Panama; Selected Issues
Panama’s extensive trade and financial linkages make it vulnerable to adverse external shocks, and this would have a sizable impact on Panama’s real activity. In the absence of monetary policy, macroprudential policy tools could usefully complement microprudential tools. A macroprudential supervisory body must possess the ability or power to collect and analyze firm-, market-, and global-level data to detect risks before they develop into full-blown crises. This study analyzes Panama’s tax structure, performance, and administration in order to identify priority areas for further strengthening
Year of publication: |
2013-03-28
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Institutions: | International Monetary Fund (IMF) ; International Monetary Fund |
Subject: | Selected issues | External shocks | Spillovers | Macroprudential Policy | Tax reforms | Panama | real gdp | trading partners | world trade | gdp growth | external trade | merchandise trade | impact of trade | trade-weighted average | trade shock | trade partner | external financing | current account deficit | economic growth | trade integration | exogenous shock | trade openness | business cycles | neighboring countries |
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