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Presentation on the Economic Performance and Outlook for MEPI Cielito F. Habito, Ph.D. Professor of Economics & Director, Ateneo Center for Economic Research & Development Ateneo de Manila University Overview – Where We Have Been: 50 Years A Laggard – Where We Are Now: Key Economic Trends – What It All Means for Filipinos – Outlook & Imperatives •Economic Drivers & Downers •The Challenge of Inclusive Growth •Where We Need to Push •Outlook for Pharmaceuticals •Long Term Prospects The Philippines & Thailand: Estranged Twins Indicator Population (million) Population G.R. (%) GDP Per Capita (US$) GDP Share (%) Agriculture Industry Services Gross Dom Inv (%GDP) Gross Dom Saving (%GDP) FDI Stock (Billion US$) 1970 Thai Phil 36 36 3.1 3.1 250 250 2009 Thai Phil 66.9 92.2 0.6 2.0 4062 1796 32.0 26.0 23.0 27.5 45.2 46.7 1965 20.0 20.0 18.5 20.3 1998 7.8 2.3 11.6 14.8 43.3 30.2 45.1 55.0 2009 21.8 14.6 31.7 15.6 2009 93.8 22.9 Fifty Years A Laggard • In 1960, average income in RP was twice that of Thailand; now it is the reverse • Other East Asian economies’ GDP grew annually at 3.6-6.0%; RP only grew 1.4% • Per capita GDP has grown 19 times in China, 8 times in Thailand, 6 times in Malaysia & Indonesia, but only 2 times in RP • At current rates of per capita income growth, WB estimates it would take RP >200 years to reach the average per capita GDP of the OECD (developed) countries Top Heavy Growth Bottom-Heavy Needs Narrow: Growth is propelled primarily by a few leading sectors and geographic areas Shallow: Weak linkages to rest of economy – e.g., low domestic valueadded exports Hollow: Jobless growth; povertyincreasing growth Top-Heavy Growth, Bottom-Heavy Needs Poverty incidence rose from 30% in 2003 to 33% in 2006, and 37% in 2009 (NSCB) Real per capita income fell 10% nationally, and fell in 50 provinces between 2003 and 2006 (NSCB) Basic education enrollment rates dropped in 75% of provinces between 2002 & 2004 (PHDR 2009) Wide disparities in life expectancy across provinces: Low - 53.4 (Tawi-tawi); High 74.6 (La Union) (PHDR 2009) Wanted: Inclusive Growth a.k.a. Broad-Based Growth: • Sectorally • Geographically • Temporally Assessing Economic Performance: The “PITIK Test” The Essential Yardsticks (P-T-K): •Price Stability (Presyo) •Jobs (Trabaho) •Incomes (Kita) The Economy Last Year & Now: Good News & Bad News Prices: Rose faster than in 2009, but more slowly than projected; now ticking up again Jobs: Jobs caught up with labor force growth – but job quality remains a challenge Incomes/Output: Strong Overall ―Manufacturing surged ―Services saw robust growth ―But agriculture declined Ateneo Center for Economic Research and Development The Economy Last Year & Now: Good News & Bad News Investment and Exports: strong rebound, even with dropping foreign investment inflows Balance of Payments: favorable last year; has now turned negative Peso: appreciating with weak dollar and amid “currency war” Net Income Inflows: slows to single digit growth; now facing new threats Fiscal Deficit: too big for comfort Ateneo Center for Economic Research and Development Presyo: Inflation Trends 2007-Present 9.3% 3.2% 2.8% 2007 2008 2009 3.8% 2010 4.3% 2100 Trabaho: Latest Jobs Survey Mixed Picture Kita: Incomes/Production (GDP): 2010: Renewed Industrial Vigor • Surge in Private Construction (19.1%) and Durable Equipment (25.7%) • Exports up 33.7% in Dollar values (25.6% in real terms) • Consumption growth surges in Q4 (7% from normal 4-5%) • Manufacturing up by double digits • Private services (esp. media) up 8.8% (media surged 31.4% in Q1) • Spoiler: Agriculture declines 1% (but bounced back in Q4) Overall Output/Income Growth Industry Takes the Lead Indicator GNP Growth (%) Net Factor Inc fr Abr GDP Growth (%) Agri, Fish & Forestry Industry Services Q1 Q2 2010 Q3 8.6 14.1 7.8 -2.7 15.9 7.1 7.6 3.9 8.2 -3.2 16.1 6.7 6.0 3.9 6.3 -3.0 8.6 8.0 Q4 FY 6.7 3.8 7.1 5.4 8.3 6.9 7.2 6.0 7.3 -0.5 12.1 7.1 Industry Leads the Way Manufacturing Makes A Comeback Sector INDUSTRY SECTOR Mining/Quarrying Manufacturing Construction Utilities Q1 Q2 2010 Q3 15.9 7.4 20.4 4.3 8.2 16.1 37.4 12.7 22.5 8.6 8.6 6.9 9.0 7.5 8.8 Q4 FY 8.3 15.5 8.9 2.4 8.5 12.1 18.4 12.3 10.5 8.5 Gross Regional Domestic Product, 2008-2009 10.0 8.0 Bicol Region grew fastest 6.0 4.0 2.0 0.0 Research and Development III Ateneo Center for Economic X -4.0 M RM 4 Regions declined A II X I X X IX III V B A II V I V V IV IV III II I R A R C C N RP -2.0 Private Investment Surges… Govt Spending Takes the Background Q1 Q2 2010 Q3 Personal Consn Exp 5.4 4.6 4.1 7.0 5.3 Govt Consumption 20.0 5.8 -7.9 -7.6 2.7 Capital Formation Of which: Construction Public Private Durable Eqpt Br Stck & Orch Dev 21.9 10.8 12.4 22.8 17.0 7.9 8.5 7.6 26.0 1.4 23.9 27.8 18.5 31.8 3.3 8.6 -24.0 34.7 18.8 2.1 3.4 -14.3 14.6 26.8 2.9 12.0 3.7 19.1 25.7 2.4 Exports Imports 22.4 22.4 29.1 20.4 28.3 18.5 21.1 21.8 25.6 20.7 Indicator Ateneo Center for Economic Q4 FY Research and Development … even as FDI dips Inflows Down, But Intentions Up Top 2 Sources: Japan, Netherlands 89% in Manufacturing Ateneo Center for Economic Research and Development Remittances slowed in 2009, but picked up anew Year Remittances (US$) Growth Rate (%) 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 7578458 8,550,371 10,689,005 12,761,308 14,449,928 16,426,854 17,348,052 18,762,989 12.8 25.0 19.4 13.2 13.7 5.6 8.2 Ateneo Center for Economic Research and Development How do recent economic trends translate to human welfare and poverty of Filipinos? The Economy in Human Terms • Poverty rose from 24.9% (2003) to 26.5% (2009) [Under old definition: 30% (‘03) to 33% (‘06) to 37% (‘09)] • No. of poor Filipinos up by 970,000, or 185,000 families between 2006 and 2009 (Poverty line: P7,017/month per family of 5) • Net elementary school participation rate down from 97% in 2001 to 85% in 2008 • Net high schol participation rate down from 66% to 62% • Malnutrition incidence went up in most provinces Ateneo Center for Economic Research and Development Self Rated Poverty: 49% of Filipinos feel poor (Q4-2010) Lowest since Cory Aquino – but is it really? Hunger: Roller Coaster SWS Q1-’10 Puzzle: Self-Rated Poverty Down But Hunger Up • Of the 4 million households reporting hunger in March 2010, only 2.6 million rated themselves as Poor. A significant 1.4 million who suffered from hunger did not consider themselves to be Poor. • Living standards had dropped so low that standard of “poorness” has dropped (misery loves company) Outlook & Imperatives Why 2011 Should Be Better Recovery from El Niño Resurgence in investment (especially domestic) Proven “immunity” to global slowdown Remittances continue growth “Rebalancing” of Asian growth toward more internal, intraregional demand Why 2011 Should Be Worse Possible double-dip recession (Wshaped recovery) in the West? European economies under threat Middle East unrest and new inflation pressures Peso appreciation (mixed effect) Japan earthquake/tsunami and nuclear disaster Medium Term: Heavy debt burden and continued fiscal pressures Where is the Peso Going? Euro Baht Sing$ Peso Rupiah Achieving Inclusive Growth: Where To Push Revenues: Restore tax effort to 17%; mostly from collection/compliance boost; sin taxes, trim excess tax perks Infrastructure: Massive catch-up program needed; needs above revenue boost &/or better BOT rules Investment: Now exceeded by savings; confidence boost needed Democratize Growth: Massive SME boost, asset reform, competition policy (esp. with PLDT-Digitel merger) Sectors to Watch, Sectors to Push Agriculture & Agribusiness End of El Niño droughts Rebound from 4-quarter decline Ongoing budget reforms promise positive results DA to “steer” while LGUs “row” Remittance-fueled consumer food demand may taper in short term due to external developments Tourism & Allied Industries Focused investments under Tourism Act of 2009 underway Pocket open-skies policy to lower costs, hike tourist arrivals Improved peace prospects in Mindanao; tourism a major thrust in Mindanao 2020 Plan “Appreciation lag” of Peso vs. neighboring currencies can make PH relatively more attractive Business Process Outsourcing Sustained demand growth projected for long term Indian firms now moving into Philippines Need to address dwindling skilled recruitable personnel Important driver of real property development sector Construction Private construction is on a rebound (19.1% growth in 2010) Massive infrastructure push (GAA & PPPs) is imperative & inevitable Revenue performance needs clear improvement; PPP policy environment needs constant improvement Huge unmet demand in low to medium-cost housing Manufacturing Electronics: Continued dominance Food & Beverages: Rising average incomes; elastic demand for processed food steady medium to long-term growth Design-based manufactures: Innate competitiveness (e.g. Cobonpue, Lhuillier) Pharmaceuticals Projected annual PH market growth rate to 2015: 6.9% (BMI) Drivers: − Cheaper Medicines Act (Elastic demand leads to higher gross sales) − Mergers/industry consolidation (Greater stability) − Universal PhilHealth coverage by 2015 (Wider market) Economic Outlook: 2011 • Presyo: ➔ Inflation projected to inch upward to 5-6% • Trabaho: ➔ Marginal improvement at 78% unemployment • Kita: ➔ Consensus GDP growth projection: 5-6% Long Term Outlook: Building on Inherent Strengths • Exceptionally rich natural & human resources • Strategic geography (transshipment, shipbuilding/repair, tourism) • Favorable global, regional trends (e.g. aging, medical tourism, outsourcing) • Resilient, adaptable people, in high demand worldwide Completing the picture: Good Governance is key! Checklist For Good Governance Quality Appointments to Cabinet, revenue and regulatory agencies Zero Tolerance for Corruption: an unequivocal policy Decentralized Governance where NG “steers,” LGUs “row” Participatory Mechanisms: bring people to the gov’t & gov’t to the people Streamline Government Processes to reduce cost of doing business Post Script: Stories from the Countryside Bgy. Lopero, Jose Dalman, Z Norte Carabaos, Not Fertilizers: A Farmer’s Plea Magsaysay, Davao del Sur Diversified Organic Farming System: A Mayor’s Lament Upland Barangay, Sarangani Horses vs. FMR: A Pragmatic Farmer Bottom-up devt; Solutions need not be sophisticated nor expensive! [email protected]