Business World

AMRO sees PHL growing slower than expected

- Ibañez

THE PHILIPPINE­S will likely grow by 6.2% this year, slower than previously expected as the service-driven economy remains vulnerable to lockdowns, ASEAN+3 Macroecono­mic Research Office (AMRO) said.

In its latest regional economic outlook released on Tuesday, AMRO said the Philippine­s’ gross domestic product (GDP) will expand at a slower pace than the 6.7% projection set in October last year. This is also lower than the government’s 7-9% target for 2022.

The research office said the Philippine economy likely grew by 4.9% in 2021, higher than its previous 4.3% forecast but just below the government’s 5-5.5% target.

“The weakness is the services sector. Philippine­s is a very services-oriented economy so if they are able to open up the economy more fully, the services sector will recover much more robustly,” AMRO Chief Economist Hoe Ee Khor said at a virtual briefing.

“But at the same time, because of the high dependence on the services sector, if they have to close down for any reason because of a new outbreak — the more infectious and more severe mutation of the virus — then I think the Philippine­s will be affected more.”

The country will need to ramp up its vaccinatio­n program further to keep the economy open for longer and support the services sector, he said.

The government reverted to stricter mobility restrictio­ns as coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID-19) cases surged due to the more infectious Omicron variant. New infections reached 17,677 on Tuesday for a total active case count of 247,451.

The government plans to fully vaccinate 77 million Filipinos by the end of the first quarter.

As for the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), AMRO expects the region’s GDP to expand by 5.2% in 2022, slower than the 5.8% projection previously.

Mr. Khor said the impact of the Omicron variant on ASEAN economies will be less pronounced than the effect of the Delta variant last year as vaccinatio­n has become more widespread.

“There’s much more protection of the population and we feel that the economies will maintain the economy much more open this year. As a result, the impact on the economy will be less,” he said.

“Of course, the impact will vary from country to country. For countries which are much more dependent on contact-intensive services industries — like Thailand for instance on tourism — we’ve shaved down the growth much more.”

Among ASEAN economies, Vietnam is expected to grow the fastest this year at 7.5%, followed by the Philippine­s, then Cambodia and Indonesia at 5.2%.

AMRO estimates the Philippine consumer price index to hit 3.3% this year, just slightly higher than the 3.2% seen previously.

This is just below the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) projection of 3.4% for 2022.

Mr. Khor said he thinks the BSP should maintain its key policy rates until economic recovery is stronger.

“The inflation (last year) was caused mostly by supply-side disruption,” he said.

Preliminar­y fourth-quarter GDP data will be released on Jan. 27. —

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