BusinessMirror

IMF CITES PHL GROWTH, PBBM SEES 7% FOR ’22, ’23

- With assistance from Niluksi Koswanage/bloomberg

country...what you have done in the last year of turbulence to sustain growth...is quite commendabl­e,” Georgieva said during the meeting.

She said the IMF is ready to continue extending support to members, including the Philippine­s, so they could reach their economic targets.

e Philippine­s joined the IMF on December 27, 1945.

“We have been really interested to engage more deeply with our members to recognize the traditiona­l challenges...they are still there,” Georgieva said.

Marcos said the government is currently facing challenges in terms of food and energy security.

Other issues, which need to be addressed, he said, are the gaps in the country’s infrastruc­ture requiremen­ts as well as climate change response.

‘Room to grow’

PHILIPPINE economic growth will likely hold steady at around 7 percent this year, President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. said, crediting strong fundamenta­ls that would help the nation post the fastest expansion in Asia amid a dimmer global outlook. “ere is so much space, room to grow, in the sense that we are starting very many new things now,” Marcos said in an interview with Bloomberg Television’s Haslinda Amin on the sidelines of the WEF in Davos.

e economy has been “rather stable” and unemployme­nt is continuing to decline, he said. Marcos said the domestic economy “will be able to manage at least 7-percent growth for last year” and expand by a similar pace in 2023.

Marcos has faced numerous economic challenges in his first six months as the country’s leader, including tight public finances and rising borrowing costs. Soaring prices of essential goods from sugar to onions have driven inflation to a 14-year high and Marcos, who is also helming the agricultur­e department, has said farm production will be ramped up to rein imports and prices.

Like most in Southeast Asia, Marcos has sought to balance interests between US and China. He has tried to cooperate with China in agricultur­e and infrastruc­ture and met with President Xi Jinping earlier this month, agreeing to pursue South China Sea energy exploratio­n talks.

Tensions between Manila and Beijing in the disputed sea have risen recently, with the Southeast Asian nation expressing “great concern” over Chinese vessels massing off its western coast. China is building up several unoccupied land features in the South China Sea, Bloomberg News reported in December.

More from Marcos:

• On taming inflation: “e long-term solution of course will be to increase production. at is what we are working on.”

• On US security support in the South China Sea: “ey have already made that commitment. As a matter of fact, when there are certain reports that come in, some of the American ships come down and make their presence felt. We were hoping that we keep and maintain that at that level.”

• On exploratio­n with China: “We may find a way around that if we limit it to exploratio­n, and hopefully, I think there’s still some give and take possible there.”

• On leading the agricultur­e department: “We have started to rationaliz­e the system because the illegal imports have been a problem.”

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