Iran Daily

Coronaviru­s: Asia’s ‘shining star’ suffers biggest ever slump

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Singapore’s economy plunged into recession in the last quarter as an extended lockdown hit businesses and retail spending.

Economic growth in the city state shrank by 41.2 percent compared to the previous quarter, the country’s biggest contractio­n on record, BBC reported.

Authoritie­s forecast it will be Singapore’s worst recession since independen­ce from Britain in 1965.

The figures reveal the severity of the virus-driven downturn faced globally.

Official data showed Singapore’s second quarter gross domestic product (GDP) shrank 12.6 percent on a yearon-year basis.

As one of first countries to release growth data for the period in which many economies were in lockdown, the numbers from Singapore provide a glimpse of how the ongoing pandemic could affect economies around the world.

The worse-than-expected figures followed a first quarter year-on-year GDP fall of 2.2 percent and quarteron-quarter drop of 10.6 percent.

The deepening downturn also indicates that the pandemic may have impacted Singapore’s economy harder than many of its Asian counterpar­ts.

The slump in global trade has hit the country’s export-reliant manufactur­ers, while the constructi­on industry activity stalled and retailers have seen sales fall at a record pace.

In contrast Japan’s GDP is seen shrinking by around 20 percent in the second quarter from the previous three months, while data this week may show that the Chinese economy has now returned to growth.

The data out of Singapore puts more pressure on the country’s ruling People’s Action Party, which last week saw its weakest general election performanc­e since independen­ce 55 years ago.

The government has already pledged about $67 billion (£53 billion), or nearly 20 percent of Singapore’s GDP, in stimulus measures to support struggling businesses and households.

Singapore started to ease its lockdown measures, known as the Circuit Breaker locally, on June 1.

The city state entered phase two of reopening its economy on June 19, which allows most shops and restaurant­s to resume business although social distancing rules remain in place.

 ??  ?? Singapore’s central business district during its lockdown
BBC
Singapore’s central business district during its lockdown BBC

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