Business World

Return to pre-2020 track to require 9.4% growth

- Keisha B. Ta-asan

THE PHILIPPINE­S needs to grow by 9.4% annually until 2028 to have a change of elevating output to P80 trillion by 2036, the growth trajectory that the government had projected before the pandemic, an analyst said.

During a webinar on Jan. 26, GlobalSour­ce country analyst Diwa C. Guinigundo said while growth in the Philippine­s bounced back in 2022 despite the setbacks from the pandemic, more still needs to be done.

“The enormous drop in economic activity during the pandemic and the relatively modest economic growth in subsequent periods pose a big challenge,” according to Mr. Guinigundo, a former central bank deputy governor.

“Before the pandemic, we were looking at a higher trajectory of growth, inching towards P80 trillion in 2036 from 2022’s P22 trillion. To overcome this setback, growth has to average 9.4% through 2028 to return to the original path,” he said.

The Philippine Statistics Authority ( PSA) estimated the nominal gross domestic product (GDP) of the Philippine­s at P17.2 trillion as of the third quarter.

“If we go to the government’s target of around 7-8% annually, by 2036, we might be reaching only P60 trillion,” Mr. Guinigundo said.

Under the medium- term macroecono­mic assumption­s of the Developmen­t Budget Coordinati­on Committee ( DBCC), the economy is targeted for an expansion of 6.5- 8% each year until 2028.

“We need to concentrat­e on strengthen­ing our governance and institutio­ns to help in a generalize­d effort to capitalize on our favorable demographi­cs, emerging industrial structure, and internatio­nal trade,” he said.

The economy may have slowed in the fourth quarter last year, with GDP growth of 5.7%, according to a median forecast of 20 economists polled by Business World.

If realized, the fourth-quarter GDP growth would underperfo­rm the 5.9% performanc­e in the third quarter and the 7.1% expansion in the fourth quarter of 2022.

The poll also yielded a median estimate growth of 5.5% for 2023, missing the DBCC’s 6-7% GDP growth target. This would lag the 7.6% expansion in 2022 and the weakest since the 9.5% contractio­n in 2020.

The PSA will announce fourthquar­ter and full-year GDP data today.

Meanwhile, Mr. Guinigundo said price pressures have eased since September. The impact of some supply shocks was mitigated in the fourth quarter through higher imports and lower tariff duties.

Headline inflation eased to a 22-month low of 3.9% in December, from 4.1% in November. It marked the first time that inflation fell within the BSP’s 2- 4% target band after 20 months, from a peak of 8.7% in January 2023.

Inflation accelerate­d to 6% in 2023 from 5.8% in 2022. It breached the 2- 4% target band for the second straight year amid soaring food and oil prices.

However, upside risks to inflation remain, and the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas ( BSP) is expected to keep policy rates higher for longer, according to Mr. Guinigundo.

“I don’t believe the BSP will start moving in the first half of 2024. It is very clear that the risk-adjusted inflation forecast of the BSP continues to exceed the 2-4% at 4.2%,” he said. —

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