EPOC TO CONTINUE MONITORING ROLE POST-IMF

The Economic Programme Oversight Committee’s (EPOC) role in monitoring Jamaica’s economic reform programme will continue beyond the end of the Precautionary Stand-By Arrangement (PSBA) with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in November 2019.
This was announced by Hon Dr Nigel Clarke, Minister of Finance and the Public Service at a press conference on 22nd August. 
He noted that the Committee will have a broader base to include Civil Society members, who this morning signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the Ministry of Finance and the Bank of Jamaica for the extension of its monitoring role.  
The Minister has appointed the current Co-Chair of EPOC, Keith Duncan, to be Chairman of the expanded Committee.
The Civil Society parties that were signatory to the agreement were:  Jamaica Confederation of Trade Unions, Private Sector Organisation of Jamaica, MSME Alliance, and Main Domestic Creditors comprising JMMB, Sagicor Jamaica, NCB and BNS.
Dr Clarke stated, “Today we are empowering EPOC to continue in its monitoring role until (the Government’s) policy commitments are operationalized.”
He referred to the agreement made with the IMF to maintain its office in Jamaica for another two years after the end of the PSBA, and stated: “These decisions are a demonstration of our commitment to maintaining a credible and sustainable macro-economic path, including a fiscal trajectory that is consistent with our fiscal responsibility law, long into the future that provides the foundation of economic opportunity for the current and future generations.”
Chairman Keith Duncan stated:  “We believe that it is extremely important that civil society has a voice in Jamaica’s economic programme; that we are plugged in, that we understand where we are in this programme, what our targets are, where we are going as a country as we move towards economic independence.”
He continued, “We’ve already seen the fruits of fiscal responsibility in relation to our ability to invest in capital expenditure, in infrastructure and this year, in national security apparatus.”
As Jamaica moves towards significantly reducing its debt by 2025/26, Duncan noted: “We can only imagine the kind of resources that would be freed up for wider Jamaica, for the investment in our people.” 
-END

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June 2019: UPDATE ON 3-YEAR IMF PRECAUTIONARY STAND-BY ARRANGEMENT (PSBA)

Most recent results The EPOC met on June 28, 2019 and reviewed the latest available results for the period ending April 2019. 
Based on the preliminary results for performance to date through the end of April 2019, Jamaica is on track to meet the targets for the quantitative performance criteria and the indicative targets for the IMF SBA for end-June 2019.

EPOC-Communique-27

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BOJ holds policy rate as inflation returns to centre of target

The Bank of Jamaica (BOJ) has taken the decision to hold the policy interest rate unchanged at 0.75 per cent per annum, effective June 28, 2019.
The policy interest rate is offered on overnight balances with the central bank.
According to the BOJ, its decision to hold the rate unchanged is based on its current assessment that monetary conditions are appropriate to support the achievement of the inflation target of 4.0 per cent to 6.0 per cent over the medium term.
When the BOJ last lowered the policy interest rate in May by 50 basis points to 0.75 per cent, it said then that the decision was two-fold. It was aimed at stimulating a faster expansion in private sector credit which should lead to higher economic activity, consistent with the bank’s inflation target.
And, it was also done with a view to getting inflation to return quickly to the centre of the BOJ’s target.
At the time, the BOJ said its decision reflected its assessment that, while inflation is expected to increase to an average 4.5 per cent over the next eight quarters, there will be months when inflation will fall below the lower limit of the bank’s target of 4.0 per cent to 6.0 per cent in the context of low underlying inflation.
In its latest statement on Friday, the BOJ said annual inflation as at  May 2019 reported by the Statistical Institute of Jamaica was 4.8 per cent, up from 3.9 per cent as at April 2019 and 3.1 per cent at May 2018.
“The May 2019 outturn is in line with Bank of Jamaica’s previous assessment and represents a return to the centre of the target following five consecutive months of annual inflation being below the target,” the central bank said.
However, it cautioned that while annual inflation has been rising, underlying inflation remains low.
Its current forecast is that, after falling towards the bottom of the target by the September 2019 quarter, inflation would rise towards the mid-point of the target by the March 2020 quarter as (i) domestic agriculture prices increase and (ii) domestic economic activity increases in response to the lowering of the policy rate over the last eight quarters.
“Inflation would then decline towards the bottom of the target in the period after the March 2020 quarter and only return to the mid-point slowly over the ensuing three years,” the BOJ said.
It explained that its policy action in May 2019 was aimed at mitigating the material risk that inflation would fall below the target during 2020.
The bank’s current assessment is that the risks to the May 2019 inflation forecast remain balanced.
It said that at 17.9 per cent, credit from banks, merchant banks and building societies to the private sector grew faster than projected in the 12 months to May 2019 and is likely to continue to grow faster than was previously expected, driven by past monetary accommodation.
This, it said represents an upside risk to economic activity and inflation (i.e, higher GDP growth and higher inflation) in the future. On the downside, an intensification of tensions in global trading arrangements points to a slowdown in world growth, which could result in lower oil prices and weaker domestic demand over the next eight quarters.
Read original article: LoopJamaica.com

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