Senior Multimedia Reporter
geisha.kowlessar@guardian.co.tt
Domestically, economic activity will be buttressed by the stabilisation of energy sector output and modest expansion of the non-energy sector over the short to medium-term.
This from the Central Bank’s monetary policy report which was released yesterday.
The Bank also stated that improvements in energy sector production observed during the fourth quarter of 2024 are anticipated to spillover into 2025.
It said natural gas production is projected to improve following the start up of bpTT’s Cypre field in April 2025, adding that production would also experience upticks from EOG’s Mento field.
In the non-energy sector, prospects for public sector wage settlements could underpin business and consumer optimism, the Bank outlined, stating that continued credit expansion alongside improvements in several supplemental indicators of non-energy sector activity, such as cashless payments, suggest aggregate demand may remain buoyant.
Further, the Bank stated that labour market conditions are likely to stabilise following an increase in the unemployment rate in 2024.
“Employment growth is expected in a few sectors, particularly the community, social, and personal services sector and construction (including electricity and water) sectors,” the bank said.
Meanwhile, it noted that headline inflation is expected to increase in the short term given challenges on the international trade front.
During the third quarter of 2024, the bank noted that overall economic growth was bolstered by an expansion in energy sector production.
This, it said, represented the first yearon-year improvement in the sector’s output in nearly two years, adding that growth conditions were further supported by improved non-energy sector output.
Indicators monitored by the Central Bank also suggested that the positive performance of the energy sector extended into the fourth quarter of 2024 and was complemented by improved activity in the non-energy sector during the period.
Based on data from the Central Statistical Office (CSO), the bank noted real GDP improved by 2.0 per cent (year-on-year) in the third quarter of 2024. This, it said, reflected improvements in both the energy and nonenergy sectors (2.1 per cent and 1.9 per cent, respectively).
Energy sector increases were broad-based as higher output was recorded for several commodities, prompting improved performances across several sub-sectors.
The bank added that economic conditions continued to improve in the fourth quarter of 2024, stating that energy sector output was bolstered by heightened production among upstream participants.
Non-energy sector activity improved in the fourth quarter of 2024, according to estimates from the Central Bank’s Quarterly Index of Real Economic Activity (QIEA).