Problems with unemployment and scant economic growth continue
without any quick resolution in sight, despite advances in the economic policy
dialogue between the government and the opposition. Only a few weeks from the
year-end holidays, the prevailing public mood is one of discouragement, an attitude
that's closely related to a belief that the political class has shown nothing
in the way of economic solutions. That leaves much of Panama's population in
deep despair and in no spirit to celebrate.
According to the experts, we are now living through the worst
economic period that the Republic of Panama has ever seen, having experienced
more than 30 months of "severe slowdown" without an end in sight.
It was aggravated at the end of last year, when there were some signs of an
economic recovery, only to be followed by disappointed expectations and a consequent
cycle of unrest and pessimism.
The Panamanian Business Executives Association (APEDE) maintains
that the national economy will its decline through the end of the year, which
it estimates will close with an annual growth rate of 0.5 to 0.7 percent. According
to the business group's report on the country's economic situation, there has
been a negative growth in several key sectors, which prevented the 1.5 to 2
percent economic growth that the government had predicted for 2001.
The report also noted a continuing decline in direct foreign
investment over the past several years. For the year ending this past June,
Panama received $106.6 million in such investments, while in the similar period
that ended in June of 1997, the figure was $1.3 billion. APEDE says that to
improve this situation the government has to create a more attractive climate
for investment.
The government is trying to find bold new policies to get us
past this period by reversing the terrible slowdown while maintaining economic
stability. To do this it is proposing structural reforms to the government's
financial practices and budget, and linking them to a package of legislation
that will establish stable guidelines in which short-term economic solutions
can be achieved. A plan to get control of public spending is central to the
Moscoso administration's strategy, so the advocates of its 2002 budget proposal
say.
However, that budget has been rejected by the Legislative Assembly,
based upon the argument that its revenue predictions are wildly unrealistic.
According to the PRD-led alliance that dominates the legislure, the administration's
proposal was out of balance to the tune of about $500 million.
Another part of the administration's strategy, with which the
opposition concurs, is to attack unemployment through major public works projects.
The public has been clamoring for such initiatives, as unemployment has struck
not only the lower end of the social and economic scale, but also the middle
classes and many highly educated professionals. The problem appears to be growing
day by day, with no easy solution in sight.
A part of the public's disquiet is based upon a mistrust of the
economic figures that the administration releases. Based on a 2000 survey of
Panamanian households, the Comptroller General is telling us that current unemployment
stands at 13.4 percent, but all of the credible statistics coming from business
and academic institutions put the figure at around 17 percent. Moreover, the
University of Panama's National Studies Institute (IDEN) notes with some alarm
an historic tendency for Panamanian unemployment to rise when joblessness increases
in the United States, as it is doing now.
In 2001 the government sought to pump some air into the gasping
economy, for example by paying cruise ships for disembarking passengers here,
while trying to keep public spending from driving deficits sky-high. The tourism
sector did improve some, and that may have given the whole economy a little
breather, but for the majority of businesses low sales have meant very delicate
conditions at best, with many enterprises being forced out of business altogether.
For Felipe Chapman, the vice-president of Panama's stock and
bond exchange, the Bolsa de Valores de Panama, if the acquisition of the Cerveceria
Nacional by Colombia's Bavaria group is consummated, it would mean a $340 million
direct investment in Panama. "If only $300 million comes in, we'd be talking
about three percent of the Gross Domestic Product entering the economy and affecting
consumption, savings and investment, from the most conservative through the
most aggressive sectors," he said. According to Chapman, this is a unique
opportunity of which the government should take advantage. "From at least
the period of the Initial Purchase Offer through the time when the sellers receive
their benefits, there's plenty of time to act." Chapman said that the administration
and the opposition must reach a consensus that will allow the country to talk
and act in unison and mobilize resources for the nation's economic recovery.
Businessman Felipe Rodriguez, the former president of APEDE,
sounded a more optimistic note than most others. He said that the issuance of
CERPAN certificates, which allow current and former public employees to withdraw
some of their retirement funds, will jump-start the economy. However, he warned
that that this stimulus will only get economic activity started again, but not
provide the basis for the country's economic growth.