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Books, Periodicals, Studies, and Reports
ISSN:1655-4809
Publication Date: September 2008
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The annual Asian Development Outlook aims to present an analysis of the recent past and forecasts for the next couple of years for the developing economies of Asia. In this Update to April's publication, regional economic growth for 2008 is taken down marginally to 7.5%, largely on unstable financial markets and elevated commodity prices. Regional growth in 2009 is expected to further decelerate to 7.2%.
Inflation forecasts are revised up—reflecting rising global prices of food and fuel and earlier loose monetary policy—to 7.8% in 2008 and to 6.0% in 2009.
The Update presents four thematic chapters discussing recent global commodity price rises and their impacts on developing Asia. They suggest that high international commodity prices are here to stay. But, given that demand-pull rather than cost-push factors are causing high prices, the role of monetary policy is still relevant in containing price pressures. Indeed, there has to be a reshifting of the basic monetary stance toward tightening throughout developing Asia, to prevent inflation from becoming entrenched.
Full Document
Foreword, Contents, Definitions, Acronyms and Abbreviations
Highlights-ADO 2008 Update
Part 1 Developing Asia: Riding out the global storm
Part 2 Global commodity price rises and impacts on developing Asia
Are high oil prices here to stay?
Macroeconomic effects of high oil prices
Causes of high food prices
Inflation in developing Asia: Demand-Pull or Cost-Push?
Part 3 Economic trends and prospects in developing Asia
Subregional summaries
Central Asia
East Asia
South Asia
Southeast Asia
The Pacific
Bangladesh
People's Republic of China
India
Indonesia
Malaysia
Pakistan
Philippines
Thailand
Viet Nam
Part 4 Technical note
Asian Development Outlook growth and inflation forecast errors
Statistical appendix
Statistical notes and tables
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