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Filipinos seen staying in Philippines as economy grows

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Remittances from overseas are expected to be less important to the Philippine economy “in the coming years” as improving job prospects in the country may dissuade Filipinos from leaving, according to DBS Group.

The financial services provider said in a research note that the domestic economy had been performing “very well” and that investment-led growth may be forthcoming.

The Singapore-based firm cited government reforms, low debt levels and steps taken to address the high birth rate as “all positive steps” that point to faster economic growth.

“Working domestically may become more attractive to locals as employment opportunities grow,” DBS said. “We suspect that remittances will slowly diminish in importance in the coming years.”

The group also noted that the sluggish economy in Europe and the Middle East pulled down the growth of remittances to the Philippines to a 15-month low of 4.2 percent year on year in June.

“Accordingly, this also implies that full-year remittance growth will be around 5 percent to 6 percent this year, a continued deceleration from 7.2 percent and 8.2 percent in 2011 and 2010, respectively,” DBS said.

“In the short term, there are considerable headwinds to remittance growth amid a lackluster global economy,” it added.

Further, DBS said that the strong peso also mitigates the effectiveness of each dollar of remittance inflows, resulting in less support for the domestic economy.

The group said that the growth of remittances to the Philippines was unlikely to return to the double-digit growth rates seen from 2002 to 2008 when growth was strong in the developed economies including the United States and Europe.

Together, these two major markets accounted for a combined 58 percent of total remittances in 2011.

“The heavy debt load in the two regions implies that economic growth will be constrained over the medium term,” DBS said.

“Asia remains a bright spot, but the region only accounts for 12.8 percent of (global) total remittance and is unlikely to negate the remittance slowdown in the developed economies,” it added.


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Tags: economy , forecasts , overseas Filipino workers , Philippines , Remittances

  • Cadiz

    Won’t happen. Our economy is not growing as fast as our population. That will always mean a net drop in per-capita income. Personally it looks to me that this economic growth that I have seen commented on is a figment of some of our President’s staff’s imagination.

  • AmpJr

    DBS might be dreaming!!!!Although you are expecting that there will be more jobs locally in the coming years, the low pay doesn’t attract Filipinos who have a chance to go abroad for a better paying job. Compare the minimun wage per hour in the US is $7.25/hour to a P350 a day..So if you work 8 hours in the US you will be making around $60 a day convert that to peso it will be P2400 and if you will do your math is 8x more…the truth is the price of commodities in the Philippines is more than in the US except the locally grown and raised vegetables and fish.

    • http://profile.yahoo.com/AVA7IX2FON6QROYWAEE3IKKCYQ S_a_r_a_n_g_g_o_l_a

      If you earned 60 dollars a day in US how much you pay for your appartment,and some other things to live in America..?

  • jpastor

    That is a good trend.
    Is there a trend that politicians or govt officials are less corrupt these days compared with the previous years? You see that is the biggest problem we have. Once a strict government comes in they will try to device a way to go around it. If they can’t they just wait for the guy to end his term and then continue their old ways.



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