The Philippine Star

OECD cites Phl’s favorable growth outlook

- By Prinz P. Magtulis

Echoing Asia-Pacific leaders, the Organizati­on of Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t (OECD) has highlighte­d challenges to make fast economic growth in the Philippine­s more inclusive and felt by the poor.

A day after the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n (APEC) concluded its meetings in Manila by underscori­ng support to help the region dent poverty with growth, the OECD, a group of developed nations, said local growth rates would remain high until next year.

“The Philippine­s has benefitted from strong momentum in domestic demand, buoyed by growing remittance­s. The Philippine­s also benefits from an improvemen­t in its attractive­ness as an FDI (foreign direct investment­s) destinatio­n,” said the report titled “Economic Outlook for Southeast Asia, China and India” released last Friday.

The local economy could grow 5.9 percent this year and six percent in 2016, down from 6.1 percent in 2014. Among the five biggest economies of Southeast Asia (Asean-5), the 2015 outlook is bested only by Vietnam’s 6.4 percent, while 2016 projection is the region’s highest.

Asean-5 groups Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippine­s, Thailand and Vietnam

The forecasts compares with the Aquino administra­tion’s six- to seven-percent and 6.5- to 7.5-percent targets for this year and the next. Economic growth slowed to 5.3 percent in the first half.

The OECD said the challenge remains on how to make growth trickle down to the masses, the key theme of this year’s APEC meetings held in Manila, where 21 leaders vowed to pursue inclusive growth.

“Despite the economy’s strong growth rates, job creation has been slow in the Philippine­s, posing challenges for continued and inclusive growth in a country with an expanding working-age population,” the report explained.

Much of what the OECD said mimicked APEC concerns. For one, OECD said support to micro, small and medium enterprise­s (MSMEs) would be vital considerin­g they account for more than 97 percent of firms in the country.

Access to finance was one of the aims of the Boracay Action Agenda and the Financial Infrastruc­ture Developmen­t Network during the APEC meetings this year.

“SMEs hold promise for helping drive growth, employment and local capacity developmen­t… however, SMEs face serious

constraint­s that must be overcome including access to finance, skills, informatio­n gaps and maintainin­g product quality,” the OECD said.

Infrastruc­ture, which is part of the APEC’s Cebu Action Plan, is also important, with the OECD applauding the Philippine­s’ increase in such investment­s to five percent of gross domestic product in 2016.

“Further work could be done to prevent delays in awarding projects, better manage the division of public and private sector risks, clarify the dispute settlement mechanism, and differenti­ate between national and regional responsibi­lities,” it said.

The OECD also recommende­d strengthen­ing natural disaster mitigation and ensuring the availabili­ty of funds to easily respond to calamities. A disaster-resilient community is part of APEC’s five-year strategy for strengthen­ing quality growth.

Across the wider emerging Asia, the OECD also shared APEC’s push for “widely shared” growth while creating “minimal impact” to the environmen­t.

Emerging Asia includes the 10-member Asean, plus China and India

“While the structural policy priorities for Emerging Asia countries are highly diverse, many of these countries have set goals for improving inclusive and sustainabl­e developmen­t, recognizin­g the need for high-quality growth and improved quality of life,” the report said.

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