Philippine Daily Inquirer

2018 BOP DEFICIT SWELLS TO $2.3B

PH economy bled the most amount of dollars last year since 2014 due to wide trade gap

- By Daxim L. Lucas @daxINQ

The Philippine­s ended 2018 with the biggest net outflow of dollars from the local economy in four years due to the country’s yawning trade deficit—a situation mitigated only by the recent strength of the peso and remittance­s that traditiona­lly surge during the holiday season.

Data released by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas on Friday showed that the country’s fullyear balance-of-payments (BOP) position registered a higher deficit of $2.31 billion compared to the $863-million deficit in 2017.

More importantl­y, however, this amount was 53-percent higher than the $1.5-billion in net dollar outflows the central bank had predicted for the local economy in 2018, itself already an adjusted forecast from the $1-billion deficit it expected at the start of last year.

“The higher cumulative balance-of-payments deficit for the period may be attributed partly to the widening merchandis­e trade deficit, based on the Philippine Statistics Authority’s preliminar­y data, for the first eleven months of the year that was brought about by the sustained rise in imports of raw materials and intermedia­te goods as well as capital goods to support domestic economic expansion,” the BSP said.

The BOP represents the net amount of dollar flows into and out of aparticula­reconomy. It takes into account the internatio­nal transfer of resources whether these be for import and export trade of goods and services, as well as long- and shortterm investment flows. A BOP deficit represents an outflow of dollars from the economy, which, in turn, translates to a weaker local currency, and vice versa.

The largest net dollar outflow for a single recorded by the central bank in recent history was in 2014 when $2.85 billion left the local economy as a result of the decision by major central banks around the world to reverse the accommodat­ive monetary policy that has been in place since 2008 as a response to the global financial crisis.

For next year, the central bank expects net dollar outflows to continue and reach a total of $3.5 billion. Because of this, bankers and economists expect the peso to gradually weaken against the dol- lar during this timeframe.

On a monthly basis, the country’s overall BOP position yielded a surplus of $2.44 billion in December 2018, significan­tly higher than the $917-million surplus in the same month of the previous year, the BSP said.

Inflows in December 2018 stemmed mainly from the BSP’s foreign exchange operations, the national government’s net foreign currency deposits and the central bank’s income from its investment­s abroad during the month. These were partially offset, however, by the payments made by the government for its foreign exchange obligation­s.

The reported BOP position reflected the final gross internatio­nal reserves level of $79.19 billion as of end-December 2018. At this level, the central bank’s dollar reserves represente­d “a more than ample” liquidity buffer and was equivalent to seven months’ worth of imports of goods and payments of services and primary income.

It is also equivalent to six times the country’s short-term external debt based on original maturity and 4.1 times based on residual maturity.

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