Money Week

Asia must adjust to Covid-19

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We’re in the third year of the pandemic and travel in Asia is still “heavily restricted”, says Chad de Guzman in Time.

Most Asian countries have done an excellent job fighting the pandemic: South Korea has recorded 12 deaths per 100,000 people, compared to 259 per 100,000 in America. But the arrival of Omicron has triggered a return to 2020-style measures. Japan has banned most foreigners from visiting. Hong Kong “which once boasted one of the world’s ten busiest airports… banned all flights from eight countries including the US and the UK” earlier this month. Yet as cases of Omicron spike across the region, “experts question whether continuing to stay closed to tourists, students and business travellers” is still “an effective strategy”.

Southeast Asia in recovery

Tight restrictio­ns and slow vaccine rollouts have weighed on stocks. The MSCI Asia Pacific index underperfo­rmed European and American shares in 2021, finishing the year down 2.5%. Southeast Asian markets have been particular­ly dull. The regional MSCI Asean benchmark has been flat over the last three years, even as the wider emerging markets index delivered gains of 11% a year. Vietnam’s VNI, which soared 35% last year, has been the only bright spot as other markets lagged global averages.

Delta wreaked havoc last summer, says Trinh Nguyen of the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace. Lockdowns disrupted Malaysian semiconduc­tor production and Vietnamese textile manufactur­ing. GDP in the latter country tumbled 6% yearon-year in the third quarter.

However, better times may be coming. Vaccinatio­n rates in most countries in the region (with the exception of Indonesia and the Philippine­s) are now comparable to those in the UK. Southeast Asia is also a potential winner from worsening USChina relations. Companies are diversifyi­ng their supply chains, which is bringing more inward investment. TransPacif­ic “jockeying for power” has “allowed Vietnam to escape the United States’ currencyma­nipulator list”.

Commoditie­s, not tourism

“The nexus of Asia-Pacific economic growth is shifting to Southeast Asia amid maturing recoveries in northeast Asia,” says RBC Capital Markets. “The retreating pandemic and higher commodity prices have catalysed a brightenin­g growth outlook for Malaysia and Indonesia”. The latter is a significan­t coal and oil exporter.

The outlook for tourism is less encouragin­g, says

The Economist. The sector “accounted for over 12% of the region’s GDP before the pandemic”. In 2019, Chinese tourists “made up 12 million of Thailand’s 39 million internatio­nal arrivals”, but Beijing’s zero-Covid policies mean few Chinese visitors are travelling overseas anymore.

“In Cambodia the temples of Angkor Wat are eerily empty.”

 ?? ?? Angkor Wat in Cambodia: eerily empty
Angkor Wat in Cambodia: eerily empty

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