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Bank of America Says Latin America’s Economy to Crash 6.8% This Year

Bank of America Says Latin America’s Economy to Crash 6.8% This Year

(Bloomberg) -- Bank of America Corp. expects Latin America’s economy to slump by 6.8% this year and warned that plans to reopen businesses are unlikely to go smoothly as new cases continue to soar.

Brazil, the region’s biggest economy, will suffer a 7.7% contraction, while Mexico’s will fall 8%, BofA said.

Weak healthcare systems, limited space for fiscal stimulus and a high degree of labor informality make Latin America particularly vulnerable to the coronavirus pandemic, BofA economists said in a report published Friday.

Bank of America Says Latin America’s Economy to Crash 6.8% This Year

Argentina is in the early stages of reopening and Mexico is likely to follow the U.S. by allowing the manufacturing sector to go back to work. But limited virus testing capacity means that plans to end lockdowns across the region are fraught with uncertainty, BofA said.

The Andean region will also suffer a deep slump, with contractions of 9% in Peru, 4% in Colombia and 3.2% in Chile, according to the report.

“The global effect of the virus, coupled with the drop in commodity prices and the direct effects of the virus in the region, created a perfect storm for a region that was struggling to grow even before the aforementioned negative shocks,“ BofA economists wrote in the global research report.

Debt levels are set to rise significantly, according to the report, which cited Brazil, Mexico, Ecuador Costa Rica and El Salvador as the most affected. Colombia is on the cusp of losing its investment-grade status, while Peru and Chile will suffer sizable increases in their debt levels, it said.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.