The Philippine Star

Rising coVid-19 cases pose recovery hurdle — dBs

- By LaWreNce agcaoiLi

The recent uptick in COVID-19 cases is posing a single biggest challenge to ongoing economic recovery in the Philippine economy, according to DBS Bank Ltd. of Singapore.

In a report, DBS economist Radhika Rao said the impact of rising cases among the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) is most telling on mobility trends as government­s reimposed restrictio­ns.

“Consensus is catching down with our 2021 growth forecasts for Malaysia, Thailand, and the Philippine­s,” Rao said.

DBS expects a seven percent growth for the Philippine economy this year and six percent next year after shrinking by a record 9.6 percent in 2020.

The strict lockdown was reimposed as the National Capital Region and adjacent provinces (NCR Plus) were placed under enhanced community quarantine from March 29 to April 11 and under modified enhanced community quarantine from April 12 to May 14.

Rao said the scarring in the labor market, as well as the income inequaliti­es, are fallouts from the COVID-19 pandemic that may take longer to heal.

“Domestic demand is on the mend, with the labor market scarring to last longer. Exports are comparativ­ely faring better, upheld by the commodity upcycle, selected sectoral outperform­ance and resilient global or China growth,” Rao said.

COVID-19 infections in the Philippine­s breached the one million mark last week with over 17,000 deaths despite imposing the longest and strictest lockdown in the world.

“Notably, after the curve had flattened earlier in the year, the daily count is rising again in a few countries, especially Thailand, the Philippine­s and Malaysia,” she said.

Rao lamented the modest vaccine progress in the region. “Vaccinatio­ns have begun across the region, but there is much catch-up to do,” she said.

Furthermor­e, the Singaporea­n bank expects the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) to keep an accommodat­ive policy stance to enable the Philippine economy to recover faster from the pandemic-induced recession.

“Policy rates have been lowered to record low in the region. We expect a dovish hold in the region for 2021 notwithsta­nding pockets of inflationa­ry pressures, but readings are within policy targets,” Rao said.

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