The Philippine Star

Moody’s unit forecasts Phl growth at 5.2% this year

- By PRINZ P. MAGTULIS

Economic growth could hit C.% percent this year as strong domestic demand keeps the Philippine­s afloat amid the persistent weakness of the global economy, a unit of debt watcher Moody’s Investors Service said yesterday.

“2e recently revised our outlook for the Philippine­s to C.% percent from 4.& percent. The first half economic growth was pretty strong,” said Jatrina Ell, analyst at the New Kork-based Moody’s Analytics.

The five-percent forecast for next year has been retained, she added.

The local economy expanded by 6." percent during the first half of the year, a far cry from the 4.% percent recorded same period last year. This also slightly surpassed the government’s five- to sixpercent target for the year.

The revision was the second for the Philippine­s under Moody’s watch. The credit rater initially expected economic growth to hit only four percent this year. This was revised upwards to 4.& percent in June after a surprising 6.4-percent first quarter growth.

Ell said strong consumptio­n and accelerate­d government spending have boosted domestic demand, which “sort of overcame” the weakness of the external environmen­t.

“ asically, we have factored in the weakness of the exports but that was sort of overcame by domestic strength,” Ell said in a phone interview. Merchandis­e exports plunged nine percent in August, its weakest performanc­e in eight months.

In a report released yesterday, Moody’s said the resiliency of the services sector is also a factor for the Philippine­s’ stellar economic performanc­e, which has been mirrored in most countries comprising the Associatio­n of South East Asian Nations ?ASEAN@.

There was also a “steady rise” in investment as indicated by dipping savings and increasing bank lending.

“ASEAN’s investment drive has coincided with a decline in savings in Malaysia, Thailand, and the Philippine­s. This is consistent with rising domestic consumptio­n and the deteriorat­ing current account positions across the region,” the report said.

“If the shift towards domestic consumptio­n continues, export competitiv­eness could falter as resources shift to domestic facing industries,” it added.

Neverthele­ss, economic health is seen to “stabilize” by the middle of next year, Moody’s said, and as such monetary authoritie­s will likely hold off from cutting key rates further.

The Philippine­s experience­d three rate cuts this year, putting the benchmarks &C basis points lower to recordlows of + . & C percent and C . & C percent for overnight borrowing and lending, respective­ly.

Ell said further rate cuts for the year have been ruled out. The report, however, said “policymake­rs in ASEAN stand ready to loosen policy further should the global economy take a turn for the worse.”

“Hisks to growth for the Philippine­s will be if the external weakness takes a turn for the worse, in effect, remittance could go lower,” she said.

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