Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Asia likely to see dynamic economic growth

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ASIA and the Pacific remains a dynamic region despite the somber backdrop of what looks to be shaping up as a challengin­g year for the world economy. Global growth is poised to decelerate as rising interest rates and Russia’s war in Ukraine weigh on activity. Inflation remains stubbornly high, and banking strains in the United States and Europe have injected greater uncertaint­y into an already complex economic landscape.

Asia’s domestic demand has so far remained strong despite monetary tightening, while external appetite for technology products and other exports is weakening. We project the region will contribute more than 70 percent of global growth this year as its expansion accelerate­s to 4.6 percent from 3.8 percent last year.

China’s reopening will provide fresh momentum. Normally the strongest effect would be from demand for investment goods in China, but this time the biggest effect is from demand for consumptio­n. Other emerging economies in the region are on track to enjoy solid growth, though in some cases at slightly lower rates than seen last year.

Even so, the dynamic growth outlook doesn’t mean policymake­rs can be complacent. Some risks—such as public debt—we have recently discussed remain. Intensific­ation of the recent global financial tremors could spark others.

Beyond these risks, persistent inflation remains a challenge. Global commodity prices have moderated after surging last year and supply chain pressures have eased, but inflation remains above central banks’ targets. Core inflation, which excludes food and energy, has also proven sticky.

Output gaps—measures of how closely demand is running to the capacity to meet demand, and hence the pressure on prices— for Asian economies are either narrowing or have already closed, while levels of economic capacity themselves might have fallen as a result of so-called economic scarring from the pandemic.

The effect of currency depreciati­on against the US dollar last year is still passing through to prices. The impact could be greater than usual, because of the already-high inflation, especially for emerging economies. These factors suggest that the battle to contain inflation isn’t over. With real interest rates still low—and negative in some countries—central banks may need to keep interest rates higher for longer.-IMF Blog

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