Economic growth will ease to 3.5% in 2024 and 2.6% in 2025 as necessary macroeconomic stabilisation policies will slow domestic demand. Tighter financial conditions and ongoing fiscal consolidation will limit household consumption. Investment and government consumption will also slow as the effects of the post-earthquake reconstruction wear off. However, exports should increase on the back of an improvement in the external environment and a continued revival of international tourism. GDP growth is projected to rebound in 2026, reaching 4% as the effects of the stabilisation policies ease.
The fiscal and monetary policy mix is rightly tight and should remain so until inflation is firmly on a path to target. Despite the ongoing price moderation, high inflation expectations and strong inertia uphold upside risks on the inflation outlook. Structural reforms can further support the current efforts to stabilise the macroeconomic framework and raise the long-term growth potential. In particular, labour market reform would help increase high-quality formal job creation.