Economists are calling for greater transparency from the Government, after the latest reports on the Heritage and Stabilisation Fund (HSF) revealed that more than half a billion US was withdrawn over a six-month period, with questions now being raised about how the money was used and whether the country's fiscal position has been fully presented.
The latest HSF reports, published last Friday, show the Government withdrew a total of $3.46 billion (US$510.78 million) from the fund during the periods July-September 2025 and October-December 2025.
Former minister in the Ministry of Finance and economist Mariano Browne yesterday argued that the withdrawals should have formed part of a broader explanation of the country's fiscal position prior to now.
"On Friday, the budget deficit was lower than it was projected. Now notice, the Finance Minister made no announcement in his budget speech, never had commented or said that he had made withdrawals from the Heritage and Stabilisation Fund during his first budget speech, nor did he make any statement during his mid-year review budget speech," Browne said.
He contended that key financial information had been omitted.
"The bottom line is conveniently leaving out numbers and pretending that everything is hunky-dory. It can't be hunky-dory."
Browne also took issue with statements suggesting the deficit had narrowed despite lower energy revenues.
"The statement, for example, from the Central Bank talks about, notwithstanding the reduction in oil revenues, that they were still able to lower the deficit. So that is total PR."
He questioned the absence of updated figures on value-added tax collections, public sector backpay and other liabilities.
"He hasn't said what the position is with VAT. He hasn't given a number in respect of all of the back pay. He just simply said he will repay it next year," he said.
Browne argued that expenses were effectively being deferred into the next fiscal year under the Government's cash accounting system.
"The bottom line is understated expenses because the Government operates on a cash-accounting basis. If I expense it, it doesn't exist. He's pushing his expenses into the following year."
He noted that while higher energy revenues may improve Government finances in the next fiscal year, the current financial picture was incomplete.
"He was not being transparent with regard to the real numbers. So, he's overstating how good things are. If things were so good, you would not have drawn from the Stabilisation Fund."
Browne also challenged the Finance Minister's explanation that excluding certain liabilities from earlier fiscal projections represented a conservative approach.
"How could you do that? You made a conscious decision to give backpay of 10 per cent to the public servants. You know that the backpay figure was about $6.8 billion. How much of that has been paid? How much of that has been postponed to next year? What happens if you can't pay it next year?"
He added, "If anything at all, the Minister of Finance is gambling. He's not being conservative."
Browne further argued that references to a lower fiscal deficit failed to acknowledge the contribution made by withdrawals from the HSF.
"The Central Bank statement that the deficit is less does not recognise that the extra money came from the Heritage and Stabilisation Fund. The impression it gives is that they were managing the expenses better without telling us that they actually hit up the fund to take care of the shortfall."
Economist Dr Marlene Attzs also called for a fuller accounting of the country's finances when Budget 2027 is presented later this year.
"The fiscal year ends in a few months, and Budget 2027 will provide the appropriate opportunity for the Government to present a comprehensive picture of the country's fiscal position, including its borrowing programme, debt obligations and withdrawals from the HSF."
She noted this was not the first time citizens had learned of withdrawals without a detailed explanation of their purpose.
"Citizens deserve that level of transparency."
Attzs stressed that borrowing and drawing on the HSF are not inherently problematic, but their purpose matters.
"The critical question is whether new borrowing and withdrawals from the HSF are financing investments that expand the country's productive capacity, strengthen future foreign exchange earnings and support long-term economic growth, or whether they are increasingly being used to finance recurrent expenditure, including the growing fiscal obligations arising from public sector wage settlements and other recurring commitments."
She added, "The country's debt is everyone's business. Borrowing and drawing on the HSF can be entirely appropriate if these resources are strengthening the economy's future productive capacity and resilience. However, citizens are entitled to know how these funds are being used and whether today's borrowing is creating tomorrow's growth or simply financing today's consumption."
The HSF reports show that US$260.78 million was withdrawn during the July to September 2025 quarter under Section 15 of the HSF Act, with assets sold from the US Core Domestic Equity mandate to facilitate the withdrawal. Despite this, the fund delivered a quarterly return of 4.54 per cent, outperforming its benchmark of 3.35 per cent, while its value increased slightly from US$6.3229 billion to US$6.3413 billion.
A further US$250 million was withdrawn during the October to December 2025 quarter through the sale of assets from the US Short Duration Fixed Income mandate. During that period, the fund returned 2.69 per cent, exceeding its benchmark return of 1.99 per cent, although its overall value declined to US$6.2549 billion by December 31, 2025.
More recent official figures released by the Ministry of Finance have indicated that the fund's net asset value had climbed to US$6.60 billion by early June 2026, reflecting a recovery after the withdrawals recorded in the second half of 2025.