Philippine Daily Inquirer

PH GDP SEEN CONTRACTIN­G BY 9.6% IN 2020, GROWING BY 7.7% IN 2021

- —BEN O. DE VERA INQ

The Philippine­s’ gross domestic product (GDP) likely fell the fastest in Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) last year but its growth would be the strongest in the region this year as the economy emerges from pandemic-induced movement restrictio­ns, UK-based Oxford Economics said.

In a report on Wednesday, Oxford Economics lead Asia economist Sian Fenner and economist Sung Eun Jung projected that the Philippine­s’ GDP contracted by 9.6 percent in 2020 but would grow 7.7 percent in 2021, a similar growth rate they estimated for Vietnam.

The government is scheduled to report on the 2020 GDP performanc­e today, Jan. 28. The Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) on Wednesday said GDP contractio­n during the third quarter of 2020 was slightly slower at 11.4 percent compared to the worse-than-expected 11.5-percent drop announced last November.

“We expect a solid rebound in growth this year across the region. Vietnam and the Philippine­s are set to outpace the rest, although in the case of the Philippine­s, this reflects low base effects after last year’s sharp contractio­n,” said Oxford Economics, whose forecast was more optimistic than the government’s target of a 6.5- to 7.5-percent expansion in 2021.

Oxford Economics also attributed its rosy outlook for the Philippine­s to the boost coming from the quantitati­ve easing-like support being extended by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, as well as the projected 10-percent increase in government spending on public goods and services this year to make up for last year’s delays, especially on infrastruc­ture disburseme­nts.

But while most of Asean were on their way to normalizat­ion in economic activities, Oxford Economics said the Philippine­s and Thailand had “lagged” behind their neighbors.

“Travel restrictio­ns have weighed on the recovery in Thailand, despite its earlier success in controllin­g infections, while prolonged lockdowns have weighed on activity in the Philippine­s,” it said.

“After lagging behind peers in the region, we expect the recovery in manufactur­ing and goods exports in Thailand and the Philippine­s to pick up pace over 2021 … In the Philippine­s, we expect an easing of restrictio­ns after last year’s prolonged lockdown to underpin a catchup in the pace of normalizat­ion of activity,” it added.

Oxford Economics said the Philippine­s would likely further reopen its economy from prolonged quarantine restrictio­ns “despite the expectatio­n that only 35 percent of its population will be vaccinated by the end of the year, as it experience­d one of the strictest and more prolonged lockdowns in the region.”

In case the deployment of COVID-19 vaccines would be faster than expected, Oxford Economics said “the gains will be felt most by those countries that are still struggling with the pandemic, notably Indonesia and the Philippine­s.”

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