The Phnom Penh Post

Institute of Int’l Finance: Rising imports to help Philippine­s post stronger growth

- Ben O de Vera

THE PHILIPPINE­S stands to benefit from rising imports while most of its Asean neighbours suffer from declining shipments from overseas, which is seen to hurt their economies in the near term, the Washington-based Institute of Internatio­nal Finance (IIF) said.

With strong imports, including those of capital equipment, the Philippine­s is seen to have a better chance to rebound from a slow firstquart­er growth, the IIF said.

The sluggish global trading environmen­t has led to a sharp import compressio­n in major Southeast Asian economies and in South Korea in the first half of this year.

Except for the Philippine­s, the large Asean economies and South Korea all posted sharp tumbles in external trade, IIF research head for Asean and India Reza Siregar and associate economist Yuanliu Hu said in a June 24 Asean Economic Views report titled Import Compressio­n: Unraveling Growth Outlook.

The report said major traders in the region experience­d consecutiv­e months of sharp year-on-year declines in capital imports beginning as early as late last year.

“Learning from past experience­s, the recent fall in imports should, in our view, offset the impact of weak exports on the overall net export balance and support the current account position.

“However, the multiplier effects of import contractio­n on investment will likely dampen the GDP [gross domestic product] growth outlook for countries in the region this year and possibly the next,” the IIF said.

The IIF warned that since import flows were highly linked to investment flows, the sharp reduction in

capital and intermedia­te imports being experience­d by Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and South Korea signalled a slowdown in foreign direct investment (FDI) flows and therefore weaker investment outlooks for these countries.

“Except for Malaysia, we find that countries with a high export and import correlatio­n – such as South Korea and Thailand – tend to report a relatively high FDI-capital import correlatio­n,” according to the IIF.

“The trade-offs between net exports and investment due to import compressio­n are, in fact, not new.

“Fallen imports contribute­d to stronger current account positions, sluggish investment­s, and slower GDP growth during the 1997 East Asian crisis and the 2008 global financial crisis in South Korea, Malaysia, and Thailand.”

‘More timely execution’

In the case of the Philippine­s, which bucked the trend of declining imports, Siregar told Philippine Daily Inquirer in an email that “since imports remained relatively strong, including capital imports, we should expect growth to rebound from its level in the first quarter of 2019”.

As of April, the Philippine­s’ imports rose 2.9 per cent year-on-year to $35.2 billion.

But Siregar said the recovery in GDP growth could only happen if it was coupled with “more timely execution of fiscal spending”.

GDP expansion fell to a four-year low of 5.6 per cent in the first quarter, below the government’s downgraded six to seven per cent full-year target range, as the government operated under re-enacted 2018 appropriat­ions at the start of the year and underspent about one billion pesos ($19.6 million) per day.

President Rodrigo Duterte signed the 3.7 trillion pesos 2019 national budget only on April 15, or more than four months late, as the two houses of Congress squabbled over pork funds.

At present, the government was implementi­ng a catch-up spending plan to reverse the slower first-quarter GDP growth.

However, Siregar acknowledg­ed the problems also being caused by increasing imports and declining exports.

“Indeed, the challenge facing the Philippine­s is more on maintainin­g external imbalance – the current account imbalance,” Siregar said.

This challenge, he said, was amplified by the tighter competitio­n on the financial account side amid the expected weaker global economy.

Attracting FDIs and portfolio investment to finance the current account deficit and keeping surplus balance of payments can be more challengin­g in the coming quarter, Siregar added.

The current account deficit ballooned to $1.216 billion as of endMarch, equivalent to 1.5 per cent of GDP, from only $322 million, or 0.4 per cent, of GDP last year.

This wider current account gap had been attributed by the government to the also bigger first-quarter trade-in-goods deficit, which at $12.4 billion was 17.3 per cent larger than a year ago amid faster growth of imports over exports.

The prevailing current account deficit had been putting pressure on the peso, which weakened to 12year lows last year.

Economic managers had said that with the Duterte administra­tion’s ambitious “Build, Build, Build” infrastruc­ture programme in full swing, demand for imports of mostly capital goods would remain strong in the near term.

 ?? PHILIPPINE DAILY INQUIRER ?? The Port of Subic on Subic Bay in the Philippine­s. As of April, the Philippine­s’ imports rose 2.9 per cent year-on-year to $35.2 billion.
PHILIPPINE DAILY INQUIRER The Port of Subic on Subic Bay in the Philippine­s. As of April, the Philippine­s’ imports rose 2.9 per cent year-on-year to $35.2 billion.

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