Developing Asia's economy is expected to expand by 7.6% in 2008
(Figure 1.1.1), picking up a shade to 7.8% in 2009. These projections
suggest a slowdown from 2007's outcome, now estimated at 8.7%, the
highest in 19 years. Still, growth projections for the next 2 years are
only slightly below the recent historical trend (Figure 1.1.2) and would
constitute a solid performance in an unsteady global economy.
Growth is expected to decelerate in most of developing Asia's
economies in 2008, with only a few likely to match or better 2007's
performance. Both the People's Republic of China (PRC) and India are
projected to cool. In the PRC, growth of net exports is set to fall in
2008 and this will check expansion. In India, where domestic demand
accounts for most output growth, a modest slowdown is seen. But growth
is expected to ease in many other countries, too. Projected growth rates
for Central Asia and for Southeast Asia are below those of 2007. Only the
Pacific Islands is forecast to do better than last year.
Rising food and fuel prices are stoking headline inflation, but
economic speed limits have also been tested, with recent output growth
straining capacity. On the demand side, sustained balance-of-payments
surpluses have seeped into domestic liquidity and credit expansion.
The expected moderation of growth in 2008 and narrowing of current
account surpluses may provide some respite. Nevertheless, trend inflation
is rising (Figure 1.1.3) and the projected headline rate is expected to be the
highest in a decade.
Risks to the baseline growth forecasts outlined in Asian Development
Outlook 2008 (ADO 2008) are firmly to the downside. A coincident
slowdown of output growth in the G3 economies—United States (US),
European Union (EU), and Japan—now looks set for 2008, with only a
moderate and highly uncertain pickup forecast in 2009. As new data are
released, G3 growth forecasts are being cut. If the global slowdown is
concentrated in sectors such as electronics, textiles and garments, and
toys, as recent data appear to suggest, this would hurt Asian exporters.
Although developing Asia is now exporting more to other emerging
economies—the Middle East, Russian Federation, and elsewhere—this
is unlikely to compensate fully for losses in the much larger, more
established markets.
There are other important uncertainties. Rising food and fuel prices
could probe developing Asia's resilience. Countries that are net fuel and
food importers are likely to be squeezed by adverse movements in their
terms of trade; more so, when unit values of important export products
are weakening, as they now are for garments and textiles. In some
countries such as Pakistan, adverse terms of trade movements threaten to
widen further already substantial current account deficits.
As highlighted in ADO 2007 Update of September last year,
fuel subsidies and other methods of restraining retail prices are
already costing developing Asia dearly. Though some recent hikes in
administered prices have been made, for example in Bangladesh and
India, these are trailing international price increases with the result
that the gap between border and domestic prices is again widening.
Such open-ended fiscal commitments have high social opportunity
costs and, in the absence of "exit strategies," could eventually threaten
macroeconomic balances. Recently introduced food subsidies, intended
to soothe social pressures, are now adding to fiscal worries. If there is a
respite from rising prices, as the ADO 2008 baseline assumes, payments
and fiscal risks should recede. But if food and fuel prices soar further—a
possibility that cannot be ruled out—some governments may be faced
with tough structural adjustments.
More general inflation risks also lurk and could limit policy options
(if the deceleration of growth gives cause for concern). In the PRC, the
consumer price index (CPI) climbed by 8.7% in February, the steepest
rise in 11 years. In Central Asia, inflation is running in double digits, and
in many other countries it is expected to accelerate this year. Monetary
policy responses have been mixed (Figure 1.1.4) and occasionally lag price
developments. The authorities in some economies are anxious that rising
interest rates may attract capital inflows and put further upward pressure
on nominal exchange rates. But if central banks attempt to resist (rather
than manage) nominal currency appreciation, they will eventually court
elevated inflation expectations as pressures build for the real exchange
rate to appreciate. Sharp cuts in US interest rates are exacerbating
pressures and will raise sterilization costs. If inflation expectations are
allowed to ratchet up, this will risk long-term damage to productivity
growth and to the credibility of central banks.
A key message of ADO 2008 is that, although problems will spread
from the global economy to developing Asia—a process that is already
visible in high-frequency trade and financial data—the region's growth
in 2008 is much more likely to moderate than to lurch down. Developing
Asia is not immune to global developments, but neither is it hostage
to them. In the near term, Asia's structural transformation, robust
productivity growth, and favorable policy climate will continue to
support healthy growth. The outlook for credit may well tighten, but
the regional financial system—which is still mainly built around bank
credit—should be largely insulated from the huge deleveraging now under
way in the US.
There should be no room for complacency. Asia's growth is neither
preordained nor guaranteed, and if economic vigor is to last, countries
must address a raft of challenges. Today, weaknesses limit policy options
and are mere bumps along the road to progress. However, left unattended, they could become inescapable road blocks along that path and a serious
source of vulnerability.
Part 2 of this 20th anniversary issue of ADO 2008, Workers in Asia,
looks beyond Asia's immediate issues and investigates the different
challenges related to the creation of productive work and jobs in Asia.
The first of three chapters, Young Asians: A squandered talent, analyzes
developing Asia's capacity to fully redeem the demographic dividend of
its many young people now moving into the labor force. Asia's skills crisis
discusses the skills gap between what workers have acquired and the
skills they need in economies that aim to move up the "value ladder." The
last chapter, Asian workers on the move, analyzes the benefits to countries
of the recent tectonic shifts in migration within Asia. All three chapters
offer policy suggestions on what developing Asia can do to maximize the
dynamism of its economies, and its people.
Part 3 presents, in a country context, overviews of recent economic
performance, forecasts for the next 2 years, and the development
challenges facing each country. Part 4 presents a brief analysis of the
"errors and omissions" line in Asia's national accounts data.
In the following section of this chapter, Global outlook explains the
wider backdrop for developing Asia's prospects. Economic conditions
in the major industrial countries are reviewed with the spotlight on the
possible implications of the still-unfolding credit crisis in the US. The
evolution of the crisis affecting US credit markets is assessed and the
policy challenges are identified. Prospects are then briefly reviewed for
the US, eurozone, and Japan. This sets the scene for an examination of
how a global downturn might be transmitted to developing Asia.
In the section, The uncoupling myth: The G3 slowdown and developing
Asia, ties between developing Asia and the wider global economy are
scrutinized at different levels. Macroeconomic models that capture
historical linkages suggest that a combination of adverse shocks to output
growth in the G3 and real exchange rate appreciation in developing Asia
would register in slower growth, but that the effects are modest relative to
potential output growth. Trade channels account for most of the spillover
to Asia, though domestic demand could also be crimped by higher
real interest rates. A more disaggregated look at the impact of slower
consumption spending in the G3 suggests a fast-working—and in some
cases substantial—drag on Asian exports. Drilling down further, patterns
in recent manufacturing trade statistics show that developing Asia is
already feeling the pinch from a slowdown in Japanese and US demand,
particularly for cyclically sensitive consumer products.
Looking inside Asia, trade data still reveal strong economic
complementarities between the PRC and other economies of East and
Southeast Asia. The notion that cross-border linkages are being weakened
as the PRC substitutes local for external suppliers finds little support.
Vertically integrated supply chains that crisscross East and Southeast
Asia remain an important mechanism that disperses and propagates the
impacts of external shocks. Virtually all the increase that has occurred
in intraregional trade in manufactured goods in recent years has been in
parts and components. Final goods demand in the PRC still accounts for
only a small share of exports from other Asian countries—though that
share may be climbing.
Asia's financial markets are becoming more closely meshed with
global markets. Most measures of financial integration, and thus potential
contagion, have greatly strengthened over the past decade. Through
these channels Asian borrowers will feel the pinch in international credit
markets and Asia's bourses are likely to experience heightened volatility.
But as Asia's banks are still the main originators of domestic credit, and
their leverage and exposure to unsafe securities are low, the possibility
of the credit crunch washing onto Asia's economic shores seems remote.
Most Asian economies also have ample foreign reserves in the event of an
unexpected rush to sell domestic currency.
In the final section, Reasons to be nervous: Commodity prices and
inflation, the role of rising fuel and food prices in stoking inflation is
considered. Net fuel and food importers are at particular risk of adverse
terms of trade movements, and countries that choose to try and cushion
the effects of rising border prices on consumers face a potentially large
fiscal bill. A jump in long-run inflation—and fuel and food are major
components of most household budgets in Asia—is perhaps a clearer
short-run danger to developing Asia than moderating growth.
Global developments complicate the current picture. Although
the slowdown in global demand should ease inflation pressures, deep
cuts in US interest rates would add to them if Asian economies do not
allow greater flexibility in nominal exchange rates. Lower interest rates
also tend to make commodities more attractive as assets and so may
support high prices (Figure 1.1.5), though the effects on inflation should
be transitory. Any passive acceptance by Asia of an upward drift in
inflation could deal a hard blow to long-run productivity growth. Even
moderate inflation typically proves costly to get rid off. Conversely, price
controls and extensive price subsidies, though they may temporarily
corral inflation expectations, are not the answer and would stymie market
adjustment processes.
This part was written by Frank Harrigan, William James, Juthathip Jongwanich, and
Lea Sumulong of the Economics and Research Department, ADB, Manila.