Business World

PHL to see limited impact from China’s reopening

- Luisa Maria Jacinta C. Jocson

CHINA’S REOPENING may bring a surge in tourists to Southeast Asia, but this may not have a big impact on the Philippine economy, analysts said.

“Though China’s reopening will bring more tourists to Southeast Asia in general, this will likely have only second-order impacts on the Philippine economy overall,” Vincent Conti, senior economist at S&P Global Ratings, said in an e-mail.

The reopening of China’s borders last month lifted hopes of many Southeast Asian countries, including the Philippine­s, that Chinese visitors will flock to tourists spots once again.

In a separate report, S&P said emerging markets (EMs) that have previously received significan­t numbers of Chinese tourists “could benefit significan­tly as travel picks up after a couple years of virtually no outbound Chinese tourism.”

“The EMs that will benefit the most from China’s lifting of COVID-19 restrictio­ns are those that are exposed to China’s consumptio­n, especially tourism-related. These are mostly EMs in Asia, and include Thailand and Vietnam,” S&P said in a Feb. 1 report titled “Which Emerging Markets Benefit the Most From a Reopening in China.”

In the case of Vietnam, Thailand, and the Philippine­s, S&P said that at least one in every five tourist arrivals came from China before the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Tourists from China accounted for 21.1% or 1.74 million of the 8.26 million total arrivals in the Philippine­s in 2019 or before the pandemic. In 2022, there were only 39,627 Chinese visitors to the Philippine­s, making up 1.49% of the 2.65 million total arrivals.

Unlike other tourism-driven economies, Mr. Conti noted the Philippine­s is “more domestical­ly driven,” particular­ly by household consumptio­n. In terms of demand, household consumptio­n was the biggest contributo­r to GDP last year, driven by restaurant and hotel spending.

Tourism contribute­d 12.7% to Philippine GDP in 2019, based on data from the local statistics authority. This shrank to 5.2% of GDP in 2021, reflecting the impact of the pandemic.

“The potential for a renewed flood of Chinese tourists entering the country, and supporting demand certainly poses an upside risk,” Pantheon Chief Emerging Asia Economist Miguel Chanco said in an e-mail.

Mr. Chanco said this will provide a cushion for the expected slowdown in private consumptio­n growth in the Philippine­s this year.

The Tourism department is targeting to attract 4.8 million internatio­nal visitors this year, with the Chinese market as a priority.

President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. last month ordered the extension of e-visas for travelers from China, India, Japan and South Korea.

MANUFACTUR­ING

China’s economic recovery is expected to also blunt the impact of slower Philippine export growth, “as weaker demand from developed countries like the US will still dominate the overall story,” he added.

“The good news is that, unlike most other trade-dependent countries in ASEAN (Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations), the Philippine­s doesn’t depend on exports as much for economic growth,” Mr. Chanco said.

Meanwhile, Ateneo de Manila University Economics Professor Leonardo A. Lanzona said China’s reopening will likely increase demand for oil, which will result in higher pump prices.

“Hence, just considerin­g the likely effect on gasoline, the overall impact of its reopening will be generally negative,” he said in an e-mail.

The Philippine­s could have revived its manufactur­ing and trade sectors while China was under a strict lockdown, but this “possibilit­y is now lost,” Mr. Lanzona added.

“Despite the cheaper imported goods from China and the increased tourist revenues, the premature deindustri­alization that had always been affecting us because of China will again be felt, offsetting whatever positive returns we may receive. The Philippine­s needs to focus on its service sector and its adaptation of new technology in order to survive this,” he said.

S&P said that emerging markets in Asia that are closely linked with China’s manufactur­ing sector will benefit by its reopening.

“The loosening in mobility restrictio­ns in China could also eventually ease any remaining supply-chain disruption­s, potentiall­y benefiting EMs with significan­t manufactur­ing linkages with China,” it said.

“In addition, supply-chain linkages tend to be high in the computer and electronic­s sector. Vietnam, Thailand, Malaysia, and the Philippine­s have sectors with large supply-chain linkages with China that represent a higher share of their economy,” it added.

However, it noted that most countries with higher supply-chain linkages with China, such as Vietnam, Thailand, the Philippine­s, Malaysia, and Mexico, were already reporting manufactur­ing output “well above pre-pandemic levels.” —

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