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Rohingya people who fled from their towns after violence in the state of Rakhine are seen behind a fence on the border line outside Maungdaw, Myanmar, March 31, 2018
Washington (Reuters): The government of Aung San Suu Kyi is opening the economy and growth is rebounding in Myanmar, though the possibility of broader Western sanctions over the Rohingya refugee crisis is nevertheless giving some foreign investors pause, according to a senior IMF official.
Shanaka Jay Peiris, the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) mission chief to Myanmar, said in a recent interview that initial data reviewed by the IMF indicated that some foreign investors were delaying final approval of projects until there was clarity about how the situation may unfold.
“The numbers we have for FDI (foreign direct investment) aren’t showing it yet, but foreign investment approvals are slowing down, so there is some indicator that going forward FDI may be weaker,” Peiris told Reuters following the publication last week of the IMF’s latest review of Myanmar’s economy.
“Since August, investors are taking a pause. It isn’t a surprise,” he said. He said it was unclear which projects were being delayed and added that more data was necessary to better understand whether the “pause” was temporary or not.
However, leading indicators such as FDI project amounts approved by Myanmar’s government for the first 10 months of fiscal 2017/18 from April show “a marked slowdown” since September 2017, according to the IMF.
For now, FDI inflows for 2017/18 still look to be a “solid number,” Peiris added.
While it is too soon to know what it could mean for the overall economy, Peiris said: “We have to see whether project approvals were temporarily lower or will be a trend, as well as whether actual FDI inflows will fall by much. The magnitude would also matter.”
“We are not operating under the assumption that there are going to be broad economic sanctions,” he added, downplaying the risk of a decline.
Myanmar government spokesman Zaw Htay said that, “Especially in Myanmar, because of the Rakhine issue, tourism has come down, and investments and FDI have come down too,” adding that the authorities were working hard to ensure macroeconomic stability.
The report by the IMF, which follows annual consultations with the government, followed a November visit to Myanmar, the first since nearly 700,000 Rohingya fled to Bangladesh after a military crackdown condemned by the international community.
The World Bank announced on 13 October 2017 that it was delaying the release of $200 million in budget support for Myanmar in response to the “forced displacement of the Rohingya.”
Both the United States and Canada imposed sanctions against a general in Myanmar’s military for his role in the crackdown against the Muslim Rohingya. The European Union said in February it was preparing sanctions against military leaders to hold them accountable for their role in the crisis.
The Trump administration’s aid chief, Mark Green, said last month he will visit Myanmar soon for talks with the government and see for himself conditions of the Rohingya refugees.
Targeted sanctions
Peiris said the IMF believed that any more Western sanctions would likely target individuals in the military and not the economy.
“If the sanctions are limited to the military personnel, which has been the case to now, we believe it will be less of an impact on the economy,” Peiris said. “If it is broader, it would be more worrying.”
Overall, the IMF sees economic growth picking up toward an estimated potential rate of about 7-7.5% after lower-than-expected growth of 5.9% in 2016/17.