The Gambia Economic Update, December 2020 : Preserving the Gains

Real GDP growth exceeded 6 percent during the two years before COVID-19 (coronavirus) struck, supported by rebounding confidence, investment, low interest rates, and growing tourism. Investment accounted for over 22 percent of GDP in 2019, three-fi...

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Main Author: World Bank
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/170581614977174091/The-Gambia-Economic-Update-Preserving-the-Gains
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35284
id okr-10986-35284
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-352842021-04-23T14:02:19Z The Gambia Economic Update, December 2020 : Preserving the Gains World Bank ECONOMIC GROWTH FISCAL TRENDS PUBLIC DEBT BALANCE OF PAYMENTS MONETARY POLICY INFLATION POVERTY ECONOMIC OUTLOOK RISKS INCLUSIVE GROWTH LABOR FORCE LABOR MARKET CLIMATE SHOCKS RESILIENT INFRASTRUCTURE Real GDP growth exceeded 6 percent during the two years before COVID-19 (coronavirus) struck, supported by rebounding confidence, investment, low interest rates, and growing tourism. Investment accounted for over 22 percent of GDP in 2019, three-fifths of which was private. The tourism market had weathered the collapse of Thomas Cook UK and expanded into new markets. Industry was the fastest-growing sector in 2019, partly due to the issuance of oil-prospecting licenses, but also due to strong investment in construction fueled by remittances from the diaspora. On the other hand, agriculture had contracted, affected by erratic rainfall and the late supply of inputs. Tourism arrivals had started the year in line with 2019 but collapsed by 50 percent in March and are expected to fall by 63 percent in 2020. However, official remittances grew at record pace in the second quarter, perhaps due to travel restrictions closing informal channels. Favorable rainfall, good access to inputs, and few pest outbreaks bode well for agriculture. It registered the lowest fiscal deficit since 2009 and a primary surplus after 2009. This came despite increased expenditure, as revenues rose due to increased excises and levies and improved revenue administration capacity. Both budget and project grants also increased. The Government continues to make large transfers to state-owned enterprises (SOEs), however, the fiscal burden of which is estimated to be around 6 percent of 2019 GDP. Pressures from COVID-19 saw the deficit rise in the first half of 2020 although the tax authorities still managed to exceed their revised collection targets. Tax exemptions, although declining, continue to be sizeable-without discretionary exemptions, the deficit in the first half of 2020 would have been reduced by 0.7 percent of GDP. Non-tax revenue has been boosted by one-off items such as the sale of assets, which partly compensated for the tax decline. The Government initially responded to pandemic-related spending pressures through budgetary reallocation. In July, the National Assembly passed a supplementary bill aimed at providing further relief and stimulating recovery. 2021-03-18T13:11:02Z 2021-03-18T13:11:02Z 2020-12 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/170581614977174091/The-Gambia-Economic-Update-Preserving-the-Gains http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35284 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: Economic Updates and Modeling Africa Africa Western and Central (AFW) Gambia, The
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic ECONOMIC GROWTH
FISCAL TRENDS
PUBLIC DEBT
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
MONETARY POLICY
INFLATION
POVERTY
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
RISKS
INCLUSIVE GROWTH
LABOR FORCE
LABOR MARKET
CLIMATE SHOCKS
RESILIENT INFRASTRUCTURE
spellingShingle ECONOMIC GROWTH
FISCAL TRENDS
PUBLIC DEBT
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
MONETARY POLICY
INFLATION
POVERTY
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
RISKS
INCLUSIVE GROWTH
LABOR FORCE
LABOR MARKET
CLIMATE SHOCKS
RESILIENT INFRASTRUCTURE
World Bank
The Gambia Economic Update, December 2020 : Preserving the Gains
geographic_facet Africa
Africa Western and Central (AFW)
Gambia, The
description Real GDP growth exceeded 6 percent during the two years before COVID-19 (coronavirus) struck, supported by rebounding confidence, investment, low interest rates, and growing tourism. Investment accounted for over 22 percent of GDP in 2019, three-fifths of which was private. The tourism market had weathered the collapse of Thomas Cook UK and expanded into new markets. Industry was the fastest-growing sector in 2019, partly due to the issuance of oil-prospecting licenses, but also due to strong investment in construction fueled by remittances from the diaspora. On the other hand, agriculture had contracted, affected by erratic rainfall and the late supply of inputs. Tourism arrivals had started the year in line with 2019 but collapsed by 50 percent in March and are expected to fall by 63 percent in 2020. However, official remittances grew at record pace in the second quarter, perhaps due to travel restrictions closing informal channels. Favorable rainfall, good access to inputs, and few pest outbreaks bode well for agriculture. It registered the lowest fiscal deficit since 2009 and a primary surplus after 2009. This came despite increased expenditure, as revenues rose due to increased excises and levies and improved revenue administration capacity. Both budget and project grants also increased. The Government continues to make large transfers to state-owned enterprises (SOEs), however, the fiscal burden of which is estimated to be around 6 percent of 2019 GDP. Pressures from COVID-19 saw the deficit rise in the first half of 2020 although the tax authorities still managed to exceed their revised collection targets. Tax exemptions, although declining, continue to be sizeable-without discretionary exemptions, the deficit in the first half of 2020 would have been reduced by 0.7 percent of GDP. Non-tax revenue has been boosted by one-off items such as the sale of assets, which partly compensated for the tax decline. The Government initially responded to pandemic-related spending pressures through budgetary reallocation. In July, the National Assembly passed a supplementary bill aimed at providing further relief and stimulating recovery.
format Report
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title The Gambia Economic Update, December 2020 : Preserving the Gains
title_short The Gambia Economic Update, December 2020 : Preserving the Gains
title_full The Gambia Economic Update, December 2020 : Preserving the Gains
title_fullStr The Gambia Economic Update, December 2020 : Preserving the Gains
title_full_unstemmed The Gambia Economic Update, December 2020 : Preserving the Gains
title_sort gambia economic update, december 2020 : preserving the gains
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2021
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/170581614977174091/The-Gambia-Economic-Update-Preserving-the-Gains
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35284
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