Feeling Asia’s economic pulse
Martin Khor
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There is now a debate whether the worst of the
global economic crisis is over. Meanwhile, recent reports and data show
that the Asian region and particularly South-East Asia is suffering from
declining economic and industrial growth and collapsing export earnings.
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An interesting debate is taking place: has the global economy turned
the corner, or are the so-called “green shoots” misleading because we
are going to see even worse times ahead?
Some political leaders in the West are grasping at a few good signs,
such as the partial recovery of the stock markets and a pick-up in the
housing markets in the US and Britain, as indicating a bottoming of the
slump and the start of a recovery.
Export economy is an important component |
But many economists are warning against premature optimism. They
point to the continued existence of serious structural problems, such as
the bad state of many big banks, the “deleveraging” that still has to be
undertaken by households and financial institutions, and that the
effects on the real economy have still a long way to run their course.
For some countries, there are frightening scenarios ahead,
particularly in Central and Eastern Europe, which is probably the
hardest hit region.
Even a major developed country like Spain is in a nightmare as its
unemployment rate hit 17.4 percent.
The number of unemployed rose 800,000 in the first quarter of this
year, or 9,000 a day, to reach 4 million.
Asia, and especially Southeast Asia, is also particularly affected,
as the latest available data show.
A paper by the UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the
Pacific (ESCAP) says the crisis in Asia has moved from stage one
(financial crisis in developed countries with limited contagion in Asia)
to stage two (great recession in developed countries and inevitable
contagion in Asia).
In stage two, Asian countries are hit by “plummeting exports, from
the double-digit growth of the past decade to double-digit declines,
declining domestic demand and rising unemployment.”
The ESCAP paper was prepared for its annual session which ended on 29
April in Bangkok.
The depths of the export decline were reached by most countries in
January, with falls (compared to the 12 months previously) in Malaysia
by 34 percent, Singapore 40 percent, the Philippines 41 percent, Taiwan
44 percent, South Korea 34 percent, Thailand 27 percent, Hong Kong 21
percent, China 18 percent, India 16 percent and Japan 35 percent.
In February, the degree of drop was less for most countries including
Malaysia 26 percent, but in China the export decline widened to 26
percent.
The trend in China is important because many other countries in the
region export significantly to China.
If China’s exports to the US, Europe and Japan decline, it will buy
less imports of parts that are used in making the exports from Southeast
Asia.
The ESCAP report warns that the decrease in imports is even more
alarming, especially the 43 percent drop in China’s imports in January.
“Given the regionally integrated nature of the production base in
Southeast and East Asia, these import declines reflect the beginning of
an industrial crisis,” it said.
It also warns that a further deepening of the crisis in manufacturing
will lead to financial sector stresses through a rise in banks’
non-performing loans.
It projects unemployment in the region to rise by up to 23 million
workers in 2009. This appears to be on the optimistic side, since there
are already reports that over 20 million industrial workers had lost
their jobs in the export-oriented coastal regions of China alone.
Economic growth is plunging and the worst hit is Southeast Asia.
Growth in the Asia-Pacific region’s developing countries is estimated by
ESCAP to fall from 8.8 percent in 2007 to 5.8 percent in 2008 and to
three percent in 2009.
But in Southeast Asia, the fall is from 6.5 percent in 2007, to 4.3
percent in 2008 and to negative 0.7 percent in 2009.
It is the only sub-region where the Gross Domestic Product will
actually decline. In East and North-east Asia (which is dominated by
China), there will still be 3.3 percent positive growth, and in South
and South-west Asia growth will be 4.3 percent.
The ESCAP report does not give growth projections for individual
countries. However, The Economist magazine provides its own forecast,
and the figures in its latest issue are sobering.
Malaysia is projected to have minus three percent growth, Singapore
minus 7.5 percent, Thailand minus 4.4 percent, Indonesia minus 1.3
percent, South Korea minus 5.9 percent and Taiwan minus 6.5 percent.
On the other hand, China and India will have reduced but still
positive growth of six percent and five percent respectively.
The latest data on industrial production show where the source of the
problem is - countries that rely on manufacturing exports are worst hit.
Compared to a year ago, industrial production has fallen in Malaysia
by 14.6 percent in February, and by 22 percent in Singapore, 20 percent
in Thailand, 27 percent in Taiwan and 10 percent in South Korea.
In contrast, industrial production rose by eight percent in China in
March, which reflects that the industrial products in this country cater
mainly to its huge domestic market, even though it may also be a major
exporter to the world. And perhaps the huge fiscal stimulus to pump up
domestic demand to offset declining exports is working.
The figures show that in Southeast Asia at least the economic crisis
is not yet over, and that the recessionary effects will take some time
to wind their way through the economy.
Many Asian countries are taking counter-cyclical measures including
increased government spending and reduced interest rates to blunt the
effects of the economic contraction.
The extent to which these policies have a positive effect remains to
be seen, and further measures and adjustments will most likely be
needed.
- Third World
Network Features
(The writer is the Executive Director of South Center). |