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ADB: Hong Kong and Malaysia looking better as India slows

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WASHINGTON: Hong Kong and Malaysia are proving to be the biggest growth surprises in Asia.

The two nations received the largest upgrades for this year among major economies in the Asian Developmen­t Bank’s (ADB) latest outlook released yesterday. Meanwhile, India received the steepest downgrade.

The global trade recovery is helping boost exports in Hong Kong and Malaysia while demonetisa­tion and the implementa­tion of the new goods and services tax regime in India have dented consumer spending and business investment. India’s economy is seen recovering in fiscal year 2018 with expansion forecast at 7.4%.

As a whole, the outlook for developing Asia is robust even as risks remain including sudden changes in US monetary policy and geopolitic­al or weather-related disasters. The unwinding of stimulus in the US “may drain capital from the region, which would chal- lenge Asia’s financial stability,” according to the report.

Higher bond yields could push up longterm financing costs at the same time that a strengthen­ing US dollar would prompt more capital outflows from the region. Government officials should monitor debt levels and asset prices while strengthen­ing their financial positions, the ADB advised.

In economies like Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, and Taiwan, there is room for accommodat­ive policy, the ADB said. In the Philippine­s and South Korea, the case for stimulus may be less clear because the growth upturn is protracted and price pressures are intensifyi­ng.

The region should embark more aggressive­ly on building infrastruc­ture, including through public-private partnershi­ps, the ADB said. More than half of the economies in developing Asia lack dedicated PPP units. — Bloomberg

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