33
Colombia GDP is expected to grow at moderate rates of 1.2% in 2023 and 1.4% in 2024 before picking up to 3% in 2025. High inflation, interest rates and policy uncertainty will weigh on domestic demand in 2024. The central bank has raised interest rates to a 25-year high to bring inflation under control. Headline inflation has started to come down and is projected to return to the 2-4% target range in the second half of 2025. Monetary policy should avoid a premature easing to ensure continued disinflation and safeguard credibility. To ensure debt stabilisation and compliance with fiscal rules while securing fiscal space for an ambitious social reform agenda, it will be necessary to improve spending efficiency and public revenues. Further raising incentives for formal job creation by reducing non-wage labour costs and improving training could foster both productivity and equity. Growth has slowed GDP growth has slowed substantially since late 2022 and consumer and business confidence remain relatively weak. Investment has fallen sharply to below 18% of GDP compared to 22% on average during 2014-2019. High interest rates and policy uncertainty are the main factors weighing on investment. Moreover, financial conditions have tightened amidst rising cost of credit and more stringent lending criteria. Private consumption, a key driver of the strong recovery from the pandemic, has also weakened. So far, the slowdown has not yet been passed through to the labour market, where the unemployment rate is 1.5 percentage points below pre-pandemic levels.
Colombia
Source: DANE; and BanRep. StatLink 2 https://stat.link/w3jryh
OECD ECONOMIC OUTLOOK, VOLUME 2023 ISSUE 2: PRELIMINARY VERSION © OECD 2023