Kuwait Times

Singapore dodges technical recession

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Singapore’s trade-driven economy grew 1.8 percent last year, the slowest pace since the global financial crisis in 2009, after dodging a technical recession in the fourth quarter, official data showed yesterday.

Analysts warned growth in 2017 could even be more subdued if rising protection­ism crimps global trade and further rises in US interest rates put more pressure on the local economy. “Singapore has comfortabl­y dodged a technical recession in Q4 2016, but we expect the local economy to remain in ‘slow-mo’,” said Weiwen Ng, Southeast Asia economist at banking group ANZ.

“The prospects of a more protection­ist trade policy poses headwinds to Singapore’s economy who is still wedded to the old export-led growth model,” Ng said in a note. There have been concerns among Asia’s export-driven economies about rising protection­ism in the West, where globalizat­ion and free-trade deals have been blamed for sending jobs abroad and opening the floodgates to immigrants.

Donald Trump, who will be sworn in as US president on January 20, has vowed to tear up the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p (TPP), a major trade deal negotiated by outgoing President Barack Obama.

Singapore is a key member of the 12nation TPP which contains market-opening provisions that go well beyond cutting tariffs. Singapore’s trade ministry said yesterday that the city-state’s economy expanded 9.1 percent quarter-on-quarter in the three months to December, reversing a 1.9 percent contractio­n the previous quarter. A technical recession refers to two straight quarters of quarter-on-quarter contractio­ns. Last year’s growth is below the 2.0 expansion in 2015. — AP

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