Country Report Curaçao 4th Quarter 2018

Outlook for 2019-20: Political stability

The political situation will remain volatile during 2019-20. The coalition government-which consists of the main Partido Antiá Restrukturá (PAR) and two minority partners, the Partido MAN (MAN) and the Partido Inovashon Nashonal-has only a very slim parliamentary majority, holding 12 seats in the 21-seat parliament. The Economist Intelligence Unit's central forecast is that the coalition will serve out the remainder of its term in office, which runs until 2021, but there is a high risk of an early election. The government, led by the prime minister, the PAR's Eugene Rhuggenaath, Faces a fragmented political environment, which will provide little guarantee of stability. Although the ruling coalition has a stronger mandate than its predecessor (which collapsed when a party holding just two seats withdrew), the government is at risk of instability should friction emerge between the PAR and MAN.

The government will find it difficult to avoid the political volatility that has affected the island in recent years. The political establishment has been rocked by major corruption allegations, including accusations of financial malpractice levelled at the now-suspended president of the Centrale Bank van Curaçao en Sint Maarten (CBCS, the Curaçao and Sint Maarten joint central bank), Emsley Tromp, who was replaced by two acting directors in November 2017.

Despite having been convicted of bribery charges and sentenced to three years in jail and a five-year ban from public office in 2016, the former prime minister, Gerrit Schotte (2010-12), of the Movementu Futuro Korsou (MFK), was allowed to run in the 2016 and 2017 elections. His party won 16% of the vote in 2016 and 19.9% of the vote in 2017, and gained a seat in the parliament. On August 30th Mr Schotte was convicted by the Court of First Instance on corruption charges and ordered to pay Naf1.8m (US$1m) to the state or face a three-year imprisonment. This development has hurt the MFK's political prospects.

On top of political fragmentation, stability will suffer from rising immigrant inflows from Venezuela, which will burden the already-strained public finances and heighten the risk of social tension. Moreover, the government will struggle in its effort to address weak growth and implement unpopular economic reforms. Changes to public pension entitlements, and the education and healthcare systems could, along with tax reform, easily be derailed by special-interest groups. These factors will contribute to overall political instability and complicate governance.

© 2018 The Economist lntelligence Unit Ltd. All rights reserved
Whilst every effort has been taken to verify the accuracy of this information, The Economist lntelligence Unit Ltd. cannot accept any responsibility or liability for reliance by any person on this information
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