Business World

Consumptio­n,

- — Beatrice M. Laforga

Metro Manila and its nearby provinces were placed under an enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) status from late March to May 15 to help mitigate the surge in coronaviru­s cases.

The stricter lockdown and higher unemployme­nt rate likely dampened consumptio­n, which accounts for more than 70% of gross domestic product (GDP).

“Second quarter GDP may dampen optimism,” FMIC and UA&P warned.

The Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) will report on Aug. 10 the official GDP data for the second quarter.

Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III earlier said that they expect the economy to post year-on-year growth in the second quarter after reporting five straight annual contractio­ns previously because of the pandemic.

The economy is expected to rebound strongly in the second quarter, coming from the 17% contractio­n during the same period a year ago.

With public consumptio­n still weak, FMIC and UA&P are expecting government spending to do most of the heavy lifting, especially with its infrastruc­ture program.

“Infrastruc­ture spending should sustain its uptrend given adequate fiscal space,” they said.

State spending on infrastruc­ture jumped by 45% from a year ago to P48.2 billion in April because of a low base in the same month in 2020. Infrastruc­ture spending, however, slowed down by 34% from P87.8 billion in March.

FMIC and UA&P noted the government still has a lot of room to spend for the rest of the year after its four-month deficit only accounted for the 20% programmed deficit this year.

Latest data showed the fiscal gap inched up by less than one percentage point year on year to P566.2 billion from January to May after the 13% jump in revenues outpaced the 8.8% growth in spending.

The economic team capped this year’s budget deficit to P1.856 trillion or equivalent to 9.3% of GDP.

FMIC and UA&P’s report noted there is still room for optimism, as seen in better manufactur­ing activity and trade data.

The Philippine Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) stood at 49.9 in May, a slight improvemen­t from April’s 49 but still below the 50 neutral mark that separates expansion from contractio­n.

The country’s total external trade in goods more than doubled to $14.16 billion in May, after exports surged by 72% to P5.71 billion year on year, and imports climbed by 141% to P8.45 billion.

Economic managers have set a 6-7% GDP growth target this year.

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