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Philippines economy on recovery path, but policy seen remaining loose

27 Jan 2022, 7:17 AM
Philippines economy on recovery path, but policy seen remaining loose

MANILA, Jan 27 —The Philippine economy expanded more quickly than expected in 2021, and looks set to accelerate further this year, but the impact of a resurgence in Covid-19 cases suggests the central bank is unlikely to start withdrawing policy support for now.

The Southeast Asian country's gross domestic product rose 7.7 per cent in the December quarter from a year earlier, faster than a 6.9 per cent expansion in the previous quarter, and beating a six per cent forecast in a Reuters poll.

Robust consumer spending ahead of the Christmas holidays helped bring full-year GDP growth to 5.6 per cent, exceeding the government's five per cent - 5.5 per cent target and after a record 9.6 per cent contraction in 2020 driven by prolonged Covid-19 lockdowns.

"The door to economic recovery is now fully open," Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Karl Kendrick Chua told a briefing, as he predicted growth would accelerate this year. "We are on the correct path to a resilient recovery."

Household consumption, the biggest contributor to growth, rose 7.5 per cent in the fourth quarter from a year ago, up from a 7.1 per cent increase in the third quarter, as mobility curbs were eased.

But Chua said the economy still faces risks particularly from any new Covid-19 variants that may emerge and from inflation pressures driven by higher prices of oil and some food items.

The government has reimposed coronavirus curbs in the capital region and a number of provinces since the start of the year due to a resurgence in infections driven by the more transmissible Omicron variant.

"While an Omicron wave means the economy's continued strong performance in Q4 is unlikely to be repeated this quarter, we think growth will pick up again before long," said Alex Holmes, an economist at Capital Economics.

The Philippine economy will, however, remain in catch-up mode this year, making it necessary for monetary policy to remain loose, he added.

The Philippine central bank, which has kept its key rate at a record low of 2.0 per cent since November 2020, has vowed to prioritize economic recovery, indicating it will not raise interest rates any time soon despite the threat of tightening in the United States and elsewhere.

The Philippines is aiming to achieve GDP growth rates of seven per cent to nine per cent for 2022, and six per cent to seven per cent for both 2023 and 2024, banking on an accelerated vaccination drive to allow the economy to reopen further.

While the economy may hit a speed bump in the first quarter, "growth dynamics suggest that a decent recovery is still possible" this year, said ING economist Nicholas Mapa, who pointed to a spending boost from presidential elections slated for May and sees the central bank preparing for a potential policy reversal by the second quarter.

— Reuters

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