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Volume
14, Number 4 |
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Also
in this section: Predictable
spins, real questions remain
Which
way is Panama's economy headed?
by Eric Jackson The report on "The Engines Behind the Growth" conference that appeared in the February 20 Bloomberg News was glowing. "There is no bubble here," proclaimed Michael Fernández, economic director for the Panamanian Chamber of Construction (CAPAC). The US real estate bust, he maintained, doesn't apply to Panama. At the same forum, former President Nicolás Ardito-Barletta claimed that "42 percent of the new luxury apartments built last year were sold to foreigners seeking a second home in Panama." Of course, Nicky Barletta has a long-standing reputation for fraud, to the extent that many Panamanians have called him "Fraudito" since with Ronald Reagan's and Manuel Antonio Noriega's backing he stole the 1984 Panamanian presidential election. More recently he was the author of the government-financed fantasy that a canal expansion that will directly generate fewer than 7,000 jobs will indirectly create some 240,000 jobs, more than two of them for every unemployed Panamanian at the time he made that canal expansion "yes" campaign prediction. The grateful Panama Canal Authority (ACP) --- one of "The Engines Behind the Growth" conference co-sponsors --- showered millions of dollars in advertising contracts on Barletta's family's businesses, and during the campaign upped the job creation prediction to 297,400. From whence comes the 42 percent figure, and the tale of foreigners buying second homes? No citation was made to those things. People in the real estate industry say that only about 10 percent of the luxury apartments built in the last year or so have sold to people who actually plan to live in them, and that since the cancellation of three major skyscraper projects last year all but the stupidest flippers have disappeared from the Panama City market. There are a few rich people, mostly not Americans, who have second homes here, but among these a major sector is composed of Colombian gangsters who are essentially laundering the profits of underworld enterprises here. One developer told The Panama News that "I don't think [former President Barletta] knows what he's talking about. The only thing that's keeping sales up are Venezuelans right now.... Things are very slow in the real estate area." So how would that stuff get into Bloomberg News? Maybe it was the reporter, Carlos Barletta. Maybe it helps to know that Bloomberg has a history of being taken for Panamanian rides, like when it worked out of the offices of now incarcerated "offshore asset protection guru" Marc Harris. But Nicky Barletta and CAPAC are not the only people talking up the Panamanian economic miracle. Take Bear Stearns. They're advising people to invest in Panama, predicting 9.5 percent economic growth in 2008 and saying that next year this country's bonds might become investment grade. But Sam Taliaferro's Panama Developers Blog asks a rhetorical question about Bear Stearns: "Didn't these guys float the Trump Tower $200 million bond?" The reality of Panama's economy is complicated, but these are some of the salient facts and growing consensus predictions:
Look for slower growth in 2008, but nevertheless some substantial growth. Look for more Venezuelan exiles, but how much wealth they will bring with them is harder to predict. Look for serious problems in the Panama City luxury housing sector, but you may have to look hard because a weak market is no big deal to the important money laundering component of the real estate boom. Meanwhile, the lower end of the housing market, where there is a severe shortage of homes for young Panamanian working families, will probably remain strong. Look for a decline in canal activity but maybe not revenues, because despite fewer containers, tolls have been raised. Despite all claims of immunity, if the economic downturn in the United States gets really bad it could drag Panama's economy with it. But as difficulty selling homes in the USA may keep some retirees away, massive job reductions by GM and other big companies may lead to an influx of people taking their buyouts, selling what they have for what the market will bear and coming down here in search of affordable living. The coming presidential decree on immigration law changes may affect the ingress of foreign retirees. Notwithstanding the predictions of influential US Representative Steny Hoyer (D - Maryland), the US - Panama free trade deal will probably not be ratified by the United States in 2008. The cited irritant, Pedro Miguel González, may finish his term as president of the National Assembly on September 1, but then the United States will be into the final months of a national election campaign and the Democrats won't want to deal with a divisive issue at that time. Economists, people in various different economic positions and to a much lesser extent politicians will still disagree about whether that's a good or a bad thing. The sky is not about to fall in on Panama, but to the extent that expectations that have been raised throughout Panamanian society are not met, this year's economy might not be the best news for incumbent politicians. Meanwhile, the Nicky Barletta and friends show was marketed to the right wing of the American community here, especially to newcomers who have no real feel for the realities of Panamanian business. The Navy League, whose past president infamously wrote a book about living in Panama which had as its central theme that rabiblancos are lazy and dishonest and that Americans who seek to do business here should suck up to them, got a special invitation. The conference's English-language promotions promised "a deep analysis of the main economic fundamentals" for those interested in "expanding their network of business contacts" and gaining "privileged access." But Americans experienced in doing business here and Panamanian academics were conspicuously absent among the presenters. This was a PRD hustle for gullible foreigners, a state-financed exercise in denial of the serious problems Panama faces and mostly a non-event for the Panamanian press. Some of the serious economists in this country's universities are holding another forum, on March 1 at the University of Panama's Centro de Investigaciones Educativas y Nacionales. That event's entitled "The Economic Crisis in the United States and its Impact on Panama." Also
in this section: Editorial
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©
2008 by Eric Jackson email: editor@thepanamanews.com or e_l_jackson_malo@yahoo.com Mailing
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