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Cablegate: Maldives Economy Grew by 6.6% in 2007

Published: Tue 5 Feb 2008 10:24 AM
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RR RUEHLMC
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ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 051024Z FEB 08
FM AMEMBASSY COLOMBO
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 7651
INFO RUCPDOC/USDOC WASHDC
RUEATRS/DEPT OF TREASURY WASHDC
RUEHNE/AMEMBASSY NEW DELHI 1817
RUEHKA/AMEMBASSY DHAKA 0727
RUEHIL/AMEMBASSY ISLAMABAD 7716
RUEHKT/AMEMBASSY KATHMANDU 5897
RUEHKP/AMCONSUL KARACHI 2326
RUEHCG/AMCONSUL CHENNAI 8321
RUEHLMC/MILLENNIUM CHALLENGE CORPORATION
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 COLOMBO 000133
SIPDIS
SIPDIS
STATE FOR SCA/INS AND EEB/IFD/OMA
TREASURY FOR LESLIE HULL
E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: ECON EFIN EAID MV
SUBJECT: MALDIVES ECONOMY GREW BY 6.6% IN 2007
1. (SBU) Summary: In 2007, Maldives economy grew by 6.6%, marking a
return to its pre-tsunami growth path. Tourism drove the growth,
with visitors up 12% to over 675,000. Tourism-related activities,
such as transport and communications, and construction of new
resorts, also contributed to growth. Fisheries declined due to a
drastic drop in the fish catch. The government is continuing heavy
deficit spending both for tsunami reconstruction and infrastructure
development. Despite a growing trade deficit, the balance of
payments remains in surplus on strong tourism receipts, advance
resort rentals, and continued tsunami-related aid flows. With much
of the deficit spending being on productive infrastructure
development, and tourism industry prospects remaining strong,
Maldives' economic fundamentals appear solid. At the same time,
President Gayoom may benefit politically from the increased spending
as he faces his first competitive re-election campaign later this
year. End Summary.
GDP UP BY 6.6% TO $3,400 PER CAPITA
-----------------------------------
2. (U) According to the Maldives Monetary Authority, Maldives'
economy grew by 6.6% in 2007 -- comparable to its average annual
growth rate of 7.4% in the decade before the December 2004 tsunami.
Growth was slower than in 2006 when gross domestic product rose by
19% on tsunami recovery and reconstruction. Total GDP exceeded $1
billion in 2007, or about $3,400 per capita (based on a population
of about 300,000 as estimated by the Ministry of Planning). This
level gives Maldives the highest per-capita GDP in South Asia.
TOURISM AGAIN STRONG; FISHERIES DECLINE
---------------------------------------
3. (U) Tourism, the most important economic sector, accounting for
28% of GDP, had another good year. Arrivals rose by 12% to over
675,000. Revenue from tourism is estimated at $494 million. Europe
generates almost 75% of visitors. China and Japan, together,
account for another 10%. The tourism boom has boosted other sectors
of the economy as well. Transport and communications, which account
for 20% of GDP, grew by 15%. Construction is also booming, with 19%
growth, partly due to development of several new resorts.
Government administration, which accounts for 16% of GDP, expanded
by 4.4%. The main export sector, fisheries, which accounts for 4.5%
of GDP, declined considerably. The fish catch decreased by 39%
during the eleven months to November 2007. Fish prices remained
high, but the low catch dragged fish export earnings to about $110
million in 2007 from $133 million in 2006. The government reported
an improvement in the fish catch towards the end of 2007. (Note:
Fisheries and Agriculture Ministry sources were unsure of the reason
for the decline but did not think it was permanent or due to
over-fishing. A representative of a private fisheries company told
EconFSN that the fish catch declines temporarily every three to four
years.)
BUDGET DEFICITS GROWING, INFLATION RISING
-----------------------------------------
4. (U) The World Bank, the Asian Development Bank, and the
International Monetary Fund have all cautioned Maldives against
unsustainable spending since 2005. The government's budget deficit
increased to 25% of GDP in 2006. In 2007, the Government planned to
spend Rf 11.8 billion ($920 million or 88% of GDP) in 2007. Revenue
was to rise to Rf 7.1 billion ($555 million or 53% of GDP). These
figures would yield a deficit of nearly 35% of GDP.
5. (U) Over 75% of revenue was expected from import duties and
resort lease rentals. Other major revenue sources are taxes on
tourism and bank profits, work permit fees, and state-owned company
profits. The government also borrowed $30 million for eight years
from HSBC bank at commercial rates in September 2007 (only the
second time it has borrowed in international commercial markets) to
repair jetties and harbors damaged by the tsunami. Commenting on
this to Agence France-Press, Finance Minister Gasim Ibrahim said,
"We got about $400 million in international aid [following the
tsunami], but we are still short of about $70 to 80 million to
SIPDIS
complete projects related to fishing and transport."
6. (U) The higher deficit and high import prices produced inflation,
which surged to 6.8% in November 2007 from 3.5% in November 2006.
Broad money increased by 24% as both public and private sector
credit expanded sharply.
COLOMBO 00000133 002 OF 002
TRADE DEFICIT UP, BUT BALANCE OF
PAYMENTS STILL POSITIVE
--------------------------------
7. (U) On the external side, the trade deficit has widened steeply
in the post-tsunami years. The trade deficit more than doubled from
$383 million in 2004 to $704 million in 2007. Imports of food and
construction material rose sharply. Thanks to the $494 million
tourism earnings and advance payments from newly-leased resorts, the
balance of payments recorded a surplus of $48 million in 2007.
External reserves stood at $309 million, sufficient to cover 3.4
months of imports. Total outstanding external debt stock stood at
$524 million.
8. (U) The Maldives government projects the economy to expand by
9.5% in 2008, again on the strength of tourism and related
construction. Fish exports are also expected to make a recovery.
Given higher import prices and increasing imports, the current
account deficit is expected to deteriorate further in 2008. A small
BOP surplus of under $10 million is expected.
COMMENT: DEFICIT SPENDING IS WORTHWHILE INVESTMENT
--------------------------------------------- -----
9. (SBU) The government of Maldives appears to be practicing the
virtuous kind of deficit spending -- investing in infrastructure
that has potential to yield both social and economic returns in the
future. Some examples:
-- improving harbors on small residential islands facilitates
fishing and ensures vessels are safe in bad weather;
-- expanding the international airport and building conference and
other related facilities on the airport island both increase the
country's tourism capacity and diversity;
-- building small domestic airports increases the tourism industry's
ability to move visitors from the international airport in Male' to
resorts farther from the capital.
-- building residential housing near overcrowded Male' relieves
housing pressures there.
10. (SBU) With these efforts adding to the country's prospects for
continued strong tourism revenue, it appears that the government
continues to manage the economy in a fundamentally prudent manner.
With Maldives earning the highest GDP per capita in South Asia, the
spending is also likely to translate into improved standard of
living for average Maldivians commensurate with the country's
growing income. Not coincidental to this is the fact that President
Gayoom is entering his first-ever genuine election cycle; he surely
calculates that spreading the wealth generated by the tourism boom
will increase his popularity.
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