The Borneo Post

Philippine economy grows 6.7 per cent in 2017

-

MANILA: ThePhilipp­ineeconomy grew 6.7 per cent in 2017, remaining one of Asia’s best performers despite a weaker business process outsourcin­g industry, the government announced yesterday.

Government spending ensured the country remained one of Asia’s fastest-growing major economies, behind only China and Vietnam, Economic Planning Secretary Ernesto Pernia told reporters.

However he said last year’s growth was slower than the 6.9 per cent gross domestic product (GDP) rise in 2016, when consumer spending was boosted during elections that propelled President Rodrigo Duterte to power.

But the 2017 figure was “a good performanc­e”, Pernia said, with China having reported 6.9 per cent 2017 GDP growth last week and Vietnam achieving a 10-year-high expansion of 6.81 per cent over the same period.

Philippine economic growth in the three months to December 2017 was at an annualised 6.6 per cent clip, slower than the previous quarter’s 7.0 per cent pace.

The business processing outsourcin­g industry, worth US$23 billion and employing 1.15 million people, was a “major contributi­ng factor to this decline”, Pernia said.

The sector, which has become a major pillar of the Philippine economy, includes call centres and offices that carry out such functions for overseas companies as accounting, medical and legal transcript­ion, software design, animation and even architectu­re. Industry officials said investment fell 31.3 per cent year-on-year in the three months to last June, with threats by US President Donald Trump to bring back jobs outsourced abroad cited as a key factor.

There was also concern in the Philippine­s that automation and artificial intelligen­ce could eventually steal call-centre jobs.

The Philippine­s’ fourth quarter growth was marginally lower than market expectatio­ns, said Sanjay Mathur, chief Southeast Asia and India economist for ANZ Research, adding the trade balance in the last two months of 2017 also deteriorat­ed.

“The prospects for growth in the Philippine­s remain solid,” Mathur said, citing the passage last month of Duterte’s tax reform programme designed to raise funds for infrastruc­ture spending.

State spending should reinforce already strong domestic demand, Mathur added.

Pernia said the government remained confident it would hit its growth target range of 7-8 per cent this year, powered by Duterte’s vow to raise spending on transport, energy, and water supply infrastruc­ture. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia