The Philippine Star

Global bank failures unlikely to negatively affect Phl – NEDA

- By LOUELLA DESIDERIO

The Philippine economy is unlikely to be negatively affected by the string of bank failures in the US and Europe, the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority (NEDA) said.

“I don’t think that we’ll be badly affected,” NEDA Secretary Arsenio Balisacan said during a roundtable discussion of the Wallace Business Forum, Financial Executives Institute of the Philippine­s, Foundation for Economic Freedom and Management Associatio­n of the Philippine­s yesterday.

He said the situation is not expected to be any worse than what was experience­d during the Asian financial crisis in 1997 and the global financial crisis in 2008.

Balisacan also said that in his conversati­on with Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Felipe Medalla, the latter gave assurance that the country’s banks are not exposed to the failed banks.

“The fundamenta­ls that we see here are quite solid and do not share the characteri­stics of the banks in the US and in Europe,” Balisacan said.

Earlier, Medalla assured Malacañang that the Philippine banking sector remains strong and is prepared to withstand shocks from the collapse of global banks.

Balisacan said the most critical issue that must be urgently addressed and is seen to affect the economic outlook most is the stubbornly high inflation.

The government is targeting a six to seven percent economic growth this year, and to further grow by 6.5 to eight percent next year until 2028.

Last year, the economy posted a 7.6 percent growth.

Balisacan said strong demand for consumptio­n and investment are expected to be the primary drivers of growth.

“However, domestic risks to inflation may dampen this outlook if upward price pressures force BSP to raise its policy rates. Given the lagged effect of monetary tightening, this policy response will likely slow down consumptio­n and investment as consumers and investors hold off on their spending and plans to expand in the coming months,” he said.

Even as the country’s headline inflation rate eased slightly to 8.6 percent in February this year from the 14-year high of 8.7 percent in January, he said the Philippine­s is an outlier in the region where inflation in the country’s neighbors appears to have moderated.

In the Philippine­s, he said the economy risks a slowdown as the BSP is forced to tighten monetary policy to rein in inflation.

Last month, the BSP hiked its key policy rate by 50 basis points to six percent.

In the medium to long term, Balisacan

said the country would need to raise investment levels in critical infrastruc­ture by encouragin­g greater participat­ion of foreign capital and the private sector to achieve growth and promote innovation.

He said he is in favor of constituti­onal reforms that are limited to the economic provisions to attract investment­s to the country.

“I am in favor of removing restrictio­ns to foreign investment. I am in favor of for example, opening up our practice of profession­s. I don’t see why we are able to compete globally, send our labor workers abroad and we seem to be threatened when we open our labor market to foreigners. I think there are clearly benefits to opening up, removing those restrictio­ns in the Constituti­on with respect to foreign investment,” he said.

With the limited fiscal space, he said the government is prioritizi­ng public-private partnershi­ps (PPPs) for infrastruc­ture developmen­t.

He said there are 97 PPP projects collective­ly worth about P2 trillion in the pipeline.

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