Philippine Daily Inquirer

NEDA CHIEF: PH SLIPPED INTO RECESSION IN H1

Nationwide factory output down 60% to 20-year low in April

- By Ben O. de Vera @bendeverai­nq

The Philippine­s has slipped into a recession as the economic contractio­n likely deepened during the second quarter as the COVID-19 lockdown—at its peak in April and May—severely affected production sectors, the country’s chief economist said on Wednesday.

“Based on the Missi (monthly integrated survey of selected industries), LFS (labor force survey) and trade statistics up to

May, it will be deeper than the first quarter,” Acting Socioecono­mic Planning Secretary Karl Kendrick Chua said in a text message. First-quarter gross domestic product (GDP) shrank by 0.2 percent year-on-year.

With two straight quarters of GDP contractio­n, the country is now in a recession—the first time since the full-year recession in 1998 with a 0.5-percent drop in GDP.

The government had projected GDP to decline by 2-3.4 percent in 2020 even as some private sector economists and most multilater­al institutio­ns expecting a bigger contractio­n for the entire year and even a double-digit drop in the second quarter.

Chua, who heads the state planning agency National Economic and Developmen­t Authority, last week said the economic team usually revisited the GDP projection­s whenever new data were available. The government will release the official second-quarter GDP figures on Aug. 6.

The Philippine Statistics Authority’s latest Missi report showed that the volume of production index—a proxy for nationwide factory output—slid 59.8 percent year-on-year in April, a 20-year low.

The April round of the LFS had shown a 15-year high unemployme­nt rate of 17.7 percent—equivalent to 7.3 million Filipinos without work.

Exports and imports also dropped at their fastest pace in April—the first full month of the enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) imposed in Luzon and other parts of the country due to the high COVID-19 cases since mid-march.

While the ECQ, which was extended until May, halted 75 percent of domestic economic activities, the less-restrictiv­e general community quarantine (GCQ) in June left only 25 percent of businesses still unable to resume operations because of social distancing and transporta­tion restrictio­ns remaining in place.

As the lockdown caused by COVID-19 eased, the Philippine­s’ purchasing managers’ index (PMI) improved to 49.7 in June, still a year-on-year contractio­n but the highest reading in four months, London-based global informatio­n provider IHS Markit Ltd. said also on Wednesday.

A PMI below the neutral 50-mark reflected a decline in manufactur­ing activities, which the Philippine­s recorded since March when the ECQ was first implemente­d.

“The change in government COVID-19 rules to GCQ helped the manufactur­ing sector make large strides toward stability in June. Most importantl­y, production was raised for the first time since before the lockdown, which, while marginal overall, marked a significan­t milestone in the reopening of the sector,” IHS Markit economist David Owen said in a report.

“However, many firms did remain closed or operated at much lower capacity, suggesting that parts of the sector have some way to go to restore production to prepandemi­c levels. Demand also fell, although the rate of decline was far softer than in May. Firms have noticeably held back from hiring as a result of weak demand, as employment numbers dropped at the steepest rate since March,” Owen said.

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