Rwanda Economic Update, January 2020 : Accelerating Digital Transformation in Rwanda

This edition’s forecast of Rwanda’s economic growth for 2019 is revised upward from the 7.8 percent projected in the REU14 to 8.5 percent. The stronger growth is driven mostly by the unexpected magnitude of the fiscal expansion. Medium-term growth...

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Main Author: World Bank
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Kigali 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/912581580156139783/Rwanda-Economic-Update-Accelerating-Digital-Transformation-in-Rwanda
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/33247
id okr-10986-33247
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-332472021-05-25T09:32:02Z Rwanda Economic Update, January 2020 : Accelerating Digital Transformation in Rwanda World Bank ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC OUTLOOK RISKS DIGITAL ECONOMY DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY TECHNOLOGY INNOVATION MONETARY POLICY FISCAL TRENDS TRADE PUBLIC SPENDING PUBLIC DEBT This edition’s forecast of Rwanda’s economic growth for 2019 is revised upward from the 7.8 percent projected in the REU14 to 8.5 percent. The stronger growth is driven mostly by the unexpected magnitude of the fiscal expansion. Medium-term growth also looks strong with annualgrowth projected to be about 8 percent. Although the current public investment push will continuein the medium-term, this issue’s high growth scenario assumes that the role of the private sector in investment will grow; public investments alone may not sustain growth at 8 percent over themedium-term. The medium-term outlook assumes that debt will accumulate faster than was projected in REU14. The primary explanation is the large fiscal expansion of 2019. Fiscal deficit for 2020 will continue to be well above the historical average. Despite the increasing indebtedness, reliance on concessional financing will help keep Rwanda’s debt sustainable. In the medium term, the CAD will again stay high, hitting 10 percent of GDP. Monetary policy will remain accommodative, although with the return of inflation to the “normal” range and continuing pressures on the exchange rate and reserves, the policy space has narrowed. The risks to Rwanda’s economic outlook, both domestic and external, have risen. The main risk is the growing reliance on public-sectored investments. Fiscal expansion to achieve the government’s targets for expanding access to infrastructure raises the debt, widens external imbalances, and may crowd out access of the private sector to finance, thus undermining long-term growth. If the reliance on the public sector persists, Rwanda may have difficulties in financing its growth model. Rwanda’s commitment toconcessional borrowing and monetary stability reduces the risks to macroeconomic stability, but overall fiscal risks has gone up because of the reliance on the public sector for achieving NST1growth targets. Despite continuing efforts, the ineffectiveness of the private sector remains a major risk to Rwanda’s growth outlook--growth projections for the medium to long term depend on the ability of the private sector to take the lead. As the fiscal expansion for NST1 subsides in the medium term, it will become increasingly difficult to keep the growth rate at 8 percent without increased private sector investment. Now, to achieve sustainable and productivity-led growth, attention must turn to improving allocation of economic resources through better market functioning. 2020-01-28T15:07:43Z 2020-01-28T15:07:43Z 2020-01-27 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/912581580156139783/Rwanda-Economic-Update-Accelerating-Digital-Transformation-in-Rwanda http://hdl.handle.net/10986/33247 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Kigali Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: Economic Updates and Modeling Africa Rwanda
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
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
RISKS
DIGITAL ECONOMY
DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION
DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY
TECHNOLOGY INNOVATION
MONETARY POLICY
FISCAL TRENDS
TRADE
PUBLIC SPENDING
PUBLIC DEBT
spellingShingle ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
RISKS
DIGITAL ECONOMY
DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION
DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY
TECHNOLOGY INNOVATION
MONETARY POLICY
FISCAL TRENDS
TRADE
PUBLIC SPENDING
PUBLIC DEBT
World Bank
Rwanda Economic Update, January 2020 : Accelerating Digital Transformation in Rwanda
geographic_facet Africa
Rwanda
description This edition’s forecast of Rwanda’s economic growth for 2019 is revised upward from the 7.8 percent projected in the REU14 to 8.5 percent. The stronger growth is driven mostly by the unexpected magnitude of the fiscal expansion. Medium-term growth also looks strong with annualgrowth projected to be about 8 percent. Although the current public investment push will continuein the medium-term, this issue’s high growth scenario assumes that the role of the private sector in investment will grow; public investments alone may not sustain growth at 8 percent over themedium-term. The medium-term outlook assumes that debt will accumulate faster than was projected in REU14. The primary explanation is the large fiscal expansion of 2019. Fiscal deficit for 2020 will continue to be well above the historical average. Despite the increasing indebtedness, reliance on concessional financing will help keep Rwanda’s debt sustainable. In the medium term, the CAD will again stay high, hitting 10 percent of GDP. Monetary policy will remain accommodative, although with the return of inflation to the “normal” range and continuing pressures on the exchange rate and reserves, the policy space has narrowed. The risks to Rwanda’s economic outlook, both domestic and external, have risen. The main risk is the growing reliance on public-sectored investments. Fiscal expansion to achieve the government’s targets for expanding access to infrastructure raises the debt, widens external imbalances, and may crowd out access of the private sector to finance, thus undermining long-term growth. If the reliance on the public sector persists, Rwanda may have difficulties in financing its growth model. Rwanda’s commitment toconcessional borrowing and monetary stability reduces the risks to macroeconomic stability, but overall fiscal risks has gone up because of the reliance on the public sector for achieving NST1growth targets. Despite continuing efforts, the ineffectiveness of the private sector remains a major risk to Rwanda’s growth outlook--growth projections for the medium to long term depend on the ability of the private sector to take the lead. As the fiscal expansion for NST1 subsides in the medium term, it will become increasingly difficult to keep the growth rate at 8 percent without increased private sector investment. Now, to achieve sustainable and productivity-led growth, attention must turn to improving allocation of economic resources through better market functioning.
format Report
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Rwanda Economic Update, January 2020 : Accelerating Digital Transformation in Rwanda
title_short Rwanda Economic Update, January 2020 : Accelerating Digital Transformation in Rwanda
title_full Rwanda Economic Update, January 2020 : Accelerating Digital Transformation in Rwanda
title_fullStr Rwanda Economic Update, January 2020 : Accelerating Digital Transformation in Rwanda
title_full_unstemmed Rwanda Economic Update, January 2020 : Accelerating Digital Transformation in Rwanda
title_sort rwanda economic update, january 2020 : accelerating digital transformation in rwanda
publisher World Bank, Kigali
publishDate 2020
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/912581580156139783/Rwanda-Economic-Update-Accelerating-Digital-Transformation-in-Rwanda
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/33247
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