The Philippine Star

DBCC to raise GDP target

- By LOUISE MAUREEN SIMEON

The economic team of the Marcos administra­tion will likely revise upward its growth projection for the year following a surprising third quarter performanc­e and as more upside risks are seen.

Budget Secretary and Cabinet-level Developmen­t Budget Coordinati­on Committee chair Amenah Pangandama­n answered in the affirmativ­e when asked whether the DBCC would move to revise upward its gross domestic product (GDP) target for 2022.

“I think so, yes it will be revised upward. With the numbers we have now and everything is open, it is likely,” Pangandama­n told reporters on the sidelines of the Pilipinas Conference 2022 of the Stratbase ADR Institute yesterday.

This comes after the third quarter GDP surprised with a 7.6-percent growth even with inflationa­ry pressures and other external headwinds.

This effectivel­y brought average GDP to 7.7 percent for the three quarters of the year. This is now above the 6.5 percent to 7.5 percent full-year assumption set by the DBCC in August.

Pangandama­n said the DBCC will meet next month to discuss and revisit economic targets. While the revision has yet to be final, local economists said raising this year’s GDP goal is plausible.

Union Bank of the Philippine­s chief economist Ruben Carlo Asuncion said continuous mobility and the increase in domestic consumptio­n due to seasonal reasons bode well for sustained domestic demand growth at least until the end of the year.

Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. chief economist Michael Ricafort said the absence of lockdowns as well as low base effects would likely magnify economic growth in the last quarter.

“This is also the first holiday season without restrictio­ns since the pandemic started with some pent-up demand,” Ricafort said.

“There are still more upside surprises despite higher prices as being overshadow­ed by the economic reopening narrative, pent up demand and revenge spending and consumptio­n,” he said.

Ricafort and Asuncion are looking at full year GDP growth of 7.8 percent to as much as eight percent.

Nonetheles­s, Asuncion still warned of risks including the continued aggressive move of the US Federal Reserve that delivered four consecutiv­e 75-basis-point rate hikes over the past months.

Asuncion argued that once the impact of these rate hikes start kicking in, it would now be challengin­g to talk about robust economic growth as these would soften economic expansion.

“I think, for until the end of the year, it is still to proceed with caution. But once we see inflation, not just globally but most especially locally, reach its peak and an improvemen­t in geo-political issues come about, this would indeed be a better situation for economic growth and recovery,” Asuncion said.

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