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Montevideo, September 21st 2024 - 09:54 UTC

 

 

Fitch forecasts Latin American economies will rebound but with downside risks

Friday, January 22nd 2021 - 09:31 UTC
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The average budget deficit across the region will fall by 3% of GDP but fiscal deficits will remain high by historical standards at an average of 6% of GDP The average budget deficit across the region will fall by 3% of GDP but fiscal deficits will remain high by historical standards at an average of 6% of GDP

Fitch Ratings forecasts Latin American economies will rebound this year from the 2020 recession but risks remain in particular because of the evolution of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The credit rating agency said slower growth would compromise government efforts to get deficits and debt back on a more sustainable, downward path, just as public pressure to spend in the face of the second wave of the virus grows.

Shelly Shetty, managing director for Sovereigns at Fitch, said that how the region weathers the second wave, the pace of vaccine distributions, the volume of shots to be rolled out and generally weak public health systems all bear monitoring.

“We don’t see many upside risks ... (we see) several downside risks,” Shetty said in an online presentation.

Peru will register the strongest growth in the region this year of more than 5%, while Brazil’s economy will expand at a little over 3%, capped by an expected tightening of fiscal policy, she said.

The recovery should be supported by 8% growth in China, strong global commodity prices, continued accommodative domestic monetary policy, and favorable base effects, she said.

The average budget deficit across the region will fall by 3% of GDP but fiscal deficits will remain high by historical standards at an average of 6% of GDP. Brazil’s deficit will be 7% of GDP, Shetty said.

“Consolidation will be a multi-year process,” she said, noting that over half of all Latin America sovereign ratings outlooks are negative, the highest for any region in the world, and with no positive outlooks.

On Mexico, Fitch analyst Charles Seville highlighted that struggling state-run oil company Petroleos Mexicanos (Pemex) could need further financial support from the government, perhaps as much as 1.5 percentage points of GDP.

This would not be a “game-changer” for Mexico’s sovereign rating, but it would hardly be a positive factor, Seville said. Fitch’s sovereign rating for Mexico is BBB-, one notch above speculative grade, or junk, with a stable outlook.

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