Eurozone crisis dampening developing Asia’s growth
Europe's worsening financial and banking crisis and a
sluggish recovery in the United States are weighing on developing Asia's growth
prospects, according to figures released today from the Asian Development
Outlook Supplement (ADOS), published by the Asian Development Bank (ADB).
“Economic growth in developing Asia moderated during the
first half of 2012 as slower growth in the US and euro area reduced demand for
the region's exports,” the report says. “Worries over the economic strength of
important developing economies have also emerged recently.” ADB's latest
figures predict developing Asia will expand by 6.6% in 2012 and 7.1% in 2013,
lower than the 6.9% and 7.3% forecast in ADB's Asian Development Outlook
published in April.
In addition to the impact of Europe's malaise, the region's
development in the first half of the year has been hampered by slower growth in
the two largest economies,” the People's Republic of China (PRC) and India”as
well as the effect of the unwinding of policy stimulus in some countries.
The PRC has seen a fall in net exports, industrial
production, and in fixed asset investment, although government spending on
health, education and big infrastructure projects should give the economy
something of a boost. As the PRC moves to a more sustainable growth model,
growth may slow down more than expected.
ADB is predicting that gross domestic product in the PRC
will increase by 8.2% in 2012 and 8.5% in 2013. In April, an 8.5% expansion was
forecast for 2012, rising to 8.7% next year. India's outlook, meanwhile, is
clouded by a combination of high inflation and poor demand, both externally and
internally.
Inflation is expected to persist, primarily due to
accelerating food prices.
India’s economy is now expected to grow by 6.5% in 2012,
down from the previous forecast of 7.0%. In 2013, growth should go up to 7.3%,
less than the previously expected 7.5%.
While the weaker global environment is expected to affect
growth in Southeast Asia, domestic demand and reconstruction activities should
keep growth robust. A strong rebound in Thailand, healthy growth in the
Philippines, and increasing consumer demand in Indonesia have helped the
subregion and most governments have sufficient policy space to ease monetary
policy and provide fiscal stimulus if needed. Southeast Asia's economies are
expected to post growth of 5.2% in 2012 and 5.6% in 2013, virtually unchanged
from predictions made in April.
Weaker global demand is helping ease international oil and
food prices, which is reducing inflationary pressures in the region. Developing
Asia's inflation rate should slow to 4.4% in 2012 ”a slight reduction from the
4.6% forecast in April” and will likely continue at the same pace next year.
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