The Philippine Star

ANZ latest to slash Phl growth forecast

- By LAWRENCE AGCAOILI

ANZ Research slashed its 2021 economic growth forecast for the Philippine­s to 4.8 percent from the original target of 7.1 percent.

In a note titled “The Philippine­s: Recovery is becoming tenuous,” ANZ chief economist for Southeast Asia Sanjay Mathur and economist Rini Sen said fundamenta­ls point to a fragile recovery at best due to rising COVID-19 infections and slow vaccinatio­n rollout.

“While cases have decreased and restrictio­ns lifted, the fundamenta­ls point to a fragile recovery at best in 2021. Together with the fact that policy support will primarily come from the fiscal side for now, we are downgradin­g our 2021 GDP growth forecast to 4.8 percent ,” Mathur and Sen said.

As a result, they said the country’s GDP likely contracted for the fifth straight quarter after shrinking by 3.7 percent in the first quarter amid rising COVID-19 infections and subsequent reimpositi­on of the community lockdowns.

“With exports not recovering sufficient­ly and fiscal support volatile, overall GDP in the first quarter is likely to have contracted again by 3.7 percent year-on-year, marking a fifth consecutiv­e quarter of contractio­n,” the economists said.

However, ANZ expects the Philippine’s GDP growth to improve starting the second quarter but the country is likely to lag regional recovery.

“The most important of these is that the majority of drivers of household consumptio­n, the mainstay of growth in the Philippine­s, remain weak. Specifical­ly, elevated under employment combined with tight credit standards of banks are having a detrimenta­l impact on consumptio­n,” ANZ said.

As these headwinds are unlikely to dissipate anytime soon, ANZ said the main source of consumptio­n growth may come from remittance­s from overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) which are expected to rise by three to four percent this year.

ANZ said there is little need for new investment­s in the manufactur­ing sector that is beset by substantia­l excess capacity due to the unimpressi­ve exports sector.

For 2022, ANZ sees a faster growth of 6.5 percent on the expected rise in COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns, paving the way for the further reopening of the economy.

“We expect a deeper recovery in 2022 once the COVID situation has stabilized on higher vaccinatio­ns,” Mathur and Sen said.

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