Business World

IMF to check PHL economic health as it raises SE Asia growth outlook

- By Maria Eloisa I. Calderon Editor-at-Large

KUALA LUMPUR — A team from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) is visiting the Philippine­s this week for an annual review of the health of the Philippine economy, a senior IMF official said.

The Washington-based lender on Monday released an update to its semi- annual World Economic Outlook ( WEO) report that showed it expects overall global growth at 3.5% this year and 3.6% in 2018 — both unchanged from April after dimmer forecasts for the United States and the United Kingdom chipped away at confidence for growth prospects in China, Japan and the euro area.

That report, however, traditiona­lly dwells on numbers for the world’s largest economies, while offering growth projection­s for emerging markets and developing economies as a group.

It lumps the Philippine­s with four other Southeast Asian countries Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam which, together, the IMF now predicts to expand by 5.1% this year, a step up from 5.0% it tipped in April. It kept its 2018 growth estimate for these five countries at 5.2%.

The detailed forecast for Philippine gross domestic product ( GDP) growth, which the IMF in April put at 6.8% for 2017, should be announced in the next two weeks after the IMF team completes the Article IV consultati­ons with Philippine central bank and finance officials. Philippine first-quarter growth was a weaker-than-expected 6.4%.

“The team is travelling to the Philippine­s right now so Article IV consultati­on will begin next week,” Ranil Salgado, assistant director at the IMF’s Asia and Pa- cific Department, told BusinessWo­rld in an interview in Kuala Lumpur.

“They will also update it [GDP forecasts] based on discussion­s with authoritie­s as well and the central bank.”

The IMF made the update to its April outlook after first quarter results for China and emerging economies Brazil and Mexico, as well as in advanced economies Japan, Canada and in the euro area, turned out stronger than it previously thought.

It raised its 2017 GDP forecast for China to 6.7% from an initial 6.6%, and to 6.4% for next year from 6.2% before, on prospects that continued fiscal support will keep the economy’s momentum after a strong start to the year.

The IMF’s outlook on Japan has become more sanguine too at 1.3% this year from a previous 1.2% forecast, after “private consumptio­n, investment, and exports supported first-quarter growth.”

Growth projection­s for euro area economies France, Italy, Germany and Spain as well as for Canada were also revised up, underpinne­d by buoyant domestic demand.

But the IMF cut its estimates for US growth to 2.1% for both this year and the next, from 2.3% and 2.5% previously, on “the assumption that fiscal policy will be less expansiona­ry than previously assumed, given the uncertaint­y about the timing and nature of US fiscal policy changes.” It did the same for the UK, which it said will likely grow by 1.7% this year, softer than a two percent earlier forecast.

With the downgrade in growth forecasts for the big economies and the cuts elsewhere, it’s a wash overall.

“The unchanged global growth projection­s mask somewhat different contributi­ons at the country level,” the IMF said.

Underlying the more upbeat outlook for the Philippine­s and its Southeast Asian neighbors are the rebound in exports, stronger factory output and lower oil.

“In terms of domestic demand, we’ve seen a number of countries follow the Philippine example and provide some fiscal stimulus thru public investment­s and also expanding thru social expenditur­es,” Mr. Salgado said.

The Philippine­s has been freed from IMF debt since 2006 and is now a creditor to the global firefighte­r. But Manila still has to go through the so-called annual surveillan­ce that the Washington­based lender conducts among its 189 member-countries — indebted or not — offering policy recommenda­tions but no longer prescripti­ons that were packaged before as part of loans for crisishit economies.

The IMF has for years been calling for an expansion of the Philippine­s’ tax revenue base, primarily through better tax administra­tion, to finance public investment and allow more space for social spending.

While a tax hike on cars and oil could be warranted — something that the Duterte administra­tion now wants Congress to pass — the IMF said the reforms should take into account the poor and fixing tax administra­tion.

“In general, the goal here is as I said, first is to enhance the tax base. So part of it is removing the exemptions, making the tax system fairer,” Mr. Salgado said.

“At the same time, you need some revenue- enhancing measures so you need to go beyond eliminatin­g exemptions and in some cases, actually raise revenues more directly. I think that’s part of it,” he pointed out.

“At the same time, to the extent that it could affect the poor parts of the population, you do need to have social expenditur­es, particular­ly targeted social expenditur­es to focus primarily on the poorer parts of the population.”

The IMF chopped its inflation bets for advanced economies to 1.9% from 2.0% for this year, and to 4.5% from 4.7% for emerging markets and developing economies, reflecting lower global oil prices and subdued wage pressures in rich nations.

“We’re seeing that inflation expectatio­ns have not fallen tremendous­ly in most of Southeast Asian countries… So for us the Philippine­s, I don’t think that’s [subdued inflation] a big, significan­t an issue,” Mr. Salgado said.

“I think if anything going forward, we’d be concerned if inflation expectatio­ns will pick up given the strengthen­ing economy.”

But with growth still buoyant and inflation tamed, the Philippine­s is enjoying “an excellent combinatio­n,” the IMF official added.

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