by Kari Grenade, PhD, Caribbean Economist and Macroeconomic Advisor
The global economy faces acute uncertainty due to a range of factors, including policy changes in the world’s largest economy and in other advanced economies, international trade tensions, pressures on supply chains, volatility in financial markets, and geopolitical strains.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) World Economic Outlook, released in April 2025, indicates that economic uncertainty is lowering global growth projections for both the short term and medium term. Caribbean governments and businesses must now navigate economic uncertainty while simultaneously strategising to advance the region’s sustainable development.
The global economic uncertainty and its direct effects on Caribbean economies are intersecting with the region’s persistent sustainable development challenges. Some of the more pressing ones include small size (economic, population, and physical), limited production and diversification, low productivity and competitiveness, inadequate social and economic infrastructure, institutional and resource constraints, vulnerability to global economic conditions and natural hazards, weak response capacity to shocks, and high migration. The region also continues to deal with socioeconomic scars from the Covid-19 pandemic.
Yet, amidst economic uncertainty, there is a critical need for strategic planning to secure and advance the region’s sustainable development. Clear and risk-informed policies and actions by both governments and businesses are essential for navigating economic uncertainty while simultaneously devising strategies to foster resilience and sustainability.
Government policies should aim to optimise fiscal frameworks, systems and institutions to ensure efficient spending, maximise revenue, and enhance the management of budgetary risks and public debt. Strengthening the fiscal ecosystem is important to provide greater stability in handling economic fluctuations. Legal and regulatory frameworks should be reinforced to enable effective implementation of policies and projects by both public and private sectors. Collaborations between the public and private sectors, through transparent and viable public-private partnership (PPP) arrangements, are essential for increasing resources and knowledge to manage economic fluctuations and for developing plans for sustainability and resilience. Investments in sustainable infrastructure, advanced technologies, new and emerging economic frontiers (such as the green, blue, and orange economies), social development, and climate adaptation should be scaled up and sustained.
Informing development stakeholders about global economic trends and including them in resilience and sustainability planning are important. Their involvement is crucial to help identify challenges, opportunities, and practical needs for inclusive development. Clear communication, regular stakeholder engagements and assessments are necessary. Genuinely involving stakeholders (not tokenism) in sustainability and resilience planning will require ruling administrations to adopt inclusive governance and policy-making practices beyond partisan, tribal and divisive politics that currently dominate the Caribbean’s political landscape.
Business strategies should focus on maintaining healthy cash reserves, reducing discretionary expenses, optimising receivables and payables, exploring new source markets as well as delivery routes, increasing digital presence, and planning for different economic scenarios. Staying updated with global economic indicators, policy changes, and industry trends is also crucial. Importantly also, businesses should be intentional about engaging stakeholders to help better align corporate goals with societal expectations, which can potentially strengthen their market position. Additionally, improving customer relationships and engaging employees are also vital strategies to navigate economic uncertainty and prepare for future growth.
At this juncture, the goal of Caribbean policymakers should be to manage economic risks and uncertainties, while concurrently setting out a roadmap for the preparation of a comprehensive sustainable development plan for the region that rests on interlocking imperatives. Key priorities include deepening regional integration, strengthening economic security as well as energy and food/nutrition security, increasing technological innovation, improving the doing business environment, accelerating social progress (including empowering youth and women), intensifying climate action, building consciousness about Caribbean identity, and shifting mindsets away from limitations and towards opportunities.

