Economy of East Timor
The economy of East Timor is a low-income economy as ranked by the World Bank.[13] It is placed 133rd on the Human Development Index, indicating a medium level of human development.[14] 20% of the population is unemployed,[1] and 52.9% live on less than $1.25 a day.[14] About half of the population is illiterate.[14] At 27%, East Timor's urbanisation rate is one of the lowest in the world.
Currency | US dollar (USD) and East Timor centavos[1] |
---|---|
Calendar year | |
Trade organisations | Pacific Alliance |
Country group |
|
Statistics | |
GDP | [4] |
GDP growth | |
GDP per capita | [4] |
GDP by sector |
|
2.294% (2018)[4] | |
Population below poverty line | 49.9%[6] (2007 est.) |
38 (2002 est.) | |
Labour force | 430,200 (2009) |
Unemployment | 18% (2010 est.) |
Main industries | printing, soap manufacturing, handicrafts, woven cloth |
181st (below average, 2020) | |
External | |
Exports | $60 million (2020 est.) |
Export goods | crude petroleum, natural gas, coffee, various vegetables, scrap iron |
Main export partners | |
Imports | $850 million (2020 est.) |
Import goods | refined petroleum, cars, cement, delivery trucks, motorcycles |
Main import partners | |
Gross external debt | |
Public finances | |
$279,000,000 (December 2013) | |
All values, unless otherwise stated, are in US dollars. |
In 2007, a bad harvest caused a "major food crisis" in East Timor. By November, eleven sub-districts still needed food supplied by international aid.[15]
According to data gathered in the 2010 census, 87.7% of urban and 18.9% of rural households have electricity, for an overall average of 36.7%.[16]
History
Prior to and during colonisation, the island of Timor was best known for its sandalwood. The Portuguese colonial administration also granted concessions to Oceanic Exploration Corporation to develop oil and gas deposits. However, this was curtailed by the Indonesian invasion in 1976.
Petrochemical resources were divided between Indonesia and Australia with the Timor Gap Treaty in 1989.[17] The treaty established guidelines for joint exploitation of seabed resources in the area of the "gap" left by then-Portuguese Timor in the maritime boundary agreed between the two countries in 1972.[18] Revenues from the "joint" area were to be divided 50-50. Woodside Petroleum and ConocoPhillips began development of some resources in the Timor Gap on behalf of the two governments in 1992.
In late 1999, about 70% of the economic infrastructure of East Timor was destroyed by Indonesian troops and anti-independence militias,[1] and 260,000 people fled westward. From 2002 to 2005, an international program led by the United Nations, manned by civilian advisers, 5,000 peacekeepers (8,000 at peak) and 1,300 police officers, substantially reconstructed the infrastructure. By mid-2002, all but about 50,000 of the refugees had returned.
The economy grew by about 10% in 2011 and at a similar rate in 2012.[19]
While East Timor gained revenue from offshore oil and gas reserves, little of it has been spent on the development of villages, which still rely on subsistence farming.[20] As of 2012, nearly half the East Timorese population was living in extreme poverty.[20]
Data
Year | GDP (in mil. US$ Nominal)[21] |
GDP per capita (in US$ Nominal)[22] |
GDP growth (real) |
GDP per capita growth (real) |
Inflation rate (in %) |
Government debt (in % of GDP) |
Note |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1993[23] | 364.92 | 480 | non-oil | ||||
1994[23] | 427.30 | 561 | non-oil | ||||
1995[23] | 501.56 | 658 | non-oil | ||||
1996[23] | 610.11 | 801 | non-oil | ||||
1997[23] | 705.23 | 926 | non-oil | ||||
1998[23] | 250.12 | 328 | Indonesian economic crisis | ||||
1999 | Independence | ||||||
2000 | 367.08 | 415 | |||||
2001 | 477.44 | 530 | |||||
2002 | 469.51 | 508 | |||||
2003 | 490.44 | 517 | |||||
2004 | 440.76 | 453 | |||||
2005 | 462.28 | 464 | |||||
2006 | 453.80 | 446 | |||||
2007 | 542.79 | 523 | oil economy start | ||||
2008 | 648.49 | 614 | |||||
2009 | 726.88 | 676 | |||||
2010 | 881.82 | 806 | |||||
2011 | 1,042 | 936 | |||||
2012 | 1,160 | 1,024 | |||||
2013 | 1,396 | 1,210 | |||||
2014 | 1,447 | 1,232 | |||||
2015 | 1,594 | 1,332 | |||||
2016 | 1,651 | 1,353 | |||||
2017 | 1,616 | 1,299 | oil price decline | ||||
2018 | 1,584 | 1,249 | |||||
2019 | 2,048 | 1,583 | |||||
2020 | 1,902 | 1,442 | |||||
2021 | |||||||
2022 | 2,450 | 1,793 | |||||
2023 | 1,988 | 1,425 |
Industries
In the Doing Business 2013 report by the World Bank, East Timor was ranked 169th overall and last in the East Asia and Pacific region. The country fared particularly poorly in the "registering property", "enforcing contracts", and "resolving insolvency" categories, ranking last worldwide in all three.[24] In 2020 it ranked 181st.[25]: 20 There are no patent laws in East Timor.[26]
Regarding telecommunications infrastructure, East Timor is the second to last ranked Asian country in the World Economic Forum's Network Readiness Index (NRI), with only Myanmar falling behind it in Southeast Asia. In the 2014 NRI ranking, East Timor ranked number 141 overall, down from 134 in 2013.[27]
East Timor is part of the Timor Leste–Indonesia–Australia Growth Triangle (TIA-GT).[28]
Agriculture
The agriculture sector employs 80% of East Timor's active population.[29] In 2009, about 67,000 households grew coffee in East Timor, with a large proportion of those households being poor.[29] Currently, the gross margins are about $120 per hectare, with returns per labour-day of about $3.70.[29] There were 11,000 households growing mungbeans as of 2009, most of them by subsistence farming.[29] 94% of domestic fish catch comes from the ocean, especially coastal fisheries.[30]: 17 66% of families are in part supported by these subsistence activities, however the country as a whole does not produce enough food to be self-sustaining, and thus relies on imports.[30]: 16 Coffee, rice, maize, coconuts, cassava, soybeans, bananas, mango, and sweet potatoes are cultivated here.
After petroleum, the second largest export is coffee, which generates about $10 million a year.[31] 9,000 tonnes of coffee, 108 tonnes of cinnamon, and 161 tonnes of cocoa were harvested in 2012 making the country the 40th ranked producer of coffee, the 6th ranked producer of cinnamon and the 50th ranked producer of cocoa worldwide.[32]
Energy
Oil and gas
The Portuguese colonial administration granted concessions to the Australia-bound Oceanic Exploration Corporation to develop petroleum and natural gas deposits in the waters southeast of Timor. However, this was curtailed by the Indonesian invasion in 1976. The resources were divided between Indonesia and Australia with the Timor Gap Treaty in 1989.[33] East Timor inherited no permanent maritime boundaries when it attained independence. A provisional agreement (the Timor Sea Treaty, signed when East Timor became independent on 20 May 2002) defined a Joint Petroleum Development Area (JPDA) and awarded 90% of revenues from existing projects in that area to East Timor and 10% to Australia.[34] An agreement in 2005 between the governments of East Timor and Australia mandated that both countries put aside their dispute over maritime boundaries and that East Timor would receive 50% of the revenues from the resource exploitation in the area (estimated at A$26 billion, or about US$20 billion over the lifetime of the project)[35] from the Greater Sunrise development.[36] In 2013, East Timor launched a case at the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague to pull out of a gas treaty that it had signed with Australia, accusing the Australian Secret Intelligence Service (ASIS) of bugging the East Timorese cabinet room in Dili in 2004.[37]
At the time of independence East Timor had per capita natural wealth equivalent to the wealth of an upper-middle income country. Over half of this was in oil, and over a quarter natural gas. The Timor-Leste Petroleum Fund was established in 2005 to turn these non-renewable resources into a more sustainable form of wealth. By 2009 it had a value of US$4.8 billion,[38]: 4–6 and by 2011 it had reached a worth of US$8.7 billion.[39] East Timor is labelled by the International Monetary Fund as the "most oil-dependent economy in the world".[40] The Petroleum Fund pays for nearly all of the government's annual budget, which increased from $70 million in 2004 to $1.3 billion in 2011, with a $1.8 billion proposal for 2012.[39] East-Timor's income from oil and gas stands to increase significantly after its cancellation of a controversial agreement with Australia, which gave Australia half of the income from oil and gas from 2006.[41] From 2005 to 2021, $23 billion earned from oil sales has entered the fund. $8 billion has been generated from investments, while $12 billion has been spent.[25]: 30 A decrease in oil and gas reserves led to decreasing HDI beginning in 2010.[25]: 18–19 80% of government spending comes from this fund, which as of 2021 had $19 billion, 10 times greater than the size of the national budget. As oil income has decreased, the fund is at risk of being exhausted. Withdrawals have exceeded sustainable levels almost every year since 2009.[25]: 23
Electricity
Electricidade De Timor-Leste (EDTL) is the vertically integrated monopoly generator and distributor of electric power within the on-grid areas.
Tourism
In 2017, the country was visited by 75,000 tourists.[42] Since the later 2010s, tourism has been increasing and the number of hotels and resorts has increased. The government decided to invest in the expansion of the international airport in Dili.
Transport
Development projects
Electricity
Oil and gas
One promising long-term project is the joint development with Australia of petroleum and natural gas resources in the waters southeast of East Timor.
East Timor inherited no permanent maritime boundaries when it gained independence, repudiating the Timor Gap Treaty as illegal. A provisional agreement (the Timor Sea Treaty, signed when East Timor became independent in 2002) defined a Joint Petroleum Development Area (JPDA), and awarded 90% of revenues from existing projects in that area to East Timor and 10% to Australia.[43] The first significant new development in the JPDA since East Timorese independence is the largest petroleum resource in the Timor Sea, the Greater Sunrise gas field. Its exploitation was the subject of separate agreements in 2003 and 2005. Only 20% of the field lies within the JPDA and the rest in waters not subject to the treaty (though claimed by both countries). The initial, temporary agreement gave 82% of revenues to Australia and only 18% to East Timor.[44]
The government of East Timor has sought to negotiate a definite boundary with Australia at the halfway line between the countries, in accordance with the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea. The government of Australia preferred to establish the boundary at the end of the wide Australian continental shelf, as agreed with Indonesia in 1972 and 1991. Normally a dispute such as this would be referred to the International Court of Justice or the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea for an impartial decision,[45] but the Australian government had withdrawn from these international jurisdictions (solely on matters relating to maritime boundaries) shortly before East Timorese independence.[46]
Nevertheless, under public and diplomatic pressure, the Australian government offered instead a last-minute concession solely on royalties from the Greater Sunrise gas field.[47] An agreement was signed in 2005 under which both countries would set aside the dispute over the maritime boundary, and East Timor would receive 50% of the revenues (estimated at A$26 billion or about US$20 billion over the lifetime of the project)[48] from the Greater Sunrise development. Other developments within waters claimed by East Timor but outside the JPDA (Laminaria-Corallina and Buffalo) continue to be exploited unilaterally by Australia, however.[49]
Some proceeds from East Timor's petroleum royalties are directed to the country's sovereign wealth fund, the Timor-Leste Petroleum Fund.
Telecoms
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{{cite web}}
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Further reading
- Mats Lundahl and Fredrik Sjöholm. 2019. The Creation of the East Timorese Economy. Springer. Archived 30 July 2020 at the Wayback Machine
- McDonald, Hamish (5 October 2020). "Sun is setting on Timor-Leste's pipe dream". Asia Times. Archived from the original on 22 February 2022. Retrieved 22 February 2022.
- Neves, Guteriano (21 March 2022). "Timor-Leste's Petroleum Revenues: The Challenges of Managing 'Easy Money'". Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung. Archived from the original on 26 February 2023. Retrieved 26 February 2023.
- Silva, Kelly; Palmer, Lisa; Cunha, Teresa, eds. (2023). Economic Diversity in Contemporary Timor-Leste. Leiden: Leiden University Press. doi:10.24415/9789087283957. ISBN 9789400604407.
- "Timor-Leste Tourism Research and Development" (PDF). International Labour Organization. June 2014. Archived (PDF) from the original on 4 November 2021. Retrieved 23 July 2021.