ASIATODAY.ID, WASHINGTON — Solomon Islands is expected to lose economic momentum in 2026 after posting stronger-than-anticipated growth last year, with rising inflation, weakening external balances, and mounting fiscal pressures clouding the outlook for the Pacific island nation.
Home to nearly 800,000 people, Solomon Islands remains heavily dependent on imported fuel, commodity exports, and international development assistance, making its economy particularly vulnerable to global shocks.
According to the latest assessment by the International Monetary Fund, the economy is projected to expand by 2.6% in 2026, slowing from 3.5% in 2025, as higher fuel prices stemming from the conflict in the Middle East weigh on businesses, households, and government finances.
Consumer inflation is forecast to accelerate to 5.4%, up from an average of 2.7% last year, driven largely by rising energy and import costs.
The weaker outlook follows a solid performance in 2025, when strong gold production, resilient agricultural exports, and continued infrastructure investment helped lift economic growth while pushing the current account balance to a 5.6% of GDP surplus.
That momentum, however, is expected to fade this year.
The current account is projected to swing back to a 3.4% of GDP deficit as rising fuel and food import bills outpace export earnings. At the same time, the fiscal deficit is expected to widen to 4.1% of GDP, reflecting persistent spending pressures, depleted government cash reserves, uncertain revenue collection, and limited domestic financing capacity.
The report identifies prolonged geopolitical tensions, domestic political uncertainty, and budget financing constraints as the principal risks to the country’s economic outlook.
To strengthen macroeconomic resilience, the Fund urged the government to narrow fiscal deficits, rebuild cash buffers through realistic budgeting, and improve public financial management. It also called for faster implementation of tax reforms, including the long-delayed value-added tax (VAT), while strengthening tax administration and reviewing tax exemptions, particularly in the extractive industries.
The Central Bank of Solomon Islands was encouraged to remain ready to tighten monetary policy if inflationary pressures intensify, while maintaining the country’s fixed exchange rate regime to preserve price stability and policy credibility.
Beyond the immediate challenges, Solomon Islands continues to benefit from long-term opportunities in mining, agriculture, and infrastructure development. Unlocking that potential, however, will require stronger governance, greater fiscal transparency, more effective management of future mineral revenues, and sustained efforts to diversify the economy as logging activity continues to decline.
Climate change also remains a growing structural challenge. The report stresses that strengthening public financial management will be essential to finance, prioritize, and implement climate adaptation projects that can improve the country’s long-term resilience.
Although public debt is projected to continue rising over the medium term, the assessment concludes that the risk of external debt distress remains low, while overall public debt distress is moderate, provided fiscal reforms stay on course.
After a stronger-than-expected recovery in 2025, Solomon Islands now faces the difficult task of protecting economic stability against an increasingly uncertain global backdrop.
Success will depend on disciplined fiscal management, credible economic reforms, and the country’s ability to convert its natural resource wealth into sustainable, inclusive long-term growth. (AT Network)
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