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ADB revises downward growth outlook for Asia

HONG KONG—First, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) warned developing Asia to brace for shocks from the West. Then the Asian Development Bank (ADB) slashed its regional growth forecasts. Now analysts are asking: Has Asia lost its mojo?

The European debt crisis and weakness in the United States have long been drags on Asian growth, but throw in China’s difficult leadership transition and the outlook is grim.

“It wasn’t supposed to turn out like this. Growth in recent months has faltered again, confounding expectations of a gradual recovery,” HSBC economists Qu Hongbin and Frederic Neumann wrote in a report released last week.

“China is one culprit, though a wobbly West is equally to blame,” they said.

As Asia’s powerhouses China and India slow faster than many had expected, the ADB on Wednesday revised down its growth estimates for the region’s emerging economies to the lowest level since 2009.

Echoing assessments from the IMF, the ADB also warned of significant risks arising from the eurozone and the uncertain recovery in America, both of which are major export markets for Asian manufacturers.

“Developing Asia is slowing down much more than we expected,” ADB chief economist Changyong Rhee told reporters in Hong Kong.

End of two-digit growth

“The years of two-digit growth in Asia are coming to an end,” he said.

The bank cut its 2012 growth forecast for developing Asia, which comprises 45 nations, from 6.9 percent in April to 6.1 percent—the lowest since 2009 when the region expanded 6 percent.

(The ADB raised its growth outlook for the Philippines from 4.8 percent to 5.5 percent this year, citing the rise in investments by local firms, robust household consumption and increase in government spending. For next year, however, the ADB expects the country to expand at a slower pace of 5 percent.)

The ADB also revised downward to 6.7 percent the 7.3-percent growth outlook for Asia for 2013. The region expanded 7.2 percent in 2011.

China’s gross domestic product (GDP) was seen expanding 7.7 percent this year—slow by the country’s recent standards—before bouncing back to 8.1 percent in 2013, still well-below the 9.3 percent achieved last year.

The Manila-based lender said India would see GDP growth slow to 5.6 percent in 2012 before picking up to 6.7 percent next year.

Analysts are wondering when will China crack the whip and provide the policy stimulus its economy needs to avoid a hard landing. HSBC economists Qu and Neumann said they had expected Beijing to act sooner.

“China has held back in providing a determined stimulus, with obvious implications for economic growth regionally,” the economists wrote.

China’s power shift

Domestic politics may be one reason Beijing seems unwilling or unable to use its fiscal reserves to boost growth, with the Communist Party leadership on the verge of a once-a-decade power shift that has been clouded by controversy.

“Given that growth is highly investment-driven, supported especially by the public sector, any leadership change is bound to have a large impact on activity,” Qu and Neumann said.

“This year, more so than during other transitions, political uncertainty may have had an especially restraining effect on investment decisions,” they said.

Asia’s worsening outlook is likely to be underlined when the IMF provides an update on the global economy in a twice-yearly report on Tuesday, in the run-up to weekend meetings of finance ministers from around the world in Tokyo.

But is it time to hit the panic buttons? Has Asia really lost its economic vim? Some analysts say no.

“Asia hasn’t quite lost its mojo yet, but patience is needed before growth accelerates to more accustomed speed,” Qu and Neumann said, predicting China would loosen policy early next year when the new leadership is in place.

No need for panic

Rhee agreed that there was no need for panic. “This is a natural adjustment to a more sustainable growth pace,” he said of the outlook for developing Asia.

Of all the regions in the world that are struggling to cope with the fallout from Europe and the United States, Asia has the most ammunition in its policy armory to respond, research consultancy Capital Economics said on Friday.

“Asia has significant scope to loosen both monetary and fiscal policy,” it said. “Unlike in most of the developed world, interest rates are well above zero across Asia, meaning there is room for interest rates to be cut in most countries.”

 

Asean resilient

ANZ bank said in an analysis last week that while growth in China and India was on the slide, the core economies of Southeast Asia were proving remarkably resilient.

It noted that while the rest of Asia had “relinked” with the West—with domestic demand tracking weak external demand for exports—this was not the case in Southeast Asia’s biggest developing economies.

“This has broken down entirely in Asean (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) over the past few quarters with domestic demand and foreign demand now largely uncorrelated,” the ANZ report said.

This meant that Asian economies such as Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam would “likely hold up well” if the global economy slowed further. AFP


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Tags: ADB , Asia , Business , economy

  • legislex

    I have serious doubts on this ADB report insofar as the Philippines is concerned.  They earlier projected that the Philippines will only grow 4.8 percent this year.  Their projection is way off our government’s projection of 5 to 6 percent.  As it turned out, the first half had shown us grown to 6.1 percent – way off ADB’s annual 4.8 percent projection.  Now, ADB wants it revised to 5.5 percent.  In order for this to be attained, ADB expects the second half to be only at 4.9 percent.  I doubt that we will go that low given that most of our economic indicators seems to show no downward trend.  Our stock market still continues to breach its all-time highs.  The only letdown is in electronics export, but the decline is not that big.  The inflation is still at 3.1 percent, and it will continue to go down given that the price of oil in the world market is plunging. 

    Also, ADB projects that our growth will decline to 5 percent in 2013.  They forgot to consider that 2013 is election year.  Hoarded money will be released by politicians, specially by those allied with GMA.  GMA’s minions do not want to end up in jail like their boss, and staying in power is their only insurance that the government will go easy on them. This will drive consumer spending to new heights, which in turn will benefit the economy.

    • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_JEMNLLYAP5EA7SM3A6QUOGV62Q Chris

      ADB, IMF or any agency does not have reliable growth outlook for PH since the last two decades. And almost always they’re pessimistic and had low expectations for the country, that’s why they do revisions almost every quarter.



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