The Manila Times

2017 BoP deficit forecast could be exceeded

- MAYVELIN U. CARABALLO

THE Philippine­s incurred a deeper balance of payments (BoP) deficit of $678 million in July, the widest gap in eight months on account of foreign exchange operations of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) and national government debt payments.

An analyst said the full-year payments balance could exceed the central bank forecast given the latest data.

The gap widened from June’s $569-million shortfall and was a reversal from the $215-million surplus recorded in July last year.

July’s deficit was the widest since the payments balance slipped to a $1.67-billion shortfall in November last year.

“The higher deficit was attributed to foreign exchange operations of the BSP and to payments made by the national government for its maturing foreign exchange obligation­s during the review month,” the central bank said on Friday.

Outflows during the month were partially tempered by net foreign currency deposits of the national government and BSP income from investment­s abroad.

“BSP’s foreign exchange operations remained driven by increasing market demand for foreign exchange largely to finance capital goods imports,” the central bank noted.

Data on national government debt, the Bangko Sentral’s foreign exchange operations and related figures for July have yet to be released.

The year-to-date BoP position stood at deficit of $1.38 billion, a reversal from $848-million surplus last year.

In June, the central bank revised its 2017 BOP forecast to a deficit of $500 million from its previous projection of a $1-billion surplus.

Following the release of the July figure, IHS Markit Asia Pacific chief economist Rajiv Biswas said: “This indicates that the BSP estimate of a BoP deficit of $0.5 billion for the 2017 calendar year may be exceeded, which could increase negative sentiment toward the Philippine peso.”

Biswas warned that if the payments balance remained in deficit and widened further over the medium term, it could become a greater downside risk factor for financial markets sentiment.

“The Philippine peso has depreciate­d moderately against the US dollar in recent weeks, mainly due to concerns about the widening current account deficit and declining foreign exchange reserves, albeit the official foreign exchange reserves level remains very high by internatio­nal benchmark standards for assessing sovereign risk,” he noted.

He said the risk of moderate deteriorat­ion in the payments balance over the medium term needed to be seen against the overall macroecono­mic outlook and the urgent requiremen­t of upgrading vital infrastruc­ture.

“Over the next 12 months, the GDP [gross domestic product] growth outlook will be supported by significan­t increases in infrastruc­ture spending, with total infrastruc­ture spending of P1.13 trillion targeted for 2018, with transport and social infrastruc­ture being key priorities,” Biswas said.

“Improving infrastruc­ture is very impor- tant for boosting the nation’s industrial and export competitiv­eness, as the Philippine­s is competing for foreign direct investment with other Asean [Associatio­n of Southeast Nations] countries like Malaysia, Thailand and Singapore which have invested heavily in high quality infrastruc­ture,” he explained.

Biswas pointed out that the ability of the current administra­tion to deliver such large increases in infrastruc­ture spending would be helped by the tremendous progress made by Philippine government­s since 2004 in terms of fiscal consolidat­ion, the rapid pace of GDP growth and prudent fiscal management.

“Since 2004, the Philippine­s general government debt-to-GDP ratio has more than halved to a new record low of 34.6 percent in 2016. Therefore a modest increase of the BoP deficit may be seen as an acceptable trade-off by the Philippine­s government for the urgent task of upgrading vital infrastruc­ture to improve long-term productivi­ty and competitiv­eness,” he said.

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