Philippines economy is great — by the numbers

 

The Philippines is having the kind of recovery that would make any emerging-market star envious. After a tough pandemic and deep recession, the economy will outpace many of its neighbors this year and leave China — once the gold standard for rapid expansion — in the dust. Whoever wins the presidential election in a few days will inherit a country poised for better things.
If only it were that simple. Bullish growth forecasts mask serious vulnerabilities apparent at the ground level. The contraction that followed the outbreak was the biggest in peacetime and has left deep scars. China, the nation’s biggest trading partner, is struggling to shore up growth at home — a troubling development for everyone in Asia. Infrastructure, a big priority of outgoing Philippines leader Rodrigo Duterte, is easing some bottlenecks but has a long way to go. Inflation is marching higher and interest-rate hikes loom. Many citizens still think the best way to make a living and support their families is to pack their bags and go abroad.
Top-line economic numbers are indeed worth celebrating. Gross domestic product is projected to expand 6.5% this year, according to the International Monetary Fund, well in excess of Asia overall and exceeding the average for Southeast Asia. The government says growth may reach 9%. After rolling lockdowns for almost two years, Filipinos are increasingly out and about: It’s hard to get a table at cafes and bars in the Greenbelt area of central Manila. Traffic is again clogging the streets. Social distancing is non-existent. You can also see shops boarded up, casualties of Covid-19. Nevertheless, officials won’t be “fighting pandemic fires,” Citigroup Inc said.
How much of this hangs in the balance with the ballot? The economy, surprisingly, hasn’t been a major pressure point: Ferdinand Marcos Jr, who leads in opinion polls, has been stressing a vaguely defined idea of national unity and continuity with Duterte. (The president’s daughter is running to be his deputy.) His main challenger, incumbent Vice President Leni Robredo, has been emphasizing governance issues, a not-so-veiled reference to the cronyism and autarky of Marcos’s late father, who plundered the treasury and racked up record debts during his dictatorial rule in the 1970s and 80s. The elder Marcos left the economy in ruin when he was driven from office in 1986. Robredo’s supporters decry the prospect that this family returns to the presidential palace.
Marcos, known as Bongbong, hasn’t spoken in great detail about his economic plans. Both he and Robredo back the substance of Duterte’s “Build, Build, Build” public-works agenda. Each is likely to appoint technocrats and respected managers to key finance roles. While the fine print may differ, both want to consolidate the recovery, bolster health care and boost employment conditions, according to Citi.
China offers promise and peril. About a dozen Beijing-backed infrastructure initiatives are in the pipeline. Duterte came back from a 2016 trip to meet President Xi Jinping armed with investment commitments, seemingly in return for backing away from the Philippines’s historically intimate ties with the US.

—Bloomberg

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend