Vietnam pulls off Asia’s fastest growth as economy powers on

 

Bloomberg

Vietnam’s economy grew at the fastest pace in Asia in 2022, signalling momentum just before risks from a global slowdown began to materialise.
Gross domestic product rose 8.02% in the year to December, according to official data reported. That was faster than the government’s initial target of 6%-6.5% growth and was aided by a quicker-than-expected 5.92% expansion in the final quarter.
Manufacturing, which grew 8.1% during the year, was the main driver of economic growth, according to Nguyen Thi Huong, head of Vietnam’s General Statistics Office. Strong improvement in services also supported growth.
The better-than-expected showing gives Vietnam’s central bank the space to wait-and-watch before deciding to pivot monetary policy away from tightening. While the authority has raised the benchmark rate by 200 basis points in two moves this year to 6%, looming fears of debt default in Vietnam’s property-sector has given reason for concern about a China-style growth hit.
Manufacturing increased 8.1% at the end of December from a year earlier, compared to 6.37% at the same time last year.
While Vietnam “is performing well amid uncertainties in the global economy, risks to the economic outlook have become elevated,” the Asian Development Bank (ADB) said in a statement. “Though trade continues to expand, signs show weakening global demand for the country’s exports,” it said.
ADB forecasts Vietnam’s 2023 growth to be 6.3% as major trade partners see a slowdown.
The weakness was already evident in the headline trade data. Exports declined 14% from a year ago in December 2022, the second straight month of fall. Retail sales during the month rose 17.1%, while credit growth improved 12.9%.
That was accompanied by consumer price growth of 4.55% from a year ago in December. Core inflation, which excludes prices of food, fuel, healthcare and education services, climbed at a faster rate of 4.99%.
Vietnam will struggle to keep inflation in check next year, according to Bui Thuy Hang, the central bank’s deputy head of monetary policy department. The country will face consumer price increases, with inflation forecast at about 5% in early 2023, higher than the government’s full-year target of 4.5%.

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