Business World

PHL household goods sector may grow by 7.5%, says BMI

- Keisha B. Ta-asan

THE PHILIPPINE­S’ household goods sector may grow by 7.5% this year to P270.4 billion ($4.8 billion) from last year as rising incomes boost consumer spending, BMI Country Risk & Industry Research said.

In a report dated Feb. 13, BMI said spending on household goods would likely grow by 7.1% in the next five years to P354 billion by 2028.

“Improvemen­ts in the housing market and the increasing number of households in the middleand upper-income brackets will encourage expenditur­e on aspiration­al products, such as consumer electronic­s and home furnishing­s,” it said.

Colliers Philippine­s earlier said vacancies in the secondary residentia­l market dropped to 16.8% at the end of December from 17.1% a year earlier. It recorded a take-up of about 23,400 condominiu­m units in the National Capital Region pre-selling market last year, better than 21,600 units sold in 2022.

The property consultanc­y expects more than 7,000 condominiu­m units to be completed this year.

BMI said the Filipino household goods consumer market is dynamic and has a mix of local and internatio­nal retailers, BMI said. Consumers can access a wide range of products from electronic­s to white goods through physical stores and e-commerce platforms.

The research firm noted that several domestic chains in the Philippine­s such as SM Home compete with Europe-based and global rivals such as Swedish IKEA and Hong Kongbased Japan Home Centre.

Retail formats also vary in the country, BMI said, citing out-of-town superstore­s, small city center display stores and a robust online sales sector.

“Over the medium term, the market will average steady growth, with all segments apart from leisure items outperform­ing,” BMI said.

The average income of Filipino households fell by 2% to P307,190 in 2021 from 2018, according to data from the local statistics agency. The average spending of Filipino families also dropped by 4.1% to P228,800.

The poverty incidence also rose to 18.1% in 2021 from 16.7% in 2018, equivalent to 19.992 million poor Filipinos.

The Philippine­s seeks to cut the poverty incidence — the proportion of Filipinos whose incomes fell below the per capita poverty threshold — to 9% by 2028.

BMI expects the Philippine economy to grow by 6.2% this year as easing inflation and unemployme­nt support household spending. Household spending expanded by 5.6% last year from 8.3% a year earlier.

It earlier said it expects inflation to fall back to trend this year, offering a respite for real household incomes after a rough 2023. Labor market conditions are very tight by historical standards and the unemployme­nt rate is now at record lows, it added.

Inflation slowed to 2.8% in January from 3.9% in December and 8.7% a year ago, the slowest since October 2020. It was also the second straight month that inflation was within the central bank’s 2-4% target.

The unemployme­nt rate fell to a record 4.3% in 2023 from 5.4% a year earlier, equivalent to 2.19 million jobless Filipinos compared with 2.67 million in 2022. —

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