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Emerging Trends in Financing Sustainable Development A Latin American and Caribbean Perspective Dr Reginald Darius Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Finance, Saint Lucia January 14, 2014 Sources of Finance for Development Public • Domestic (Taxes and other revenues) • International (ODA , SSC and other Official flows) Private • Domestic (Portfolio, commercial bank lending) • International (FDI, Remittances, portfolio, bank flows) Blended Innovative Financing • (PPP projects) • (carbon pricing policies, FTT, RfI, Diaspora resources) Domestic International Domestic Public Finance-Trends • Improvement in Revenue/GDP ratios … but still below the level of advanced economies • Revenue ratio is on the rise in Caribbean Small States … but average lower than LAC ratios General Government Revenue (% of GDP) 40 35 General Government Revenue (% of GDP) 35 30 30 25 25 20 20 15 15 10 10 5 5 0 0 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Source: IMF WEO Advanced economies Developing Asia Latin America and the Caribbean Sub-Saharan Africa 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Latin America and the Caribbean Caribbean Small Sates (Avg) Source: IMF WEO Domestic Public Finance Opportunities Challenges Critical source of finance for expenditure on public goods and social services Leakages due to tax evasion, illicit financial flows, capital flight, money laundering Most stable and predictable form of financing for development- reduces aid dependency High debt service crowds out spending for sustainable development Domestic resources can be used to leverage private resources for economic development Transparent and effective budgeting frameworks for efficient use of tax revenue Improving Domestic Resource Mobilisation • Implement policies to broaden tax base and improve efficiency of collections • Explore innovative sources of finance eg. diaspora resources financial transaction taxes, carbon and environmental taxes • National development plans to guide spending into priority areas • Strengthen PFM through reforms: ▫ Debt sustainability ▫ Budgeting ▫ Procurement • Implement policies to curtail illicit financial flows ▫ International tax cooperation International Public Finance LAC receives a marginal share of ODA to developing countries… Source: World Bank Development Indicators … however Net ODA to SIDS is higher than average of the wider LAC group… Net ODA Received (% of GNI) 2007-2011 Avg East Asia & Pacific 00% Caribbean small states Latin America & Caribbean Europe & Central Asia 01% 00% 00% Middle East & North Africa Sub-Saharan Africa Source: World Bank Development Indicators 02% 04% Public Finance- International Opportunities Challenges ODA is an important source of finance to SIDS with limited access to international markets ODA flows have been falling in real terms - Fiscal challenges in donor countries Increasing importance of South-South cooperation Quality and targeting of ODA Increasing use of ODA’s catalytic role to leverage private finance Smaller share of ODA to MICs - transition issues Improving the Efficiency and Effectiveness of Aid • Better defined eligibility and graduation criteria to channel ODA to areas with the most needs • The delivery on ODA commitments by donors • Implementations of systems for improved evaluation and monitoring • SSC/OOF should not be seen as substitute for shortfalls in traditional aid but as a complement Private flows and remittances are more significant sources of finance for developing countries… Source: OECD DAC Stats, World Bank Migration and Remittances Data Private flows account for 70 percent while remittances account for 21 percent of financing flows to LAC… Financing flows to LAC (2011) Net Official flows 9% Remittances 21% Net Private financial flows 70% Source: IMF WEO, World Bank Database FDI is a dominant source of financing to LAC and is on an increasing trend… Net Private flows to LAC (2011) Net Private flows to LAC (In US Billions) 150 100 Other private financial flows 9% 50 Private portfolio flows 24% 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 0 -50 Direct Investment 67% -100 Private portfolio flows, net Direct investment, net Other private financial flows, net Source: IMF WEO •Developing Asia and LAC have attracted the largest volumes of FDI inflows to developing countries FDI Inflows to Developing Countries •Largest share of FDI inflows to LAC goes to South America FDI Inflows to LAC (Avg 2009-2012) (Avg 2009-2012) Africa 8% LAC 32% Asia 60% Source: UNCTAD Caribbean 37% South America 51% Central America 12% • While private financing may seem the more dominant source of financing for LAC, however not all countries have the same access Barriers to Accessing Finance for Development (SIDS) • Macro-economic stability- growth prospects, fiscal and debt sustainability • Costs of doing business ▫ Inadequate infrastructure ▫ Poor institutional, regulatory, political and financial framework • Lack of access to capital markets • Short term horizon of investors Going forward the focus must be on: Improving domestic resource mobilization Creating an enabling environment for investment ▫ Implementation of a credible national development plan/strategy to guide spending into priority areas ▫ Implement reforms to improve doing business climate ( legal and regulatory, reforms, provision of information, efficient business registration processes, contract enforcement) ▫ Develop capital markets for access to financing Develop investor base with long term investment horizon Promote financial services for SMEs Better aligning private incentives with public goals through effective PPP frameworks: ▫ Encourage private sector investment in infrastructure by improving risk/return profile: Developing bankable projects for private sector to fund ▫ Funding costs of preparation- feasibility studies Direct risk sharing through co-investment, guarantees and insurances Increasing returns such as premium prices and tax credits Support industries by providing capacity in areas of research and innovation Conclusion • Growth is key for development and poverty eradication • Aid remains a critical resource for countries with limited access to private finance • Improving domestic resource mobilisation to gradually reduce aid dependency • Provide the right enabling environment to attract private investment • The use of PPPs to improve risk/reward profile of long term development investments (infrastructure)