Business World

Bottoming out in services could herald recovery

- — Jenina P. Ibañez

GLOBAL SERVICES may have bottomed out in June, signaling the possibilit­y of the sector’s outsized role in economic recovery for services-dependent countries like the Philippine­s, the World Trade Organizati­on (WTO) said.

The WTO said its services trade barometer for June fell to a record low, raising the possibilit­y of an early recovery, though analysts seem to agree that for the Philippine­s, the recovery will be slow.

The index also declined 4.3% year on year in the first quarter, which the WTO says reflects slowing economic activity and the early effects of the pandemic.

“While substantia­l, this decline is smaller than those seen during the financial crisis over a decade ago, when services trade fell by 5.1% in the first quarter of 2009 compared to the previous year before registerin­g an even bigger 8.9% slump in the second quarter,” WTO said.

The organizati­on said that while the index is expected to remain below trend for the second half of 2020, recovery in passenger air transport could contribute to a “powerful” turnaround.

“The barometer’s measures are in aggregate outperform­ing recent trends in actual services trade, a gap that in the past has preceded a positive shift in trade momentum,” WTO said.

Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Economist Michael L. Ricafort said that the services sector could drive a Philippine economic turnaround.

“Services account for at least 60% of the Philippine economy and would be a key driver in the economic recovery prospects as the economies further re-open from lockdowns, thereby also supporting the pick up in consumer spending, which accounts for at least 70% of the economy,” he said in an e-mail Friday.

University of Asia and the Pacific Senior Economist Cid Terosa said such an improvemen­t could be more gradual than that of other economies.

“The Philippine­s will experience recovery in overall services trade but it won’t be as quick as many countries around the world because of the more urgent need to resuscitat­e domestic business and economic activities,” he said in an e- mail Monday.

“Domestic production of goods and services have to be revived first before the Philippine­s can fully benefit from possible early recovery in overall services trade.”

Union Bank of the Philippine­s Chief Economist Ruben Carlo Asuncion in an e-mail said that consumptio­n related to services is still sluggish.

“Aviation and traditiona­l retail were hit hard and may take time to recover. I do agree that there are incrementa­l improvemen­ts in passenger air travel worldwide, but, for the Philippine­s, this may be initially concentrat­ed on local travel and internatio­nal travel will have to wait,” he said.

WTO’s services trade indices remain mostly below trend, especially passenger air transport, which the organizati­on said had bottomed out.

The container shipping, constructi­on, and global services purchasing managers’ indices also point to a possible turnaround while informatio­n and communicat­ions technology services continued to fall.

The financial services index was the exception, showing growth in line with medium-term trends.

Mr. Ricafort said that this resilience could be due to rapid digitaliza­tion in the industry in recent years. The stay-at-home and social distancing measures during the pandemic, he said, accelerate­d the use of online banking transactio­ns.

He added that financial services trade is integral to the digitalizi­ng global economy, with online payments facilitati­ng a surge in e-commerce activities.

“The resilience of the Financial Services Trade may also be attributed to the increased preparedne­ss by industry for any contingenc­y/emergency/ scenario including extreme ones as also required and encouraged by regulators worldwide the required business continuity plans, stress tests, recovery plans, contingenc­y plans, and the adoption of risk management systems that are aligned with global best practices,” he said.

Mr. Ricafort added that financial institutio­ns made trading and investment gains amid record low interest rates and bond yields that sent prices of bonds to record levels.

“Record low interest rates and increased funds/liquidity in the financial system also supported further gains in many parts of the global financial markets amid the search for higher returns to riskier investment­s such as equities amid liquidity-driven gains.”

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