Source: http://ph.news.yahoo.com/philippines-surprisingly-strong-q1-growth-eclipses-china-070213924.html |
The
stellar pace of expansion, which blew past expectations, pulled the peso up
from an 11-month low and cemented views the central bank would leave its key
policy rate on hold this year.
Growth
is seen powering on after the Philippines
earlier this month got an investment grade rating from Standard & Poor's,
the second debt agency to do so this year. That lowers borrowing costs and
helps to attract foreign capital for an economy mired with high unemployment
and poverty.
First
quarter GDP grew a seasonally adjusted 2.2 percent over the prior three months,
the fastest clip since the first quarter of 2012. A Reuters poll of economists
had forecast 1.6 percent growth.
From
a year earlier, the economy grew 7.8 percent, helped by robust domestic
spending, making the Philippines the fastest growing economy in Asia as it
pushed past China's 7.7 percent annual pace and 1.6 percent quarterly growth.
The
Philippines '
year-on-year GDP figure also topped the 6.1 percent growth forecast in a
Reuters poll and was the fastest since the second quarter of 2010, then boosted
by spending related to national elections that put President Benigno Aquino in
power.
"We
may now be moving along a new growth trajectory," economic planning chief
Arsenio Balisacan told reporters.
Capital
formation jumped an annual 47.7 percent in the first quarter as the private
sector invested heavily to expand capacity given strong domestic consumption.
Public
construction climbed 45.6 percent as a faster budget roll-out and better fiscal
position allowed for more spending to rehabilitate decrepit school buildings,
roads and bridges.
Per
capita GDP grew an annual 6.1 percent in the first quarter, the highest in at
least two years, although unemployment was at a year-high of 7.1 percent as of
March.
With
a fast-growing population, estimated at 96.8 million as of March, job creation
can't keep pace with the around 1 million new entrants to the job market every
year, Balisacan said.
The
challenge was to create more broad-based growth so that the poorer sectors of
society could benefit from jobs in high growth sectors, he added.
Bernard
Aw, analyst at Forecastweb in Singapore
said the Philippines '
improved risk and debt profile would help shield the peso from external
vagaries.
The
export-reliant Philippines is facing some risk that demand for its high-tech
products will slow on more evidence that the recovery in global growth is
losing momentum.
But
the global slowdown had little impact on manufacturing. Data showed the sector
grew an annual 9.7 percent in the first quarter on domestic demand for food
items, household appliances, chemicals, and communication, transport and
machinery equipment.
Market
reaction was mixed. While the peso was up at 42.28 per dollar, the local stock
market slid as much as 3.4 percent in line with sharp declines in regional
bourses.
RATES SEEN ON HOLD
At
a time when several regional central banks have cut rates to bolster growth,
economists said the Philippine central bank would most likely leave its key
overnight borrowing rate on hold for the rest of the year. Inflation is
forecast to stay within the central bank's 3 to 5 percent target band this year
despite strong growth.
Bangko
Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Amando Tetangco said he did not foresee the
inflation target being breached over the policy horizon despite strong GDP
growth.
The
central bank next meets to review policy on June 13. It has kept its policy
rate steady at a record low of 3.5 percent since December 2012, but has slashed
the rate on its special deposit account (SDA) facility by more than 200 basis
points since July 2012 to divert credit to more productive use.
"We
think the BSP will continue to cut the SDA rate to lift domestic spending as
well as save costs," said Trinh Nguyen, economist at HSBC in Hong Kong . The central bank has incurred heavy losses as
the SDA facility attracted huge liquidity.
With
the outlook on exports still murky, domestic consumption will remain as the
main driver for economic growth this year. Manila is targeting growth of 6 percent to 7
percent in 2013 after an upwardly revised 6.8 percent expansion the prior year.
(Writing
by Rosemarie Francisco; Editing by Jacqueline Wong)
Source:
ph.news.yahoo.com by Karen Lema
No comments:
Post a Comment