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Presentation to the meeting,

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Caricom project to develop a vulnerability profile for SIDS ... Economic Vulnerability Profile: Profile of International Trade. Profile of International Finance ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Presentation to the meeting,


1
  • Presentation to the meeting,
  • The vulnerability of SIDS
  • Enhancing resilience the role of the private
    sector, civil society and trade in the
    sustainable development of SIDS
  • Convened by UWICED / UNDP in Dominica
  • September 29, 2003 October 3, 2003
  • Presented by Dr. Michael Witter
  • UWI, Mona
  • Assisted by Ms. Terry-Ann Miller
  • UWI, Mona

2
Vulnerability Trends ProfileSelected
Caribbean Case Studies
3
Vulnerability Trends and Profile
  • Background to the study
  • Caricom project to develop a vulnerability
    profile for SIDS
  • Tracking economic vulnerability as an essential
    element in the preparation of SIDS for Mauritius
  • Development of customized indices for tracking
    the impact of policy on vulnerability as a
    management tool for individual SIDS

4
Vulnerability Trends and Profile
  • Over view of the presentation
  • Definition of the index used and the rationale
  • The challenges of the availability of data and
    the accessing of that data
  • Estimates of the index of economic vulnerability
    in the last decade for 6 Caribbean SIDS
  • Vulnerability profile template for SIDS

5
Vulnerability Trends and Profile
  • Definition of the Index used in these estimates
  • Four indicators have been used to capture
  • the openness of the economy exposure as
    indicated by the sum of exports of goods and
    tourism and imports as a proportion to GDP.
    Because of the dominance of tourism in the hard
    currency earnings of several Caribbean SIDS, it
    seemed necessary to include tourism in indicating
    the exposure of these economies to shocks
    emanating from the international economy

6
Vulnerability Trends and Profile
  • the concentration of risk among the two of three
    leading export industries, including tourism, as
    indicated by the share of the two or three
    principal (largest) foreign exchange earners in
    total earnings from the export of goods plus
    tourism
  • dependence on imported energy as indicated by
    the share of imported energy in total energy
    consumption. There is a difficulty with this
    indicator for countries, like Trinidad and
    Tobago, that import petroleum for processing and
    re-export as petroleum-based products

7
Vulnerability Trends and Profile
  • external indebtedness as indicated by the
    proportion of external debt to the GDP. We have
    experimented, in the case of Jamaica, with the
    inclusion of the internal debt as an indicator of
    indebtedness because of the impossibility of
    separating the external from the internal debt
    where the capital market has been liberalized.
    Even conceptual distinction between external and
    internal debt is difficult in a country like
    Jamaica. For the purposes of this exercise we
    have not included the internal debt.

8
Vulnerability Trends and Profile
  • Weighting of the indicators
  • We have adopted equal weights for the indicators
    in constructing the index because
  • Ultimately any weighting system entails values
    judgment as to the relative importance of each of
    the component indicators, and we have nor reason
    to believe that any indicator is more important
    than any of the other chosen indicators

9
Vulnerability Trends and Profile
  • Experiments with different weighting systems have
    not shown any significant difference in the
    estimated index except where highly unequal
    weights, that cannot be justified, are used
  • Normalization, following Briguglio, so that all
    the numbers are scaled down to lie between 0 and
    1

10
Vulnerability Trends and Profile
  • Accordingly, the index of economic vulnerability
    (IEV1) used is defined as
  • IEV (exposure) (concentration) (energy
    dependence) (indebtedness)/4,
  • where
  • 1 EVI already refers to the environmental
    vulnerability index

11
Vulnerability Trends and Profile
  • exposure (XTM)/GDP
  • concentration (Leading exports T)/(XT)
  • energy dependence (Petroleum imports)/(total
    energy consumption)
  • indebtedness External debt/GDP
  • X total exports of goods
  • M total imports of goods
  • T gross earnings from Tourism

12
Vulnerability Trends and Profile
  • The estimates of the IEV for 6 Caribbean SIDS
    Antigua, Barbados, Dominica, Jamaica, St. Lucia,
    Trinidad and Tobago are shown in the following
    graphs

13
Vulnerability Trends and Profile
  • Singapore Contradiction/Paradox
  • Briguglio has pointed to Singapore as the epitome
    of a high performance economy with high economic
    vulnerability dependent as it is on international
    markets.

14
Vulnerability Trends and Profile
  • Perhaps, it is really an apparent contradiction
    a paradox since export led growth that entails
    increased dependency on a narrow range of
    industries and/or a narrow range of markets
    necessarily leads to very high risks associated
    with those industries and markets.

15
Vulnerability Trends and Profile
  • Conversely, the collapse of traditional export
    markets without replacement by new industries
    leads to a decline in openness, and hence a
    decline in the risks emanating from the
    international economy, and therefore a decline in
    vulnerability.

16
Vulnerability Trends and Profile
  • In summary, growth without diversification
    increases economic vulnerability, and economic
    vulnerability will decline as the trade sector of
    economies contracts.

17
Vulnerability Trends and Profile
  • Of course, in the second case the decline in
    openness if GDP is sustained by debt or
    short-term financial flows, risks due to sudden
    changes in international credit accessibility,
    and hence the economic vulnerability will
    increase. Most likely, social vulnerability will
    increase with unemployment, poverty, migration of
    skilled persons, and other factors that
    contribute to social instability, such as the
    trade in illegal drugs.

18
Vulnerability Trends and Profile
  • Resilience comes with growth that is
  • led by a diversified basket of goods and services
    for export
  • accompanied by a relative decline in the import
    dependence the so-called import coefficient of
    the GDP which in turn requires more intensive
    utilization of domestic resources

19
Caribbean Vulnerability Indices
20
Caribbean Vulnerability Indices
21
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
22
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
23
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
24
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
25
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
26
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
27
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
28
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
29
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
30
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
31
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
32
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
33
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
34
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
35
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
36
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
37
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
38
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
39
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
40
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
41
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
42
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
43
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
44
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
45
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
46
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
47
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
48
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
49
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
50
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
51
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
52
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
53
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
54
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
55
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
56
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
57
Caribbean Vulnerability Index
58
Economic Vulnerability Profile
  • Physical size
  • Location
  • Demographic
  • Population Distribution
  • Economic Size absolute
  • Economic Size relative
  • Economic Growth
  • Structure of the Economy

THE ISLAND
THE PEOPLE
THE ECONOMY
59
Economic Vulnerability Profile
  • Profile of International Trade
  • Profile of International Finance
  • Shocks of Natural Forces
  • Shocks / Threats to Security
  • Threats to Major Social Groups

INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC RELATIONS
ENVIRONMENTAL RISK
SECURITY RISK
SOCIAL VULNERABILITY
60
Economic Vulnerability Profile
  • Profile
  • Profile 2

61
Jamaica Vulnerability Profile
  • Profile
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