93
Chile The Chilean economy is growing strongly, fuelled by a rapid vaccine rollout, a large fiscal stimulus, high commodity prices and the short-term impact of extraordinary pension fund withdrawals on consumption. GDP growth is expected to reach 12% in 2021 and slow towards 2% in 2023, as monetary and fiscal policies tighten. Inflation has risen amid buoyant domestic demand and supply bottlenecks, but is projected to slowly return to the target of 3% by early 2023. In the short term, the main challenge for macroeconomic policies will be to avoid overheating. The planned fiscal adjustment is appropriate. Focusing support on those firms and households that need it most would go in this direction, but a reform to raise higher public revenues is needed to accommodate higher social spending needs. Monetary policy has started to tighten and should continue to reach a neutral stance in early-2022 to ensure that inflation returns to target. Strengthening access to quality education, life-long learning and job search support would help to address increases in inequality and foster a stronger recovery of employment. Demand is expanding vigorously while inflation has increased One of the fastest vaccination rollouts in the world has substantially reduced COVID-19 cases and deaths, allowing an almost full reopening of the economy. Household consumption is thriving on the back of strong fiscal support to households and continuous pension fund withdrawals. Economic activity recorded strong growth in the third quarter of 2021 with vigorous retail trade and services growth. Short-run business confidence has risen significantly supporting investment, especially in machinery, in a context of strong demand and reopening of the economy. The strong increase in domestic demand led to an acceleration of headline and core consumer price inflation well beyond the central bank target of 3%. The peso depreciation and higher energy prices have added to inflationary pressures, and inflation expectations have started to rise. Wage pressures have emerged as firms are facing difficulties in hiring workers. The unemployment rate, at 8.4% in September, is almost 4 percentage points lower than a year ago. However, around a third of the jobs lost during the pandemic have yet to return, while labour force participation is well below pre-crisis levels.
Chile Economic activity is growing strongly
Inflation has increased above the central bank target
Index 2019Q4 = 100, s.a. 140 130 120
Y-o-y % changes 6
Monthly economic activity index, IMACEC
Headline inflation (CPI)
Subindex, goods production
Core inflation¹
Subindex, retail trade
One-year inflation expectations²
5
Subindex, services
4 Target band
110
3 100 2
90
1
80 70
2019
2020
2021
0
0
2019
2020
2021
0
1. Consumer Price Index (CPI) excluding energy and food products. 2. Inflation expectations are based on the Survey of Economic Expectations, which is a monthly survey of a group of academics, consultants and executives or advisors of financial institutions carried out by the Central Bank of Chile. Source: OECD Economic Outlook 110 database; CEIC; the Central Bank of Chile; and INE. StatLink 2 https://stat.link/kc4nm2
OECD ECONOMIC OUTLOOK, VOLUME 2021 ISSUE 2: PRELIMINARY VERSION © OECD 2021