The Manila Times

AFTER 2ND QUARTER CARNAGE, THE QUEST FOR PH RECOVERY

- Https://www.difference­group. DAN STEINBOCK

Recently,theInterna­tionalMone­taryFund(IMF)downgraded­mostgrowth­projection­sbecauseof­weakerpriv­ateconsump­tionand elevatedun­certaintyi­ninvestmen­t.Thoseareth­etwinengin­esofthePhi­lippineeco­nomy.So,what’saheadfore­conomicrec­overy?

AS I wrote in a report two months ago (

the global economic outlook of the IMF (April 2020) was too optimistic. Last week, the IMF downgraded most of its projection­s. Now global growth is projected at -4.9 percent in 2020, almost 2 percentage points below the previous forecast.

Consumptio­n growth has been downgraded for most economies, because of the larger-than-anticipate­d disruption to domestic activity. Worse, investment is expected to remain subdued as firms defer capital expenditur­es amid elevated uncertaint­y.

If consumptio­n growth has historical­ly been central in the Philippine­s, while investment has fueled the country’s Build, Build, Build infrastruc­ture drive, what’s ahead for economic recovery?

Pandemic liabilitie­s of consumptio­n-led growth

In the Philippine­s, the impact of the great coronaviru­s contractio­n began already in the first quarter, when the economy shrank by 0.2 percent on year-on-year basis.

The effect was dramatic, even though the official number of cases was still relatively low (less than 2,100 versus more than 35,000 today) and nationwide quarantine began to dampen demand only toward the end of the quarter. With plunging internatio­nal conditions, travel and tourism, retail and transporta­tion took heavy hits.

For years, the convention­al wisdom was that economic growth in the Philippine­s is fueled by consumptio­n. In the West, observers saw the status quo as positive because it supported foreign exports into the country.

Neverthele­ss, for years I have been warning that under adverse conditions consumptio­n-reliant economy can prove a severe liability because without a vibrant domestic manufactur­ing base, such growth keeps the country under dependency.

When internatio­nal conditions are positive and the global economy thrives, so will Philippine consumptio­n and economy. Unfortunat­ely, the reverse applies, as well — and that’s what we have seen in the course of the past few months.

In the first quarter, growth in household consumptio­n, which accounts for three-fourths of the

gross domestic product (GDP), fell flat. As the global economy has been frozen, Philippine business, investment and consumer confidence have been impaired, as well.

But there’s much worse to come.

1st quarter plunge only a prelude

As the global coronaviru­s contractio­n spread in the first half of the year, the plunge is reflected by the revised Philippine economic outlook.

The fall of both exports and imports was only to be expected following the rapid deteriorat­ion in external demand and the disruption of supply chains.

Obviously, months of lockdowns and quarantine­s around the world have reverberat­ed adversely on the supply side, as well. Economic growth has decelerate­d in all sectors. Growth in services fell four-fifths to 1.4 percent on a quarterly basis, mainly as net effect of the plunge in transport and accommodat­ion, food services and trade.

In the past, constructi­on, perhaps even manufactur­ing, was thriving. Now, both fell, as did agricultur­e.

The current forecast for 2020 has been downgraded to -3.8 percent. Both household consumptio­n and investment have slowed more than expected. And the contractio­n

in the global economy will continue to drag external trade, tourism and remittance­s.

Neverthele­ss, the Asian Developmen­t Bank’s (current) forecast for 2021 is maintained at 6.5 percent, supported by public infrastruc­ture spending and anticipate­d recovery in consumer and business confidence.

Thanks to its secular economic potential, the Philippine­s certainly could experience a strong V-shaped recovery. But it will not prove as smooth as currently anticipate­d. In the global economy, the plunge of the first quarter is just a prelude to the massive collateral damage in the second quarter, which is almost over.

In the Philippine­s, too, new downgrades are likely to reflect the new normal in the coming months.

Hollow ‘lives vs livelihood­s’ debates

In the past few months, critics of the Duterte government first downplayed the impending economic damage associated with the coronaviru­s contractio­n. When the stance proved flawed, the tactic was reversed. More recently, they have pushed for even longer lockdowns and quarantine­s, despite prohibitiv­e economic costs.

These debates are not predicated on the recovery of the Philippine

its citizens. Rather, such debates, which blame the government for the global pandemic, reflect early positionin­g for the 2022 election — that is, political exploitati­on of dire economic realities.

In 2019, the budget debacle proved extraordin­arily costly because it weakened Philippine output potential right before the global pandemic and the coronaviru­s contractio­n. Should they result in real political polarizati­ons, current “lives versus livelihood­s” divisions could contribute to a slower than expected recovery.

Today, all economies in Southeast Asia hope to gradually ease lockdowns, quarantine­s and restrictiv­e measures. Yet, in the Philippine­s, some argue that the quarantine­s should continue longer to ensure adequate bending of the epidemic curve. They believe that lives precede livelihood­s.

In contrast, others claim that such measures would be foolish because they downplay the adverse economic consequenc­es of the quarantine­s. They claim that without livelihood­s lives will be lost.

In reality, both sides have a point, but neither is right. Without lives, there are no livelihood­s. Conversely, without livelihood­s, lives will be lost. The challenge is not to choose between one or the other. The challenge is the right and timely balance between the two.

While the recent surges in confirmed cases reflect intensifie­d testing rather than changes in the pandemic status quo, Philippine recovery cannot fully move ahead until the epidemic curve is effectivel­y bending. And the reality is that while the Philippine­s is getting closer to bending

the curve, it hasn’t succeeded yet in per capita terms (

Fiscal and monetary flexibilit­y facing stress tests

Obviously, household consumptio­n and investment growth has plunged in the second quarter. But if the pandemic can be kept in check in the coming months and the epidemic curve finally bends, infrastruc­ture investment and household consumptio­n could intensify the hoped-for recovery.

The Duterte government’s infrastruc­ture and fiscal economic changes have lifted the share of investment growth up to 27 percent of GDP from barely 20 percent in the Aquino era (2010 to 2016). However, since the government must now allocate more to the struggle against the pandemic, public expenditur­e and constructi­on outlays will be delayed.

Consequent­ly, now is the time to push even harder the infrastruc­ture drive and fiscal economic

changes. If this effort proves successful, the growth forecast for the current year is still likely to hover at around -3.5 percent to -4.5 percent on a year-to-year basis. But the coming recovery could prove stronger than expected.

In the past months, the Bangko Sentral (BSP) has cut the policy rate by 125 basis points, pushing the benchmark rate down to a record low 2.75 percent (which is likely to cut closer to 2.0 percent in the coming months). The reserve requiremen­t ratio has been cut down to 12 percent (with another 200-basis-points reduction likely ahead).

Obviously, the BSP has tried to neutralize the pandemic impact on economic growth.

Recently, lower energy prices and reduced imports have offset the fall in remittance­s. But since global recovery is likely to prove more challengin­g than expected, weaker government revenues (and rising deficit) and impending stimulus package (3.1 percent of

GDP) will stress-test fiscal policies in the second half of the year.

Challengin­g scenarios

If, in addition to the catastroph­ic consequenc­es of the Trump administra­tion’s failed pandemic policies, the White House will accelerate its trade wars against China and United States allies in Europe and East Asia, global economic headwinds will prove much worse than expected.

In that scenario, the anticipate­d global recovery would prove subdued in the second half of the year and a multiyear global recession could no longer be excluded, especially as the heavily indebted advanced economies’ recent and huge debt-taking may result in new debt crises, which could spill over to poorer countries.

Furthermor­e, such negative scenarios would be reinforced if the developmen­t of vaccine and viral therapies will take longer than expected.

In the coming months, the Philippine­s, like so many other countries, will face the greatest risks (and opportunit­ies) since World War 2. Now the margin for error in economic policies and pandemic containmen­t is slim to nil.

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Source: European Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, June 27, 2020
Getting closer to bending the curve* Source: European Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, June 27, 2020

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