Gulf Today

Taiwan slashes 2020 GDP outlook again, but sees recovery ahead

The pandemic has hit the country’s services sector and tourism, but global demand for electronic­s helped offset the impact

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Taiwan’s economic growth will likely slow to its weakest in five years in 2020 as consumptio­n and tourism take a hit from the coronaviru­s pandemic, but the economy is set to rebound next year on improved demand for the island’s exports.

Taiwan’s economy, a key part of the global technology supply chain, is expected to grow 1.56% this year, the Directorat­e General of Budget, Accounting and Statistics said on Friday, again downgradin­g its outlook.

In May, it forecast full-year growth of 1.67%, its lowest since 2015.

Gross domestic product (GDP) shrank by a revised 0.58% in the second quarter from a year earlier, slightly up on the preliminar­y decline of 0.73%, the agency said.

The agency said the pandemic has hit the island’s consumptio­n, especially the services sector and tourism, but still-strong global demand for electronic­s helped offset some of the impact, thanks to the growing need for telecommut­ing as more people work from home to reduce the risk of infections.

The agency projected full-year growth of 3.92% next year, its fastest pace since 2014, citing a “significan­t recovery” in external demand and manufactur­ers moving production home from China amid a supply chain reshuffle following Sino-us tensions and the pandemic.

Consumptio­n dropped 4.98% in the second quarter from a year earlier at its sharpest rate on record.

While Taiwan has not gone into total lockdown to contain the virus due to relatively successful measures that prevented its rapid spread, the government has repeatedly warned of uncertaint­y for the economy and is rolling out a stimulus package worth T$1.05 trillion ($35.79 billion).

In addition to the virus uncertaint­y, analysts say renewed Us-china tensions could spell extra trouble for Taiwan’s electronic­s exports, a bellwether of demand for global tech giants such as Apple.

The statistics agency forecast exports in 2020 would drop 0.1%, but recover sharply next year to expand 6.7%.

It also slightly raised its consumer price estimate for 2020 to a drop of 0.19% from a 0.32% fall previously.

Meanwhile, Foxconn, the world’s largest contract electronic­s manufactur­er, posted a beter-than-expected quarterly profit and forecast its smartphone­s business would see sustained revenue weakness but at a slightly slower pace this quarter.

The taipei-based company, however, is expected by analysts to boost its revenue recovery in the months ahead, underpinne­d by the expected launch in autumn of a new lineup of iphones by Apple Inc, a major client of Foxconn’s. Foxconn reported a net profit of T$22.9 billion ($778.54 million) for the second quarter ended June. That was up 34% from a year earlier and beter than a consensus estimate of T$17.95 billion drawn from 13 analysts polled by Refinitiv. It said the stronger than expected figures were mainly driven by the server and computing businesses, while revenue from its key consumer products, mainly smartphone­s, dropped more than 15% from a year earlier in the second quarter as the coronaviru­s pandemic hit global electronic­s demand.

 ?? Reuters ?? ↑ Employees make cycles at a factory in Changhua, Taiwan, on Friday.
Reuters ↑ Employees make cycles at a factory in Changhua, Taiwan, on Friday.

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