asian development outlook 2011 - oecddeveloping asia’s outlook key challenges ... recent surge in...

Post on 29-Jul-2020

1 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

Asian Development

Outlook 2011 South-South Economic Links

Joseph E. Zveglich, Jr.

Assistant Chief Economist

Economics and Research Department

OECD Development Centre

Paris

8 April 2011

Outline

Economic outlook Global outlook

Developing Asia’s outlook

Key challenges Managing inflation

Finding new growth source: South-South economic links?

2

3

Key Messages

Asia’s recovery is firm, with growth nearing 8% in the next 2 years

Asia is leading the global recovery

Rising inflation is a concern

Expanding South-South links present a supplementary growth source

But structural weaknesses need to be addressed to maximize their potential

Economic outlook

4

Modest growth expected in

major industrial economies

2009 2010 2011 2012

Actual Actual ADO 2011 projection

ADO 2011

projection

GDP Growth

Major industrial economies (%) -3.8 2.6 2.1 2.1

United States (%) -2.6 2.9 2.8 2.6

Eurozone (%) -4.1 1.7 1.6 1.6

Japan (%) -6.3 3.9 1.5 1.8

World trade

Merchandise exports

(% change) -12.2 13.5 7.5 8.5

Inflation

Inflation (G3 average, %) -0.2 1.2 1.3 1.8

5

6

But risks remain

Recent surge in oil and food prices

Sovereign debt problems in the eurozone periphery

High unemployment and weak housing market in the US

Impacts of the Japan earthquake

Developing Asia’s recovery is

firming

7

…due to robust domestic demand

9,4 10,1

6,7 5,9

9,0

7,8 7,7

0

4

8

12

2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012

GDP growth

5-year moving average

8

-5

0

5

10

15

20

PRC INO KOR MAL PHI SIN THA

Percentage points

Contributions to GDP growth

Private consumption Government consumption

Investment Net exports

Statistical discrepancy GDP growth

Propelled by robust domestic

demand

PRC=People’s Republic of China; INO=Indonesia; KOR=Republic of Korea; MAL=Malaysia; PHI=Philippines; SIN=Singapore; THA=Thailand.

9

Region’s recovery is widespread

GDP growth

0

2

4

6

8

10

Central

Asia

East Asia South Asia Southeast

Asia

The Pacific Developing

Asia

%2010 2011 2012

10

Southeast Asia moderating

SEA=Southeast Asia INO=Indonesia

SIN=Singapore THA=Thailand

MAL=Malaysia PHI=Philippines

VIE=Viet Nam

0

5

10

15

SEA INO MAL PHI SIN THA VIE

%GDP growth

2010 2011 2012

Asia contributed to the

global recovery

11

-8 0 8 16 24 32

Brazil

Mexico

Saudi Arabia

South Africa

France

Germany

Japan

United States

%

Asia-10 Rest of the World

Average quarterly growth rates of exports to developing Asia (Q3 2008–Q3 2010, y-o-y)

Key challenge:

Managing inflation

12

Inflation pressures are building…

13

3,3

4,4

6,9

1,2

4,4

5,3 4,6

0

2

4

6

8

2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012

%

Inflation

5-year moving average

…with some signs of overheating

14

-16

-12

-8

-4

0

4

8

%

Real Interest Rates People's Rep. of China India

Indonesia Rep. of Korea

Malaysia Philippines

Taipei,China Thailand

Viet Nam

o Negative real interest rates

o Output near or above its potential

Inflation matters more for Asia

Bangladesh 58.8

Philippines 46.6

India 46.2

Sri Lanka 45.5

Cambodia 44.9

Pakistan 40.3

Viet Nam 39.9

Indonesia 36.2

Thailand 33.0

Malaysia 31.4

PRC 30.2

United States 14.8

Eurozone 14.0

Japan 25.9

15

Food share in CPI (%)

o The poor are especially vulnerable

o Rising in part to Asia’s faster recovery

o Inflation expectations can fuel wage-price spiral

But managing inflation is not easy

Higher policy rates attract more capital inflows

16

71 9245 27 39 -22 49

24 68 -4257

207

111

-225

-150

-75

0

75

150

225

H104 H105 H106 H107 H108 H109 H110

$ billion

Net flows in emerging Asian economies

FDI Portfolio Other Net flows

Coherent policy mix is key to success

For countries with persistent current account imbalances and misaligned exchange rates: More flexible exchange rates

For countries without the above symptoms: Internationally coordinated temporary measures, such as capital controls

G20 could provide useful tools: practical indicative guidelines and principles for capital controls

17

Key challenge:

South-South economic links

18

Share of the South in global GDP is

rising

Share of South in world GDP (%)

27

32 33

37

45

0

10

20

30

40

50

1990 1995 2000 2005 2010

Developing Asia’s share in South GDP, 2010

PRC 30%

Other Asia 34%

Other South 36%

Developing Asia 64%

19

PRC = People’s Republic of China

20

South-South trade is growing

Developing Asia’s share in South-South trade, 2009

Other South 26%

Other Asia 34%

PRC 40%

Developing Asia 74%

Note: Merchandise trade, non-fuel

7

10

15 16

17

1990—91* 2000—01* 2006—07* 2008 2009

South-South trade as share of world merchandise trade (%)

PRC = People’s Rep. of China

But developing Asia’s trade is driven

by factory Asia

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

97 99 01 03 05 07 09

(%)

Developing Asia PRC

Africa Latin America

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

97 99 01 03 05 07 09

(%)

Developing Asia PRC

Africa Latin America

Exports Imports

Share of parts and components (%)

21

• Factory Asia: intermediate goods sourced from South for assembly and subsequent export to North

• Growing South-South links do not necessarily mean greater economic independence!

Structural weaknesses need to be

addressed

22

4,2 5,5 5,1

3,7 3,2

19,6 20,6

16,0

12,1

9,3

0

5

10

15

20

25

1985-89 1990-94 1995-99 2000-04 2005-08

%

Applied tariffs, simple mean

North South

Other barriers remain too

Trade-related

infrastructure and

logistics performance

of the South lag

considerably behind

the North

South-South FTAs

are generally less

consistent with WTO

and other global rules

23

2,0

2,5

3,0

3,5

North South

Average Logistic Performance Index scores, North and South

2007 2010

Potential gains from stronger

South-South links are large

Lowering tariffs could increase South-South trade by 6% points

Industrial migration among the South could boost global growth

Recycling South savings for investment could help global rebalancing

24

25

Key Messages

Asia’s recovery is firm, with growth nearing 8% in the next 2 years

Asia is leading the global recovery

Rising inflation is a concern

Expanding South-South links present a supplementary growth source

But structural weaknesses need to be addressed to maximize their potential

top related