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Colombia - Economic Briefing September 2003

Economic Activity Slowing Amid Domestic Downturn

The external sector promises to be the key driver behind economic growth this year. Domestic demand, however, is showing signs of a deceleration. Consumption is recovering only very slowly from the real income deterioration resulting from pronounced currency deterioration at the beginning of the year and higher unemployment. Furthermore, investment is decelerating despite the current low interest rate environment.

Economic growth slows in second quarter
In the second quarter, gross domestic product (GDP) grew 2.0% over the same quarter last year. The second quarter performance was precisely in line with the 2.0% Consensus figure of last month, which had anticipated a slowdown in economic activity over the previous quarter, when growth had come in at a surprisingly more robust 3.9%. In seasonally adjusted terms, GDP grew just 0.2% over the first quarter, which was down from 0.5% variation observed in the previous quarter.

Key behind the second quarter slowdown was the moderation in growth observed in the manufacturing and construction sectors. Manufacturing industry growth in the second quarter reached just 1.0% (Q1: 8.6%) over the same quarter last year, while the construction sector experienced a 5.0% expansion (Q1: 14.7%). Agricultural output, which accounts for 13.6% of GDP, entered negative territory. As the result of adverse climatic conditions, agricultural activity dropped from 2.1% growth in the first quarter to a contraction of 1.0% in the second quarter. Mining was the only sector to experience a strong surge, with growth accelerating from a 2.5% contraction in the first quarter to a 10.9% expansion in the second quarter. Increased coal, gold and silver output were the key drivers behind the improvement of mining. Oil output, on the other hand, remained plagued by continued guerrilla attacks against one the country’s largest oilfields.

Declining unemployment insufficient to bolster private consumption
In June, unemployment reached 16.9% for the 13 major metropolitan areas, 1.1 percentage points below the levels observed for the same month last year. The improvement is mainly due to a rise in the number of employed. When combined with low interest rates, the current downward trend in unemployment should provide momentum for a rebound in private consumption. However, the real wage deterioration induced by strong currency depreciation earlier this year and tight credit conditions continue to be felt. Retail sales in June were down 3.2% over the same month last year, which represented a significant deceleration in activity over the previous month, when growth had reached a modest 0.6%.

Investment slows despite favourable interest rate setting
Supply and demand data have not yet been published. However, import data suggest that investment has slowed in the second quarter. In June capital good imports were down 3.1% over the same month last year. The June reading was only a modest improvement compared to the previous month’s reading of a 3.7% decline. Investment in agriculture and industry continues to remain strong, as these sectors take advantage of lower domestic interest rates and a more competitive exchange rate to benefit from a pickup in international demand.

Economic growth to be led by export sector
The private consumption and investment data indicate that subdued domestic demand dragged down economic activity in the second quarter, as export growth remained very strong. In the second quarter, exports were up 2.7% over the same quarter last year, compared to a 1.0% contraction in imports. Consensus Forecast participants anticipate the current trend of an export-induced growth trajectory to persist through the end of this year. Robust export growth of 7.0% should help boost economic activity, as imports will expand at a very modest 1.6%. On the downside, consumption is seen to grow at a moderate 2.2%. Investment, however, should rebound at healthy 7.0% in 2003, albeit at a slower pace than observed earlier this year, as firms continue to take advantage of low interest rates. As a result, total economic growth is seen as expanding 2.6% this year, which is up a 0.1 percentage point from last month’s forecast. Next year, the domestic side of the economy should experience a boost, and growth in the external sector is likely to remain healthy. As a result, GDP is seen expanding 3.3%, which is unchanged from last month’s consensus.



 

 

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Note:  The above text is an abridged version of the LatinFocus Consensus Forecast country briefing.  For more details please click here.

 

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