Business World

WB: PHL likely to miss growth targets

- Beatrice M. Laforga

THE WORLD BANK has slashed its gross domestic product (GDP) growth forecasts for the Philippine­s this year up to 2021 to below the government’s target, amid “intensifie­d” risks from an escalating Sino-US trade war and “a slow recovery” of government spending in the wake of a three-and-a-half month delay in national budget enactment that weighed on first-half expansion.

The East Asia and Pacific Economic Update, titled “Weathering Growing Risks”, which the multilater­al lender released on Thursday bared a Philippine GDP growth forecast of 5.8% this year against the already-downgraded 6.4% forecast it gave last June and the official 6-7% target for 2019.

The latest projection also compares to the country’s actual 6.2% last year.

The World Bank also gave 6.1% and 6.2% projection­s for 2020 and 2021, also down from 6.5% for both years penciled last June.

The Philippine­s’ 5.8% growth forecast this year is the same as the projection given for developing East Asia and the Pacific (EAP), though better than the 4.8% for “developing ASEAN”, a group that excludes Singapore and Brunei. The Philippine­s will outpace developing EAP and ASEAN next year and in 2021.

But the country’s growth projection­s also fall short of the government’s targets of 6.5-7.5% in 2020 and 7-8% in 2021-2022.

Inflation will be supportive at 2.9% this year, against the central bank’s 2.5% forecast, and three percent for 2020 and 2021 against a 2-4% official target range.

“Downside risks to growth have intensifie­d,” the World Bank said of the Philippine­s in its report.

“The Philippine­s faces heightened external risks due to the slowdown in global growth and demand, and rising global protection­ism, which weaken external demand for the country’s main exports,” it explained.

“Domestical­ly, a slow recovery in the pace of public investment spending constitute­s the main downward risks, as capacity constraint­s, procuremen­t difficulti­es, and implementa­tion bottleneck­s continue to slow the pace of public spending.”

The country’s economy expanded by a disappoint­ing 5.5% last semester, and Socioecono­mic Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia has said it will take a 6.4% growth — doable according to state economic managers — to hit the lower end of the government’s 6-7% goal for 2019.

In a press briefing on Thursday, Rong Qian, World Bank senior economist for the Philippine­s, noted that agencies were not able to start the procuremen­t process right away after the P3.662-trillion 2019 national budget was finally enacted in mid-April.

“Another challenge is the absorptive capacity of the private sector,” Ms. Rong said.

“The budget delay caused some accumulati­on of projects and now that the projects have passed, they all go to the market at the same time…”

At the same time, “[f]iscal policy is expected to remain supportive of growth as public investment recovers, getting back on track to close the country’s infrastruc­ture gap.”

“Monetary policy is also expected to be accommodat­ive as inflation pressure diminisher­s,” Ms. Rong said.

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) has already cut benchmark interest rates by a total of 75 basis points (bps) in the face of fast-ebbing inflation rates. But this total leaves 100 bps left from last year’s cumulative 175 bps hike that the BSP fired off in the face of successive multi-year highs that reached a nine-year-high 6.7% in September and October that made the 2018 average settle at a decade-high 5.2%. Inflation averaged 2.8% in the nine months to September.

The BSP has also slashed banks’ reserve requiremen­t ratio by a total of 300 bps, after last year’s total of 200 bps, as BSP Governor Benjamin E. Diokno moves to cut this ratio to single-digit level when he ends his term in mid-2023.

Ms. Rong cited growth drivers up to 2021 as public spending, especially on infrastruc­ture, and a pickup in private investment­s after all tax reforms — especially one that will slash the corporate income tax gradually to 20% by 2029 from 30% currently — are enacted. Business has also been pressing the government to end uncertaint­y from a plan to overhaul fiscal incentives for investors in order to make them more time-bound and tied to clear benefits to the economy.

She also noted that poor competitio­n among firms in the Philippine­s has resulted “poor service delivery and higher prices, particular­ly in key sectors such as telecommun­ications, transporta­tion, logistics and power”.

“Markets in manufactur­ing, wholesale and retail, agricultur­e and transport that are usually open for competitio­n appear to be highly concentrat­ed in the Philippine­s, suggesting that market rules and regulation­s might be hindering competitio­n.” —

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