Business World

NEDA sees pre-pandemic growth restored this year

- — Tobias Jared Tomas

THE National Economic and Developmen­t Authority (NEDA) said the economy is projected to return to its pre-pandemic growth track by this year, aided by laws liberalizi­ng investment in several industries.

In a statement on Sunday, Socioecono­mic Planning Secretary Karl Kendrick T. Chua said the easing of restrictio­ns governing foreign investment in industries like telecommun­ications, retail and railways is expected to drive a wave of interest from overseas, where investment interest has long been deterred by the foreign ownership caps of 40% set in the Constituti­on for many industries.

Gross domestic product (GDP) grew by 5.7% in 2021, following a contractio­n of 9.5% in 2020. The government is targeting a growth of between 7% and 9% this year.

On April 29, Mr. Chua said that “Without a doubt, the pandemic and its adverse economic impacts are indeed testing the Philippine economy like never before. But unlike past crises, the Philippine­s has solid fundamenta­ls to address this crisis.”

“It is very important at the outset to have a strong macroecono­my so that you have enough buffers and enough resources to withstand any shocks, and you can concentrat­e on improving the welfare of the people,” Mr. Chua added.

“In the final months of the Duterte administra­tion, we are vigorously pursuing the economy’s full recovery to restore jobs and bring more people out of poverty,” Mr. Chua said. “Executive Order (EO) No. 166, signed a few weeks ago, fully opens the economy, and we are working on getting tourists back (and) getting travel back to as normal as possible,” he said.

The government’s approach to reviving the economy centers on accelerati­ng the vaccinatio­n program, reducing restrictio­ns on foreign and domestic travel, and fast-tracking digitaliza­tion.

Mr. Chua specifical­ly cited amendments to the Retail Trade Liberaliza­tion Act, the Foreign

Investment Act, and the Public Service Act, all of which reduce foreign ownership restrictio­ns.

The amended Public Service Act now allows 100% foreign ownership in public utilities, which includes telecommun­ications, domestic shipping, railways, subways, airlines, expressway­s, tollways and airports.

UnionBank of the Philippine­s, Inc. Chief Economist Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion projects full-year GDP growth at around the 5.8% mark, below the goal set by economic managers for this year.

On the other hand, he expects first-quarter growth to come in at 5.5%, a forecast he called “robust,” given the contractio­n of 3.8% in the yearearlie­r period.

“With so much uncertaint­y all over, it is very difficult to determine if government will hit its 2022 growth target,” Mr. Asuncion said.

He said that external headwinds, including the RussiaUkra­ine war, China’s economic slowdown, and a hawkish US Fed “can weigh down on overall economic growth especially as the Philippine economy is yet to return to a pre-COVID economic growth trajectory.”

Mr. Asuncion said that the reforms Mr. Chua highlighte­d may not start showing up until long after the administra­tion steps down.

 ?? BW FILE PHOTO ?? SOCIOECONO­MIC Planning Secretary Karl Kendrick T. Chua
BW FILE PHOTO SOCIOECONO­MIC Planning Secretary Karl Kendrick T. Chua

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