Presentation made by Lual A. Deng at a High Level Seminar 1: The Financial Crisis

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1 Presentation made by Lual A. Deng at a High Level Seminar 1: The Financial Crisis and Fragile States The 2009 ADB Annual Seminars Dakar, Senegal, 12 May 2009 : The Challenges of Managing Impact of Global Financial Cri Post-conflict Economy

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Sudan: The Challenges of Managing the Impact of Global Financial Crisis on a Post-conflict Economy. Presentation made by Lual A. Deng at a High Level Seminar 1: The Financial Crisis and Fragile States The 2009 ADB Annual Seminars Dakar, Senegal, 12 May 2009. 1. 1. 1. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Presentation made by Lual A. Deng at a High Level Seminar 1: The Financial Crisis

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Presentation made by Lual A. Deng at a High Level Seminar 1: The Financial Crisis

and Fragile StatesThe 2009 ADB Annual Seminars

Dakar, Senegal, 12 May 2009

Sudan: The Challenges of Managing the Impact of Global Financial Crisis on a Post-conflict Economy

Sudan: The Challenges of Managing the Impact of Global Financial Crisis on a Post-conflict Economy

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Presentation Consists of Four Parts

SUDAN

1. The Context

2. The Impact on national economy

3. Impact on GOSS

4. Policy Response

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1. National Context

Sources of Fragility:

a) Political – just emerged out of protracted civilWar (1983 – 2005) in the south & continued

conflict in Darfurb) Economic – huge external debt of more than

US$30 billion, which has resulted in large arrears to Paris Club & multilateral institutions

c) Weak institutions of economic governance

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2. The Impact on the National Economy

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2.1 Sudan economy to grow at 4% in 2009, which is above SSA average & other developing countries, except East Asia

8.2

11.4

8.4

6.96.2 6.0 5.85.8

8

5.6

4.24.9

5.54.3

2.2

5.4

3.7

-2

2.43.3

-0.6

-3

0

3

6

9

12

All Dev EastAsia

SAR ECA SSA MENA LAC

2007 2008e 2009f

GDP growth, percent

Source: World Bank, DEC Prospects Group.

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2.2 Sharp Fall in Oil Prices of Sudan’s two Blends

6

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2.3 Weaker public finances likely to cause fiscal deficits to deteriorate sharply more than SSA & developing world, but

less than that of Europe & Central Asia

-1.5-2.1

-2.6 -2.6

-3.8

-5.6-6

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

Middle-East& NorthAfrica

South Asia LatinAmerica &Caribbean

East Asia &Pacific

Sub-Saharan

Africa

Europe &Central Asia

Projected deterioration in fiscal balance, percent of GDP

Source: World Bank, DEC Prospects Group.

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Public Budgetary Impact:deteriorated GoNU’s Overall fiscal picture

2.4 Deteriorated GoNU’s Overall Fiscal Picture

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2.5a Worsening of Balance of Payments position due to lower foreign exchange inflows, partly explained by Lower Oil

Export Earnings

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2.5b Worsening of Balance of Payments position due to lower foreign exchange inflows, partly explained by declining

FDI and slowing in Remittances

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2.6 a sharp decline (i.e. by 50%) in the foreign exchange reserves from its peak of US$2.0 billion in August 2008 to about U2S$1.0

billion at end-December 2008

March 2009 - reserves are less than 1 month import coverage.

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Southern Sudan and Global Crisis

1.Fiscal impact especially strong in Southern Sudan

2.Implications for oil revenue transfers to GOSS

3. GOSS

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3.1 Fiscal impact especially strong in Southern Sudan, which relies on oil revenues for more than

95%

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141414Source: Ministry of Finance & National Economy

Implications for Oil Revenue Transfers from GoNU to GOSS

3.2

* Monthly transfers figures don’t include arrears and withdrawals from ORSA

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• Short-term Measures

– Increased VAT on telecom, tobacco & alcoholic beverages.– Strengthened customs & tax collection in Southern Sudan by

appointing SPLA officers into national customs and tax administration operating in the south.

– Reduced public expenditure (e.g. expenditure on purchase of goods & services was reduced by 51% during the 1st quarter of 2009).

– Allowed prices to adjust rather than impose quantitative restrictions in goods, money and factor markets (including foreign exchange within a “float-managed” regime).

– Strengthened microfinance policy framework as by way of enhancing local financial intermediation needs of the vulnerable group and rural communities.

– Established a ministerial policy group to monitor the global financial and economic crisis.

Sudan’s Policy Response to the crisis

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Medium-Term Measures– Increased capital expenditure (i.e. development) on infrastructure in that

priority is given to upgrading roads, river transport and railway along the major north-south corridor and roads to key agricultural zones.

– Enhancing economic governance at all levels of government in Sudan.– Creating a clear policy framework for transparent and competitive

environment of transport services. – Focusing on agriculture as the engine of growth of Sudan economy and

a vehicle for diversification.– Encouraging broader private sector participation in all sectors of the

economy, e.g. infrastructure construction.

– Working toward strengthening inter-governmental fiscal and regulatory policy coordination between GoSS and GONU as well as with the 25 States of Sudan.

– Simplify state-level taxation system and improve accountability in revenue collection.

– In the process of creating a transparent, predictable, and less binding fiscal and regulatory policies toward the private sector.

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