Country Report Maldives April 2022

Briefing sheet

Political and economic outlook

  • The Maldivian economy is heavily skewed towards the services sector, which makes up more than three-quarters of GDP and is led by tourism services. The country relies heavily on bilateral assistance for budgetary support.
  • Although EIU expects the Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) to complete its term in office, which expires in 2023, the risk of political instability has risen with the leader of the main opposition Progressive Party of Maldives (PPM) having been acquitted by the Supreme Court, making him eligible to contest the presidential election.
  • A sustained recovery in tourism activity will be a priority for the government in 2022-23. Widespread booster vaccination, the "one island, one resort" set up for safe holidays, a lenient immigration policy (with no quarantine requirement) and initiatives such as offering vaccination to tourists will make the Maldives a preferred destination.
  • The country's impressive vaccination coverage and liberal visa policies will provide tailwinds for economic growth over the next two years; real GDP is forecast to be 4% larger than 2019 levels by 2023. Easing of travel restrictions will boost both global tourism demand and competition from other travel destinations.
  • We expect the rufiyaa's peg to the US dollar to be maintained in 2022-23, despite low levels of foreign-exchange reserves. A recovery in tourism receipts and a US$150m currency swap line with India will help to reduce pressure on reserves.
  • We expect the Maldives to welcome 1.5m tourist arrivals in 2022; India will remain the leading source of tourists. The recovery in the Maldives will outpace other tourism-dependent economies in Asia, including Sri Lanka, Fiji and Thailand.
  • The Maldives' strategic location in the Indian Ocean will attract courtship by India, China and the US. Although not our forecast, a PPM victory in the 2023 presidential election is likely to be accompanied by realignment away from India and towards China.
Key indicators
 2020a2021b2022c2023c
Real GDP growth (%)-33.630.012.08.5
Consumer price inflation (av; %)-1.40.52.52.0
Government balance (% of GDP)-27.6-18.1-10.5-7.2
Current-account balance (% of GDP)-35.5-27.2-22.0-20.4
Exchange rate Rf:US$ (av)15.3815.37a15.3815.39
a Actual. b EIU estimates. c EIU forecasts.

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Key changes since January 17th

  • We now believe that government spending will increase at a faster pace than originally expected, which will push up the budget deficit/GDP ratio to 10.5% this year, compared with 9% previously. We still expect the deficit to narrow in 2023.
  • Owing to an upward revision to our forecast for global oil prices (dated Brent Blend) in 2022-23, we now expect consumer prices to rise by an annual average of 2.3% during this period, compared with 1.9% earlier.

The quarter ahead

  • TBC-Tourist arrivals (April): The lifting of the state of public health emergency and withdrawal of a required negative covid-19 test for international visitors will boost tourist arrivals in the coming months. The ongoing Russia-Ukraine war will hit arrivals from both nations, which are key sources of visitors to the Maldives.
  • June 30th-GDP (Q1 2022): We expect real GDP growth to make a strong start in 2022, bolstered by stellar growth in tourism inflows over the year-earlier period. We expect the Maldives to receive about 1.5m tourist arrivals in 2022, but this is still below the pre-pandemic levels of 2019.

Basic data

Land area

298 sq km

Population

407,660 (2014 Population and Housing Census of Maldives)

Major islands

Thiladhunmathi Atoll (resident population 57,078 according to 2014 census; includes Miladhunmadulu group)

Northern Maalhosmadulu Atoll (resident population 15,819 in 2014 census)

Southern Maalhosmadulu Atoll (resident population 9,601 in 2014 census)

Malé Atoll (resident population 14,092 in 2014 census)

Capital

Malé (population 157,935 in 2014 census)

Climate

Tropical; average temperature range: 25-32°C

Weather in Malé (altitude 2.4 metres)

Average rainfall is 1,945 mm per year. There is a dry season from January to April and a rainy season from May to December

Languages

Dhivehi (official language; English also widely spoken among officials)

Measures

Metric

Currency

Maldivian rufiyaa. Rf1 = 100 laari. Average exchange rate in 2021: Rf15.37:US$1

Fiscal year

January 1st-December 31st

Time

5 hours ahead of GMT

Public holidays

January 1st (New Year); April 3rd (beginning of Ramadan); May 1st (Labour Day); May 3rd-5th (Eid-ul Fitr); July 10th-12th (Eid-ul Adha); July 26th (Independence Day-observed); September 27th (Quamee Dhuvas); October 9th (Mawlid al-Nabi); October 26th (celebration of the day that the Maldives embraced Islam); November 3rd (Victory Day); November 11th (Republic Day)

Political structure

Official name

Republic of Maldives

Form of state

Presidential republic

The executive

The president is elected by direct popular vote; a cabinet is appointed by the president and approved by parliament

Head of state

Ibrahim Mohamed Solih (president)

National legislature

Unicameral parliament with 87 members. Legislators are elected by a simple majority in single-seat constituencies and serve five-year terms

Legal system

Each inhabited island has a magistrate's court. There is also a network of other courts with varying specific responsibilities (such as a family court or a juvenile court), as well as a High Court. The country's top judicial body is the Supreme Court

National elections

The last presidential election was held in September 2018; the next is due in September 2023; the last parliamentary election was held in April 2019; the next is due in April 2024

National government

The Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) controls both the presidency and the legislature

Main political parties

MDP, led by a former president and current speaker of the People's Majlis (the legislature), Mohamed Nasheed; Progressive Party of Maldives (PPM); Jumhooree Party, allied with the current government

Key ministers

President: Ibrahim Mohamed Solih

Vice-president: Faisal Naseem

Defence: Uza. Mariya Ahmed Didi

Economic development: Uz. Fayyaz Ismail

Finance & Treasury: Ibrahim Ameer

Foreign affairs: Abdulla Shahid

Health: Abdulla Ameen

Home affairs: Sheikh Imran Abdulla

Tourism: Abdulla Mausoom

Central bank governor

Ali Hashim

Economic structure: Annual indicators

 2017a2018a2019a2020a2021b
GDP at market prices (Rf m)73,153.081,586.086,788.057,568.761,329.1
GDP (US$ m)4,754.25,301.05,642.23,742.83,989.5
Real GDP growth (%)7.28.17.0-33.630.0
Consumer price inflation (av; %)2.8-0.10.2-1.40.5
Population (m)0.50.50.50.50.6
Exports of goods fob (US$ m)318.3339.2360.7257.6315.0
Imports of goods fob (US$ m)-2,226.5-2,764.2-2,753.1-1,708.3-2,035.7
Current-account balance (US$ m)-1,026.7-1,502.5-1,489.7-1,327.4-1,085.9
Foreign-exchange reserves excl gold (US$ m)587.4712.2753.5984.9791.2a
Total external debt (US$ m)1,515.42,339.32,679.73,352.23,313.3
Debt-service ratio, paid (%)5.012.212.115.823.5
Exchange rate (av) Rf:US$15.3915.3915.3815.3815.37a
a Actual. b EIU estimates.

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Origins of gross domestic product 2020% of totalComponents of gross domestic product 2020% of total
Agriculture7.2Private consumption52.6
Industry12.8Government consumption16.9
Services80.0Fixed investment40.6
  Stockbuilding0.0
  Exports of goods & services49.5
  Imports of goods & services69.8
  Domestic demand110.1
    
Main destinations of exports 2021% of totalMain origins of imports 2021% of total
Thailand20.1Oman15.4
Germany4.9UAE15.2
UK2.9China14.8
France1.8India14.5

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Economic structure: Quarterly indicators

 2020   2021   
 1 Qtr2 Qtr3 Qtr4 Qtr1 Qtr2 Qtr3 Qtr4 Qtr
Prices        
Consumer prices (av; 2000=100)136.8131.3135.1135.6135.9134.3135.8135.7
Consumer prices (% change, year on year)0.7-4.0-1.1-1.1-0.72.30.50.1
Financial indicators        
Exchange rate Rf:US$ (av)15.3715.4015.3715.3815.3715.3615.3715.39
Exchange rate Rf:US$ (end-period)15.3115.4115.4015.4115.3515.3215.4015.39
Deposit rate (av; %)3.623.923.793.763.833.643.673.60
Lending rate (av; %)11.6511.6211.5811.5511.5511.6211.5911.38
M2 (end-period; Rf m)37,354.337,753.837,182.141,385.044,428.745,608.246,410.852,415.1
M2 (% change, year on year)0.97.410.114.218.920.824.826.7
Foreign trade (US$ m)        
Exports fob90.241.980.273.473.163.863.8n/a
Imports cif668.6350.9387.2431.5587.0579.8625.5n/a
Trade balance-578.4-309.0-307.0-358.1-513.9-516.1-561.7n/a
Foreign reserves (US$ m)        
Reserves excl gold (end-period)7427036969858459121,017791
Sources: IMF, International Financial Statistics.

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Outlook for 2022-23: Political stability

The ruling Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) dominates the People's Majlis (parliament), with 65 of the 87 seats. This has enabled the president, Ibrahim Mohamed Solih, to pass the bulk of his administration's agenda. The EIU's core forecast is that the MDP will serve out the remainder of its term, which expires in 2024.

The risks to political stability have risen however, after Abdulla Yameen Abdul Gayoom, the former president of the Maldives (2013-18), was acquitted from a five-year prison term in November 2021. This makes Mr Yameen, who leads the main opposition, Progressive Party of Maldives (PPM), eligible to contest the 2023 presidential election. He had lost the 2018 election with a 42% vote share, meaning that the MDP no longer enjoys a guaranteed victory in the poll.

Political infighting within the MDP has also weakened its support base, reflected in the party's defeat in local government polls in April 2021. The two main party figures-Mohamed Nasheed, the leader of the MDP, speaker of the People's Majlis and a former president (2008-12), and Mr Solih-are believed to have often fallen out over matters of complacency and corruption in government functioning. Their tug-of-war has created confusion in the ranks of the party, as well as within the country's security forces. This could hinder the response in the face of a security threat to officials, locals and foreign tourists; however, we do not currently expect the impact of this to be significant. The Taliban's assumption of power in Afghanistan is also likely to embolden local fringe groups in the Maldives, increasing the risk of social unrest in the country.

Since surviving an assassination attempt in May 2021 (allegedly launched by a local Islamist group), Mr Nasheed has also been pushing for a national referendum to shift from presidential to parliamentary governance, which would enable a party to form a government via majority rather than through coalition negotiations under the current system. This has irritated the MDP's coalition allies, mainly comprising conservative lawmakers who view Mr Nasheed's stance as an attack on religion. Mr Solih seems to be in favour of supporting the parliamentary scheme after the 2023 presidential election, should he return as president, when he believes that the country's tourism industry will have emerged from the shadow of covid-19.

We believe that Mr Yameen's political comeback is likely to encourage Mr Nasheed and Mr Solih to lay their differences to rest, albeit temporarily, as an MDP victory in the upcoming presidential elections in 2023 remains paramount for both. On Mr Nasheed's part, this will require a softening of his demands for changing the country's political structure and pushing for controversial legislations such as the hate-crime bill (which is viewed by conservative lawmakers as an attack on religion) to heal internal party fractures, while Mr Solih will have to win back lost public support through supportive welfare schemes in 2022.

Outlook for 2022-23: Election watch

The next presidential election is due in September 2023 and the next parliamentary election in early 2024. In the previous presidential campaign, the absence of Mr Nasheed (who lived in exile in the UK) resulted in Mr Solih being chosen as the presidential candidate for an MDP-led coalition against the then incumbent PPM. The MDP's endorsement for the upcoming election will be contested by both individuals in the primary elections this time around. The losing candidate is likely to support the winning one in the presidential poll, despite their disagreements, in order to suppress the PPM's chances of victory.

A divided MDP will also encourage other contenders to enter the presidential race, but the PPM will remain its main contender. Mr Yameen's release has breathed life into the latter's effort to rally its support base by suggesting that the current administration's "India first" foreign policy threatens the country's sovereignty. For the public, however, growing tourism and trade ties with India likely overshadow security concerns from its military presence on the islands, suggesting that this campaign may not be a vote winner. Although a close call, we continue to expect the MDP to retain presidency in 2023 on the condition that it is able to heal internal fractures.

Outlook for 2022-23: International relations

Maldivian foreign policy will continue to be guided by the country's substantial external financing requirements, resulting from a wide deficit on the current account and high levels of external debt, much of which is owed to China. Its strategic location in the Indian Ocean means that the Maldives will continue to garner interest from India and China, which are keen to expand their influence in the region.

Despite being divided over matters of corruption and religious extremism, the MDP lawmakers are united in their support for the administration's "India first" foreign policy. India has offered regular fiscal and investment support to the Maldives, and emerged as the main source of inbound tourism for the country in 2021. It is also operating a US$1.5bn line of credit to fund various projects, including the Greater Malé Connectivity Project, with the aim of matching China's role in the archipelago's infrastructure projects. We expect India to remain the first port of call for the Maldivian administration for economic and maritime aid in 2022-23.

By contrast, relations between China and the Maldives, which flourished under the administration of Mr Yameen, have had less room to prosper under Mr Solih. A PPM victory in 2023 would therefore also affect foreign relations of the Maldives, with realignment away from India and towards China under Mr Yameen's presidency. This remains outside our forecast, however. In the interim, the free-trade agreement with China that was signed in December 2017 remains in limbo and is unlikely to be implemented in 2022-23.

Under its Indo-Pacific strategy, which seeks to limit China's growing influence in the region, the US will also increase its engagement with the Maldives (and other small nations in South Asia). This is reflected in the Framework for a Defence and Security Relationship with the US, the country's first military agreement with any country other than India, which was signed in 2020. The US government has also announced its plan to open an embassy in the Maldives, but a timeline has yet to materialise. Notably, the Indian government has welcomed closer US-Maldives relations, in sharp contrast to its stance in 2013, when it blocked Mr Nasheed's plans to sign a Status of Forces Agreement with the US.

Outlook for 2022-23: Policy trends

The tourism sector, along with the services ecosystem, is the main driver of the Maldivian economy. Reliance on tourism earnings left the county especially vulnerable to the covid-19 pandemic. The government's efforts in 2022-23 will remain focused on bolstering activity in the sector. This will involve marketing the country as a safe holiday destination, owing to its "one island, one resort" set up and widespread vaccination. On March 13th the government revoked the public health emergency protocol that had been in place for almost two years since the start of the pandemic, further easing rules related to covid-19 tests and quarantine requirements for international arrivals. Tourists arriving into the country are now no longer required to present a negative covid-19 test and will continue to be offered a 30-day visa on arrival. The government is also relying on rapid booster dose programmes to maintain immunity levels of resort employees and the local population. These initiatives are likely to be welcomed by tourists, the majority of whom are from high-income groups.

With the withdrawal of the public health emergency, the government's policy focus will gradually return to other matters that had been put on the back burner amid the pandemic. It will now look to roll out its planned reform measures under the Strategic Action Plan 2019-23, which include tackling corruption and human-rights abuse that had spread under the previous administration. Reforms to the judiciary to reduce its tendency of intervening in the country's political struggles will also be on the government's agenda, although progress is likely to be slow as attention turns to looming elections.

Outlook for 2022-23: Fiscal policy

The current government inherited significant external debt associated with the infrastructure spending boom under Mr Yameen. The servicing of this debt, much of which is owed to China, will keep the country's budget balance in deficit. The government deficit widened sharply in 2020 on account of a steep decline in earnings, but it will narrow gradually over the forecast period. With the phasing-out of covid-19 relief on resort lease rent and with favourable tourism prospects boosting the collection of the goods and services tax, the deficit is forecast to narrow to 7.2% of GDP by 2023, from an estimated 18.1% of GDP in 2021. This is still slightly wider than the pre-pandemic average, as elevated global prices will increase the cost of the government's extensive subsidy programme, which covers utilities and food prices. We do not expect significant cuts in subsidies in 2022-23.

Grants and loans received by the Maldivian government from multilateral donors and other countries, especially India, will cover part of the fiscal shortfall in 2022-23. This will inflate the country's public debt levels but a strong economic recovery will temper the public debt/ GDP ratio, which the national authorities expect to fall to 104.5% of GDP in 2022, from 115.6% in 2020.

Outlook for 2022-23: Monetary policy

The primary job of the Maldives Monetary Authority (MMA, the central bank) is to maintain price stability, although legislation also tasks it with preserving an adequate level of international reserves. The MMA achieves monetary stability partly through the peg between the currency (the rufiyaa) and the US dollar. In view of this peg, the MMA has little scope to conduct independent monetary policy.

The MMA uses minimum reserve requirements (MRRs) for banks and open-market operations as instruments to control local credit creation and money supply. We expect the MRR on foreign-currency deposits to be raised back to 10% in 2022, from 5% currently, as steady tourism earnings reduce the risk of dollar illiquidity in the local currency market. The increase is likely to be delivered in two increments of 2.5 percentage points each over the year, matching the rise of MRR on local-currency deposits to 10% in 2021.

Outlook for 2022-23: International assumptions

International assumptions summary
(% unless otherwise indicated)
 2020202120222023
GDP growth
World-3.75.63.43.1
US-3.45.73.42.1
China2.28.15.25.0
EU27-6.15.23.62.8
Exchange rates
US$ effective (2000=100)117.8115.3120.9121.0
¥:US$106.8109.8116.5118.5
US$:€1.141.181.121.13
Financial indicators
US$ 3-month commercial paper rate0.560.070.962.05
¥ 3-month money market rate0.050.040.030.05
Commodity prices
Oil (Brent; US$/b)42.370.4116.395.3
Gold (US$/troy oz)1,770.31,799.61,897.31,559.4
Food, feedstuffs & beverages (% change in US$ terms)7.836.122.10.7
Industrial raw materials (% change in US$ terms)-3.240.111.71.2
Note. GDP growth rates are at market exchange rates.

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Outlook for 2022-23: Economic growth

Given the dominant role played by tourism in the Maldivian economy, real GDP growth in 2022-23 will be tied closely to the recovery of activity in the sector. The country's wide vaccination coverage, lenient visa procedures and natural separation of resorts from the main island inhabited by locals will underpin its popularity as a top tourist destination. The emergence of more contagious strains of the coronavirus, like Omicron, presents the main downside risk for the country's growth outlook, as this could prompt travel restrictions and disrupt the pace of economic recovery.

Nevertheless, higher global vaccine coverage, especially in the developed world, is expected to blunt the severity of future outbreaks and encourage more lax border restrictions globally in 2022 relative to 2021. This will increase tourism demand while also increasing competition from other tourist destinations. We expect the Maldives to welcome 1.5m tourist arrivals cumulatively over the year, up from 1.3m in 2021 but below 1.7m in 2019. The pace of recovery will slow in 2023 compared with 2022, but we still expect real GDP to be 4% larger than 2019 level.

We do not expect a nationwide lockdown to be reimposed in the Maldives in 2022-23, allowing undisrupted work on ongoing infrastructure development projects. Tourism-affiliated services, such as transport and retail trade, will also benefit from the anticipated return of visitors. Improving household earnings and continued support from the government, in the form of subsidies, will prop up private consumption.

Outlook for 2022-23: Inflation

Global prices dominate inflationary trends in the Maldives, as domestic consumption is driven mainly by tourism expenditure and is met mostly through imports. Inflation is therefore susceptible to global travel and price swings, and the pass-through is set by the rufiyaa:US dollar peg. However, the government's comprehensive policy of capping the cost of utilities (making up more than a fifth of the consumer price index) and other living expenses for citizens strongly blunts the pass-through of global price pressures. We expect the government to maintain its current subsidies in 2022-23 owing to which, despite a surge in global energy and commodity prices, the pick-up in the headline inflation rate over the forecast period will be relatively modest, averaging 2.3% per year. The introduction of a minimum monthly wage, set in the range of Rf4,500-7,000 (US$291-453) by the Ministry of Economic Development will add to higher cost-push inflation.

Outlook for 2022-23: Exchange rates

The rufiyaa is pegged to the US dollar. The mid-point of the exchange rate is Rf12.85:US$1, and the rate is permitted to fluctuate within a band of ±20%. In recent years the currency has consistently grazed the weak edge of the exchange-rate band.

Although we maintain an optimistic tourism outlook for the Maldives, the expiration of the debt relief offered by G20 countries in 2020-21 and the country's significant external debt burden will weigh on its external buffers, while anticipated monetary tightening by the Federal Reserve (US central bank) will increase refinancing costs. The Ministry of Finance has allocated around US$400m for debt obligations in its 2022 budget projections, which will be funded through credit assistance from bilateral and multilateral sources.

Our core forecast is that the peg will be maintained in 2022-23 as tourism receipts recover; however, there is a significant risk that the government could be forced to weaken the currency if foreign-exchange reserves remain under pressure over a prolonged period. We believe that the currency will continue to test the weaker edge of the band, especially as the outlook for the US dollar improves.

Outlook for 2022-23: External sector

The value of merchandise imports dwarfs that of exports, and the country has historically run a wide deficit on its goods trade account. We expect the trade deficit to widen in 2022-23, inflated further by elevated global oil prices. The strengthening of external demand over the next two years and ongoing efforts to extend the country's shipments of fisheries (the main export commodity) to Russia and China will underpin a recovery in exports. This will, nonetheless, be overshadowed by resurgent tourism activity in the islands that will fuel the import bill, the size of which will continue to exceed exports by a wide margin.

By contrast, the Maldives' services exports from tourism (accounting for 90% of total services credits) have consistently exceeded services debits. These exports are expected to grow beyond their 2019 levels by end-2023, with the Maldives emerging as a leading destination for luxury tourism. However, the services surplus will be insufficient to offset the goods trade deficit.

The current account will remain firmly in deficit in 2022-23, but the shortfall will narrow to the equivalent of 20.4% of GDP by end-2023, from an estimated 27.2% of GDP in 2021 on account of higher tourism receipts. The primary and secondary income accounts will remain in deficit over the forecast period, reflecting high interest payments and negligible remittance inflows.

Outlook for 2022-23: Forecast summary

Forecast summary
(% unless otherwise indicated)
 2020a2021b2022c2023c
Real GDP growth-33.630.012.08.5
Gross fixed investment growth-32.06.07.55.0
Gross agricultural production growth7.0-15.912.88.1
Consumer price inflation (av)-1.40.52.52.0
Consumer price inflation (end-period)-1.30.00.70.0
Lending interest rate11.611.411.511.7
Government balance (% of GDP)-27.6-18.1-10.5-7.2
Exports of goods fob (US$ m)257.6315.0330.0340.0
Imports of goods fob (US$ m)1,708.32,035.72,195.02,490.7
Current-account balance (US$ m)-1,327.4-1,085.9-989.2-988.9
Current-account balance (% of GDP)-35.5-27.2-22.0-20.4
External debt (year-end; US$ m)3,352.23,313.33,573.63,692.9
Exchange rate Rf:US$ (av)15.3815.37a15.3815.39
Exchange rate Rf:US$ (end-period)15.4115.39a15.3815.39
Exchange rate Rf:¥100 (av)14.4114.00a13.2012.99
Exchange rate Rf:€ (av)17.5518.19a17.1917.35
a Actual. b EIU estimates. c EIU forecasts.

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