In this year of global recession, fiscal policy has been
able to play a supportive role in some countries of the Latin America
and Caribbean (LAC) region. Even as the downturn caused
fiscal revenues to fall, many governments were able to avoid cutting
expenditure, and some were able to provide a sizable positive fiscal impulse, actively raising expenditure to provide a boost to domestic demand and GDP.
This is especially clear among the group we call “commodity
exporting, financially integrated countries” (see Figure). Fiscal
policy is also playing a countercyclical role in a number of other
countries in 2009. In contrast, some of the region’s other commodity
exporting countries—which in general had implemented a procyclical
fiscal policy during the previous years of expansion—continue to do so
in 2009, with negative fiscal impulses.
And most of the LAC region’s tourism intensive countries are also
implementing a procyclical policy, again similar to their previous
record.

The different fiscal policy responses this year are not a surprise,
but relate to differences in the conditions and policies prevailing in
more favorable times. Countries implementing countercyclical fiscal
policies in 2009 are those that have the ability to do so.
This is the notion of fiscal space, related to the
availability of financial buffers, and the ability to access
international capital markets even during bad times, a privilege
associated with stronger track records of fiscal discipline—including
by having achieved larger fiscal surpluses in the pre-crisis period,
when revenues were booming.
Countries with larger debt ratios, lower debt ratings, lesser access
to financing or their own financial buffers have less space to conduct
countercyclical fiscal policies. In some cases, these restrictions are
related to past patterns of rapidly increasing expenditure when rising
commodity export prices deliver revenue windfalls.
This year’s experience highlights the value of strengthening fiscal
policy frameworks in the future, so that all countries can be better
prepared for future episodes of unfavorable conditions. For
a discussion of these policy issues, and a detailed analysis of policy
responses to the global crisis, see the October 2009 edition of the Regional Economic Outlook for Latin America and the Caribbean.
Other blogs in this series:
The Commodity Connection: Rising Commodity Prices and the Outlook for Latin America and the Caribbean
Latin America and the Caribbean During the Global Crisis: Better than the Past, Better than Other Regions
Why Did Latin America Do Better in This Crisis? The Benefits of Being Prepared
Spanish versions (Version en español):
La recuperación de los precios de las materias primas y su impacto en las economías de América Latina y el Caribe
América Latina y el Caribe durante la crisis: Mejor que en el pasado y que otras regiones
¿Por qué América Latina tuvo un mejor desempeño en esta crisis? Los beneficios de estar preparado
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