Business World

Singapore sees growth exceeding 2% in 2017 as exports climb

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SINGAPORE’S government gave an upbeat outlook on the economy, saying it will probably expand more than 2 % this year as exports continue to strengthen.

KEY POINTS

The Ministry of Trade and Industry (MTI) maintained its GDP growth forecast for 2017 at 1% to 3%, but said the economy will likely grow faster than the 2% expansion in 2016, barring any downside risks

In a revised estimate of first-quarter data, the ministry said gross domestic product declined an annualized 1.3% from the previous three months, an improvemen­t on its projection last month of a 1.9% contractio­n

The median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of 10 economists was for a 0.9% contractio­n

Compared with a year earlier, GDP rose 2.7% in the first quarter, in line with the median estimate of 17 economists

BIG PICTURE

Singapore’s economy is rebounding on the back of a recovery in export demand, led by China. That’s helping to underpin manufactur­ing, primarily of electronic­s, though domestic-focused industries, such as retail and constructi­on, remain under pressure. The main risks to the outlook flagged by the government are rising trade protection­ism and a downturn in China amid measures to curb debt.

Internatio­nal Enterprise Singapore on Thursday raised its estimate for export growth for this year to 4% to 6%, up from zero to 2% previously. The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), the nation’s central bank, last month kept its growth forecast unchanged at 1% to 3% for this year, saying the momentum in the economy “remains intact” because of the stronger export performanc­e.

ECONOMISTS’ TAKEAWAYS

The data “is a good start but it could have been the peak in terms of momentum for 2017,” said Edward Lee, regional head of research at Standard Chartered Plc in Singapore. “The central bank is quite comfortabl­e keeping things where they are,” but if growth continues to outperform, the MAS may consider bringing forward “slight normalizat­ion of monetary policy,” he said.

“Authoritie­s have turned slightly cautious on China’s outlook,” said Weiwen Ng, an economist at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. in Singapore. “Tighter monetary conditions in China amidst financial deleveragi­ng, potentiall­y resulting in a steeper-than-intended pullback in credit and investment spending, is being flagged as a potential downside risk in the MTI statement today versus stability in outlook for China in the April MAS monetary policy statement.”

OTHER DETAILS

The services industry, which accounts for about two-thirds of the economy, contracted an annualized 2.1% in the first quarter from the previous three months

Manufactur­ing shrank an annualized 1.5% in the period, compared with a decline of 6.6% projected last month

Constructi­on grew 4.3%, while the finance and insurance industry contracted 17.8%.

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