Philippine Daily Inquirer

PH export, import growth goals slashed

- By Ben O. de Vera @bendeverai­nq

With global demand and supply constraine­d by the COVID-19 pandemic, the government economic team has slashed the country’s external trade growth targets even as it expects domestic inflation to settle within a slightly lower range this year.

The Cabinet-level Developmen­t Budget Coordinati­on Committee (DBCC), via ad referendum, has scaled down the growth goals for merchandis­e exports to 0.5 percent and for imports to 3 percent, from 4 percent and 8 percent, respective­ly.

Budget Undersecre­tary Laura Pascua told the Inquirer on Thursday that the revised but still preliminar­y exports growth target “was due to both the slowing of global growth and the high dependence of our exports on China.”

As for the less rosy imports outlook, Pascua attributed it to “the reduction of the projected 2020 GDP (gross domestic product) growth from 6-7 percent to the worst-case scenario of negative 1 percent to zero, and lower global oil prices.”

The DBCC nonetheles­s sees headline inflation this year at between 1.75 percent and 3.75 percent, below the original 2-4 percent goal.

The DBCC only had preliminar­y and partially approved macroecono­mic targets due to constraint­s and uncertaint­ies brought about by the pandemic. Pascua said the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), the Department of Finance and the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority would do a second round of projection­s taking into considerat­ion new developmen­ts.

It was during this March 27 DBCC ad referendum approval that economic managers projected GDP, at base year 2000, to post zero growth or contract by 0.8-1 percent.

The Philippine Statistics Authority this week rebased national accounts such as GDP to year 2018, such that the DBCC would adjust macroecono­mic targets before submitting the P4.64-trillion 2021 national cash budget proposal to Congress, Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III said.

In an investor call with Standard Chartered Bank on April 22, BSP Governor Benjamin Diokno said “preliminar­y assessment indicates a U-shaped recovery” for the Philippine economy.

“GDP could also recover more strongly once the fiscal and monetary stimulus gain traction and workers and firms resume operations,” Diokno said.

“Evidence suggests that (the BSP’S policy) measures have stabilized broad funding conditions, improved market liquidity and reduced volatility, but the shape of economic recovery remains highly uncertain with risks heavily tilted to the downside,” Diokno said.

He said the immediate challenge was to provide a tangible boost to the economy through the right combinatio­n of fiscal response and monetary measures.

As the government intends to ramp up borrowings from multilater­al and bilateral sources to finance aid for vulnerable sectors, health care and medical response, and an economic rebound postpandem­ic, the DBCC had set the budget-deficit ceiling at 5.3 percent of GDP from 3.2 percent previously.

Pascua said the wider 2020 budget deficit cap had a nominal value of P990 billion.

The debt-to-gdp ratio will also rise to 46.7 percent in 2020 from 41 percent last year.

Dominguez said that such a higher debt-to-gdp ratio would remain “low” compared with the Philippine­s’ neighbors.

Under the administra­tion’s P1.49-trillion four-pillar socioecono­mic strategy against COVID-19, the government planned to borrow an additional P310 billion from foreign lenders to augment funds.

Temporary unemployme­nt was expected to hit 1.2 million.

These assumption­s took into considerat­ion the impact of COVID-19 on consumptio­n, exports, remittance­s, tourism and travel, as well as the ongoing and a possible extension of the enhanced community quarantine in Luzon and other parts of the country if the pandemic would continue wreaking havoc on the economy until the middle of the year.

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