Bleak economic Projection for Phl
>> Wednesday, October 17, 2018
With the county’s high
inflation rate, economists paint a bleak picture for the country’s fiscal
situation even as government officials insist the economy is as not bad as it
seems.
The Philippines will
likely miss its economic growth target this year and next, according to a
regional think tank, which joined other institutions in slashing their growth
outlook on the country as multi-year high inflation hurts Filipino consumers.
In its October economic
outlook, ASEAN+3 Macroeconomic Research Office, or AMRO, cut its 2018 growth
estimate for the Philippines to 6.5 percent from 6.5 percent previously.
If realized, the
regional research group’s predictions would fall below the government’s 7-8
percent target range. It would also place the Philippines as the sixth-fastest
growing economy in the 14-nation report.
The Philippines had
enjoyed uninterrupted growth in the past quarters, thanks to benign inflation
in the previous years that had given the central bank enough room to keep
interest rates low.
But in the second
quarter of 2018, the economy slowed down to a three-year low of 6 percent,
which the government's chief economist attributed to “spoiler” inflation.
In the first half of the
year, the economy grew 6.3 percent, well below the state’s goal.
Inflation surged to a
fresh nine-year high of 6.7 percent in September after monster typhoon Ompong
flattened vast swathes of farmland in northern Luzon last month, adding to
the country’s food supply woes. Year-to-date, inflation average to 5 percent,
well above the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’ 2-4 percent target band.
Despite onslaught of
"Ompong", farmgate price of palay dropped 0.91 percent in the fourth
week of September from a week ago, resulting into a 0.07 percent decline in
average retail price of regular milled rice during the same period, latest
government data show. Rice is a staple food in the Philippines and a heavy item
in the basket of goods and services that a Filipino purchases.
In the same monthly
report, AMRO said it expects Philippine inflation to hit 5.2 percent this year
— the highest among the rest of Asian economies covered — before cooling down
to 4.3 percent in 2019.
“For the growth rate
revision, the main reason is that inflation is higher than previously expected,
and high inflation continued to erode the purchasing power of household and
consumer confidence,” AMRO chief economist Hoe Ee Khor was quoted as saying in
a report by Business
World.
Socioeconomic Planning
Secretary Ernesto Pernia earlier said the economy would have to expand by at
least 7.7 percent in the second half to achieve the low-end of its target range
for the year.
However, some analysts
expect economic growth to continue to decelerate over the second semester of
the year as tighter monetary policy and higher inflation weigh on consumer
spending, which accounts for about seven-tenths of the Philippine economy.
The Asian Development
Bank, the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank have recently
downgraded their growth projections on the Philippines as high inflation bites.
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