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Grenada
Grenada landenbeleid
Beleid vastgesteld op 28 mei 2007
- Er is een landenplafond van 80 mln euro van kracht
- Het signaleringsplafond is 30 mln euro
- - waarvan per 2011-08-31 1 mln euro benut is
- Voor overheidskopers: minimale concessionaliteitseis van toepassing.
- Particuliere kopers: SIF faciliteit
Landenklasse: 6
Restricties
- Speciale voorwaarden, raadpleeg uw account manager
Grenada landenrapport
Atradius DSB Economic Research
Country Report last updated : 3 February 2008
Country : GRENADA
Political Situation
Stable
Head of state
QEII, represented by governor-general Daniel Williams.
Form of government
Government of the centre-right New National Party.
Internal Economic Situation
Erratic Performance
General situation
Adverse shocks badly hit Grenada: NY 11/9/2001 and natural disasters. Hurricane Ivan devastated the domestic economy in 2004: 90% of buildings were damaged or destroyed, the agricultural sector was decimated (nutmeg, cocoa and banana crops wiped out) and tourism badly hit with several hotel complexes to close for months. Reconstruction costs amounted to $850 mln, double the 2003-GDP. From 2005 strong recovery as a result of repair works and investments for the Cricket World Cup: GDP-growth of 5% in 2007. Before Ivan struck Grenada’s economy, diversification has taken place from traditional agricultural sectors to more service-orientated (offshore finance, IT) and tourist-related activities. Stable rate of inflation, at 2.5% end 2007.
External Economic Situation
Weak Liquidity And Solvency
Main sources of foreign exchange
Tourism (40%), spices, light industrial products, services.
Main foreign markets
USA (46%), EU (26%), Latin America (22%).
Main expenses of foreign exchange
Construction material, consumer goods.
Balance of payments
Recovered tourism and workers’ transfers (> 20% GDP) have not compensated for the imports of reconstruction materials and less exports as a result of loss of productive sectors (esp. bananas and cacao), widening the current account since 2004. These deficits are partly covered by FDI and grants.