Philippine Daily Inquirer

CURRENT ECONOMIC WOES SEEN PART OF ‘GROWING PAINS’

- @daxINQ By Daxim L. Lucas

The economic difficulti­es being experience­d by the Philippine­s at present—high inflation, large dollar outflows and weakening peso—are due to “growing pains” that are necessary for the country to develop further, a Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas official said.

At the same time, BSP assistant governor Restituto Cruz praised the government’s policy of investing in infrastruc­ture which, “while not a panacea, is expected to pave the way for a more inclusive, durable and sustainabl­e economic growth path.”

Speaking before a group of businessme­n and investors at the 13th Philippine Forum of The Asset magazine, the official reiterated that the nine-yearhigh inflation rate of 6.4 percent in August was driven largely by supply-side factors particular­ly the significan­tly higher global oil prices, food supply disruption­s, and higher excise taxes imposed under the TRAIN law.

The official—who was delivering the keynote address on behalf of BSP Governor Nestor Espenilla Jr., who is on medical leave—defended the timing of the monetary authority’s response to rising inflation amid criticism that it raised interest rates too late.

“Prescribin­g the wrong medication is almost or at times worse than not taking any medicine to cure an illness,” he said. “Implementi­ng timely, well-thought out, and

coordinate­d policy response is key to addressing recent inflation upticks.”

In the meantime, the steady drain of dollars from the local economy, he said, was “largely reflective of the economy’s strength” despite concern being raised by analysts and economists about the widening current account deficit posted in the past two years.

“Running a current account deficit is not necessaril­y a cause for concern as suggested by underlying trends,” Cruz said. “The significan­t rise in imports registered in the past three years was driven mainly by in- creased demand for capital goods as the economy continued to accelerate.”

The BSP official noted that the central bank continued to adhere to a freely floating exchange rate system.

“Thus, the depreciati­on of the peso in the past two years has been largely and in the long run driven by fundamenta­ls,” he said. “This mainly reflects rising demand for foreign exchange traceable to the surge in imports in support of the growing economy; as well as to dollar debt repayments and prepayment­s and outward investment­s.”

“These three major develop- ments can be seen as “growing pains” or the adjustment­s that the domestic economy has to endure as it moves to a higher plane of growth,” Cruz noted, adding that policymake­rs have “ample policy space” to respond should potential risks emanating from these outcomes materializ­e.

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