Some successful reforms (electricity, telecommunications). • Low penetration of Internet seems more related to HK than infrastructure. – Cross subsidies in electricity pricing • There are some problems in ports and transportation, as well as problems with electricity pricing. • Although, it does not seem as critical as HK CIEN - FIEL 20 3,000,000 2,500,000 2,000,000 Open Forest is not so bad 1,500,000 1,000,000 500,000 BRA SLV ARG GTM CHL COL GUY NIC PAN ECU JAM (*) TTO • Klinger and Lederman (2005) Guatemala 5th from 73 countries in new discoveries. 106 new products exported in 1997-2002. • CONCLUSION: actual export basket does not seem to be a binding constraint to growth • So, why export growth is weak? Same factors affecting investment and GDP growth CIEN - FIEL 21 Informality • Striking figure in Guatemala is the high level of informality (around 75% of workers) • In terms of value added, the informal sector in 2006 was around 34.4% of the total economy • High informality can affect economic growth, because it affects the production technology, sector composition of the production, capital structure, R&D investment, human capital, etc.) • Informal activites in Guatemala: Demand less qualified workers, Wages are much lower (showing productivity is smaller) and Capital accumulation is slow and more volatile CIEN - FIEL 22 General Conclusions and Policy Recommendations CIEN - FIEL 23 • Constraints: – Stock and quality of education, health – Weak enforcement of property rights and laws / dysfunctional justice – Certain types of infrastructure (with high public-good component) • Common thread in binding constrains is low supply of public goods to complement private investment. – Financing expansion in the supply of public goods is difficult without raising tax revenues and improving quality of expenditures. – Note that public sector has no important sources of revenue, debt financing not recommended. CIEN - FIEL 24 • Policy reforms to address binding constraints on the economy have been considered… • …but financing expansion in the supply of public goods is difficult without raising tax revenues and improving quality of expenditures (policy constraint…not economic constraint). • Therefore: – Taxation (for example, VAT and Excises to raise tax revenues with progressivity through public outlays) – Focus on reducing informality and continue with efforts to improve HK (investment in education and health) – Complete reforms that are “less intensive” in public money (for example, PPPs, regulation of utilities, regulation of the financial system, labor regulation) – Picking the winners demands stronger public institutions (addressing issue of “state capture” by powerful interest groups) CIEN - FIEL 25