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Posts Tagged ‘GDP’

Singapore Dollar trades near 3-month low as GDP falls: Update

Singapore’s dollar traded near its weakest level in three months after the economy contracted in the fourth quarter, interrupting the island’s recovery from its deepest recession since independence in 1965.

The island’s gross domestic product shrank an annualised 6.8%, after expanding 14.9% in the previous three months, the trade ministry said in a statement today. Five of eight economists surveyed by Bloomberg forecast a drop. United Overseas Bank, Singapore’s second-largest lender, predicts the economy will expand 4.5% this year.

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Singapore’s 2010 GDP to grow by 5%, says Action Economics

The sequential contraction in Singapore’s 4Q09 GDP is a correction from robust growth in preceding quarters and doesn’t challenge the validity of expectations for return to growth for the island state in 2010, says Action Economics economist David Cohen.

Cohen forecasts Singapore’s economy to grow by 5% this year, at the high end of government’s current growth forecast of 3–5%.

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MTI to release advance Q4 GDP data on Jan 4

Singapore will release the advance gross domestic product estimates for the fourth quarter on Jan 4, the Ministry of Trade and Industry said today. Singapore’s economy expanded 0.6% in the third quarter of 2009 from a year earlier, returning to growth after three quarters of annual contraction. The government projects the trade-dependent economy will grow between 3–5% in 2010.

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Improving prospects

South Korea’s economy rebounded strongly in the second quarter

South Korea recorded real GDP growth of 2.3% quarter on quarter in the second quarter of 2009—a stronger performance than the Economist Intelligence Unit expected. Monthly indicators also suggest that the rate of economic contraction is slowing. As a result, we have revised up our real GDP forecast for 2009 to a relatively small fall of 1.8% (compared to our previous forecast of a 4.4% decline). We forecast real GDP growth of 2% in 2010.

Although South Korea’s economic prospects are improving, the financial and economic environment abroad remains extremely challenging and will have an adverse impact on the performance of all components of South Korean GDP. We expect private consumption to contract by 1.5% in 2009, before recording modest growth of 0.8% in 2010. This weakness reflects a number of factors. The unemployment rate is expected to rise, and the weakness of the labour market will put downward pressure on wages. In addition, economic uncertainty will undermine consumer confidence. …

Lending binge

Astonishingly rapid lending growth appears to have rescued the Chinese economy but at what cost?

China’s economy has experienced a dramatic recovery over the past six months. It now looks highly likely that GDP growth will meet the government’s 8% target for 2009—a target which seemed overly optimistic just a few months ago. Although private demand has held up better than expected, the rapid pick-up in the economy has only been possible owing to a massive increase in state-mandated bank lending. However, the huge increase in bank lending has also sparked concerns over the emergence of asset-price bubbles, and over the risk of a sharp rise in non-performing loans (NPLs) that could lead to a banking crisis.

That China’s economy has recovered much sooner and more strongly than expected is not in doubt. Although real GDP growth only slowed to 6.8% year on year in the final quarter of 2008, it is estimated that on a quarter-on-quarter seasonally-adjusted annualised basis, growth slumped to around 2%—well below the 13% growth rate achieved in 2007. Moreover, the 7.9% year-on-year growth rate achieved in the second quarter of 2009 understates the true pace of the recovery in growth, which reached an estimated 17% on a quarter-on-quarter annualised basis. …

China’s Real Debt Situation

As I have repeatedly pointed out, China is in better shape than the U.S. and many other Western countries, but all is not rosy in China.CNN Money is now making some of these same points out for a mass audience:On the surface, China presents a fiscal st…

UK GDP falls faster than expected

• GDP down 0.8% in threee months to June
• City had expected a 0.3% decline, with some expecting growth

The chancellor’s forecasts for economic growth were blown out of the water official figures revealed Britain’s economy contracted by a record 5.6% over the last year as output fell for a fifth straight quarter.

Dashing hopes that the steepest decline in growth since the 1930s might be nearing an end, the Office for National Statistics said gross domestic product – the total value of goods and services in the economy – fell by 0.8% in the three months to June. The size of the drop surprised the City, which had expected only a 0.3% decline following recent signs of a pickup in the housing market and strong growth in high street spending.

But although the news caused the pound to fall 0.5% against the dollar to $1.64, the FTSE 100 saw its 10th straight day of gains, ending up 16.8 points, or 0.4%, at 4,577.

Economists believe GDP will almost certainly contract by more than the Treasury’s forecast of between –3.25% and –3.75% this year.

“It would be a miracle [if the government's target was met],” said Colin Ellis, European economist at Daiwa Securities SMBC. “Not on the scale of water into wine but not far off.”

The economy has already contracted by 3.16% this year and analysts are predicting a drop of 4.5% for 2009 as a whole.

Hetal Mehta, senior economic adviser to the Ernst & Young Item Club, said the economy would have to grow by 1% in the third quarter of the year and by 1.8% in the final three months to meet the government’s target of –3.75%.

The Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesman, Vince Cable, said: “These figures blow a hole in the chancellor’s GDP forecast for this year. The government’s failure to address the crisis in bank lending is only making the economic outlook worse. As a result, the deficit will balloon further, leading to bigger spending cuts or higher taxes.” The shadow chancellor, George Osborne, said: “These disappointing figures are much worse than expected and show that the recession is longer and deeper than the government had led us to believe. The sad news is this will mean the rise in unemployment is likely to be even steeper.”

Before yesterday’s data, some economists had even predicted the UK could post its first positive growth since early 2008, and the size of the decline prompted immediate speculation that the Bank of England would be forced into fresh emergency action to kickstart activity.

While the pace of decline in GDP slowed from the 2.4% seen in the first three months of 2009, the economy has suffered a cumulative contraction of 5.7% in the last five quarters.

The ONS said this was double the drop in the recession of the early 1990s and almost as big as the 6.4% retrenchment during the 1980-81 slump. The 5.6% drop in GDP in a year has not been matched since comparable records began in 1955.

Business services and finances, a sector that has boomed for much of the last decade, accounted for more than a quarter of the GDP decline in the second quarter. Overall, services fell by 0.6% on the quarter and by 3.8% on the year.

Describing the figures as “shockingly bad” Vicky Redwood, UK economist at Capital Economics, said they “firmly dash any hopes that the UK had already pulled out of recession”. Getting the economy back on track “looks likely to be a long hard slog”, she said.

The TUC’s general secretary, Brendan Barber, said: “There are no green shoots here. Unemployment is growing and a recovery that brings hope to the jobless looks ever more distant.

“Immediate big spending cuts are the last thing we need. They could tip the economy into an ever deeper downturn and make the deficit worse when the tax take falls and spending on unemployment goes up.”

Meanwhile, US consumer confidence fell this month to its lowest level since April amid growing pessimism about the long-term economic outlook, especially about income and jobs.

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Finance chief confident of IMF agreement

Diana Dragutinović is confident the government will manage to reach an agreement with the IMF on increasing the 2009 budget deficit from 3 to 4.5 percent GDP. The finance minister said that the government would propose credible measures to cut the deficit.

Rob Shapiro: Solving the Problem with Jobs and Wages

The way to ensure the next expansion will create jobs is to make medical cost containment the center of health care reform the development and broad use of alternative fuels the center of energy policy.

FM: Budget deficit bigger than expected

Finance Minister Diana Dragutinović says that GDP will fall from 3.5 to 5 percent by the end of the year. She predicted that GDP would drop between 3.5 and 5 percent by the end of the year, but warned that “it is too early for us to be overly optimistic.”

Monsoon blues

Drought threatens India’s farms and its economy

Monsoon flooding has hit several Indian states in recent days, but for much of the country the problem is still too little, not too much, rain. Low rainfall so far during the main June-September wet season—June was the driest in over 80 years—has raised fears that poor harvests will weaken GDP growth in India’s agriculture-dependent economy. Food shortages do not appear to be a risk, but a weak monsoon would hit farm output and rural consumption at a time when the global economic crisis is already expected to slow India’s recent strong growth.

India’s flagship IT companies and the increasingly global ambitions of its largest industrial companies tend to make more business headlines, but in fact the health of the macroeconomy is heavily tied to agriculture, and to seasonal rains. Agriculture accounts directly for about 18% of GDP—a significantly lower proportion than in more underdeveloped economies, but still very high compared to rich countries, where the ratio is usually in the low single digits. More importantly, the farm sector is disproportionately important for employment—and thus for private consumption—as some 60% of all jobs are in agriculture. …

Crisis resistant or crisis prone?

Uzbekistan’s economy is growing but so are the risks

The Uzbek authorities claim the economy has been barely affected by the global downturn, with GDP growing by 8.2% year on year and 500,000 jobs being created in January-June. However, signs of stress are apparent across the economy: output has stagnated or contracted in the main sectors while the population’s mainstay—remittances from workers abroad—have fallen by nearly a third over the last year. The authorities are responding to this with measures to protect jobs and boost living standards. Yet with 40% of the 20m population under 16 years of age, the Uzbek economic model in its current guise may not be sustainable.

Uzbekistan’s GDP grew by 8.2% year on year in the first half of 2009—according to Shavkat Mirziyoyev, Uzbekistan’s prime minister, at a cabinet meeting held on July 17th. A day later it was reported that 534,600 jobs were created in the first six months of the year, including 328,000 jobs in rural areas. If these figures are to be believed, Uzbekistan is among the best performing economies in the world at present. The authorities have for months stressed that the economy is well-placed to ride out the global downturn, as a result of the extensive controls the government has maintained. The official GDP growth forecast for this year is in the range of 7-9%; and on a visit to the country in June, an IMF delegation concurred with that assessment. …

Domestic despair

Ireland’s economy is in free-fall

GDP contracted by an alarming 8.5% year on year in the first quarter of 2009, while the fall in domestic demand was even more marked at 15.5%. These contractions were larger than any other high-income OECD country, reflecting the impact of the collapse in Ireland’s property market and the decimation of its construction sector. Surging job losses are now weighing heavily on private consumption and, with the public finances in disarray, the extent of downside risk to the Irish economy appears without precedent.

Ireland is mired in a recession of a different order from those being seen in its developed-economy peers. According to recently released national accounts data, GDP collapsed year on year by 8.5% in the first quarter of 2009—a sharper contraction than in any other high-income OECD country. And if the GNP (gross national product) measure of growth is used instead, which also takes into account the value of income from abroad (particularly important for economies with large traded sectors, such as Ireland) the slump is worse still, with a year-on-year fall of 12%. …

A fine balancing act

Is China’s economic stimulus too much of a good thing?

CHINESE growth was already the envy of the world. Now recession-stricken countries will be turning an even brighter green. On Thursday July 16th new figures showed China’s GDP growth quickened to 7.9% in the year to the second quarter. That is healthy enough by anyone’s standards but the headline number conceals a more astonishing rebound. Goldman Sachs estimates that GDP grew at an annualised rate of 16.5% in the second quarter compared with the previous three months. Over the same period, America’s economy probably contracted again. China’s economic stimulus has clearly been hugely effective. So effective, indeed, that some economists are now worrying it may be working rather too well.

In the year to June fixed investment surged by 35%, car sales rose by 48%, and purchases of homes by more than 80%. After falling last year, home prices are now rising briskly in some big cities, and share prices have soared by 80% from their November low. Domestic spending has been spurred partly by the government’s stimulus package, but probably even more important was the scrapping of restrictions on bank lending late last year. In June new lending was more than four times larger than a year earlier. …

Decline slows

Taiwan’s deep recession may be easing

Several economic indicators point to a slight easing of Taiwan’s deep economic recession during the second quarter of 2009, following a 10.2% year-on-year fall in real GDP in the first quarter—the most dramatic single-quarter contraction since records began in 1961. However, Taiwan’s heavily trade-dependent economy will continue to suffer deeply in the next couple of years. The Economist Intelligence Unit forecasts that Taiwan’s real GDP will contract by 6.5% in 2009. The poor economic and financial environment abroad will continue to undermine Taiwan’s growth prospects in 2010, when the economy is forecast to expand by just 0.6%.

The composite index of leading economic indicators produced by the Council for Economic Planning and Development, which forecasts conditions over the next three to six months, reinforces our view that Taiwan’s economy, although showing signs of stabilising, remains weak. In May the index strengthened slightly for the fourth successive month, rising by 3.3% from April. Six of the seven components of the index—export orders, average monthly overtime in industry and services, book-to-bill ratios in the semiconductor machinery industry, monetary aggregate M1b (currency in circulation plus current-account and passbook deposits, and plus passbook savings deposits), stock prices and producers’ inventory—showed positive movement. However, the barometer, which uses five colours to measure the health of the economy, continued to flash blue, indicating recession, for the ninth month in a row. …

Signs of life

Singapore’s economic prospects remain precarious

Singapore’s export-oriented economy, one of the most exposed to the global downturn, rebounded in spectacular fashion in the second quarter, according to a preliminary government estimate. However, much of the improvement was the result of potentially temporary factors. The city-state will not fully recover until the global economy returns to health—although Singapore’s unusual reliance on external trade also means that its economy is likely to be one of the first to rebound when export demand picks up.

According to an advance estimate released by the Ministry of Trade and Industry (MTI) on July 14th, Singapore’s seasonally adjusted real GDP grew at an annualised rate of 20.4% compared with the previous quarter. Data for the first three months of the year were also revised upwards, to the effect that GDP in January-March is now estimated to have contracted by an annualised 12.7% compared with the fourth quarter of 2008 (an improvement from the 14.6% contraction reported in the MTI’s previous GDP release, in May). …