135
Chile Chile is set for a gradual recovery over the next two years, with activity returning to its pre-pandemic levels in late 2022. GDP growth will be 4.2% during 2021, after a contraction of 6% in 2020. Private consumption will be a main driver of the recovery, initially sustained by measures implemented by the government to support households, a gradual improvement of the labour market sustained by hiring subsidies and withdrawals from pension funds. Investment will regain momentum at a slow pace, conditional on the evolution of the pandemic, driven by public infrastructure plans, supportive financing conditions and tax incentives. Recovering global demand will also be beneficial. Solid fiscal and monetary policy frameworks allowed the authorities to pursue bold measures, which prevented a deeper contraction and are avoiding deeper scars from the pandemic. Continuing with an ambitious structural reform agenda, in particular planned reforms to bolster pensions and female participation in the labour force, would sustain an inclusive recovery. Additional public investment, especially in education, the lifelong learning system, active labour market policies, and digital and transport infrastructure, would help strengthen the recovery further. The country has been hit hard by the pandemic Chile has been hit hard by the pandemic, with one of the highest numbers of deaths per million inhabitants. The cases have been concentrated in the Santiago metropolitan area, with scattered outbreaks in other regions of the country. Local quarantines, mobility restrictions and night-time curfews have been applied across the country. The city of Santiago and other large cities were put under a strict lockdown in May, with most containment measures lifted progressively in mid-July, when infections started declining. A state of emergency, declared in March to impose containment measures, has been extended until the end of the year.
Chile Investment will remain subdued
Many jobs have been lost
Index 2019Q3 = 100, s.a. 110
Y-o-y difference, thousands 500
Real GDP Real investment
0
100
-500 90
Self-employed Formal employees
-1000
Informal employees Rest¹
80
-1500
Total
70 2019
2020
2021
2022
0
0
Jan-20
Mar-20
May-20
Jul-20
Sep-20
-2000
1. The rest includes employers, domestic workers and unpaid family workers. Source: OECD Economic Outlook 108 database; and INE. StatLink 2 https://doi.org/10.1787/888934218064
OECD ECONOMIC OUTLOOK, VOLUME 2020 ISSUE 2: PRELIMINARY VERSION © OECD 2020