Central Bank says Hurricane Melissa will affect Jamaica’s domestic GDP growth over the coming quarters
The Financial Policy Committee (FPC) of the Bank of Jamaica, says the recent passage of Hurricane Melissa is expected to adversely affect domestic GDP growth over the coming quarters.
This was disclosed this afternoon, following a meeting of the committee yesterday.
During that meeting, the FPC reviewed the financial system’s performance and systemic risks based on data up to September 2025.
In a statement, the FPC said the domestic financial system had been stable during the September 2025 quarter, underpinned by enhanced prudential oversight and favourable macroeconomic conditions.
It noted that key contributing factors included real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth, low inflation and a general easing of monetary policy globally, which supported the orderly functioning of the financial markets.
The committee said in this context, the core elements of the financial sector continued to demonstrate sound performance across key metrics, including adequate capital, solvency, asset quality, liquidity and profitability.
However, the recent passage of Hurricane Melissa is expected to adversely affect domestic GDP growth over the coming quarters.
It said in addition to key sectors directly impacted by the hurricane—such as tourism and agriculture—households in the affected sections of the country are expected to experience weakened debt servicing capacity, potentially leading to an uptick in non-performing loans.
The FPC said not with-standing the negative impact on credit quality, the deposit-taking sector remains well positioned to absorb this deterioration owing to historically low non-performing loans, high levels of provisioning and robust capital positions.
It noted that while insurance claims are likely to increase, this should not significantly impair insurer solvency due to strong reinsurance coverage coupled with low property insurance penetration in some affected parishes.
According to the committee, the overall impact on the economy is anticipated to be mitigated by financial transfers and gifts in kind from several jurisdictions and agencies to aid the recovery and rehabilitation process as well as the activation of the Government of Jamaica’s Disaster Risk Financing Frame-work, which could provide significant budgetary support.
The release further stated that the BOJ, in assessing financial system resilience, conducted stress tests and systemic risk evaluations to gauge the financial sector’s ability to withstand credit, liquidity, and market risk shocks.
It said the preliminary results indicated that the respective financial system sub-sectors possess sufficient capital and liquidity to absorb the negative impact of Hurricane Melissa and to support the uptick in cash demand as the recovery efforts commence.
It noted that while institution specific factors, including internal policies and risk-appetite may result in varied approaches to the provision of customer relief, financial institutions are well positioned to support the recovery effort.
This includes currency supply, processing of verified insurance-related payments and, where appropriate, offering temporary deferral of credit-related facilities.
The BOJ said it stands ready to provide the necessary liquidity support to deposit-taking institutions should the need arise and to maintain orderly conditions in the foreign exchange market.
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