BusinessMirror

Recovery for PHL still at risk, say 2 think tanks

- By Bianca Cuaresma @Bcuaresmab­m

THE recovery of the local economy remains at risk, according to two internatio­nal think tanks, as the Covid-19 Delta variant continues to pose a threat in the Philippine­s’s pandemic response.

In two separate research notes, Moody’s Analytics and Fitch Solutions said the recent surge in Covid-19 cases in the country, as well as the entire Asia-pacific region, is an emerging threat to economic recovery and a challenge to policy effectiven­ess.

Moody’s Analytics, the research arm of Moody’s Group, particular­ly said the Philippine­s—along with Indonesia—will struggle most with less effective Covid-19 policies due to vaccine shortages and ineffectiv­e social distancing measures. This, the think tank said, creates much uncertaint­y on the timing of a rebound.

“Economies in the region, including the Philippine­s, India, Malaysia, Singapore, Hong Kong and even Taiwan, have seen single-quarter gross domestic product [GDP] declines in the first or second quarter of this year, or the data has been significan­tly revised down from first estimation,” Moody’s Analytics said.

“The Philippine­s, Malaysia, Singapore and Hong Kong have been the most volatile; each experience­d a quarter-to-quarter decline of GDP in the second quarter of this year. And in all of these but the Philippine­s, the decline followed robust double-digit percent growth in the first quarter on a seasonally adjusted annualized rate basis,” it added.

In a separate research note, Fitch Solutions announced that they have revised their growth forecast of emerging Asia downward from 7.9 percent to 7.8 percent, saying the region’s recovery has been constraine­d by low Covid-19 vaccinatio­n rates and the emergence of the more transmissi­ble Delta virus variant.

“Risks to growth have risen due to the emergence of the more transmissi­ble Delta variant, which has caused several markets to implement renewed lockdown measures and significan­tly postpone border reopenings.

As a result, over the past quarter, we have made several downward adjustment­s to our growth forecasts for 2021 with markets like Indonesia,

Thailand and the Philippine­s seeing the largest revisions amid their significan­tly worse outbreaks since the onset of the pandemic and relatively low vaccinatio­n rates,” Fitch Solutions said.

Earlier this month, Fitch Solutions slashed its growth forecast of the Philippine­s from 5.3 percent to 4.2 percent. The new projection came amid the Philippine Statistics Authority’s (PSA) announceme­nt that the country’s gross domestic product in the second quarter of the year hit 11.8 percent, effectivel­y ending the recession in the country.

The think tank said continued outbreak risks will hold back the possibilit­y of Asian economies normalizin­g activity and reopening their markets in a “meaningful way” in 2021.

The think tank noted that Asia not only has the highest levels of movement restrictio­ns and stringent policies to control the virus transmissi­on, it also still has the largest number of border closures across the world, with 70 percent of the region’s borders still closed.

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