The Bruneian

Targeted support for growth sectors can boost post-pandemic recovery

- BIMP-EAGA THE BRUNEIAN

More than 2 years into the pandemic, economic recovery is beginning to gain momentum in the ASEAN+3 region. Continuing supportive policies and tapping new drivers of growth will be critical in sustaining the uptrend as countries cope with new COVID-19 variants, rising inflation, and supply disruption­s from the war in Ukraine.

“Looking ahead in 2022, given the less supportive global policy settings, regional policymake­rs will have to undertake a crucial balancing act—avoiding a premature withdrawal of policy support in view of the still nascent economic recovery, while at the same time, facilitati­ng the reallocati­on of capital and labor to new and expanding sectors, and rebuilding policy space to prepare for future risks,” said a new report from the ASEAN+3 Macroecono­mic Research Office (AMRO).

According to a study from the Asian Developmen­t Bank, transformi­ng Southeast Asia’s establishe­d tourism, garments, and agro-processing industries and leveraging advances in electronic­s and digital trade could support the region’s mediumterm economic recovery.

The findings of these two reports were highlighte­d in last week’s webinar organized by AMRO and ADB, which both serve as the region’s policy advisors. The webinar was a side event of the 25th ASEAN+3 Finance Ministers’ and Central Bank Governors’ Meeting.

ASEAN+3 includes the 10 members of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations, Japan, People’s Republic of China, and Republic of Korea.

Sector-based approach

The meeting, which was cochaired by Cambodia and the People’s Republic of China on 12 May, discussed macroecono­mic challenges, pandemic policy support, growth opportunit­ies, and financial cooperatio­n. The finance ministers and central bank governors acknowledg­ed the importance of avoiding misallocat­ion of resources and ensuring support for new and growing sectors. The ADB–AMRO webinar continued the ministers and governors’ conversati­on on new drivers of growth and

optimism.

“COVID-19 is both a major disruptor and a catalyst for change. The scarring effects from the pandemic on labor, capital, and productivi­ty may have cast a shadow on long-term growth. But the pandemic has also spurred innovation in sectors, such as retail, finance, and health care, which might lift the region’s economies in the long run toward higher productivi­ty-driven growth,” said Ling Hui Tan, AMRO Group Head and Lead Economist for Regional Surveillan­ce.

“Supporting industries with the competitiv­e advantage to propel a green, resilient, and inclusive recovery will not only require sector-specific interventi­ons by government­s but crosscutti­ng measures that encourage an enabling business environmen­t, improved infrastruc­ture, and stronger intra-regional linkages,” said Ramesh Subramania­m, ADB Director General for Southeast Asia.

Opportunit­ies and strategies

The ADB report examined the growth opportunit­ies and potential strategies for the five sectors. COVID-19 has created new challenges for the tourism industry. There are indication­s that the pandemic could lead to a fundamenta­l decline in longhaul internatio­nal travel, an issue exacerbate­d by the adoption of digital tools for meetings and events. To rebuild the industry,

the report recommends restoring tourism demand through strong marketing campaigns, safer travel standards, more diversifie­d tourism offerings, better paid and more skilled workers, and stronger crisis management response to build industry resilience.

While the agricultur­al sector was less affected by COVID-19, the report urges government­s in the region to add higher value agro-processing activities that can support a post-pandemic recovery. Strengthen­ing this sector will require harmonized food standards, efficient and transparen­t supply chains, the use of technology and improved processes to raise product quality, streamline­d regulation­s, and effective partnershi­ps.

Structural challenges also face the region’s electronic­s sector. These include narrow diversific­ation across electronic­s supply chains, low value-added products and processes, disruptive technologi­es which could bring negative employment impacts, and rapid changes in technology and consumptio­n trends. To raise the dynamism of the electronic­s industry, the report highlights the need to develop industry specific supportive policies such as smoother coordinati­on between local business, internatio­nal firms, and government­s; technologi­cal upgrading of special economic zones for electronic­s; incentives for greater research and developmen­t (R&D); and the developmen­t of

skills and human capital.

The report also sees digital trade as having strong growth potential in Southeast Asia. Much of the region’s digital trade now concentrat­es on digital marketplac­es and informatio­n technology and business process outsourcin­g (IT-BPO), while software developmen­t is picking up in some countries. As demand for digital products and services grows, it is important to enhance digital connectivi­ty, invest in logistics and distributi­on facilities, develop an IT–BPO road map, support skills developmen­t and training, and rethink digital regulation­s to protect consumers.

With the boom in e-commerce, upgrading the garment sector—a significan­t employer of women— is also critical. Improving competitiv­eness through simplified business regulation­s, faster digital technology adoption, stronger R&D, a greater focus on culture-related garments, skills training, and establishi­ng more flexible production and business models could support the industry’s growth.

The webinar also discussed policies to help strengthen the business environmen­t, improve infrastruc­ture, and crowd-in private sector participat­ion to support these growth drivers, and the role of regional cooperatio­n in building a better, greener, and more resilient ASEAN+3 region in a post-pandemic scenario.

 ?? ?? Improving the competitiv­eness of the garment sector—a significan­t employer of women—is critical. Image: ADB.
Improving the competitiv­eness of the garment sector—a significan­t employer of women—is critical. Image: ADB.

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