The Borneo Post

Philippine­s spending spree fades as inflation hurts even foreign cash earners

-

SANTA ROSA VILLAGE: Liezel Carada, who relies entirely on her husband’s earnings as a dishwasher in Italy, has seen her income grow sharply thanks to a plunge in the Philippine peso in recent years.

Yet she’s having to explain to her three children that they can’t afford to go to their favourite eatery anymore.

Inflation, now at a nine-year high of 6.4 per cent and running above the central bank’s two to four per cent target for the past six months, is eroding the purchasing power of Filipino consumers, the backbone of the Southeast Asian economy.

The weaker peso, which fell to a 13-year low last week, is one major factor driving it.

But even the families of the estimated 10 million overseas Filipinos who earn foreign currency are feeling the pinch as higher oil prices and heavy government spending are also pushing prices higher.

Food costs rose 8.5 per cent more than they did last year and transporta­tion is up 7.8 per cent.

“We have so many expenses and the higher food prices makes budgeting more difficult,” said the 44-year old jobless Carada, who has three children, as she walked home after visiting her mother in their village of Santa Rosa, about 80 km (50 miles) south of Manila.

Reuters calculatio­ns show that over the past three years, during which the peso has been on an a rarely interrupte­d downtrend as the economy’s trade surplus gradually turned into a deficit, the growth in remittance­s is 14 percentage points higher in peso terms than in dollar terms.

But consumer price inflation is more than 11 per cent in the same period, offsetting much of the growth in remittance earnings.

Raul Rivera, who works in a grocery store the size of a garage in Santa Rosa, says his customers, mostly relatives of overseas workers, are buying less than before and switching to cheaper brands.

“Those who were buying five canned goods before are now only buying three, and those who were buying 25 kilos of rice are buying just 15 or 10 kilos now,” Rivera said, adding this was the first time he noticed a change in buying patterns in the eight years he worked in the grocery.

Data shows that economic growth, which is driven mainly by private consumptio­n in the Philippine­s, may be at a turning point.

Household consumptio­n grew 5.6-5.7 per cent in the first two quarters, down from 6.2 per cent at the end of 2017 and rates that surpassed seven per cent the year before.

The economy grew six per cent in the second quarter, from 6.6 per cent in the first.

It could slow down even more as the central bank has already raised rates by 100 basis points in recent months and is expected to hike further to fight inflation and keep Filipino assets relatively attractive in the face of a global sell-off in emerging markets. The central bank has said inflation should return to its target in 2019.

President Rodrigo Duterte is regarded as a rock star by many Filipinos abroad, but at home his huge popularity is starting to be tested, amid discontent over inflation, particular­ly the rising cost of rice, a staple for Filipinos.

His 2018 growth target of seven to eight per cent, which is similar for each year until the end of his current term in 2022, now looks ambitious.

The impact of inflation “is being felt across different income classes,” said Manila-based ING economist Joey Cuyegkeng, adding that slowing consumptio­n and a widening trade deficit prompted him to trim his 2018 growth forecast to 6.3 per cent from 6.7-6.8 per cent.

 ??  ?? Philippine Peso bills sent by a Filipino working abroad are pictured being received by a relative at a money remittance center in Makati City, Metro Manila, Philippine­s. – Reuters photo
Philippine Peso bills sent by a Filipino working abroad are pictured being received by a relative at a money remittance center in Makati City, Metro Manila, Philippine­s. – Reuters photo
 ??  ?? Prices of different cuts of chicken are seen outside a meat shop in Paranaque, Metro Manila, Philippine­s. – Reuters photo
Prices of different cuts of chicken are seen outside a meat shop in Paranaque, Metro Manila, Philippine­s. – Reuters photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia