Philippine Daily Inquirer

FEARS OF ECONOMIC OVERHEATIN­G ‘OVERDONE’

- By Ben O. de Vera @bendeveraI­NQ

Fears that the Philippine economy may be overheatin­g amid a “sharp fall” in the current-account surplus were “overdone” as the surge in imports supports infrastruc­ture developmen­t as well as manufactur­ing expansion, London-based economic research firm Capital Economics said.

“Although the key cause of the fall in the [Philippine­s’ current-account] surplus has been a sharp rise in imports, the import surge is being driven by strong demand for just two categories of goods: Capital goods and electronic items, which combined account for around two-thirds of total imports,” Capital Economics economist Gareth Leather noted in a report titled “Philippine­s-current account deficit no cause for alarm.”

Instead of being a cause for concern, booming demand for capital goods is an encouragin­g sign that after a series of delays, the government’s infrastruc­ture drive is making progress, he said. “Poor road, rail and port facilities act as a drag on economic growth in the Philippine­s and better infrastruc­ture should over time boost the productive potential of the economy,” Capital Economics said.

“Neither is the surge in electronic imports anything to be alarmed by. A majority of elec- tronics items imported into the Philippine­s are in fact intermedia­tes (circuit boards and microchips), which are assembled before being shipped to third markets. This bodes well for exports over the coming year and suggests that after a few years in the doldrums the country’s electronic­s sector could finally be getting back on its feet,” Capital Economics added.

In 2016, the current account surplus narrowed to $601 million. While the current account remained at a surplus for the 14th straight year, last year’s surplus was 91.7-percent lower than the $7.3-billion surplus in 2015. The 2016 surplus was equivalent to a mere 0.2 percent of the gross domestic product, whereas the 2015 figure was a bigger 2.5 percent of the GDP.

The current account surplus figure in 2016 was below the $2.5-billion target, equal to 0.8 percent of GDP.

The BSP mainly attributed the drop in the current account surplus to the widening deficit in the trade-in-goods account.

Last year, the trade-in-goods deficit increased by 46.2 percent to $34.1 billion from 2015’s $23.3 billion as imports jumped 16.62 percent while exports grew by just 0.6 percent.

For 2017, the BSP sees the current account remaining at a surplus of $800 million as the projected 10-percent growth in imports would outpace the 2percent exports growth.

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