Bangkok Post

Solid Philippine growth boosts case for rate hike

- NEIL JEROME MORALES ENRICO DELA CRUZ

Newly-elected Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr will inherit an economy that has strongly bounced back from the Covid-19 pandemic when he takes office in June, but soaring food and fuel costs will need to be addressed quickly.

Southeast Asia’s fifth-largest economy grew a better-than-expected 8.3% in the first quarter, the government said yesterday. It was the fastest annual growth since the June quarter of 2021 when it expanded 12.1% and exceeded a 6.6% forecast in a Reuters poll.

That growth rate made the Philippine­s the fastest growing economy in the East Asia for the period, officials said.

On a seasonally adjusted basis, the economy grew 1.9% in January-March from the previous quarter, with the easing of Covid-19 curbs and election-related spending underpinni­ng domestic demand.

That gives the central bank scope to raise interest rates to tackle rising inflation, which threatens to dampen consumer sentiment and derail the economic recovery.

“Since we are doing relatively well on the economic opening as evidenced by the Q1 data, the immediate priority is to address inflation, especially those that affected people the most, food prices,” Economic Planning Secretary Karl Kendrick Chua told a news conference.

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) holds its next policy meeting on May 19, with some analysts seeing higher chances for an interest rate hike.

“With GDP now back to pre-Covid levels and with inflation accelerati­ng, we fully expect BSP to hike policy rates at the May 19 meeting,” said ING senior economist Nicholas Mapa.

Economists have raised concerns the BSP, which has kept benchmark interest rates steady since November 2020 at record lows, could fall behind the curve as central banks around the world step up monetary tightening to fight inflation.

Governor Benjamin Diokno, however, has flagged a possible hike in June, with the BSP looking at raising rates two to three times to bring down inflation by next year.

To sustain the growth momentum, Chua also urged the next administra­tion to pursue further tax reforms, continue fiscal prudence and boost tax revenues needed to finance infrastruc­ture projects and human capital developmen­t.

Boosting tax revenue is crucial as Marcos must tackle the problem of heavy public debt bloated by heavy borrowings to finance the government’s pandemic measures.

“A majority mandate on top of sizeable political capital opens the door for opportunit­ies for Marcos to implement substantia­l economic reforms early on in his single six-year term,” ING’s Mapa said.

Marcos said he would hit the ground running as president and was looking very carefully at candidates for his economic team, with infrastruc­ture, jobs and energy prices his priorities.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand