East Asia's recovery -- in full swing in the first half of 2002 --
is now being challenged by a combination of global, regional, and
domestic uncertainties, underlining the urgency for policymakers to
advance reforms that strengthen public security, reduce
vulnerability to shocks, and foster domestic sources of domestic
productivity growth, the World Bank said today in its half yearly
update on East Asia and the Pacific, Making Progress in Uncertain
Times.
The report calleds for actions to: improve law and order and public
security – essential for both economic development and the
consolidation of more representative government; maintain prudent
macroeconomic management of external and domestic fiscal positions;
strengthen governance, administration and public financial
accountability – especially in delivery of services; and, to
encourage growth, continue to tap the energies of private
individuals, entrepreneurs and firms. – which This means completing
the restructuring agenda left over from the financial crisis,
improving financial sector supervision and regulation, and
undertaking broader reforms to strengthen the investment climate.
Increasingly crowding the agenda are sSecurity concerns and
political focus on upcoming elections in some countries, will
increasingly crowd the policy agenda, along with economic and
structural reforms, the report notes.
“Our previous Update, from April 2002, said that the region was
rebounding, but asked ‘how far’?” said Jemal-ud-din Kassum, Vice
President for East Asia and the Pacific, at the launch of the
report today in Tokyo. “which This proved to be the right questions
to ask, as we see East Asia’s recovery threatened? /
affectedchallenged by a number of factors. The anticipated pace of
global economic recovery – with heightened turmoil in emerging
markets – has been slower than expected, demand for East Asian
exports has slackened off, and the recent sharp fall in high tech
demand suggests that the road to recovery in this critical sector
might be a bumpy one. Furthermore, tThis year’s sharp rise in world
oil prices will sap income in the majority of East Asian countries,
while recent terrorist attacks in Bali and elsewhere will depress
tourism and business confidence, at least for a time, taking a toll
on the near term growth outlook for Indonesia in particular.”
He
continued, “the external environment for East Asia is thus both
weaker and more uncertain than it appeared six months ago. S; to
sustaining adequate rates of economic and social development in
this more complex and difficult environment will rely depend more
than ever on the quality of countries’ own policies and
institutions.”
Mr. Kassum noted that the recovery of earlier this year – powered
by exports, private consumer spending, and, in some cases, fiscal
stimulus was relatively broad-based, but that private investment
spending has remained weak and that growth itself has not addressed
problems of excessive corporate leverage and distressed debt. He
commented, “debt-equity ratios, though they have fallen in some
instances, remain high by international standards. Together, with
low corporate profitability, they continue to depress the
investment climate and undermine the prospects for accelerated
medium term growth.”
Mr. Kassum continued, “The recent terrorismt attacks in the
Philippines and Indonesia – in particular the horrific attack in
Bali – underlines the urgency of fighting combating terrorism and
political violence, and more generally, of strengthening law and
order in the South East Asian countries. Governments in East Asia
today must now grapple with the immense challenges of strengthening
law and order and implementing a wide array of difficult structural
and institutional reforms – often against vested interests – while
meeting the public’s expectations of renewed gains in income and
welfare – at a time when many countries are moving into the next
turn of their electoral cycles. It’s important that countries not
be distracted from their focus on development and reform
priorities.”
There are some reasons for optimism, however, commented Homi
Kharas, Chief Economist for the World Bank’s East Asia region. He
noted that world trade and growth in the developed world is still
expected to be stronger in 2003 than 2002. Further, China has seen
an especially strong growth in exports to the U.S. and in high tech
exports, continued high FDI flows, and build-up of manufacturing
capacity and competence in an increasingly broad range of high tech
sectors. As a powerful source of export demand for other countries
in East Asia, exports to China from eight other East Asian
economies jumped by around 50 percent from a year earlier in the
first half of 2002.[1] “This extremely rapid rise in exports to
China this year will clearly not be sustained, but the underlying
trend in the importance of China as an export market for East Asia
will continue, as it has for the last decade,” said Mr. Kharas. He
noted that these gains in China have offset the loss of East Asian
exports to Japan in 2001 and 2002 which reflects the continued weak
performance of the Japanese macro economy and domestic demand.
.
Another bright spot: poverty is at an all time low, expected to
fall to around 41% of regional population in 2002 (at the $2 a day
level) – down from around 50 percent in the wake of the regional
financial crisis. Mr. Kharas noted, “poverty has been dropping
across the region for a number of reasons: per capita income has
been increasing since 1999, SME activity has been growing more
buoyant, and commodity prices for goods produced by the rural poor
have been rising – helping to distribute welfare gains in most
countries throughout East Asia, which are expected to achieve all
time lows in poverty rates this year, well below pre-crisis
levels.” The main exceptions, he said, are are countries in South
East Asia, where poverty is still estimated to be higher than 1996
levels in Thailand and Indonesia, and where the rate of decline
remains fairly sluggish in the Philippines.
Addressing poverty in rural areas of East Asia and the Pacific is a
particular challenge, notes the report’s special focus section on
reducing rural poverty. With about 65 percent of its population
living in rural areas, East Asia remains among the more rural of
developing regions. Although rural poverty fell rapidly through the
first two-thirds of the 1990s, several East Asian countries with
large numbers of poor experienced a reversal in some of these gains
in the latter part of the decade. The large declines in aggregate
demand and supply disruptions caused by the regional financial
crisis of 1997-98 clearly played an important part in pushing down
rural incomes and raising rural poverty in countries like
Indonesia, Philippines, and Thailand, but other factors such as
domestic policies, international market trends, climatic shocks
(like El Nino) and environmental constraints have also played a
part. With the passing of the regional crisis, rural poverty in the
region has begun to fall once more, although the pace is generally
still modest.
“Since well over three quarters of the East Asian poor live in
rural areas, reducing the overall numbers of poor in the region
will be increasingly difficult in the years ahead, unless countries
renew efforts to reduce rural poverty, either through improving
incomes and opportunities in the rural areas themselves, or through
people moving to better opportunities in urban areas,” said Mr.
Kharas. To achieve reinvigorated rural growth, he recommended
action on key agendas including: strengthening property rights,
better public research and extension systems, better market access
for farmers, expanding off-farm opportunities, improving rural
financial markets, and increasing involvement of rural producer
organizations and communities; and said that work at the
sub-national government, national government, and international
levels is needed.
The Regional Outlook Ahead
The report notes that recent steep falls in global equity markets
and indications of renewed or continued weakness in major developed
countries (the U.S., Japan, the Euro area) have heightened
uncertainty about the global outlook - and with it for the
export-oriented East Asia region.. Thus the World Bank’s
expectation for 2003 growth in the high-income countries has been
reduced to 2.1 percent from a projection of 3.3 percent earlier
this year, with more downside risk of a greater slowdown or even a
‘double dip’. “Nevertheless,” said Mr. Kharas, “that would still be
stronger than in 2002 – in short, things will still get better,
just bymuch less than had been hoped.”
Output growth in developing East Asia is expected to rise to a
little over 6 percent in 2002 from about 5.5 percent in 2001, led
by China and Vietnam growing at 6-87 percent or more, with even
post-crisis countries in South East Asia like Indonesia, Thailand
and Philippines expected to grow around 3.5-4 percent. Including
the four newly industrialized economies (NIEs), overall East Asian
growth is expected to pickup from a depressed 3.5 percent in 2001
to around 5.5 percent in both 2002 and 2003. Such a pace of
recovery, while exceeding other world regions, would be less than
the 6.5-7.5 percent rate reached in the post-financial crisis
recovery of 1999-2000.
(china.org.cn Novemebr 6, 2002 )
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