phil01

AMRO ups Philippine GDP growth forecast

DESPITE the ongoing RussiaUkraine conflict and tighter global financial situation, the Asean+3 Macroeconomic Research Office (AMRO) has hiked its 2022 growth forecast for the Philippine economy.

However, it has slashed its growth projection for the Association of Southeast Asian Nations Plus Three (Asean+3).

AMRO now sees a 6.9-percent expansion for the Philippine economy — as measured by gross domestic product (GDP) — this year, higher than its 6.5-percent projection last April. The 2023 projection, however, was kept at 6.5-percent.

“The driver for this growth is basically the opening of the economy,” AMRO chief economist Hoe Ee Khor said in a virtual briefing on Tuesday.

He said growth will be also driven by domestic consumption and investment, such as infrastructure or projects under the Build, Build, Build program.

Khor said the domestic economy is expected “to do relatively well in terms of growth” this year amid the coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) infections due in part to the continued vaccination drive.

He said since the “Philippines is basically a service economy, and the BPO (business process outsourcing) sector is doing very well,” AMRO expects the sector “to continue to do well and to expand as well.”

As the Philippines is a service-oriented economy and has been reopened given the drop in Covid-19 infections, Khor said it is “less affected by external demand even with the downturn in the US.”

“I think the spillover to the Philippine economy would not be as high as it is for other economies,” he said.

For the Asean+3 GDP, AMRO eyes this to be around 4.3 percent this year from 4.7 percent previously, while the 2023 forecast was hiked to 4.9 percent from 4.6 percent.

In terms of inflation and its impact on the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’ (BSP) monetary policy stance, Khor said the central bank has leeway to “really increase” its key rates as economic growth is expected to continue its recovery and remain strong.

“We worry about inflation but because it is a supply shock, traditionally, the advice would be to look through the shock and try to support the economy,” he said.

He forecasts the BSP to hike its key rates “to neutral level, which is probably around 4 percent.”

“But even though rates are rising, monetary policy conditions remain accommodative. So, it will not be a drag on growth because the growth is basically self-sustaining,” he said.

Source: https://www.manilatimes.net/2022/07/06/business/top-business/amro-ups-philippine-gdp-growth-forecast/1849924