Business World

PHL growth to slow, still ‘robust’— ADB

- By Elijah Joseph C. Tubayan Reporter

THE ASIAN DEVELOPMEN­T BANK (ADB) has slashed its Philippine economic growth projection­s for this year and 2019 following “stagnant” performanc­e in agricultur­e and a merchandis­e export slowdown, even as investment­s continue to rise.

The regional lender revised downwards its Philippine gross domestic product (GDP) forecast to 6.4% in 2018 and 6.7% in 2019 in its Asian Developmen­t Outlook

Update published on Wednesday, from 6.8% and 6.9% in its April report.

If realized, this year’s growth would be slower than the actual 6.7% clocked in 2017 and would fall short of the government’s 7-8% target.

But while the Philippine­s “faces the largest downward revision to its growth forecast for this year — by 0.4 percentage points — followed by Malaysia by 0.3 points, the Lao PDR, Myanmar and Vietnam by 0.2 points and Indonesia by 0.1 points,” it should still “post strong growth both this year and next,” the report read.

Contributi­ng to next year’s pickup, the report added, would be accelerati­on of state spending on infrastruc­ture and social services, while “[t]he recent buildup of inflationa­ry pressure should moderate next year as tighter monetary policy reins in inflation expectatio­ns.”

Clarifying that this year’s projection of “6.4% is still a very robust economic growth rate,” ADB Country Director for the Philippine­s Kelly Bird said in a press conference on Wednesday at the ADB headquarte­rs in Mandaluyon­g City that the new 2018 projection was “in line with the Philippine long-term growth and it’s driven by investment­s.”

“And because it’s driven by investment­s, we also believe that economic projection for next year is around 6.7%,” Mr. Bird said.

“That would be driven by investment and we expect that to further pick up due to a lot of flagship projects under the government’s ‘Build, Build, Build’ program that will start to come on stream next year.”

The Malacañan Palace issued a statement after the report was released, saying: “We expected this slowdown vis-à-vis our growth target for the year, given that certain policy decisions — such as the closure of Boracay and the full implementa­tion of our comprehens­ive tax reform package which would benefit the country in the long-run — contribute­d to the decelerati­on.”

“We assure the public that our macroecono­mic fundamenta­ls are resilient, strong and stable,” it added.

“Our economic managers are committed to the country’s long-term vision and are swiftly addressing issues affecting our growth prospects to sustain high growth and make it inclusive.”

Noting continued growth of importatio­n of capital goods and infrastruc­ture spending, Mr. Bird pointed out that the country’s

fixed investment-to- GDP ratio reached 27.2% last semester — the highest in over two decades — “laying the foundation for sustained growth over the medium term.”

The economy grew 6.3% last semester versus 6.6% in 2017’s first half, weighed particular­ly by flat farm performanc­e and slowed increase in household spending that neverthele­ss fueled nearly 70% of GDP.

ADB’s projection­s for the Philippine­s are above the Southeast Asia averages of 5.1% and 5.2% for 2018 and 2019, respective­ly.

They also compare to the World Bank, Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, and the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t’s estimates as of July of 6.7% for both years, as well as the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific’s 6.8% and 6.9% for 2018 and 2019, respective­ly, as of May.

CHALLENGES

Mr. Bird said agricultur­e will continue to weigh on Philippine growth prospects, together with rising inflation and subdued merchandis­e exports.

“Economic growth remains strong,” he said.

“It softened a little, but that’s because of exports on the demand side but also agricultur­e on the supply side, and inflation as we know increased well above the target,” he explained.

“We still see those costpush factors working their way through the economy,” he added, citing the impact of rising food and global oil prices.

“You’ve got a stagnant agricultur­e sector, and in fact in some areas production declined.”

The regional lender noted that agricultur­e edged up just 0.6% last semester from 5.6% in 2017’s first half, while growth of exports of both goods and services eased to 9.8% from 19.5% in the same comparativ­e six-month periods.

At the same time, he noted that the government has been “vigilant” and “very proactive in addressing inflation,” citing the 100 basis-point policy interest rate hike so far this year, distributi­on of cash cards among the poor, administra­tive orders to streamline distributi­on of food such as lifting non-tariff trade barriers, cutting red tape in importatio­n, setting up of public outlets and cold storage facilities, among others.

Headline inflation in accelerate­d to a fresh multiyear-high 6.4% in August from 5.7% a month ago and 2.6% a year ago. The eight-month average in the overall rise in prices clocked in at 4.8%, above the central bank’s 2-4% target range for 2018.

The ADB expects inflation to average five percent this year and moderate to four percent in 2019, compared to its previous projection­s of four percent and 3.9% for those respective years.

Mr. Bird said the increase in interest rates is “designed to slow down growth on the demand side so you might see some re-softening on growth coming forward.”

Other risks include fasterthan-expected interest rate tightening in the United States that would trigger more fund outflows.

Joseph E. Mr. Zveglich, ADB’s assistant chief economist, said in the same briefing that the Philippine­s may benefit from the USChina trade war since “Philippine producers of [intermedia­te] electronic goods can retool and attract the suppliers” of finished electronic­s equipment to the US market “that were previously coming from China.”

Mr. Bird also noted that external debt is currently “relatively low” and fiscal deficit remains “on track,” which “provides a strong setting for continued economic growth but also providing a buffer.”

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