Home ›› 13 May 2022 ›› Asia Biz
Newly-elected Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. will inherit an economy that has strongly bounced back from the Covid-19 pandemic when he takes office in June, but soaring food and fuel costs will need to be addressed quickly.
The Southeast Asian nation’s economy grew a better-than-expected 8.3per cent in the first quarter , the government said on Thursday. It was the fastest annual growth since the June quarter of 2021 and exceeded a 6.6per cent forecast in a Reuters poll.
On a seasonally adjusted basis, the economy grew 1.9per cent in January-March from the previous quarter , with the easing of Covid-19 curbs and election-related spending underpinning domestic demand.
The Philippines thus was the fastest growing economy in the East Asia Region for the period, officials said.
That gives the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) scope to raise interest rates to tackle rising inflation, which threatens to dampen consumer sentiment and derail the economic recovery.
“The BSP stands ready to adjust our monetary policy settings, should we see material risk of these supply-side pressures spilling over to the demand side,” BSP Governor Benjamin Diokno said following the data release.
The BSP holds its next policy meeting on May 19, with some analysts seeing higher chances for an interest rate hike as early as its May 19 meeting.
“With GDP now back to pre-Covid levels and with inflation accelerating, we fully expect BSP to hike policy rates at the May 19 meeting,” said ING senior economist Nicholas Mapa.
Diokno, however, has flagged a possible hike in June, and he said the BSP was looking at raising rates two to three times to bring down inflation by next year.
Economists have raised concerns the BSP, which has kept benchmark interest rates steady since November 2020 at record lows , could fall behind the curve as central banks around the world step up monetary tightening to fight inflation.