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Chile - Economic Briefing June 2008

Lower Growth And Higher Inflation

The economy continues to show signs of weakness and has expanded at the slowest pace in five years in the first quarter. Moreover, the outlook remains subdued, as export growth is anticipated to slow notably amid moderating global demand. In addition, domestic demand will continue to be affected by the high interest rates. Meanwhile, inflation continues to soar and has just reached the highest level in over thirteen years, which may prompt the Central Bank to raise interest rates even further.

 

Economy expands at slowest pace since 2003

In the first quarter, gross domestic product (GDP) increased 3.0% over the same quarter last year.  The reading was down from the 4.0% expansion registered in the previous quarter and also came in slightly below market expectations, which had anticipated the economy would grow 3.2%.  The reading marks, in fact, the slowest growth pace since the final quarter of 2003.  The deceleration over the previous quarter was broad-based, but was mainly caused by a deterioration of the net contribution of the external sector to overall growth.  Export growth decelerated notably, from 7.3% annual growth in the fourth quarter to a weak 2.1%, strongly affected by the poor performance in copper exports.  Exports of copper increased a meagre 0.5% year-on-year, as labour conflicts disrupted production, which declined 3.6% over the same quarter last year.  Imports also decelerated but less notably, increasing 14.5% over the same month last year (Q4 2007: +18.0% yoy).  On the domestic side of the economy, both private consumption and investment slowed over the preceding quarter.  Private consumption expanded 5.7%, down from the 7.4% growth registered in the previous quarter, while investment remained strong, increasing 15.5% annually (Q4 2007: +16.9% yoy).  At the sector level, the deceleration over the previous quarter was also general, but mainly driven by plummeting growth in agriculture, which slowed from 4.4% in the fourth quarter to 0.6%, affected by a severe drought.  The industrial sector also slowed and remained unchanged over the same quarter last year, after having expanded 0.4% the preceding month; finally, the services sector increased 4.6% annually (Q4 2007: +5.6% yoy).  A quarter-on-quarter comparison does not corroborate the deceleration suggested by the annual figures.  According to seasonally adjusted figures, the economy increased 1.43% over the previous quarter, which was up from the 0.84% expansion registered in the fourth quarter. 

 

Economy grows below potential

Economic activity was weak in the first quarter and the outlook for this year remains subdued, as export growth should moderate amid the global slowdown, while domestic demand suffers from high interest rates.  In addition, on the domestic side of the economy, unemployment remains stagnant at high levels, reaching 7.6% in the February-April quarter, which is 0.8% higher than the level observed in the same period last year.  Recent indicators corroborate a negative outlook for the coming months.  In April, consumer sentiment deteriorated again, with the consumer confidence index (IPEC) dropping from 41.4 points in March to 38.9 points.  Thus, the index drops further below the 50-point threshold that separates optimism from pessimism.  Moreover, the April reading marks the lowest level in over five years.  The March business confidence index (ICME) also deteriorated, falling from 57.1 points in February to 52.2.  Although the index remains above the 50-point threshold that marks the dividing line between optimism and pessimism, the March figure marks the lowest level in almost two years.  Meanwhile, prices for copper, which accounts for more than half of total exports, will continue to be decisive for the performance of the external sector.  In May, copper prices fell 6.4% over the previous month, reaching US$ 8,105 per tonne (equivalent to US$ 3.67 per pound) by the end of the month.  Moving annual average copper prices reached US$ 3.50 per pound at the end of May, which is well above the Central Bank’s US·2.95 per pound estimate for this year.  The Chilean Copper Commission (Cochilco, Comisión Chilena del Cobre), a government-run research group, is more optimistic than the Central Bank and estimates copper prices to average US$ 3.10 per pound this year.  Nevertheless, in spite of the high copper prices, export growth is expected to moderate significantly this year.  In the first quarter, exports increased 15.7% annually, down from the 18.2% growth attained in the previous quarter, and Consensus Forecast panellists expect exports to grow only 8.8% in the full year.  The Central Bank anticipates GDP to grow between 4.0% and 5.0% this year.  Consensus Forecast panellists share the Bank’s view and expect GDP growth to reach 4.1% this year, which is 0.1 percentage points down from last month’s forecast.  For 2009, the panel expects the economy to accelerate to 4.7%.

 

Inflation rises to highest level in over 13 years

In May, consumer prices increased 1.15% over the previous month, which was well up from the 0.38% price rise registered in April.  The reading also came in above market expectations, which had anticipated prices would increase 0.70% over the previous month.  The price rise was broad-based and, once again, a strong increase in food prices, which added 1.9% over the previous month, was the main driver behind the monthly price spike.  In addition, transport prices soared 2.7% over April.  As a result of the May reading, annual headline inflation jumped from 8.3% in April to 8.9%, which is the highest rate since December 1994.  The core inflation index, which excludes volatile categories such as oil, fresh fruits and vegetables, added a more moderate 0.69% over the previous month but even so, annual core inflation rose from 8.1% in April to 8.4%.  The continuous rise in inflationary pressures may prompt the Central Bank to raise interest rates at its next policy meeting, on 10 June.  The Bank left the benchmark interest rate unchanged at a six-year high of 6.25% at its last policy meeting on 8 May and maintains a 3.0% inflation target for this year.  Nevertheless, Consensus Forecast panellists expect inflation to moderate significantly and end the year at 4.8%, which is unchanged from last month’s forecast.  For 2009, the panel anticipates inflation slowing further to 3.5%.

 

Current account surplus falls notably compared to last year

In the first quarter, the current account recorded a surplus of US$ 880 million.  The reading was less than a quarter of the US$ 3.7 billion surplus recorded in the first quarter of 2007 but came in above the US$ 702 million surplus registered in the previous quarter.  A deterioration in both the transfer and the income balances was more than offset by a notable improvement in the trade balance, thus resulting in the higher current account surplus recorded in the first quarter.  The trade balance surplus rose from US$ 3.9 billion in the fourth quarter of 2007 to US$ 6.2 billion, as exports increased a strong 16.8% over the previous quarter, while imports increased at half that pace, adding 8.2% over the final quarter of 2007.  Meanwhile, the income balance registered a US$ 5.3 billion deficit, well above the US$ 3.7 billion deficit registered in the preceding quarter.  On an annual basis, the current account surplus dropped from US$ 7.2 billion in the fourth quarter to US$ 4.3 billion.  Consensus Forecast panellists expect the current account surplus declining to US$ 1.7 billion by the end of this year.  For 2009, the panel anticipates the current account surplus to fall further to US$ 757 million.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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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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