After Surviving the Pandemic, Companies in Latin America, Caribbean Need Help – Report

August 5, 2022

  • Companies throughout Latin America and the Caribbean survived the pandemic by cutting back on investment, which reduced capital levels and now threatens to slow economic growth in the region.
  • More than two years after the onset of COVID-19, productive capital numbers remain 20% below pre-pandemic levels. New policies are needed to help companies boost investment and growth, according to a new report.

A new study by the Center for Global Development and the Inter-American Development Bank finds that many companies in Latin America and the Caribbean survived the pandemic by slashing investment, but that this decline now threatens to constrain the region’s economic recovery.

To reverse the situation and prevent it from leading to a type of “economic long COVID,” where a weak private sector fails to create jobs and stimulate economic growth, governments in the region should actively pursue a series of policies to help companies boost investment and hire new employees.

These are among the key findings of the new report, which examined the balance sheets from a large number of companies across the region and discovered that, despite an economic recovery in 2020 and 2021, capital levels at companies are still 20% lower than they were before the pandemic began.

“While it is good news that relatively few larger firms failed, the drop in their productive capital implies significant scarring and threatens the region’s economic growth,” said Andrew Powell.

“Rebuilding capital is essential for firms after the pandemic. But with global and local interest rates rising and major uncertainties in international capital markets, it’s clear that firms will find it a challenge to obtain the necessary financing for investment,” said Liliana Rojas-Suarez

The study was written as the result of discussions in an expert group of top economists and lawyers drawn from the region and led by Andrew Powell, Principal Advisor of the Research Department at the IDB and Liliana Rojas-Suarez, director of the Latin America Initiative and senior fellow at the Center for Global Development.

The study sampled balance sheet data from larger businesses across the region and found that investment fell sharply while debt levels remain high, especially in sectors hit the hardest by the COVID-19 pandemic. In addition, the demand for formal workers diminished and informal employment rose steeply during the recovery.

The report analyzes companies across a large swathe of the region’s economy. Although revenues at companies in sectors like logging, mining, and other extractive industries have mostly recovered, in many sectors—including construction, retail, and most white-collar industries—revenues remain significantly depressed.

Small firms, which often have limited access to credit, were punished the most severely by the crisis. The report finds smaller companies still face more financial challenges and are more likely to fall behind on debt payments, with a significant portion shutting down.

While overall economic growth has recovered significantly in many countries across the region, the stalled recovery for companies in key sectors has had knock-on effects for workers, especially for women and younger people. The number of workers in informal businesses has increased from its already-very-high pre-pandemic levels. Higher informality, the researchers say, will further constrain the region’s productivity and growth, largely because informal companies tend to be much less productive.

The joint CGD-IDB report recommends several ways governments could kickstart investment and economic recovery for the region’s businesses:

  • The establishment of a new, independent, and temporary public-private institution with a mandate to identify and support firms that suffered during the pandemic but are still viable and need investment. This institution needs to be staffed by the private sector to avoid political interference.
  • The promotion of digitalization strategies in each country, with a focus on proven cost-effective and growth-enhancing policies like the prioritization of investment in digital infrastructure.
  • Policies to boost and incubate promising young firms and improve access to venture capital, through both international networks and local markets.
  • Simpler, more transparent, and more efficient legal procedures to allow firms to reorganize or go into bankruptcy more effectively. Greater flexibility for courts, better insolvency frameworks, and an international forum to assist with bankruptcies would help unsuccessful businesses reform or wind down their activities.
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