WORLD BANK EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 Sustaining Resilience WORLD BANK EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 Sustaining Resilience © 2017 International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank 1818 H Street NW, Washington, DC 20433 Telephone: 202-473-1000; Internet: www.worldbank.org Some rights reserved 1 2 3 4 20 19 18 17 This work is a product of the staff of The World Bank with external contributions. The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed in this work do not necessarily reflect the views of The World Bank, its Board of Executive Directors, or the governments they represent. The World Bank does not guarantee the accuracy of the data included in this work. The boundaries, colors, denominations, and other information shown on any map in this work do not imply any judgment on the part of The World Bank concerning the legal status of any territory or the endorsement or acceptance of such boundaries. 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SUSTAINING RESILIENCE Contents List of Abbreviations xiii Preface and Acknowledgments xv Executive Summary xvii Part I. Recent Developments and Outlook 1 I.A. Recent Developments 2 Growth in developing East Asia and Pacific remains resilient, also supported with some recovery in the external environment in the second half of 2016 and early 2017 2 Exports show early signs of recovery across much of the region 8 Domestic demand across much of the region was buoyant, reflecting accommodative macroeconomic policies and tight labor markets 10 Private sector credit growth is moderating slightly, but debt stocks remain elevated 12 Inflation is edging up, and producer prices are rising rapidly 13 Renewed capital outflows toward the end of 2016 led to exchange rate depreciations, but external financial conditions have stabilized in 2017 14 Recent developments in the Pacific Island Countries 22 Poverty and inclusiveness: sustained progress, but challenges remain 22 I.B. Outlook and Risks 28 Growth is expected to moderate in China, but pick up slightly in the rest of the region 28 Poverty will continue to fall across most of the region, reflecting rising labor incomes and low unemployment32 Domestic demand will support growth, with a rising contribution from exports, across much of the region 33 The normalization of monetary policy in advanced economies may test the region’s resilience, especially in countries with elevated external debt, or high and rising private sector leverage 35 A sharp slowdown in world trade or in China could significantly affect the region 43 Fiscal deficits are expected to remain elevated in several countries, in some cases posing risks to fiscal sustainability 44 The outlook for the Pacific Island Countries is positive, but they remain especially vulnerable to shocks 49 I.C. Policy Considerations 54 Elevated global policy uncertainty places a large premium on macroeconomic prudence 54 Ensuring sustained growth and greater inclusion 57 References82 List of Contents iii EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 Contents continued Part II. Medium-Term Development Agenda 85 II.A. Boosting Labor Mobility in the ASEAN Economic Community 86 Economic integration and international labor mobility 86 The implications of labor mobility for worker welfare 88 Barriers to labor mobility in ASEAN 91 Policies to decrease labor mobility costs 93 References100 II.B. Tackling Farm Pollution in Developing East Asia 103 The benefits of agricultural intensification 103 Significance of agriculture as a polluter 105 Adverse impacts of farm pollution 106 Sources of pollution from farming practices 107 Structural and policy drivers of farm pollution 109 Current approaches and why they are falling short of expectations 111 Toward an effective strategy: Curbing agricultural pollution will require the public sector to set priorities, effectively compel and motivate farmers, back innovation and learning, and influence the sector’s structure and growth trajectory from farm to table 111 Looking ahead: Tackling East Asia’s agricultural pollution challenge is not only within reach, but also a business, economic, and leadership opportunity 116 References117 Part III. Country Pages and Key Indicators 121 Cambodia122 China125 Fiji128 Indonesia131 Lao PDR 134 Malaysia137 Mongolia140 Myanmar143 Papua New Guinea 146 Philippines149 Small Pacific Island Countries 152 Solomon Islands 158 Thailand161 Timor-Leste164 Vietnam168 iv List of Contents SUSTAINING RESILIENCE List of Figures Part I. Recent Developments and Outlook I.A. Recent Developments Figure I.A.1. Growth in developing EAP continued to prove resilient 5 Figure I.A.2. Growth performance remains robust across the region’s large economies 6 Figure I.A.3. Managers generally feel upbeat about economic prospects 6 Figure I.A.4. Domestic demand continued to drive growth 8 Despite a pickup in exports, the overall growth contribution of net exports remained Figure I.A.5.  modest8 Figure I.A.6. Export volumes have started to recover… 9 Figure I.A.7. …as have export values 9 Figure I.A.8. Government capital expenditure is stabilizing in several countries 10 After widening earlier, fiscal deficits in some of the large economies started to Figure I.A.9.  stabilize toward end-2016 11 Figure I.A.10. The fiscal positions in Mongolia and Lao PDR are particularly challenging 11 Figure I.A.11. Policy rates have been stable or decreased across most countries 12 Figure I.A.12. Real interest rates in large economies have been declining, and in most cases are significantly below their long-term average 12 Figure I.A.13. Credit growth has slowed over the past year, but remains rapid 13 Figure I.A.14. The stock of private sector debt remains elevated in several economies 13 Figure I.A.15. Inflation has been increasing across much of the region, but from relatively low levels 14 Figure I.A.16. Core inflation remains more muted 14 Figure I.A.17. Producer prices have been increasing rapidly in some countries 14 Figure I.A.18. Most of the region experienced significant capital outflows toward end-2016 15 Figure I.A.19. In China, declining returns lowered FDI inflows and increased outflows 15 Figure I.A.20. Net FDI flows in most of the rest of the region have been robust 15 Figure I.A.21. Financial markets saw increased volatility since end-2016, but have since recovered 15 Figure I.A.22. Stock Prices 15 Figure I.A.23. External corporate and sovereign risk spreads have been easing over time 16 Figure I.A.24. Government bond yields have significantly decreased over the past year in Indonesia and Vietnam 16 Figure I.A.25. U.S. dollar exchange rates depreciated in late 2016, with some recovery since 17 Figure I.A.26. Trade-weighted exchange rates have depreciated over the past year in China, Malaysia, and the Philippines, but appreciated in Indonesia and Thailand 17 Figure I.A.27. Reserve coverage for the major economies in the region remains broadly adequate 17 Figure I.A.28. The bottom 40 percent of the population has enjoyed relatively fast income growth across much of the region 23 List of Contents v EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 List of Figures continued I.B. Outlook and Risks Domestic demand will support growth, with at most a modest contribution from net Figure I.B.1.  exports, across the region as a whole… 34 Figure I.B.2. …across most large economies 34 Figure I.B.3. …and in the smaller economies 34 Figure I.B.4. Markets are expecting a faster normalization of U.S. interest rate policy 35 Malaysia, and to a significantly lesser extent Thailand and Indonesia, have sizable Figure I.B.5.  external debt stocks 36 Figure I.B.6. In Malaysia and Thailand, a significant share of external debt is short term 36 Figure I.B.7. Debt service ratio of private nonfinancial sector 36 Figure I.B.8. Interest coverage ratio of listed firms 36 Figure I.B.9. Return on assets in the banking sector 37 Figure I.B.10. Return on equity in the banking sector 37 Figure I.B.11. Nonperforming assets are steadily increasing across the region 38 Figure I.B.12. Banks in the region are in general well capitalized 38 Figure I.B.13. Much of developing EAP displays significant trade openness 43 Figure I.B.14. Fiscal deficits are expected to remain elevated across much of the region 44 Figure I.B.15. Government debt is projected to rise rapidly in Mongolia and, to a lesser degree, Vietnam, and remain elevated in Malaysia 48 I.C. Policy Considerations Greater regional integration has already led to a significant increase over time in Figure I.C.1.  intraregional trade 58 Part II. Medium-Term Development Agenda II.A. Boosting Labor Mobility in the ASEAN Economic Community Figure II.A.1. Intraregional trade in ASEAN, 1990–2014 87 Figure II.A.2. Change in GDP in ASEAN with deeper integration 87 Figure II.A.3. ASEAN’s actions to facilitate labor mobility 87 Estimated change in welfare under trade integration: lower barriers to mobility for Figure II.A.4.  high-skilled workers versus no reduction in barriers 89 Estimated change in welfare under trade integration: lower barriers to mobility for Figure II.A.5.  all workers versus lower barriers for skilled workers only 89 Change in the number of Malaysians employed in a state due to the arrival of 10 Figure II.A.6.  immigrants89 Wage impacts of doubling the size of the immigrant workforce in five immigrant- Figure II.A.7.  intensive provinces in Thailand 89 Figure II.A.8. The median age in ASEAN’s major migration corridors 91 Figure II.A.9. International labor mobility costs in ASEAN in the 1960s and 2000s 92 Figure II.A.10. Migration costs associated with the migration system 94 vi List of Contents SUSTAINING RESILIENCE List of Figures continued II.B. Tackling Farm Pollution in Developing East Asia Figure II.B.1. Prevalence of food inadequacy in selected countries, 1990–2016 103 Figure II.B.2. Yields of selected crops, 1961–2014 103 Trends in cereals production, yield, and harvested areas in China, the Philippines, Figure II.B.3.  and Vietnam, 1961–2013 104 Figure II.B.4. Domestic food supply of all animal products, 2000–11 104 Change in agricultural greenhouse gas emissions in selected East Asian countries, Figure II.B.5.  1990–2013 106 Figure II.B.6. Breakdown of agricultural greenhouse gas emissions in China, 2014 estimates 106 Figure II.B.7. Fertilizer use per hectare of arable and permanent cropland in selected countries 108 Figure II.B.8. The spread of plastic mulch in China, 1991, 2001, and 2011 109 Part III. Country Pages and Key Indicators Cambodia Figure 1. GDP growth, contributions to growth 124 Figure 2. Trends in rice prices and remittances 124 China Figure 1. GDP growth (yoy), contributions to growth 127 Figure 2. Poverty rates estimates and projections 127 Fiji Figure 1. Real GDP growth 130 Figure 2. Recurrent spending breakdown 130 Indonesia Figure 1. Despite global policy uncertainty, Indonesia’s GDP growth strengthened in 2016 133 Distribution of national consumption in Indonesia. Inequality has fallen, but bottom 40 Figure 2.  consumption has dropped 133 Lao PDR Figure 1. GDP growth, contributions to growth 136 Figure 2. Actual and projected rates and GDP per capita (constant LCU) 136 Malaysia Figure 1. GDP growth, contributions to growth 139 Figure 2. Government cash transfer 139 Mongolia Figure 1. GDP growth (yoy), contributions to growth 142 Figure 2. Poverty headcount ratio 142 List of Contents vii EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 List of Figures continued Myanmar Figure 1. GDP growth, contributions to growth, by sector 145 Figure 2. Contributions to yearly inflation (yoy percent change) 145 Papua New Guinea Figure 1. GDP growth (yoy), contributions to growth 148 Figure 2. Key fiscal indicators (% GDP) 148 Philippines Figure 1. GDP growth, contributions to growth 151 Figure 2. Poverty reduction is expected to continue as per capita income increases 151 Small Pacific Island Countries Figure 1. Primary balances 157 Figure 2. Public and publicly guaranteed external debt 157 Solomon Islands Figure 1. Trade balance 160 Figure 2. GDP per capita 160 Thailand Figure 1. GDP growth, contributions to growth 163 Figure 2. Poverty rate and GDP per capita growth 163 Timor-Leste Figure 1. Gross domestic product, expenditure components 167 Figure 2. Petroleum Fund wealth per capita 167 Vietnam Figure 1. GDP growth, contributions to growth, by sector 170 Figure 2. Poverty rate and GDP per capita 170 viii List of Contents SUSTAINING RESILIENCE List of Tables Part I. Recent Developments and Outlook I.B. Outlook and Risks Table I.B.1. East Asia and Pacific: GDP growth projections 29 Table I.B.2. Poverty is projected to continue falling across most countries 32 Banking resilience: estimated impact of shocks due to U.S. monetary policy Table I.B.3.  tightening and depreciation against the U.S. dollar 38 I.C. Policy Considerations Table I.C.1. Exports to rest of developing EAP 59 Part II. Medium-Term Development Agenda II.A. Boosting Labor Mobility in the ASEAN Economic Community Table II.A.1. Migrant stocks and GDP per capita in ASEAN’s major migration corridors in 2015 91 Part III. Country Pages and Key Indicators Cambodia  Selected Indicators 124 China  Selected Indicators 127  elected Indicators Fiji S 130 Indonesia  Selected Indicators 133 Lao PDRSelected Indicators 136 Malaysia  Selected Indicators 139 MongoliaSelected Indicators 142 MyanmarSelected Indicators 145 Papua New Guinea  Selected Indicators 148 Philippines  Selected Indicators 151 Solomon IslandsSelected Indicators 160 Thailand S  elected Indicators 163 Timor-Leste  Selected Indicators 167 Vietnam  Selected Indicators 170 List of Contents ix EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 List of Boxes Part I. Recent Developments and Outlook I.A. Recent Developments Box I.A.1. Recent Global Developments 3 Figure BI.A.1.1. Global GDP growth 3 Figure BI.A.1.2. Global industrial production growth and manufacturing PMI 3 Figure BI.A.1.3. Regional GDP growth, 2007–16 3 Figure BI.A.1.4. PMI and import growth in EMDEs 3 Figure BI.A.1.5. GDP across developing regions: cumulative change, 2007–16 4 Figure BI.A.1.6. Global trade growth 4 Figure BI.A.1.7. International commodity prices 5 Figure BI.A.1.8. Emerging market stocks and currencies 5 Box I.A.2. Poverty in Developing East Asia and Pacific 7 Figure BI.A.2.1. The prevalence of poverty has continued to decline across the region 7 Box I.A.3. Capital Flows across Developing EAP 18 Figure BI.A.3.1. Balance of payments and net financial flows: developing EAP 18 Figure BI.A.3.2. Balance of payments and net capital flows 19 Figure BI.A.3.3. Balance of payments: China, quarterly 19 Figure BI.A.3.4. Foreign debt: China 20 Figure BI.A.3.5. Composition of capital flows: China 20 Figure BI.A.3.6. Balance of payments and net capital flows: developing EAP excluding China 21 Box I.A.4. Poverty and Jobs in East Asia 24 Table BI.A.4.1. Poverty rates and changes for selected EAP countries 25 Figure BI.A.4.1. Components of poverty change, by family income source 26 I.B. Outlook and Risks Box I.B.1. Global Outlook and Risks 30 Figure BI.B.1.1. Global GDP growth 30 Figure BI.B.1.2. Regional GDP growth 30 Figure BI.B.1.3. World commodity prices forecast. 31 Box I.B.2. The Real Estate Sector and Risks to Financial Stability 39 Figure BI.B.2.1. Real housing prices 39 Figure BI.B.2.2. Real housing prices, China 39 Figure BI.B.2.3. Growth in residential floor space sold in China 39 Figure BI.B.2.4. Real estate sales growth, China 40 Figure BI.B.2.5. Real estate sales growth, Indonesia 40 Figure BI.B.2.6. Real estate loans to total loans 40 Figure BI.B.2.7. Commercial and residential real estate loans 40 Figure BI.B.2.8. Real estate investment by sector, China 41 x List of Contents SUSTAINING RESILIENCE List of Boxes continued Box I.B.3. The Long-Run Impact of China’s Rebalancing on Developing East Asia and Pacific 45 Figure BI.B.3.1. China’s slowdown and rebalancing under full reform and partial reform 45 Figure BI.B.3.2. The impact of full reform in China on developing EAP, in 2025 47 Box I.B.4. What is Possible in the Pacific in 2040? 50 Figure BI.B.4.1. Growth in real income per capitaa: opportunity scenarios, 2015–40 52 Figure BI.B.4.2. Employment growth: opportunity scenarios, 2015–40 52 Figure BI.B.4.3. Domestic revenues per capita: opportunity scenarios, 2015–40 53 I.C. Policy Considerations Box I.C.1. Exchange Rate Regimes in Developing East Asia and Pacific 61 Table BI.C.1.1. Exchange rate regimes 63 Figure BI.C.1.1. Reserve cover 64 Box I.C.2. Productivity Trends in Developing East Asia and Pacific 66 Figure BI.C.2.1. Total factor productivity growth 66 Figure BI.C.2.2. Intersectoral labor reallocation 67 Figure BI.C.2.3. Labor productivity, firm level 68 Table BI.C.2.1. Reported constraints to firm-level productivity in developing EAP 68 Figure BI.C.2.4. Estimated constraints to firm-level productivity 70 In Malaysia, productivity is higher among firms that can more easily find Figure BI.C.2.5.  the required skills, offer training opportunities, and have access to better infrastructure70 Figure BI.C.2.6. Easier access to credit can increase productivity 71 More R&D spending is associated with greater job creation and faster sales Figure BI.C.2.7.  growth in Vietnam 71 Box I.C.3. The Investment Slowdown in Developing East Asia and Pacific 72 Figure BI.C.3.1. Investment 72 Figure BI.C.3.2. Savings and current account balances 73 Figure BI.C.3.3. FDI inflows and stocks 73 Figure BI.C.3.4. Investment growth 75 Figure BI.C.3.5. Investment stabilization in developing EAP 76 Box I.C.4. Food Prices and the Poor in Indonesia and the Philippines 78 Poor Indonesians and Filipinos spend 60 to 70 percent of all consumption Figure BI.C.4.1.  on food, with rice the main staple 78 Soaring rice prices in 2006 saw poverty rise in Indonesia by nearly 2 Figure BI.C.4.2.  percentage points, the only increase in the past 17 years 78 When the Philippines’ National Food Authority rice stocks drop below Figure BI.C.4.3.  around 600,000 metric tons, rice price inflation rises sharply 80 Food price inflation has been increasing in the Philippines, driven by Figure BI.C.4.4.  higher rice prices, although overall price increases remain moderate 81 In Indonesia, both food and rice price inflation remains lower than in Figure BI.C.4.5.  recent years, but increases in regulated prices have caused inflation to increase81 List of Contents xi EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 List of Boxes continued Part II. Medium-Term Development Agenda II.B. Tackling Farm Pollution in Developing East Asia Box II.B.1. Examples of public sector instruments that can be used to address agricultural pollution 113 What are some of the aspects of farm sector development that the public sector might Box II.B.2.  influence? 115 xii List of Contents SUSTAINING RESILIENCE List of Abbreviations AEC ASEAN Economic Community LNG liquefied natural gas ALMP active labor market policies META Model for Electricity Technology ANAPEC National Agency for the Promotion of Assessment Employment and Skills (Morocco) MJ/kWh megajoules per kilowatt hour ASEAN Association of Southeast Asian Nations MOU memorandums of understanding bbl barrel MRA mutual recognition agreements BPS Statistics Indonesia tCO2-e metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent CAIT Climate Analysis Indicators Tool NBS National Bureau of Statistics (China) CCAP Climate Change Action Plan NCDs noncommunicable diseases CO2 carbon dioxide OPEC Organization of the Petroleum Exporting CPI Consumer Price Index Countries EDMEs Emerging Market and Developing PEOS Pre-Employment Orientation Seminar (the Economies Philippines) eop end of period PMI Purchasing Managers’ Index EPS Employment Permit System (Republic of PNA Parties to the Nauru Agreement Korea) PPP purchasing power parity ESMAP Energy Sector Management Assistance RAICES Research and Scientists Abroad (Argentina) Program REI real estate investment EU European Union Q3 third quarter FDI foreign direct investment Q4 fourth quarter FX foreign exchange q/q quarter-on-quarter GDP gross domestic product R&D research and development GEP growth elasticity of poverty REI real estate investment GFC global financial crisis RELs real estate loans GST general sales tax RERF Kiribati’s sovereign wealth fund Gt billion tons SAAR Seasonally Adjusted Annual Rate GTAP Global Trade Analysis Project SEZ Special Economic Zone GW gigawatts SOEs state-owned enterprises IBRD International Bank for Reconstruction and SPGs South Pacific Games Development tCO2-e tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalents ICORs incremental capital-output ratios TCP Tropical Cyclone Pam ICRG International Country Risk Guide TFP total factor productivity ICT information and communications TTF Tuvalu Trust Fund technology UNFCCC United Nations Framework Convention on IEA International Energy Agency Climate Change IMF International Monetary Fund VAT value-added tax IPCC Intergovernmental Panel on Climate WBG World Bank Group Change WTO World Trade Organization IPM integrated pest management yoy year-over-year LCU local currency unit List of Abbreviations xiii EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 List of Abbreviations continued Regions, World Bank Classification and Country Groups ECA Europe and Central Asia LAC Latin America and the Caribbean ASEAN+3 ASEAN plus China, Japan, and the Republic MENA Middle East and North Africa of Korea MNA Middle East and North Africa ASEAN-4 ASEAN plus Indonesia, Malaysia, the PICs Pacific Island Countries Philippines, and Thailand SAR South Asia ASEAN-5 ASEAN plus Indonesia, Malaysia, the SSA Sub-Saharan Africa Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam SST Sub-Saharan Africa EAP East Asia and Pacific Country Abbreviations MYS Malaysia PHL Philippines CHN China PNG Papua New Guinea FJI Fiji RMI Republic of Marshall Islands FSM Federation States of Micronesia SGP Singapore IDN Indonesia SLB Solomon Islands KHM Cambodia THA Thailand KIR Kiribati TON Tonga KOR Korea, Rep. TUV Tuvalu LAO Laos People’s Democratic Republic USA United States MHL Marshall Islands VNM Vietnam MNG Mongolia VUT Vanuatu MMR Myanmar Currency Units $NZ New Zealand P Philippine peso $A Kiribati RM Malaysian ringgit B Thai baht RMB Chinese renminbi CR Cambodian riel Rp Indonesian rupiah D Vietnamese dong SI$ Solomon Islands dollar F$ Fiji dollar Tog Mongolia K Myanmar kyat US$ Timor-Leste K Papua New Guinea kina US$ United States Kip Lao PDR xiv List of Abbreviations SUSTAINING RESILIENCE Preface and Acknowledgments The East Asia and Pacific Economic Update is a joint product of the World Bank Office of the Chief Economist, East Asia and Pacific Region, and the Macroeconomic and Fiscal Management Global Practice, prepared in collaboration with the Poverty and Equity Global Practice, the Development Prospects Group, and the Finance and Markets Global Practice. The report was supervised by Nikola Spatafora, under the guidance of Sudhir Shetty (Chief Economist, East Asia and Pacific Region). Chapter I was prepared by Evgenij Najdov (lead), Ekaterine Vashakmadze, and Vera Kehayova. Contributions were received from the Chapter III team (listed below), Camilo Amezquita, Ana Maria Aviles, Monika Blaszkiewicz, Kevin Chua, Kim Alan Edwards, Samuel Freije-Rodriguez, Delfin S. Go, Gunjan Gulati, Elisabeth Hyun Kim, Csilla Lakatos, Alan D. Lee, Xubei Luo, Facundo S. Martin, Keita Miyaki, Steven Pennings, Valeria Perotti, Gevorg Sargsyan, Ashish Shrestha, Serhat Solmaz, Radu Tatucu, Robert Utz, Matthew Wai-Poi, Xiaodong Wang, Heather B. Worley, Judy Yang, and Luan Zhao. Chapter II was prepared by Harry Edmund Moroz and Mauro Testaverde (chapter II.A), and Emilie Cassou, Steven M. Jaffee, and Jiang Ru (chapter II.B). Chapter III was prepared by staff from the Macro and Fiscal Management Global Practice and Poverty and Equity Global Practice: Magda Adriani, Kiatipong Ariyapruchya, Reena Badiani-Magnusson, Davaadalai Batsuuri, Hans Beck, Raul Andres Castaneda Aguilar, Shaohua Chen, Derek Hung Chiat Chen, Kevin Chua, Kevin Cruz, Somneuk Davading, Gabriel Demombynes, Reno Dewina, Viet Tuan Dinh, Sebastian Eckardt, Kim Edwards, Fitria Fitrani, Samuel Freije-Rodriguez, Imogen Halstead, Linh Hoang Vu, Mizuho Kida, Jae Kyun Kim, David Knight, Nandini Krishnan, Chandana Kularatne, Jonathan William Lain, Taehyun Lee, John Litwack, Xubei Luo, Sodeth Ly, Miguel Martin, Carolina Mejia-Mantilla, Elitza Mileva, Shabih Ali Mohib, Laura Liliana Moreno Herrera, Rafael Munoz, Evgenij Najdov, Minh Cong Nguyen, Lucy Pan, Keomanivone Phimmahasay, Obert Pimhidzai, Sharon Faye Alariao Piza, Ririn Purnamasari, Habib Rab, Julio Revilla, Carlos Romero, Shakira Sharifuddin, Manohar Sharma, Altantsetseg Shiilegmaa, Kenneth Simler, David Stephan, Kimsun Tong, May Thet Zin, Ikuko Uochi, Robert Utz, Matthew Wai-Poi, Maria Monica Wihardja, Judy Yang, Karla Mirari Yee Amezaga, and Luan Zhao. The work was managed by Ndiame Diop and Mathew Verghis for the Macroeconomic and Fiscal Management Global Practice, and by Salman Zaidi for the Poverty and Equity Global Practice. Arsianti Arsianti, Pimon Iamsripong, Angkanee Luangpenthong, Yulita Sari Soepardjo, and Kristina Cathrine Tan Mercado provided technical support. Assistance with communications and outreach was provided by Alejandro Cedeno Ulloa, Diana Ya-Wai Chung, Dini Sari Djalal, Livia Pontes, Anissa Amador Tria, and Jane Zhang (External Communications, East Asia and Pacific Region). The report was edited by Diane Stamm, and designed and typeset by Budy Wirasmo. Administrative support was provided by Cecile Wodon. Preface and Acknowledgments xv EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 Preface continued Throughout the report, geographic groupings are defined as follows: East Asia and Pacific comprises Developing East Asia and Pacific, and the Newly Industrialized Economies. Developing East Asia and Pacific comprises Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Lao People’s Democratic Republic (PDR), Malaysia, Mongolia, Myanmar, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, Thailand, Timor-Leste, Vietnam, and the Pacific Island Countries. The Pacific Island Countries comprise Fiji, Kiribati, the Marshall Islands, the Federated States of Micronesia, Palau, Samoa, the Solomon Islands, Tonga, Tuvalu, and Vanuatu. The Newly Industrialized Economies comprise Hong Kong SAR, China; the Republic of Korea; Singapore; and Taiwan, China. The ASEAN member countries comprise Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Indonesia, Lao PDR, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam. The ASEAN-4 comprise Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand. The ASEAN-5 comprise Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam. This report is based on data available through March 24, 2017, inclusive. xvi Preface and Acknowledgments SUSTAINING RESILIENCE Executive Summary The global economy has shown signs of dynamism in the six months since the previous East Asia and Pacific Economic Update. Sustained expansion in the United States, the Euro Area, and Japan has been accompanied by better-than-expected growth in the United Kingdom and in some emerging market commodity exporters. This recovery in activity has led to a pickup in global trade and a gradual increase in commodity prices. While policy uncertainty following the U.S. elections triggered a bout of financial volatility, market conditions stabilized quickly. Monetary policy has started tightening in the United States, but remains loose in other advanced economies. Growth in developing East Asia and Pacific (EAP) continues to be resilient and in line with previous expectations. Already robust domestic demand has been supported by some pickup in external demand and the gradual recovery in commodity prices. Fiscal deficits in the major regional economies widened in 2016, prompting some adjustment toward the end of the year in Indonesia and Malaysia. Monetary policies remained accommodative, and credit continued to grow rapidly in most major economies. Inflation is edging up and producer prices are rising quickly as commodity prices increase. Capital outflows intensified toward end-2016 leading to depreciation pressures, but financial markets have since recovered. The growth outlook for 2017–19 remains broadly positive across the region. China is expected to continue its gradual transition to lower, more sustainable growth. In the rest of the region, growth is projected to pick up moderately. Continued buoyancy in domestic demand, including public and increasingly private investment, will be supported by gradually strengthening external demand. Global growth and commodity prices are projected to continue recovering slowly, while global financial conditions tighten gradually. Inflationary pressures should remain contained. China’s growth moderation and rebalancing are expected to continue. Growth is projected to continue easing steadily, to 6.5 percent in 2017 and 6.3 percent in 2018–19. The real estate sector is expected to cool in response to policy tightening, while exports rise moderately. Productivity-oriented reforms, such as reducing excess capacity and leverage in the corporate sector, including state-owned enterprises, will gradually advance the rebalancing of China’s economic structure. In the other large developing economies in the region, growth is projected to pick up slightly. The Philippines will benefit from increases in public infrastructure spending, a recent uptick in private investment, continued credit expansion, and growth in remittances. In Indonesia, growth will rise as commodity prices firm, and credit growth continues to respond to loose monetary policy. In Malaysia, the moderate recovery reflects income-support measures, increased infrastructure spending, and rising exports. In Vietnam, activity will increase as the impact of the 2016 drought dissipates, and in line with favorable market sentiments and continued strong FDI flows. Thailand is expected to benefit from improved confidence following the royal transition, large public investment projects, and robust tourism, although continued weak productivity growth will keep growth modest. The smaller regional economies are generally expected to continue to benefit from rapid growth in their neighbors and higher commodity prices. Activity will be boosted by fiscal expansion, agricultural reforms, and continued buoyancy of tourism in Cambodia; increases in the generation and exports of power in Lao PDR; and Executive Summary xvii EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 rising infrastructure spending and foreign investments in Myanmar. In Mongolia, growth will stagnate in 2017, partly reflecting efforts to reduce public debt to sustainable levels, but will recover thereafter with macroeconomic stabilization, structural reforms, and the likely expansion of mining investments. In Papua New Guinea, growth will gradually recover as several mining and petroleum prospects come on stream. In Timor-Leste, the elections later this year will slow some public investment projects. Most Pacific Island Countries will benefit from recent trends in fisheries and tourism, and expanding opportunities for migration and connectivity. Poverty has continued to decline in most countries and is projected to fall further, consistent with sustained growth and rising labor incomes. The number of extreme poor has fallen to 2 percent of the region’s population, although this proportion rises to about 10 percent if the threshold is one of moderate poverty. And, across much of the region, the bottom 40 percent of the population has enjoyed relatively fast income growth. Nevertheless, challenges remain. In countries such as Lao PDR and Myanmar, a significant percentage of the population remains poor. In Mongolia and Papua New Guinea, recent economic setbacks may have reversed gains. And in many countries the public perception is that inequality is high and rising, with income and wealth increasingly concentrated at the very top of the distribution, and everyone else facing an uneven playing field. Nevertheless, global and regional vulnerabilities mean that the positive prospects for the region are subject to large risks. First, financial sectors in the large regional economies could be tested by external and domestic shocks. External financial conditions may tighten faster than anticipated, leading to significant capital outflows and renewed financial volatility. As a result, the servicing and rollover of debt, particularly short-term, foreign-currency-denominated debt, would become more challenging. Nevertheless, generally robust reserves provide a cushion against short-term volatility. Domestically, rapid credit growth is raising financial vulnerabilities among households and corporates, particularly in China, Malaysia, and Thailand. That said, banks in the region generally remain relatively well capitalized. Second, the region, being extremely open, is particularly vulnerable to a slowdown in international trade, stemming, for instance, from mounting protectionist pressures. The United States has withdrawn from the proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership, which could cause Vietnam and to a lesser extent Malaysia to miss out on gains from expanded trade and investment. Antiglobalization sentiment has also been picking up in some other advanced economies. Finally, fiscal deficits are expected to remain elevated in several countries, in some cases posing risks to fiscal sustainability. Elevated global policy uncertainty places a premium on macroeconomic prudence. The risks that the region continues to face, related to the availability and cost of external financing and to the prospects for global trade growth and export demand, strengthen the case for a continued focus on addressing key macroeconomic vulnerabilities. Policy makers should retain their emphasis on maintaining sustainable medium-term fiscal frameworks, standing ready to adjust accommodative monetary policies, and addressing corporate and financial vulnerabilities. Across the region’s large economies, mobilizing additional revenues will create space for measures to support growth and foster inclusion, while ensuring that risks to fiscal sustainability remain low. Given broadly robust domestic demand and the prospects for a gradual increase in external demand, there is little rationale for additional fiscal stimulus at this time. In contrast, efforts to broaden the tax base and improve tax administration can yield significant gains. In China, increasing the clarity of government and state-owned enterprise (SOE) finances, as well as strengthening fiscal discipline and hardening budget constraints for subnational governments and public-benefit SOEs, will help moderate growth in public investment and place public finances xviii Executive Summary SUSTAINING RESILIENCE on a more sustainable path. A broadening of the tax base, especially at the local level to lower the dependence of revenues on land sales, and improvements in VAT administration can make room to reform labor taxation and streamline fees levied on businesses. In Malaysia, there is significant scope to broaden the base for personal income tax, and to reduce exemptions from the general sales tax. In the Philippines, continued rapid growth will hinge on how well the government manages the large increase in public expenditure. In Vietnam, there is an urgent need to strengthen the credibility of the medium-term fiscal framework. Some smaller commodity-exporting economies need to focus on lowering threats to fiscal solvency. In Mongolia, fiscal consolidation, including more progressive taxation and greater rationalization and better targeting of expenditures, remains the main priority as part of stabilization. In Lao PDR, elevated public debt is generating vulnerability to shocks. Efforts are required to boost declining revenues and contain expenditure. In Myanmar and Papua New Guinea, limited sources of financing again call for fiscal prudence. In general, while many countries have announced fiscal consolidation plans, these have been lacking in detail. A focus on implementing a combination of revenue measures (involving increases in tax rates, adjustments to the generous, untargeted tax exemptions, a strengthening of property and natural resource taxation, and improved tax administration) and expenditures measures (targeting both the level and the efficiency of spending) would be appropriate. Much of the region also may need to adjust accommodative monetary policies. While the increase in consumer prices has so far proved moderate, the more rapid pickup in producer prices and the projected recovery in commodity prices suggest that pressures will intensify, albeit from a low base. If external financing conditions tighten more rapidly than anticipated, this will place regional exchange rates under pressure, and again call for domestic monetary tightening. Some of the smaller economies are already facing significant pressures, and should consider a combination of greater exchange rate flexibility and monetary tightening. In China, reforms of the corporate sector, including restructuring of SOEs, and measures to bring credit growth under control are critical to reducing vulnerabilities. Reforms to address excess industrial capacity, including closures of outdated production facilities and strict controls on new projects, have been initiated and remain key tasks for the authorities. They could be usefully complemented by measures to enhance SOEs’ corporate governance and efficiency. The rapid expansion of credit increases the risk of disorderly deleveraging. A continued gradual tightening of financial discipline, and increased tolerance for insolvencies and bankruptcies, remain appropriate. Strengthening social transfers and active labor market policies will help mitigate any adverse impacts. Elsewhere in the region, rapid credit growth and sizable external debt could catalyze the buildup and transmission of risks; improvements in supervision and prudential regulation will be required. Credit growth remains elevated across much of the region, including Cambodia, Lao PDR, the Philippines, Myanmar, and Vietnam. The policy response must involve efforts to strengthen regulation and supervision in line with international good practice. Arrangements for resolving nonperforming loans also need to be improved. As total debt stocks continue increasing, macroprudential regulation will prove increasingly important. Sustaining medium-term growth and promoting inclusion will require efforts across a range of areas. Several economies have been experiencing trend slowdowns in both productivity and, in particular, investment growth. While the precise causes differ across countries, the underlying drivers of this trend include weaknesses in the institutional environment and investment climate, rising private debt burdens, weak growth prospects in Executive Summary xix EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 advanced economies, and negative terms-of-trade shocks. Sustaining robust growth over the medium term will involve addressing a range of bottlenecks so as to increase the impact of public investment on productivity, and help crowd in both domestic and foreign private investment. This issue of the East Asia and Pacific Economic Update discusses three broad reform areas: improving the quality of public expenditure, responding to potential global protectionist pressures through greater regional integration, and dealing with the rising threat of agricultural pollution. Across the region, improving the quality of public spending can bring benefits. While all countries can gain, it is especially critical in economies with limited fiscal space, because it will help ensure that needed fiscal adjustments do not affect the most vulnerable or the delivery of key public services. In China, current revenue and expenditure mismatches at the local level result in wide disparities in welfare expenditure and social service provision. Lower infrastructure spending, combined with a reallocation of funds from distortionary agricultural support programs, can help free up resources. If combined with complementary sectoral reforms, these resources can help finance a consolidated, streamlined social protection system, more equitable educational spending, and improved access to health services for the poor. In Indonesia, more efficient spending on education and agriculture will allow for a reallocation toward underfunded programs with greater development impact, including infrastructure, health, and social assistance. In Malaysia, priorities include improving the targeting of social protection, maintaining support for infrastructure development, and increasing the quality of education to address skills constraints. In Myanmar, limited fiscal space must be refocused toward capital expenditure, including on critical energy and transport infrastructure, and toward currently underfunded social protection. Across the region, both urban and rural poor remain vulnerable to higher food prices. Boosting agricultural productivity and enhancing logistics (including through improvements in irrigation and transport infrastructure, more effective agricultural research, stronger land titling, and greater competition) will require both policy and expenditure reforms geared to ensuring better value for money. Together, these measures can help reduce food prices and boost the incomes of the poor. Developing EAP could benefit significantly from further deepening regional integration, especially in services trade, which remains subject to significant restrictions. Several initiatives, including the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, the evolving ASEAN Economic Community, and the various ASEAN+3 initiatives, provide an opportunity to advance regional integration. Such agreements will provide greater benefits to the region if they cover all trade, in both goods and services, do not discriminate against nonmembers, and feature functioning dispute resolution mechanisms. Lowering barriers to labor mobility within ASEAN could yield significant gains, including by reinforcing the impact of measures to liberalize trade and investment. Specific policy priorities for labor-sending and labor-receiving countries include strengthening regulation of international recruitment agencies, and providing comparable protection to migrant and local workers; introducing mutual recognition of qualifications, and increasing the portability of social protection benefits; and adjusting quantity restrictions on migration regularly, based on economic needs. The agricultural sector’s increasingly adverse environmental footprint needs attention across the region. Agricultural activities are affecting soil and water quality in many countries, with increasingly serious consequences for human health and biodiversity, and increasingly the productivity of agriculture itself. This particularly threatens the poor, whose livelihoods are especially dependent on natural resources, and who lack the means to cope with environmental shocks. So far, policy responses have typically occurred late, lacked the required scale, and ultimately failed to tackle distorted incentives. Indeed, agricultural pollution is often encouraged by current public xx Executive Summary SUSTAINING RESILIENCE expenditure programs, including subsidies and regulations favoring the livestock industry, and direct or indirect fertilizer subsidies. Looking ahead, agricultural agencies must increasingly focus on health and environmental outcomes, including by giving greater weight to resource conservation, and redefining food security in terms of micronutrient content and diversity as well as caloric and protein availability. Similarly, health and environmental agencies must bring agriculture more fully into their fold, to help curb the rise of chronic disease. In the Pacific Island Countries, maintaining fiscal sustainability needs to remain a focus along with policy reforms in selected sectors, which could prove transformational over the medium term. For fiscal sustainability, efforts to shore up revenues, contain unproductive spending while boosting critical expenditures on health and education, and build up buffers against shocks need to be sustained. There are also opportunities to accelerate growth and boost employment over the longer term. On tourism, promising options include tapping into the Chinese and retiree market, increasing the number of luxury resorts, and encouraging cruise ships to base in the Pacific. Increases in labor mobility, through the expansion of existing agreements and the negotiation of new agreements, complemented by investments in workers’ human capital, could also generate substantial benefits. Higher mobile and internet penetration, complemented by a conducive business environment and the development of a skilled workforce could boost productivity. And income from fisheries could be significantly increased, without threatening the sustainability of the fisheries stock, by broadening participation in cooperative agreements to include East Asian countries with major fishing grounds, such as the Philippines and Indonesia, and ensuring compliance with robust catch limits. Executive Summary xxi This page intentionally blank. SUSTAINING RESILIENCE Part I. Recent Developments and Outlook  1 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 I.A. Recent Developments Growth in developing East Asia and Pacific continues to be resilient and in line with previous expectations. Already robust domestic demand has been supported by some pickup in external demand, and a gradual recovery in commodity prices. In China, growth moderated slightly, but with some strengthening toward the end of 2016. The other large economies, including, in particular, the Philippines and Vietnam, generally solidified their performance in the second half of 2016 and the start of 2017. Among the smaller economies, performance has been more mixed: Cambodia continued to grow rapidly, while Mongolia and Papua New Guinea slowed sharply. Fiscal deficits in the major regional economies widened in 2016, prompting some adjustment toward the end of the year in Indonesia and Malaysia. Monetary policies remained accommodative, and credit continued to grow rapidly in most major economies. Inflation is edging up and producer prices are rising rapidly as commodity prices increase. Capital outflows intensified toward end-2016, leading to depreciation pressures, but external financial conditions have stabilized in 2017. Poverty rates have continued to decline, driven by rapid growth in labor incomes, and across much of the region the bottom 40 percent of the population has enjoyed relatively fast income growth. Despite this, in many countries the public perception is that inequality is high and rising. Growth in developing East Asia and Pacific remains resilient, also supported with some recovery in the external environment in the second half of 2016 and early 2017 The global economy showed signs of dynamism in the second half of 2016, which have been sustained in early 2017  (Box I.A.1). Global growth accelerated to 2.5 percent and industrial production rose by 4.8 percent in Q4 2016; the global composite Purchasing Manager’s Index (PMI) continues to rise. The sustained, albeit relatively slow, expansion in the United States, the Euro Area, and Japan has been accompanied by better-than- expected growth in the United Kingdom and in some emerging market commodity exporters, including Brazil and the Russian Federation. This recovery in activity has led to a pickup in global trade: while growth in global goods trade fell to a postcrisis low of 1.2 percent for 2016 as a whole, trade flows strengthened in the second half of the year, with the trend continuing into 2017. Commodity prices, after stabilizing in the first half of 2016, gradually recovered, benefiting commodity exporters; that said, commodity prices remain low by historical standards. External financial conditions were more volatile, but have recently stabilized. The U.S. Federal Reserve, in widely anticipated moves, raised interest rates by 25 basis points in December 2016, and again in March 2017. In addition, U.S. long-term interest rates rose sharply following the U.S. elections, reflecting market expectations of strengthening activity. In response, markets in Emerging Markets and Developing Economies (EMDEs) reacted nervously, with capital flowing out, especially from China, and significant currency volatility. However, other advanced economies’ central banks maintained loose monetary conditions. Financial flows have steadied since. Emerging market bond spreads have narrowed since November 2016, and currencies have recovered. Capital inflows have resumed, with EMDE bond issuance activity starting 2017 at a record pace. 2 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE Box I.A.1. Recent Global Developments The global economy is recovering following its weakest postcrisis performance in 2016. Global growth is estimated to have fallen to 2.3 percent in 2016, amid stalling global goods trade, weak investment, and heightened policy uncertainties (Figure BI.A.1.1). However, growth appears to have accelerated in the second half of the year. Activity continued to firm in the first months of 2017, with the global composite Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) reaching a multiyear high in early 2017, reflecting particularly strong performance in the United States, China, and Russia (Figure BI.A.1.2). Figure BI.A.1.1. Global GDP growth Figure BI.A.1.2. Global industrial production growth and manufacturing PMI Percent Percent, 3mma, SAAR Index, >50 denotes expansion 8 8 53 6 6 4 52 2 4 0 51 2 -2 -4 0 50 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016e Jan-16 Mar-16 May-16 Jul-16 Sep-16 Dec-16 Jan-17 JJWorld ▬▬Advanced economies ▬▬Emerging and developing economies ▬▬Industrial production growth JJManufacturing PMI, rhs Sources: World Development Indicators; Haver Analytics; and World Bank staff estimates. Sources: Haver Analytics, World Bank staff estimates. Note: rhs = right-hand side; SAAR = Seasonally Adjusted Annual Rate. Figure BI.A.1.3. Regional GDP growth, 2007–16 Figure BI.A.1.4. PMI and import growth in EMDEs Percent Index, >50 denotes expansion Percent, 3mma, SAAR 10 51.5 30 8 51.0 20 50.5 6 10 50.0 4 0 49.5 2 -10 49.0 0 48.5 -20 -2 48.0 -30 e e e e e e 20 13 20 13 20 13 20 13 20 13 20 13 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2014 2014 2014 2014 2014 2014 20 15 20 15 20 15 20 15 20 15 20 15 16 16 16 16 16 16 -15 ug-15 -15 ec-15 -16 -16 -16 -16 -16 6 -17 20 20 20 20 20 20 Oct Feb Apr Oct c-1 EAP SAR ECA LAC MENA SSA Jun A D Jun Aug De Feb Sources: World Development Indicators; Haver Analytics. ▬▬PMI ▬▬Import growth, rhs Note: Lines denote long-run precrisis (1990–2008) average growth. Sources: World Development Indicators; Haver Analytics. Note: rhs = right-hand side; SAAR = Seasonally Adjusted Annual Rate. Growth in advanced economies is strengthening. In the United States, growth rose to near 2 percent in Q4 2016. Domestic demand was sustained amid increased confidence and stabilization of investment. In the Euro Area, growth strengthened at the start of 2017. Manufacturing activity and goods exports have been buoyed by strengthening internal and external demand. In Japan, recent data suggest growth stabilizing around 1 percent. Exports have started to pick up, labor markets are tight, but consumption remains subdued due to weak wage growth. (continued) I.A. Recent Developments 3 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 (Box I.A.1 continued) Activity in Emerging Market and Developing Economies (EMDEs) is accelerating, following an estimated 3.4 percent growth in 2016. A modest increase in commodity prices and improved confidence underpin a recovery in commodity exporters following two consecutive years of anemic growth (Figure BI.A.1.3). Recent industrial production, PMI, and trade data all point to tentative signals of a solid rebound in economic activity in EMDEs (Figure BI.A.1.4). Median Consumer Price Index inflation is picking up as rising inflation in commodity importers offsets easing price pressures in commodity exporters. Adopting a longer perspective, developing countries in East Asia and Pacific and in South Asia continue to prove their resilience—their real GDP is now well above precrisis levels (Figure BI.A.1.5). Figure BI.A.1.5. GDP across developing regions: Figure BI.A.1.6. Global trade growth cumulative change, 2007–16 Percent, PPP terms Percent 100 40 30 80 20 60 10 0 40 -10 -20 20 -30 0 -40 Developing Developing LAC ECA MENA SSA SAR EAP EAP excl. CHN 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Sources: World Development Indicators; Haver Analytics. ▬▬Volume ▬▬Value Note: PPP = purchasing power parity. Source: CPB Netherlands Bureau of Policy Analysis. Note: Last observation is December 2016. Global trade is showing growing momentum. Global goods trade growth fell to a postcrisis low of 1.2 percent in 2016 as a whole (Figure BI.A.1.6). Services trade was more resilient throughout 2016, supported by the relative strength of global consumer spending. Trade growth began to strengthen in the second half of the year, however, expanding by 2.3 percent in Q3 (q/q SAAR) and an estimated 4.6 percent in Q4. The positive momentum appears to have continued in 2017, as export orders reached their highest levels in nearly six years in January. Protectionist pressures have increased, but are unlikely to have been the key factor behind recent weakness in global trade. The rate at which new trade-restrictive measures are imposed has not increased significantly above the post-2009 average, although there is some evidence that it is higher than in the period before the global financial crisis, and new trade-facilitating measures are being introduced at a slower rate (WTO 2016). Commodity prices are continuing to recover slowly. Prices of most commodities continued to rise in January 2017 from their lows in early 2016 (Figure BI.A.1.7). The recent uptick in oil prices has been supported by the agreement between some OPEC and non-OPEC producers to limit output during the first half of this year. Global financing conditions tightened at end-2016, but have since stabilized. U.S. long-term interest rates rose sharply following the U.S. elections in early November 2016, but have plateaued in recent weeks. In both the Euro Area and Japan, policy rates remain at historic lows, and central banks remain committed (continued) 4 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE (Box I.A.1 continued) to quantitative easing—Japan’s “yield curve control” program aims to stabilize the 10-year government bond yield at zero percent. However, in some Euro Area countries, the combination of rising inflation, rising risk premia from upcoming political events, and renewed banking sector concerns have driven up long-term yields. Figure BI.A.1.7. International commodity prices Figure BI.A.1.8. Emerging market stocks and currencies Current US$, index 2010 = 100 Index, Jan 1, 2016 = 100 180 120 160 115 140 110 120 100 105 80 100 60 95 40 90 20 0 85 07 -08 -09 -10 -11 -12 -13 -14 -15 -16 -17 -16 r-1 6 y-1 6 -16 -16 v-1 6 -17 r-1 7 Jan- Jan Jan Jan Jan Jan Jan Jan Jan Jan Jan Jan Ma Ma Jul Sep No Jan Ma ▬▬Energy ▬▬Agriculture ▬▬Metals ▬▬MSCI EM equity index ▬▬MSCI EM FX index Source: World Bank. Sources: World Development Indicators; Haver Analytics. Note: Vertical line denotes U.S. presidential election. EM = emerging market; FX = foreign exchange. EMDE financial markets have performed well recently. The markets rebounded in early 2017 after a turbulent spell in late 2016. Capital inflows to EMDE bond and equity mutual funds have resumed after sharp outflows in late 2016. EMDE equities recently surpassed 2016 highs, reflecting some unwinding of U.S. dollar appreciation, stabilization of U.S. bond yields, and a pickup in commodity prices (Figure BI.A.1.8). And emerging market sovereign bond spreads have tightened since their most recent high in mid- November, to levels last seen in late 2014. Figure I.A.1. Growth in developing EAP continued to Growth in developing East Asia and Pacific (EAP) prove resilient GDP growth (year-on-year percent change) continued to prove resilient, as already robust 8 domestic demand was supported by some pickup in external demand and a recovery in commodity 7 prices. In China, growth moderated slightly in 2016 6 to 6.7 percent, but with some strengthening of activity 5 toward the end of the year and the start of 2017 (Figure I.A.1). The rebalancing of the economy was muted, as 4 growth was increasingly driven by investment, with 3 fiscal and monetary policies providing continued accommodation. In the rest of the region as a whole, 2 Q4-14 Q1-15 Q2-15 Q3-15 Q4-15 Q1-16 Q2-16 Q3-16 Q4-16 growth increased marginally to 4.9 percent. Growth JJDeveloping East Asia ▬▬China ▬▬Developing East Asia excl. China picked up in the Philippines and Thailand, and exceeded Sources: Haver Analytics; World Development Indicators. previous projections in Mongolia and Vietnam, although I.A. Recent Developments 5 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 Myanmar saw a slowdown. Overall, developing EAP accounted for around 40 percent of global growth in 2016. Adopting a longer perspective, growth in the region has been particularly resilient: since 2007, regional output has increased by 90 percent, more than in any other region. Furthermore, developing EAP maintains its long track record of remarkable success in reducing poverty, driven largely by continued increases in labor incomes (Box I.A.2). In addition to China, the other large economies also generally solidified their performance in the second half of 2016 and the start of 2017. In Vietnam, GDP growth picked up by more than 1 percentage point in the second half of 2016, to reach 6.7 percent (year-over-year) in Q4 2016 (Figure I.A.2). Manufacturing exports expanded, and the impact of the drought at the start of the year dissipated. In the Philippines, after six quarters of acceleration, GDP growth rate moderated to a still very high 6.6 percent in Q4 2016. Higher public capital spending crowded in private investments; robust remittances, credit growth, and low inflation supported private consumption; and electronic exports proved buoyant. On the production side, both industry and services recorded strong growth, while systemic issues continue to weigh on agricultural performance. In Indonesia, growth weakened slightly in the second half of the year to around 5 percent, as efforts to meet the deficit target led to a scaling back of government consumption. In Malaysia, GDP growth held up as rising minimum wages and civil servants’ salaries supported private consumption, improving prospects for commodities strengthened business sentiments and investments, and a diversified export base helped the country benefit from the pickup in global trade. In Thailand, growth accelerated in the first half of 2016 but slowed slightly in the second half, as the mourning period for the late king weighed on domestic demand. The manufacturing PMI has been broadly consistent with these trends, pointing to robust expansion in the Philippines, continued confidence in China and Vietnam, lackluster performance in Indonesia, a bottoming-out in Malaysia, and modest expansion in Thailand (Figure I.A.3). Figure I.A.2. Growth performance remains robust across Figure I.A.3. Managers generally feel upbeat about the region’s large economies economic prospects GDP growth (year-on-year percent change) Purchasing manager’s index (manufacturing; seasonally adjusted, 50+ = expansion) 8 55 54 7 53 6 52 51 5 50 4 49 48 3 47 2 46 Q4-14 Q1-15 Q2-15 Q3-15 Q4-15 Q1-16 Q2-16 Q3-16 Q4-16 Jan-14 Jul-14 Jan-15 Jul-15 Jan-16 Jul-16 Jan-17 ▬▬IDN ▬▬MYS ▬▬PHL ▬▬THA ▬▬VNM ▬▬CHN ▬▬Emerging markets ▬▬CHN ▬▬IDN ▬▬MYS ▬▬VNM ▬▬THA ▬▬MMR Sources: Haver Analytics; World Development Indicators. Source: Haver Analytics. Among the smaller economies, performance has been more mixed. The recovery in commodity prices provided opportunities for commodity exporters. However, in some of these countries, fiscal challenges constrained public spending, and natural resource sectors continued to be affected by difficulties including resource depletion. In Myanmar, growth slowed to 6.5 percent, as flooding took a toll on agriculture, gas production declined, and domestic demand was affected by uncertainty regarding the new administration’s policies and by currency volatility. 6 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE Box I.A.2. Poverty in Developing East Asia and Pacific Developing EAP maintains its record of successful poverty reduction. In 2016, the share of the region’s population living in extreme poverty (below the international poverty line of US$1.90 a day in 2011 purchasing power parity [PPP] terms) is estimated to have decreased to 2.0 percent, or excluding China, to 4.6 percent (Figure BI.A.2.1). The share of the region’s population living in moderate poverty (below the US$3.10-a-day line in 2011 PPP terms) also fell, from 14 percent in 2014 to less than 11 percent in 2016. Poverty has recently started declining also in the Philippines, after a decade of relatively slow progress. Figure BI.A.2.1. The prevalence of poverty has continued to decline across the region Poverty rate (vertical axis, percent), and number of poor (size of bubble, million) for US$1.90-a-day (2011 PPP) and US$3.10-a-day (2011 PPP) poverty lines 35 30 181 175 25 480 164 154 432 137 20 129 15 In China, data through 2012 are not comparable 314 with those for subsequent years 284 244 10 215 57 52 163 139 43 39 5 34 30 69 58 49 41 0 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 QQEAP: US$1.90/day EAP excl. China: US$1.90/day QQ QQEAP: US$3.10/day EAP excl. China: US$3.10/day QQ Sources: World Bank East Asia and Pacific Team for Statistical Development; PovCalNet. Note: The most recent household survey used for actual estimates vary from 2006 in Kiribati to 2015 in Indonesia and the Philippines. Estimates prior to 2015 are: (i) derived directly from household survey data; (ii) China 2013 is a survey break and data are not comparable with previous years (iii) interpolated between existing surveys; or (iv) extrapolated based on per-capita GDP growth and historical estimates of the growth elasticity of poverty (GEP), but China, Papua New Guinea and Pacific Island countries based on neutral growth distribution. For 2016 onwards, estimates are projected based on projected per-capita GDP growth and the GEP, and are hence preliminary and subject to revision.  In China, data through 2012 are not comparable with those for subsequent years, owing to a change in the survey methodology which acted to lower reported poverty, and may account for nearly half of the reported decrease in the poverty headcount between 2012 and 2013. In late 2012, separate urban and rural household surveys were replaced with a single national household survey, which uses stratified, multi-stage sampling methods. There were significant changes in the collection of information from migrants (now treated as part of the urban population when measuring aggregate disposable income), and the treatment of net taxes and transfers in rural areas; and rents from home ownership are now imputed. This latter factor in particular may have had a substantial effect on reported poverty. In Mongolia, output is estimated to have expanded by 1.0 percent in 2016 (almost a full percentage point above earlier expectations), largely as a result of a Q4 2016 recovery in mining output and exports. Still, macroeconomic imbalances remain significant and the authorities have recently reached a tentative agreement with development partners on a program of fiscal, monetary, and structural reforms to be supported by a substantial external financing package. In Papua New Guinea, output growth moderated, reflecting partly the maturing of the liquefied natural gas (LNG) sector (a large project came on stream in 2015), but also a halt in production at two mines, as well as cash shortages affecting government spending. In Timor-Leste, nonoil output expanded at a faster pace in 2016, benefiting from higher government spending, improved agriculture outturns, and some growth in tourism, albeit from a low base. However, oil production continues to decline as existing oil fields are depleted. In Lao PDR, growth remained high, driven by continued expansion of the power sector. However, it fell below historical averages, as the continuation of the moratorium on mining licenses led to flat mining output, and fiscal difficulties limited the government’s contribution to economic activity. Among small commodity importers, Cambodia continued to expand rapidly, as agriculture recovered from the drought in the previous year, and FDI and garment exports remained resilient. In contrast, GDP growth in Fiji declined to 2 percent as cyclone Winston affected key sectors, including agriculture and tourism. I.A. Recent Developments 7 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 Exports show early signs of recovery across much of the region The gradual strengthening of global economic activity led to a slight pickup in regional exports, although domestic demand continues to drive growth. In China, the contribution of net exports to growth turned negative in the first half of 2016, but has since been trending up (Figure I.A.4). In the Philippines, in the second half of the year, exports held up while import growth moderated (Figure I.A.5). In Thailand, net exports contributed positively to growth in 2016, although import growth has been gradually recovering. In Indonesia, net exports’ contribution to growth declined in the first three quarters of 2016; however, in the last quarter, exports grew for the first time in over two years. In Malaysia, net export demand added around 0.5 percentage points to GDP growth in the second half of the year, more than at any time over the preceding two years. Across the smaller economies, net export demand contributed to growth in Cambodia and Lao PDR, as exports increased while imports remained contained in Papua New Guinea, as well. Figure I.A.4. Domestic demand continued to drive growth Contribution of expenditure components to change in GDP (percentage points, year-on-year) 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 -2 -4 -6 -8 -10 -14 -14 -15 -15 1-16 -16 -14 3-14 1-15 3-15 1-16 -16 -14 3-14 1-15 3-15 1-16 -16 -14 3-14 1-15 3-15 1-16 -16 -14 3-14 1-15 3-15 1-16 -16 Q1 Q3 Q1 Q3 Q Q4 Q1 Q Q Q Q Q4 Q1 Q Q Q Q Q4 Q1 Q Q Q Q Q4 Q1 Q Q Q Q Q4 China Indonesia Malaysia Philippines Thailand JJConsumption JJGross capital formation JJGovernment consumption JJNet exports JJStatistical discrepancy ▬▬GDP growth Sources: Haver Analytics; World Bank staff estimates. Figure I.A.5. Despite a pickup in exports, the overall growth contribution of net exports remained modest Contribution of expenditure components to change in GDP (percentage points, year-on-year) 10 8 6 4 2 0 -2 -4 -6 -8 -10 -14 -14 -15 -15 1-16 -16 -14 3-14 1-15 3-15 1-16 -16 -14 3-14 1-15 3-15 1-16 -16 -14 3-14 1-15 3-15 1-16 -16 -14 3-14 1-15 3-15 1-16 -16 Q1 Q3 Q1 Q3 Q Q4 Q1 Q Q Q Q Q4 Q1 Q Q Q Q Q4 Q1 Q Q Q Q Q4 Q1 Q Q Q Q Q4 China Indonesia Malaysia Philippines Thailand JJExports JJImports QQNet exports Sources: Haver Analytics; World Bank staff estimates. Growth in both export volumes and values has been gradually recovering, following a disappointing performance in 2015 and the first half of 2016. The export recovery has been largely in line with projections, reflecting firming activity in high-income economies and in large EMDEs. In China, export volumes for goods 8 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE Figure I.A.6. Export volumes have started to recover… Export volume growth (percent, 12-month growth rate) Export volume growth (percent, 12-month growth rate) 8 8 30 6 6 25 4 4 2 2 20 0 0 -2 -2 15 -4 -4 10 -6 -6 -8 -8 5 -10 -10 -12 -12 0 Jan-14 Jul-14 Jan-15 Jul-15 Jan-16 Jul-16 Jan-17 Jan-14 Jul-14 Jan-15 Jul-15 Jan-16 Jul-16 Jan-17 ▬▬CHN ▬▬EAP excl. China ▬▬EAP commodity exporters ▬▬THA ▬▬MYS ▬▬IDN ▬▬PHL, rhs Sources: Haver Analytics; World Bank staff estimates. Note: rhs = right-hand side. have gradually recovered (Figure I.A.6), in turn leading Figure I.A.7. …as have export values Export values (index of 12-month moving sum, January 2011 = 100) to increased intermediate imports from the rest of the 155 region. In particular, in commodity exporters, growth in 145 export volumes bottomed out in the last part of 2016. Export values have also started to increase (Figure 135 I.A.7), with commodity exporters benefiting from 125 increased prices for oil, copper, and other commodities. 115 In Indonesia, which experienced a contraction of export 105 volumes through mid-2016, exports rebounded strongly 95 in Q4 2016 and continue to accelerate in the first two months of 2017. In Malaysia, where export growth held 85 Jan-11 Jan-12 Jan-13 Jan-14 Jan-15 Jan-16 Dec-16 up relatively well, reflecting the strong performance of ▬▬CHN ▬▬THA ▬▬MYS ▬▬IDN ▬▬PHL manufactured goods exports (particularly electrical and Sources: Haver Analytics; World Bank staff estimates. electronics), a modest recovery of oil and gas shipments is providing an additional boost to exports. In the Philippines, export growth remains strong, buoyed by electronics, including semiconductors. In Thailand, the export stagnation eased in late 2016, but performance remains weak, reflecting ongoing competitiveness challenges. Export volumes from Cambodia are strengthening as garment exports continue to rise; however, export values eased, as depreciating currencies among the main competitors pushed export prices down. In Lao PDR, exports have been rebounding in 2016, reflecting the coming on stream of new capacity in the power sector, recent success in attracting export-oriented FDI in manufacturing of parts and components, and the recovery in copper prices. In Myanmar, exports contracted due to lower gas production and the impact of the floods. Export volumes declined in Papua New Guinea and Timor-Leste owing to reductions in copper and oil production, respectively. However, Mongolian commodity exports benefited from expanded production at one large copper mine, and continued weakness in China’s coal sector. I.A. Recent Developments 9 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 Domestic demand across much of the region was buoyant, reflecting accommodative macroeconomic policies and tight labor markets Private consumption in the large economies remained buoyant throughout 2016 and in early 2017. Consumption growth accelerated in the Philippines and remained rapid in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Vietnam. In China, combined private and public consumption1 contributed around 5 percentage points to growth in 2016, almost a full percentage point more than the 2013–15 average (Figure I.A.4). Labor markets are tight across most of these countries: China created a record 13.1 million jobs in 2016, and unemployment has been declining in Indonesia and the Philippines. Further boosts in purchasing power came, in Malaysia, from the hike in the minimum wage and civil servants’ salaries; in the Philippines, from the expansion in social protection and conditional cash transfer program, and from robust remittances. In contrast, in Thailand, private consumption enjoyed some recovery at the start of 2016 but subsequently slowed, while public consumption grew toward the end of the year but at a modest pace. In Mongolia, macroeconomic uncertainty and the partial reversal of expansionary measures limited demand. Investment broadly continued to hold up, supported by stabilizing public capital expenditure and improved business sentiment. Over the past few years, developing EAP has been spared the relatively sharp fall in investment growth experienced by other regions (Box I.C.3). And, more recently, regional investment is showing signs of a modest recovery, although private investment in particular remains sluggish in a few countries, most notably Thailand and, until recently, Indonesia. In China, infrastructure spending accelerated in the second half of the year; the contribution of investment to growth rose to 2.8 percentage points of GDP in the last quarter, still below the 2013–15 average. In the Philippines, investment growth remains robust, reflecting a strong public infrastructure push (Figure I.A.8) and an upbeat private sector. In Vietnam, investment growth Figure I.A.8. Government capital expenditure is stabilizing in several countries accelerated to 9.7 percent in 2016, supported by General government capital expenditure (percent of GDP) record FDI levels. In Malaysia, private investment was 12 17 strong as sentiment gradually improved, while public 16 10 capital spending tapered in the second half of the year. 15 Conversely, in Indonesia, investment grew sharply in 8 14 the first half of 2016 but subsequently decelerated, as 6 13 the fiscal adjustment undertaken to meet the deficit 12 target disproportionally affected capital spending. 4 11 In Thailand, underexecution of public spending 2 10 contributed to the overall mediocre performance of 9 0 8 investment. In Myanmar and Mongolia, investment 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 has also been sluggish, reflecting impediments in the ▬▬CHN ▬▬PHL ▬▬MYS ▬▬MMR ▬▬KHM ▬▬IDN ▬▬VNM ▬▬MNG, rhs Source: World Bank staff estimates. business environment and macroeconomic uncertainty. Note: Data for Malaysia, Myanmar, and the Philippines refer to central government capital expenditure. Data for Myanmar and the Philippines refer to the fiscal year. Data for Indonesia and Malaysia refer to In Lao PDR, investments, including in larger power the four-quarter average. rhs = right-hand side. sector projects, moderated. Fiscal deficits in the major regional economies widened in 2016, prompting some adjustment toward the end of the year in Indonesia and Malaysia ( Figure I.A.9). In China, the fiscal deficit widened in 2016 by 1 percentage point of GDP, to 3.7 percent, partly reflecting higher infrastructure spending. In the Philippines, the 1 Data are not available on a quarterly basis for private and public consumption separately. 10 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE deficit increased from 0.9 percent of GDP in 2015 to 2.4 percent of GDP in 2016, largely the result of increased capital expenditure on roads, education, and health. Deficits widened in Thailand as well, also reflecting subdued revenue collection, and in Vietnam. In Indonesia, the widening deficit triggered a sharp adjustment in Q4 2016, containing the 2016 deficit to 2.5 percent of GDP, slightly below the 2015 level. Similarly, in Malaysia, the deficit widened in the first half of 2016, but subsequently narrowed as current nonsalary expenditures were tightened, and revenues were boosted by the improved collection of general sales tax and dividend payment from the national oil company. Figure I.A.9. After widening earlier, fiscal deficits in some Figure I.A.10. The fiscal positions in Mongolia and Lao of the large economies started to stabilize toward end- PDR are particularly challenging 2016 General government fiscal balance (percent of GDP, 4-quarter moving average) General government fiscal balance (percent of GDP, 4-quarter moving average) 2 0 1 -2 0 -4 -1 -6 -2 -8 -3 -10 -4 -12 -5 -14 -6 -16 -7 -18 -13 -13 -13 -13 -14 -14 -14 -14 1-15 2-15 3-15 4-15 1-16 2-16 3-16 4-16 -13 -13 -13 -13 -14 -14 -14 -14 1-15 2-15 3-15 4-15 1-16 2-16 3-16 4-16 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q ▬▬CHN ▬▬MYS ▬▬PHL ▬▬IDN ▬▬THA ▬▬LAO ▬▬MNG Sources: CEIC; World Bank staff estimates. Source: World Bank staff estimates. Note: Data refer to general government fiscal balance, except for Indonesia, where data refer to central Note: The fiscal balance for Mongolia excludes commercial spending by the Development Bank of government fiscal balance. Mongolia. There are large, rising deficits across the smaller economies. In Mongolia, in particular, the deficit more than doubled in 2016, reflecting both large election-related expenditures on policy lending and other programs, and weak revenues (Figure I.A.10). In Lao PDR, despite some recovery in revenues in the second half of 2016, the fiscal position for the year deteriorated significantly, as natural resource revenues declined. Resource revenues have fallen and deficits increased in Myanmar and Papua New Guinea as well. In Timor-Leste, a large structural deficit has opened up, as the impact of declining petroleum production has been compounded by low world energy prices. The deficit increased, to a lesser degree, in Cambodia, caused mainly by a rising wage bill. Monetary conditions in many countries remain accommodative, supported by still relatively benign inflationary conditions. China began to gradually tighten monetary policy in early 2017 to moderate credit growth and cool property markets, although monetary conditions remain accommodative. In Vietnam, there were no changes in the main monetary policy instruments, but significant unsterilized foreign exchange purchases drove interbank rates below 1 percent toward the end of the year, subsequently prompting some efforts to tighten liquidity. Malaysia ended the easing cycle in July 2016, including due to the increased volatility of the exchange rate in the second half of the year. In the Philippines, following rate cuts in Q2 2016, the benchmark interest rate remained unchanged. Indonesia, however, lowered policy rates by 25 basis points in October 2016, as inflationary pressures remained low, credit growth was modest, and reserve cover improved (Figure I.A.11). And, in Thailand, the policy rate remained at 1.5 percent as the authorities tried to support the sluggish economy. Among the I.A. Recent Developments 11 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 smaller economies, Lao PDR further lowered the inflation-linked interest rate caps on kip deposits and loans in August 2016, and Cambodia recently introduced interest rate caps for microfinance. Mongolia, facing significant pressures on the exchange rate, sharply tightened monetary policy in August 2016, and only partly reversed the tightening later in the year. With inflation picking up slightly, real interest rates have been declining, and in some cases are close to zero or even negative. In most countries, they remain significantly below their long-term average (Figure I.A.12). Figure I.A.11. Policy rates have been stable or decreased Figure I.A.12. Real interest rates in large economies have across most countries been declining, and in most cases are significantly below their long-term average Policy rate (percentage points) Real policy rate (percentage points) 8 7 Feb-14 7 6 5 6 Jan-14 4 5 3 May-14 Feb-14 4 Sep-14 2 Dec-14 3 1 2 0 1 -1 0 -2 -13 ec-13 ar-14 un-14 ep-14 ec-14 ar-15 un-15 ep-15 ec-15 ar-16 un-16 ep-16 ec-16eb-17 Sep D M J S D M J S D M J S D F CHN IDN MYS PHL THA VNM ▬▬CHN ▬▬IDN ▬▬MYS ▬▬PHL ▬▬THA ▬▬VNM JJTop of current cycle JJReal policy rate as of Nov. 2016 QQ10-year average Source: Haver Analytics. Sources: Haver Analytics; World Bank staff estimates. Private sector credit growth is moderating slightly, but debt stocks remain elevated Following several years of rapid expansion, real credit growth has moderated over the past year, but remains rapid. Since 2010, credit growth has been relatively high across most large regional economies, but particularly so in China, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand, and more recently in Vietnam (Figure I.A.13). In China, continued robust real credit growth in the second half of 2016 prompted a tightening of monetary policy in early 2017, in an effort to lower risks in the financial sector. Despite this, credit growth remains strong. Growth in real credit appears to have moderated in Vietnam and stabilized in the Philippines. Still, in both countries, the pace of credit expansion remains high, at well above 10 percent year-over-year. In contrast, mixed business sentiment in Indonesia, and lackluster economic performance and high debt in Thailand, kept real credit growth below 5 percent, despite cuts in policy rates in the former and a prolonged period of low rates in the latter. Real credit growth remains below 5 percent in Malaysia, as well. Credit growth has been especially rapid in some smaller economies in recent years; however, there, too, credit expansion appears to be moderating. In Cambodia, the real growth rate of domestic credit declined to around 17 percent, from around 20 percent at the start of 2016. Similarly, a small deceleration was recorded in Lao PDR to 15 percent. In contrast, real credit growth accelerated in Myanmar to around 25 percent by the end of 2016. 12 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE Figure I.A.13. Credit growth has slowed over the past Figure I.A.14. The stock of private sector debt remains year, but remains rapid elevated in several economies Real growth in net domestic credit (year-on-year, percent) Credit by sector (percent of GDP) 25 40 300 35 250 20 30 200 25 15 150 20 10 100 15 10 5 50 5 0 10 15 16 10 15 16 10 15 16 10 15 16 10 15 16 10 15 16 10 15 16 0 0 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 13 13 14 14 15 15 16 16 17 Emerging Jan- Jul- Jan- Jul- Jan- Jul- Jan- Jul- Jan- CHN MYS VNM THA PHL IDN economies ▬▬CHN ▬▬IDN ▬▬MYS ▬▬PHL ▬▬THA ▬▬VNM ▬▬KHM, rhs JJCredit to general government JJCredit to households Sources: Haver Analytics; World Bank staff estimates. JJCredit to nonfinancial corporations Note: Deflated by CPI. rhs = right-hand side. Sources: Bank for International Settlements; Central Bank of the Philippines; IMF International Financial Statistics. Note: For 2016, data refer to end-Q3, except for the Philippines, where they refer to end-2016. For the Philippines and Vietnam, disaggregated data on credit to households and nonfinancial corporations are not available. The group “emerging economies” comprises the following countries, for which data are available: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, India, Mexico, Russia, South Africa, and Turkey. The stock of private sector debt remains elevated in several economies. The total debt stock exceeds 250 percent of GDP in China, and 150 percent of GDP in Malaysia and Thailand (Figure I.A.14). In China, nonfinancial corporate debt has grown particularly rapidly, to over 160 percent of GDP; a large share of this is concentrated in infrastructure and real estate. In Malaysia and Thailand, household debt exceeds 70 percent of GDP. Inflation is edging up, and producer prices are rising rapidly Inflation has been increasing across much of the region in response to robust domestic demand and recovering commodity prices, but remains below historical values. Inflation remains stable in China. However, in Vietnam, consumer prices rose relatively quickly in recent months, including owing to hikes in administrative prices (Figure I.A.15). Consumer price inflation has also been steadily accelerating in the Philippines (to 3.3 percent in February 2017) and more recently Indonesia (to 3.8 percent in February 2017). In Thailand, inflation increased to 1.1 percent in early 2017, reflecting higher food and fuel prices. Similarly, inflation is increasing among the smaller economies. It accelerated rapidly in Myanmar, also reflecting the currency depreciation, and edged upward in Cambodia and Lao PDR, reflecting increases in food prices and, in Lao PDR, also fuel prices. In Mongolia, inflation dropped sharply during 2016, but has been increasing more recently. In general, available measures of core inflation remain more muted (Figure I.A.16). Producer prices have been increasing rapidly in some countries, reflecting rising commodity and materials prices and reduced excess capacity ( Figure I.A.17). Producer prices across much of the region fell during most of 2015–16. However, producer price inflation has now reached around 10 percent in Indonesia and Malaysia, 7 percent in China, 6 percent in the Philippines, and 4 percent in Thailand; producer prices also stopped falling in Vietnam in early 2017. I.A. Recent Developments 13 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 Figure I.A.15. Inflation has been increasing across much of the region, but from relatively low levels Headline inflation (year-on-year, percent) 10 20 8 15 6 10 4 5 2 0 0 -2 -5 -12 -13 -13 -14 -14 -15 -15 -16 -16 -17 -12 -13 -13 -14 -14 -15 -15 -16 -16 -17 Aug Feb Aug Feb Aug Feb Aug Feb Aug Jan Aug Feb Aug Feb Aug Feb Aug Feb Aug Jan ▬▬CHN ▬▬IDN ▬▬MYS ▬▬PHL ▬▬THA ▬▬VNM ▬▬KHM ▬▬LAO ▬▬MMR ▬▬MNG Source: Haver Analytics. Figure I.A.16. Core inflation remains more muted Figure I.A.17. Producer prices have been increasing rapidly in some countries Core inflation (year-on-year, percent) Producer price index (year-on-year, percent change) 2.5 20 20 18 2.0 15 16 1.5 14 10 12 1.0 10 5 0.5 8 0 0 6 4 -0.5 -5 2 -1.0 0 -10 -12 -13 -13 -14 -14 -15 -15 -16 -16 -17 -10 eb-11 ug-11 eb-12 ug-12 eb-13 ug-13 eb-14 ug-14 eb-15 ug-15 eb-16 ug-16 an-17 Aug Feb Aug Feb Aug Feb Aug Feb Aug Feb Aug F A F A F A F A F A F A J ▬▬CHN ▬▬IDN ▬▬MYS ▬▬PHL ▬▬THA ▬▬VNM ▬▬MNG, rhs ▬▬CHN ▬▬MYS ▬▬PHL ▬▬THA ▬▬IDN Source: Haver Analytics. Source: Haver Analytics. Note: rhs = right-hand side. Renewed capital outflows toward the end of 2016 led to exchange rate depreciations, but external financial conditions have stabilized in 2017 Capital flows proved volatile in the aftermath of the U.S. elections and the increase in U.S. policy rates. During 2016, China again saw large capital outflows, reflecting uncertainty and the growing role of Chinese corporates as outbound investors, only partially offset by further liberalization of domestic bond and stock markets (Box I.A.3). Outflows intensified at end-2016 but may have moderated slightly since the start of 2017. Similarly, capital outflows intensified in Malaysia and Thailand, and to a lesser extent the Philippines, in the second half of 2016 (Figure I.A.18). In contrast, capital inflows appear to have held up in Indonesia, as residents repatriated foreign assets owing to the tax amnesty, and in Vietnam. Portfolio flows exhibited roughly similar trends. 14 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE Figure I.A.18. Most of the region experienced significant FDI inflows proved more resilient across the capital outflows toward end-2016 Net capital flows (share of GDP) region. In China, FDI inflows moderated and FDI 10 outflows increased in 2016 (Figure I.A.19), reflecting declining returns, including owing to rising labor 5 costs and expectations of further volatility. However, 0 outward FDI declined sharply in early 2017, reflecting -5 new restrictions. Net FDI inflows reached record levels in Vietnam, and further accelerated in Indonesia, -10 Malaysia, and the Philippines (Figure I.A.20). -15 Financial markets also saw increased volatility -20 Q 1-1 2 Q3-1 2 Q 1-1 3 Q3-1 3 Q 1-1 4 Q 3-1 4 Q1-1 5 Q3-1 5 Q1-1 6 Q 3-1 6 toward end-2016, but have since recovered. Equity ▬▬CHN ▬▬IDN ▬▬MYS ▬▬PHL ▬▬THA and bond markets rallied until the third quarter of Sources: Haver Analytics; IMF International Financial Statistics; World Bank staff estimates. Figure I.A.19. In China, declining returns lowered FDI Figure I.A.20. Net FDI flows in most of the rest of the inflows and increased outflows region have been robust Net FDI flows (US$ billion) Net FDI flows (US$ billion, four-quarter sum) 300 20 250 15 200 150 10 100 5 50 0 0 -50 -5 -100 -10 -150 -200 -15 -07 -08 -09 -10 -11 -12 -13 -14 -15 -16 -16 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Q2-16 Q3-16 Q4-16 Q1 Q1 Q1 Q1 Q1 Q1 Q1 Q1 Q1 Q1 Q3 JJFDI net inflows JJFDI net outflows ▬▬Balance FDI net flows ▬▬IDN ▬▬MYS ▬▬PHL ▬▬THA ▬▬VNM Source: Haver Analytics. Source: Haver Analytics. Figure I.A.21. Financial markets saw increased volatility Figure I.A.22. Stock Prices since end-2016, but have since recovered Total returns (index, end-2015 = 100) US$, index, end-2015 = 100 115 130 120 110 110 105 100 100 90 95 80 90 70 5 -16 -16 -16 -16 -16 6 -17 5 -16 -16 -16 -16 -16 6 -17 c-1 Feb Apr Oct c-1 c-1 Apr Oct c-1 De Jun Aug De Feb De Feb Jun Aug De Feb ▬▬Stocks ▬▬Corporate (ext.) ▬▬Sovereign (ext.) ▬▬Sovereign (local) ▬▬CHN ▬▬IDN ▬▬MYS ▬▬PHL ▬▬THA ▬▬VNM Sources: J. P. Morgan, Thomson Reuters Datastream, IFC Global Macro & Market Research. Source: Thomson Reuters. Note: Data refer to the following indexes: Datastream Equity Index Asia ex-Japan (stocks), J.P. Morgan EMBI Global Diversified Asia (external sovereign Bonds), J.P. Morgan JACI Corporate (external corporate bonds), and J.P. Morgan GBI EM Asia (local bonds). I.A. Recent Developments 15 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 Figure I.A.23. External corporate and sovereign risk 2016 as concerns about the Chinese economy eased spreads have been easing over time Emerging Market Bond Index spreads (basis points) and commodity markets recovered (Figure I.A.21). 400 Stocks in Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand, and 350 Vietnam registered the largest gains. However, 300 regional stock indexes fell by an average 6.5 percent 250 in Q4 2016, again reflecting the outcome of the U.S. 200 elections and the subsequent increase in U.S. interest 150 rates. Equity markets have since recovered their losses and reached all-time highs in early 2017, climbing 100 by almost 30 percent since late January, supported 50 by the continued firming up in commodity prices, 0 -16 eb-16 ar-16 pr-16 ay-16 un-16 ul-16 ug-16 ep-16 ct-16 ov-16 ec-16 an-17 eb-17 ar-17 Jan F M A M J J A S O N D J F M the stabilization of the U.S. dollar, and expectations ▬▬CHN ▬▬IDN ▬▬MYS ▬▬PHL ▬▬VNM of faster growth in the United States (Figure I.A.22). --- CHN – av --- IDN – av --- MYS – av --- PHL – av --- VNM – av Source: J.P. Morgan. Likewise, bond markets have been recovering since Note: Dashed lines denote long-term averages. late 2016. Corporate and sovereign risk spreads, on a Figure I.A.24. Government bond yields have significantly decreased over the past year in Indonesia and Vietnam 10-year local currency government bond yields, A.  B. Change since December 2015 February 2017 Percent Basis points Indonesia Indonesia Vietnam Vietnam Philippines Philippines Malaysia Malaysia China China Thailand Thailand 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 -120 -100 -80 -60 -40 -20 0 20 40 60 Sources: Haver Analytics; CEIC. declining trend by mid-2016, peaked temporarily in November 2016. However, they have since declined and are below their longer-term average levels (Figure I.A.23). Similarly, local-currency government bond yields are significantly below their end-2015 values in Indonesia and Vietnam, reflecting continued capital inflows, although they are somewhat higher in China and the Philippines (Figure I.A.24). Exchange rates also depreciated in late 2016, again with some recovery since. Dollar exchange rates depreciated across much of the region in the second half of 2016 (Figure I.A.25). China, Indonesia, the Philippines, and Malaysia were significantly affected, reflecting their exposure to global trade prospects and to capital flows. In response, Malaysia tightened currency regulations.2 Vietnam experienced depreciation despite a trade surplus and strong FDI inflows, as the authorities built up reserves. Mongolia and Myanmar saw the sharpest depreciations, as 2 The authorities reinforced rules against offshore currency trading, required exporters to convert at least 75 percent of their export proceeds to local currency, and adopted measures to deepen onshore financial markets to ensure liquidity in domestic financial markets. The Central Bank has been proactively communicating these measures to investors and market players. 16 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE sluggish commodity prices and lowered FDI prospects weighed on their external position. Still, several countries, including China and Indonesia, saw some appreciation against the U.S. dollar in early 2017. In trade-weighted (nominal and real) terms, both China and the Philippines have depreciated sharply since end-2015, but Indonesia and Thailand have appreciated (Figure I.A.26), in line with capital flows. Countries with more rigid exchange rate arrangements, usually de jure or de facto pegs again the U.S. dollar (including Cambodia, Lao PDR, Fiji, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, and Tonga), saw trade-weighted appreciation. In some cases, including Lao PDR and Papua New Guinea, significant pressures emerged on foreign exchange reserves. Figure I.A.25. U.S. dollar exchange rates depreciated in Figure I.A.26. Trade-weighted exchange rates have late 2016, with some recovery since depreciated over the past year in China, Malaysia, and the Philippines, but appreciated in Indonesia and Thailand Index of U.S. dollar to local currency, January 2013 = 100 Change in exchange rate from December 2015 to January 2017 (percent) 105 8 100 6 95 4 90 2 85 0 80 -2 75 -4 70 -6 65 -8 -13 -13 -14 -14 -15 -15 -16 -16 -17 -17 Jan Jul Jan Jul Jan Jul Jan Jul Jan Mar Change in NEER Change in REER ▬▬CHN ▬▬IDN ▬▬MYS ▬▬PHL ▬▬THA ▬▬VNM JJCHN CNY JJPHL PHP JJTHA THB JJIDN IDR JJMYS MYR Source: Bloomberg. Sources: Bank for International Settlements; CEIC; World Bank staff estimates. Note: Decrease denotes depreciation. Note: Negative values denote depreciation. The real effective exchange rate (REER) is deflated using the consumer price index. NEER = nominal effective exchange rate. Reserve coverage across the region is in general Figure I.A.27. Reserve coverage for the major economies in the region remains broadly adequate broadly adequate, although below longer-term Selected ratios, latest and long-term average averages. (Figure I.A.27). In Malaysia, foreign exchange 0.6 30 reserves fell below the 100 percent of short-term debt 0.5 25 benchmark in 2015 and 2016, reflecting significant interventions in the face of market pressures. Still, 0.4 20 reserve cover in terms of monetary aggregates and 0.3 15 imports remains adequate. China saw a large decline in reserves, to below US$3 trillion at end-2016, and 0.2 10 reserves also declined in the Philippines. However, 0.1 5 cover in terms of the various monetary aggregates, 0 0 imports, and short-term debt servicing remains N N S L A G N N S L A CH ID MY PH TH MN CH ID MY PH TH N N S L A G N N S L A G CH ID MY PH TH MN CH ID MY PH TH MN comfortable. Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand, and JJReserves to M2, lhs JJReserves to short-term debt, rhs JJReserves to external financing needs, rhs JJReserves in months of imports, rhs Vietnam all saw increases in reserves as their external QQLong-term average performance improved; in all these countries, except Sources: Haver Analytics; CEIC; IMF International Financial Statistics; World Bank staff estimates. Note: The long-term average denotes the 10-year average, except for China and Malaysia where it Vietnam, reserve coverage is above generally accepted denotes the five-year average. Latest values generally refer to end-Q2 2016, except for short-term debt, where they refer to end-Q1 2016, and for external financing needs, where they refer to expected 2016 thresholds. Among the smaller economies and Pacific values. External financing needs are defined as repayments on short- and long-term external debt net of the current account balance. M2 = broad money supply . lhs = left-hand side; rhs = right-hand side. Island Countries, reserves also remain broadly adequate, I.A. Recent Developments 17 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 with a few exceptions. Reserves increased to above standard benchmarks in Cambodia, but they lie below standard benchmarks in Lao PDR, Myanmar, and Papua New Guinea. Box I.A.3. Capital Flows across Developing EAP1 Capital flows to developing EAP have in general decreased and become more volatile since 2013, reflecting changing external and domestic conditions. Major external factors included monetary policy normalization in the United States, the sharp decline and current recovery of commodity prices, heightened political uncertainty in major economies, and elevated geopolitical tensions. Key domestic factors included the slowdown in regional growth, including, in particular, in China, against the backdrop of sizable domestic vulnerabilities; the pace of exchange rate and capital account liberalization in China; accommodative monetary policies in the majority of regional emerging markets; and episodes of political and policy uncertainty in several major economies. In general, developing EAP Figure BI.A.3.1. Balance of payments and net has performed better than most other developing financial flows: developing EAP Percent of GDP regions in terms of domestic factors. Nevertheless, 6 these developments as a whole have acted to reduce 4 expected returns in the region relative to high- 2 income economies, and led to net capital outflows 0 and heightened volatility of flows since 2014 (Figure -2 BI.A.3.1). In addition, international investors have been increasingly differentiating between -4 individual emerging economies based on economic -6 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016e fundamentals, including their track record and JJCurrent account balance JJNet financial flows QQChange in reserves prospects for economic growth, macroeconomic and Sources: World Bank staff estimates; Haver Analytics; IMF International Financial Statistics. political stability, credibility of economic policies, and domestic and external vulnerabilities. The external financial conditions facing developing EAP improved in early 2017, following turbulence in late 2016. The region continued experiencing net capital outflows in 2016, driven by sharp outflows from China, Malaysia, Thailand, and to a lesser extent, the Philippines (Figure BI.A.3.2, panels A and B). Net outflows intensified in Q4 2016, as the U.S. presidential election, and the expectation of a faster pace of monetary policy normalization by the U.S. Federal Reserve, affected investors and led to renewed global financial volatility. Since the start of 2017, as the U.S. dollar appreciation was partially unwound and U.S. bond yields stabilized, capital flows into regional bonds and equities have resumed.2 Regional stock prices recently surpassed 2016 highs, and sovereign bond spreads have tightened since their most recent mid- November 2016 high. Currencies and assets in commodity-exporting Indonesia and Malaysia have benefited from the continued recovery in commodity prices. 1 Prepared by Ekaterine Vashakmadze and Luan Zhao. 2 Both the Philippines and Thailand, where official data are available on a monthly basis, registered sharp improvements in their balance of payments during January–February 2017. (continued) 18 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE (Box I.A.3 continued) Figure BI.A.3.2. Balance of payments and net capital flows Percent of GDP Panel A. China Panel B. Developing EAP excluding China 6 4 4 3 2 2 0 1 -2 0 -4 -6 -1 -8 -2 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016e 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016e JJCurrent account JJNet capital inflows QQChange in revenues JJCurrent account JJNet capital inflows QQChange in revenues Sources: World Bank staff estimates; Haver Analytics; IMF International Financial Statistics. China In China, weakening growth and increased Figure BI.A.3.3. Balance of payments: China, interest differentials with the United States, quarterly Billion US$ combined with gradual exchange rate and capital 200 account liberalization, have been accompanied 150 by large capital outflows, depletion of foreign 100 50 reserves, and currency depreciation. Capital 0 outflows in 2016 (5.8 percent of GDP) were almost -50 -100 as large as in 2015, resulting in a sharp decline in -150 foreign exchange reserves (Figure BI.A.3.3).3 The -200 outflows had moderated in early 2016, but resumed -250 -13 -13 -13 -13 -14 -14 -14 -14 -15 -15 -15 -15 -16 -16 -16 -16 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 in the second half of the year, reflecting a sharp JJCurrent account JJNet capital flows ▬▬Change in reserves increase in net FDI outflows in Q3 and the outcome Source: The State Administration of Foreign Exchange of China. of the U.S. elections in Q4. The composition of capital outflows has changed significantly over time. In 2015, repayment of corporate external debt accounted for a large share of outflows. In 2016, this was no longer a key driver of capital outflows; indeed, external debt has increased since Q2 2016 (Figure BI.A.3.4). Conversely, in 2016 outbound FDI exceeded inward FDI for the first time (Figure BI.A.3.5). Outward FDI has nearly tripled since 2013, boosted by the government’s “going out” strategy. At the same time, inward FDI has declined sharply, including through a reduction in reinvested profits, reflecting weaker investment returns and concerns about currency depreciation. Relatedly, overseas bank lending, including trade credits, has surged since Q2, partly 3 Foreign exchange reserves decreased in 2016 by US$444 billion according to balance-of-payments data, and US$320 billion according to central bank data. This discrepancy may reflect valuation effects due to changes in exchange rates and interest rates, and possible currency swap transactions between the central bank and domestic banks. (continued) I.A. Recent Developments 19 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 (Box I.A.3 continued) reflecting financing to facilitate overseas investments and acquisitions. Meanwhile, net portfolio outflows eased, as domestic bond and stock markets were further opened up. Figure BI.A.3.4. Foreign debt: China Figure BI.A.3.5. Composition of capital flows: China Billion US$ Billion US$ 1,200 250 200 1,000 150 100 800 50 0 600 -50 400 -100 -150 200 -200 -250 0 -300 -13 2-13 3-13 4-13 1-14 2-14 3-14 4-14 1-15 2-15 3-15 4-15 1-16 2-16 3-16 Mar-15 Jun-15 Sep-15 Dec-15 Mar-16 Jun-16 Sep-16 Q1 Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Source: The State Administration of Foreign Exchange of China. JJODI JJFDI JJResident: portfolio investment JJResident: other investment JJNonresident: portfolio investment JJNonresident: other investment JJE&O ▬▬Total capital flows Sources: World Bank staff estimates; The State Administration of Foreign Exchange of China; People’s Bank of China. The authorities accelerated their intervention in foreign exchange markets to curb intensified downward pressure on the renminbi. Gross foreign exchange reserves fell sharply in the second half of 2016, although at a slower pace than in 2015. Reflecting these interventions, in the second half of 2016 the renminbi remained broadly stable against the target currency basket, although it depreciated by 4.3 percent against the U.S. dollar. Capital controls were tightened toward end-2016, in response to the large capital outflows. New restrictions were imposed on outward investment and overseas acquisition, reversing the easing measures introduced in previous years.4 As a result, outward FDI eased in Q4 2016, and there were net FDI inflows in December 2016 and January 2017, after eight consecutive months of net outflows. Since early 2017, overall capital inflows have also increased.5 Nevertheless, the long-term effect of such controls remains unclear, as uncertainty about instability in capital account regulations and their enforcement has arguably been an important motivation for capital outflows. In addition, a tightening of restrictions usually fails to reduce net outflows as it provokes a sizable decline in gross inflows from foreign investors (Long 2017; Ma et al. 2016; Saborowski et al., 2014). 4 Individuals are now required to provide more stringent reporting on the intended purpose of demanded foreign currency not used for capital account transactions. Regulators have also increased scrutiny of foreign firms repatriating profits out of China. 5 Gross foreign exchange reserves rose by US$6.9 billion in February 2017, the first increase since June 2016. The increase, net of valuation effects, was estimated at US$23.3 billion. Given a weaker trade balance, this implies lower capital outflows. (continued) 20 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE (Box I.A.3 continued) Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand Indonesia continued to benefit from net capital inflows in 2016, notwithstanding a brief reversal toward end-2016. Indonesia has in general enjoyed sizable net capital inflows since 2010 (Figure BI.A.3.6, panel A). FDI accounted for about half of total capital inflows; portfolio inflows, in particular, to local currency government bonds, have also been sizable. During most of 2016, macroeconomic stability was reflected in continued capital inflows. FDI and portfolio inflows by nonresidents decreased in the second half of the year; in particular, after the U.S. election in November, portfolio investment turned negative. However, this was partly offset by residents reducing foreign assets holdings and repatriating funds as a result of the tax amnesty (IMF 2017; Tiftik and Farmham 2017). Figure BI.A.3.6. Balance of payments and net capital flows: developing EAP excluding China Percent of GDP Panel A. Balance of payments: Indonesia Panel B. Net capital flows: selected economies 5 6 4 4 3 2 2 0 1 -2 0 -4 -1 -2 -6 -3 -8 -4 -10 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Indonesia Malaysia Philippines Thailand JJNet financial flows JJCurrent account QQChange in reserves JJ2011 JJ2012 JJ2013 JJ2014 JJ2015 JJ2016e Sources: World Bank staff estimates; Haver Analytics; IMF International Financial Statistics. In Malaysia, net capital outflows in Q4 2016 were driven by portfolio outflows by nonresidents. Conversely, FDI inflows increased, channeled largely into the manufacturing sector, particularly the electrical & electronic and petrochemical industries, and into services, including finance and insurance. Outward FDI also increased, mainly in mining, telecommunication, and wholesale and retail trade. Thailand continued to witness significant capital outflows in 2016  (Figure BI.A.3.6, panel B). FDI inflows remained subdued, given policy uncertainty and potential changes to investment promotion regimes. Resident capital outflows increased, largely accounted for by outward FDI, and reflecting policy measures to liberalize outflows and diversify investment opportunities.6 Thai asset markets were generally less affected by global turbulence than regional peers. 6 Foreign exchange regulations were relaxed in early 2016. I.A. Recent Developments 21 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 Recent developments in the Pacific Island Countries Most small Pacific Island Countries (PICs) are experiencing moderate to strong growth, driven by stimulus from public and donor-funded investments, reconstruction from recent natural disasters, and relatively strong tourism receipts and remittances. In Tonga, growth benefited from improved weather and from construction for the South Pacific Games. In Samoa, growth accelerated, also due to the start of operations of a new fish processing plant. Reconstruction spending following Cyclone Pam boosted economic activity in Tuvalu and Vanuatu, with the upgrade of the airport runway in Vanuatu providing additional tourism opportunities. Improved weather, stronger tourism, and remittances supported growth in the Federated States of Micronesia, Kiribati, and the Marshall Islands. In Nauru, the Australian Regional Processing Center, together with construction activities related to the upgrading of the port, continues to support demand. Growth stagnated in Palau, also reflecting a government decision to limit the number of charter flights on the islands to reduce pressure on the infrastructure. Regional fisheries continue to boost public finances in many PICs. Record tuna catches, and the introduction of the “vessel-day scheme” (a regional agreement that establishes the minimum price of a vessel day and limits the total number of vessel days sold) continued to deliver large budget windfalls in Kiribati, the Marshall Islands, the Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru, and Tuvalu. Several of these countries placed part of the surpluses into sovereign wealth funds, to finance the budget in future years. In Samoa, fiscal consolidation accelerated, as domestic revenues increased and expenditure was contained, in part due to the winding down of cyclone reconstruction efforts. In contrast, the budget deficit further increased in Fiji in 2016, with the cyclone recovery program expected to add around 2.1 percentage points of GDP to spending. Similarly, the deficit is estimated to have increased in Tonga, where lower-than-expected development grants, and higher spending on cyclone reconstruction and wages, more than offset robust revenues. In Vanuatu, a large budget deficit is expected in 2016, reflecting the start of a number of reconstruction projects. Poverty and inclusiveness: sustained progress, but challenges remain Poverty rates have continued to decline in most countries, and are also now falling in the Philippines. In general, sustained reductions in poverty rely on rapid growth in labor incomes among the poor, although public transfers can also make a significant contribution (Box I.A.4). In Indonesia, continued reductions in poverty reflect sustained economic growth and low unemployment. In Cambodia and Vietnam, reductions in poverty largely reflect a structural transformation, with robust growth of employment in secondary and tertiary sectors compensating for stagnant incomes in agriculture. In China, while growth slowed in 2016, the economy created more jobs than in previous years. Further declines in unemployment were recorded in Indonesia, the Philippines, and the Solomon Islands. Livelihoods also benefited from higher public transfers (in Indonesia, Malaysia, and the Philippines), and from public investment focused on lagging regions and critical services (in Malaysia, Thailand, and the PICs). In contrast, in Mongolia, weak growth is having a disproportionate impact in labor-intensive sectors, including manufacturing and services. Similarly, in Papua New Guinea, the sharp growth slowdown resulted in a contraction of employment in nonresource sectors. 22 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE The bottom 40 percent of the population has enjoyed relatively fast income growth across much of the with the exception of Lao PDR (Figure I.A.28). New surveys also indicate that inequality is starting to region,  decrease in several countries, including the Philippines. In China, there is a growing consensus that inequality has either leveled off or declined in recent years, after growing rapidly for several decades.3 Despite this, in many countries the public perception is that inequality is high and rising, with income and wealth increasingly concentrated at the very top of the distribution, and everyone else facing an uneven playing field. Figure I.A.28. The bottom 40 percent of the population has enjoyed relatively fast income growth across much of the region Annualized income/consumption growth, average of poorest 40 percent of population and total population, percent 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 LAO PNG PHL IDN VNM THA KHM MNG CHN 2007–12 1996–2009 2009–15 2011–14 2010–14 2008–13 2008–12 2010–14 2008–12 JJTotal QQBottom 40 Sources: World Bank, East Asia and Pacific Team for Statistical Development; PovCalNet. Note: Welfare aggregates are spatially deflated. Data for all countries refer to consumption, except for the Philippines, where they refer to income. China’s consumption data are based on grouped data. 3 There is a growing consensus that this development has been underpinned by the policy focus on supporting growth in rural areas, recently urbanized areas, and small and medium- sized cities, and by the expansion of social protection programs in rural areas, and possibly the greater enforcement of minimum wage regulations. I.A. Recent Developments 23 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 Box I.A.4. Poverty and Jobs in East Asia1 Over the last two decades, poverty has decreased dramatically across most of developing East Asia. Between 1990 and 2013, the number of people in the region living in extreme poverty fell by over 920 million. Over that period, many countries have enjoyed rapid economic growth, supported by increases in agricultural productivity, structural transformation, growth in exports, increasing integration into global value chains, and a generally favorable business environment.2 These macroeconomic trends correlate at the microeconomic level with increased economic opportunities for households. At the household level, two main factors explain changes in living standards: labor and nonlabor incomes. Labor incomes depend on the number of household members that are able to work, the number that actually work, and the incomes they earn from that work. The number of members that can potentially work in a household depends on type of family and the life-cycle stage of its members; the larger the share of able-bodied adults, the larger the household’s potential labor income. However, potential workers earn labor incomes for the family only if they actually have a job. And the magnitude of these labor incomes depends on how much they earn (be it in salary work, farming, or their own business) for their hours of work. In contrast, nonlabor incomes do not involve current labor market participation. Examples include public transfers, such as pensions, cash transfers, unemployment insurance, and other forms of social security and social assistance; rents from real estate; and interest and dividends received from ownership of financial assets. The relative importance of each of the above factors for recent poverty reduction is analyzed across a sample of developing EAP countries. Countries are chosen based on data availability. The surveys used cover the Philippines during 2009–15, Thailand during 2007–13, and Mongolia and Vietnam during 2010–14.3 These surveys contain information on individual wages and employment, as well as other sources of income such as farming, returns to financial and real estate assets, and public transfers. Poverty rates declined over time in all the countries under study. Poverty is defined as household income per capita falling below the global poverty line of US$3.10-a-day at 2011 purchasing power parity (PPP) prices.4 In general, reported poverty levels are lower using this global poverty line than the official national poverty lines (put differently, the global poverty line is lower than the national poverty lines), with the exception of the Philippines. However, the direction of changes over time is the same regardless of the specific poverty line adopted (Table BI.A.4.1). As a caveat, these surveys may not capture very recent 1 Prepared by Samuel Freije-Rodriguez, Xubei Luo, and Judy Yang. 2 See the forthcoming World Bank report, Richer and Fairer: An East Asian Miracle for the 21st Century.. 3 In all countries, official household surveys are used: in Mongolia, the Household Socio-Economic Survey; in the Philippines, the Family Income and Expenditure Survey; in Thailand, the Household Socio-Economic Survey; and in Vietnam, the Household Living Standard Survey. 4 The analysis adopts this global definition of poverty, rather than official national poverty lines, for two reasons: this approach allows for cross-country comparisons; and decomposing changes in poverty changes into the impact of different income sources requires poverty to be defined in terms of income. Official poverty estimates vary in terms of both the poverty threshold, and the welfare aggregate used to define the threshold. In particular, poverty is computed using consumption in Mongolia, Thailand, and Vietnam, but income in the Philippines. And the official poverty line, in 2011 PPP terms, equaled, in Mongolia, US$5.79 in 2014; in the Philippines, US$3.00 in 2015; in Thailand, US$6.25 in 2013; and in Vietnam, US$3.44 in 2014. (continued) 24 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE (Box I.A.4 continued) developments; in particular, the pace of poverty reduction in Mongolia may have decelerated in 2016, owing to the macroeconomic crisis and the consequent slowing of growth. Since the time spanned by the surveys differs across countries, the analysis focuses on the annualized percentage point change in poverty. As discussed, this is then split into the labor and nonlabor income components. In turn, the labor income component is split into demographic, employment, and labor income per employed adult components.5 Table BI.A.4.1. Poverty rates and changes for selected EAP countries Percentage of total population Mongolia Philippines Thailand Vietnam 2010–14 2009–15 2007–13 2010–14 Using global poverty line (US$3.10-a-day, 2011 PPP) Initial 23.7 31.0 9.3 13.0 Final 14.5 24.8 3.1 10.2 Change -9.2 -6.1 -6.1 -2.8 Using national poverty line Initial 38.8 26.3 20.0 20.7 Final 21.6 21.5 10.9 13.5 Change -17.2 -4.8 -9.1 -7.2 Source: World Bank staff estimates. Reductions in poverty are larger where the labor incomes of the poor have increased faster. In particular, in Mongolia, relatively rapid growth in labor incomes, stemming from rising employment rates, wages, and farm incomes, accounted for a 2.2 out of the total 2.3 percentage points annualized reduction in poverty (Figure BI.A.4.1, red bars in all panels, referring to employment rates, and blue bars, referring to labor incomes per employed adult). In the other countries, poverty fell more slowly—by an annualized 1 percentage point in the Philippines and Thailand, and 0.7 percentage points in Vietnam. But, similarly, a large share of the total poverty reduction was accounted for by growing farm incomes and wages in Thailand, and by growing wages (offsetting a fall in farm incomes) in the Philippines and Vietnam. Demographics have had a noticeable impact on poverty. In the Philippines, and to a lesser extent in Thailand and Vietnam, the aggregate dependency ratio has been falling in recent years, so that demographics has helped reduce poverty (Figure BI.A.4.1, green bar in all panels). In contrast, in Mongolia, a rising dependency ratio acted to increase poverty.6 5 Formally, household income per capita (Y_pc) may be decomposed as follows (see Paes de Barros et al. 2006): n L n NL Ypc = nA/n [nE/nA (Σ iEA y i ) + 1/nA Σ iEA y i ], where (nA/n) denotes the share of adults in a household, which is multiplied by income per adult; and income per adult is further decomposed into the amounts reflecting L NL labor earnings ( y i ) and nonlabor earnings ( y i ). To compute contributions to the change in poverty, counterfactual distributions are calculated by replacing the value of a component in the initial period with its corresponding value in the final period. Since panel data are not available, households are sorted by their income per capita, and relative household ranks are assumed constant. The decomposition is implemented using the method developed by Azevedo, Nguyen, and Sanfelice (2012), where the cumulative effect of each component is calculated across all paths in every possible order, and then averaged. 6 The dependency ratio fell from 40.5 to 36.5 percent in the Philippines, from 29.9 to 28.2 percent in Thailand, and from 33.7 to 29.8 percent in Vietnam, during 2005–15. It increased in Mongolia from 30.8 to 32.3 percent during 2010–15. (continued) I.A. Recent Developments 25 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 (Box I.A.4 continued) Figure BI.A.4.1. Components of poverty change, by family income source Percentage points Philippines 2015–2009 Mongolia 2014–2010 0.4 0.4 0.2 0.2 0.2 0 0 -0.2 -0.2 -0.4 -0.4 -0.6 -0.6 -0.8 -0.8 -0.2 0.0 -0.4 -0.4 -1.0 -1.0 -1.2 -0.3 -1.9 -0.2 Share of Share of Farm Nonfarm Assets & Public Share of Share of Farm Nonfarm Assets & Public employed Wages income business remittances employed Wages income business remittances adults income transfers adults income transfers JJDemographics JJEmployment JJLabor incomes JJNonlabor income/adult JJDemographics JJEmployment JJLabor incomes JJNonlabor income/adult Thailand 2013–2007 Vietnam 2014–2010 0.4 0.4 0.2 0.2 0 0 -0.2 -0.2 -0.4 -0.4 -0.6 -0.6 -0.8 -0.2 0.0 -0.3 -0.6 -0.8 -0.2 0.0 -0.2 -0.3 -1.0 -1.0 Share of Share of Farm Nonfarm Assets & Public Share of Share of Farm Nonfarm Assets & Public employed Wages income business remittances employed Wages income business remittances adults income transfers adults income transfers JJDemographics JJEmployment JJLabor incomes JJNonlabor income/adult JJDemographics JJEmployment JJLabor incomes JJNonlabor income/adult Source: World Bank staff estimates. In most countries, public transfers have also made a significant contribution to poverty reduction. They account for a 0.4 percentage point annualized reduction in poverty in the Philippines, and 0.3 percentage points in Mongolia and Thailand (Figure BI.A.4.1, second green bar in all panels). Only in Vietnam is the impact of transfers small compared to other drivers of poverty reduction. In Mongolia, the commodity boom and government programs have had a significant impact on poverty reduction. Real wages outside agriculture grew by 28 percent, driven by labor productivity growth. Earnings in agriculture rose by an even faster 77 percent, reflecting higher livestock prices and a move by many households into the production of animal byproducts, subsidized under a government incentive scheme. The various transfers programs, including cash transfers for children, mothers, and the elderly, have also contributed to a large share of the welfare improvement among low-income families. With the end of the commodity boom, there is now a need for significant fiscal adjustment, and for major reforms in the design of these programs to ensure their sustainability. In the Philippines, higher wages as well as transfers played a key role in poverty reduction. Wages in manufacturing and services, especially for low-skilled workers, grew rapidly, in line with sectoral labor productivity. This compensated for slow productivity growth in agriculture, which has particularly affected small producers. The large impact of transfers is partly due to recent improvements in the coverage, (continued) 26 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE (Box I.A.4 continued) targeting, and monitoring of social programs. However, looking ahead, further poverty reductions will hinge on reducing unemployment (among the highest in the region, hovering around 6 to 7 percent during 2010–15), particularly among the young. In Thailand, farm incomes played a key role in poverty reduction. The importance of farm income partly reflects structural problems: a slowdown in nonagricultural employment growth and the stalling of structural transformation, combined with the struggle within agriculture to move labor from low- to higher- productivity jobs. Rising farm incomes largely reflect the impact of increases in agricultural prices rather than productivity; as agricultural prices fall back again, a process that has already started, the impact on poverty will no longer be favorable. Private transfers, consisting mainly of remittances, are also an important source of income: over one-fifth of Thai households have migrants, with the highest proportions being from poor households and disadvantaged regions. In Vietnam, nonagricultural jobs have been the main drivers of poverty reduction. The secondary and tertiary sectors grew almost twice as fast as the agricultural sector over the period (about 6 percent and 3 percent a year, respectively). The poor obtain a relatively high share of income from farming, but their agricultural income per capita is lower than that of other groups. And, over the sample period, incomes from farming increased only for those in the top 40 percent of the income distribution. Ultimately, further sustained reductions in poverty will rely on rapid growth in labor incomes among the poor. Public transfers and remittances play an important role in sustaining a minimum welfare, and compensating for unforeseen shocks. But further increases in the standard of living, leading to the eradication of poverty and the reduction of vulnerability, require gains in employment and real earnings, whether through wages, farm incomes, or business incomes. Moreover, increases in labor earnings, linked to gains in labor productivity, will become even more critical as East Asian countries age, dependency ratios rise, and the favorable demographic conditions of the past dissipate. References Azevedo, Joao Pedro, Minh Cong Nguyen, and Viviane Sanfelice. 2012. Adecomp: Stata module to estimate Shapely Decomposition by Components of a Welfate Measure. Statistical Software Components S457562, Boston: Boston College Department of Economics. Paes de Barros, Ricardo, Mirela de Carvalho, Samuel Franco, and Rosane Mendonca. 2006. “Uma analise das principais causas da queda recente na desigualdade de renda brasileira”. Economica 8(1). I.A. Recent Developments 27 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 I.B. Outlook and Risks Global growth and commodity prices are projected to recover slowly, while global financial conditions tighten gradually. Growth in developing East Asia and Pacific is expected to remain resilient, as continued buoyancy in domestic demand, including public and increasingly private investment, is supported by strengthening external demand. China is expected to continue its gradual transition to lower, more sustainable growth. In the rest of the region, growth is expected to increase moderately. Poverty will continue to fall across most of the region, reflecting rising labor incomes and low unemployment. Nevertheless, global and regional vulnerabilities mean that the positive prospects for growth and poverty reduction in the region in this base case are subject to significant risks. A sharp global financial tightening and rising financial vulnerabilities among households and corporates may test countries with elevated external debt, or high and rising private sector leverage. Significant slowdowns in world trade, whether stemming from mounting global protectionist pressures or from unanticipated weakness in global activity, could adversely affect most of the region. Fiscal deficits are expected to remain elevated in several countries, in some cases posing risks to fiscal sustainability. Growth is expected to moderate in China, but pick up slightly in the rest of the region Global growth and commodity prices are projected to recover slowly, while global financial conditions tighten gradually  (Box I.B.1). Global growth is projected to increase from 2.3 percent to 2.7 percent in 2017, driven by some acceleration in advanced economies and a more robust pickup in developing economies. Monetary policy is expected to continue normalizing in the United States, reflecting the pickup in activity, and remain accommodative in other advanced economies. Capital flows to the region are projected to remain relatively stable. Oil prices are expected to edge upward, but are unlikely to return to historical highs, given uncertainty regarding whether recent cuts in oil production will be maintained, as well as the potential flows of shale oil; similarly, well- stocked global food markets, and the considerable spare capacity in the mining and metal industry, will limit increases in other commodity prices. Growth in developing East Asia and Pacific (EAP) is expected to remain resilient during 2017–19, as continued buoyancy in domestic demand is supported by gradually strengthening external demand. The outlook remains more positive than for other regions, with the exception of South Asia. China’s gradual transition to slower but more sustainable growth is projected to continue (Table I.B.1). In the large ASEAN economies, growth is expected to pick up slightly. In several countries, activity will also be supported by increased government spending, especially on infrastructure projects. Commodity exporters will benefit from the projected recovery in commodity prices. China’s growth moderation and rebalancing are expected to continue in the medium term. Growth is projected at 6.5 percent in 2017, reflecting somewhat stronger net exports than in 2016 but a moderation in the real estate sector following tightening policy measures. Growth is expected to further moderate to 6.3 percent 28 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE in 2018–19, as economic rebalancing gradually continues in response to productivity-oriented reforms, such as reducing excess capacity and leverage in the corporate sector, including state-owned enterprises.1 Table I.B.1. East Asia and Pacific: GDP growth projections Percent change from a year earlier, unless otherwise noted Change from Oct. 2016a Forecast (percentage points) 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2016 2017 2018 Developing EAP 6.5 6.4 6.2 6.1 6.1 0.0 0.0 0.1 China 6.9 6.7 6.5 6.3 6.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 Dev. EAP excl. China 4.8 4.9 5.0 5.1 5.2 0.1 0.0 0.0 Developing ASEAN 4.8 4.9 5.0 5.1 5.2 0.0 0.0 -0.1 Indonesia 4.9 5.0 5.2 5.3 5.4 -0.1 -0.1 -0.2 Malaysia 5.0 4.2 4.3 4.5 4.5 0.0 0.0 0.0 Philippines 5.9 6.8 6.9 6.9 6.8 0.4 0.7 0.7 Thailand 2.9 3.2 3.2 3.3 3.4 0.1 0.1 0.0 Vietnam 6.7 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.4 0.2 0.0 0.1 Cambodia 7.0 6.9 6.9 6.9 6.7 -0.1 0.0 0.0 Lao PDR 7.4 7.0 7.0 6.8 7.2 0.0 0.0 0.0 Myanmar 7.3 6.5 6.9 7.2 7.3 -1.3 -1.5 -1.1 Mongolia 2.2 1.0 -0.2 1.9 8.0 0.9 -2.1 -1.7 Fiji 3.6 2.0 3.7 3.5 3.3 -0.4 -0.2 -0.2 Papua New Guinea 6.8 2.4 3.0 3.2 3.4 0.0 0.0 0.0 Solomon Islands 3.3 3.0 3.3 3.0 3.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 Timor-Lesteb 4.3 5.1 4.0 5.0 6.0 0.1 -1.5 -1.0 Assumptions about the external environment:c World 2.7 2.3 2.7 2.9 2.9 0.0 0.0 0.0 Advanced economies 2.1 1.7 1.8 1.8 1.7 0.2 0.1 0.0 Emerging and developing economies 3.5 3.4 4.2 4.6 4.7 -0.1 -0.2 -0.1 Crude oil (spot, US$/barrel) 51 43 55 60 61 -0.2 2.0 0.0 Nonenergy commodities (index, 2010 = 100) 82 80 83 84 85 1.3 1.9 0.7 Food (index, 2010 = 100) 91 92 93 94 95 1.3 -0.3 -0.3 Sources: World Bank data and staff estimates. Note: a. World Bank East Asia and Pacific Economic Update, October 2016 (World Bank 2016a); b. Nonoil GDP.; c. Global growth forecasts represent preliminary working assumptions. Commodity price forecast drawn from the World Bank Commodity Markets Outlook, January 2017 (World Bank 2017a). In the other large developing economies in the region, growth is projected to pick up moderately. In the Philippines, growth expectations have been revised upward sharply, to 6.9 percent in 2017–18, reflecting increases in public infrastructure spending, a recent uptick in private investment, continued credit expansion, and growth in remittances. In Indonesia, growth is projected to rise to 5.2 percent in 2017 and 5.4 percent in 2019, as commodity prices firm, credit growth continues to respond to loose monetary policy, and the impact of fiscal consolidation dissipates over time.2 In Malaysia, growth is expected to edge up to 4.3 percent in 2017 and 4.5 percent by 2018. Domestic demand will benefit from a stable labor market, income support measures, and higher infrastructure spending; exports will again benefit from rising commodity prices and recovery in growth in advanced economies. In Vietnam, growth will recover to 6.3 percent in 2017, as the impact of the 2016 drought 1 In 2017, targets call for production capacity to be cut by 50 million tons for steel and 150 million tons for coal. 2 Projections have been revised downward slightly since October 2016, reflecting marginally lower growth in 2016 than expected, and weak retail sales in January 2017. I.B. Outlook and Risks 29 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 Box I.B.1. Global Outlook and Risks1 Global growth is expected to strengthen in 2017. After reaching a postcrisis low of 2.3 percent in 2016, global growth is expected to increase to a moderate 2.7 percent in 2017, mainly driven by stronger growth in Emerging Market and Developing Economies (EMDEs), as obstacles to activity among commodity exporters gradually diminish (Figure BI.B.1.1). Among advanced economies, growth is projected to recover modestly, from 1.7 percent in 2016 to 1.8 percent in 2017. These forecasts do not incorporate the effects of policy proposals by the new U.S. administration, as their precise content remains uncertain. Figure BI.B.1.1. Global GDP growth Figure BI.B.1.2. Regional GDP growth Percent Percent 8 10 6 8 4 6 2 4 0 2 -2 0 -4 -2 f f f f f f 2016e 2016e 2016e 2016e 2016e 2016e 20015 20015 20015 20015 20015 20015 2017f 2017f 2017f 2017f 2017f 2017f 20 8f 20 8f 20 8f 20 8f 20 8f 20 8f 19 19 19 19 19 19 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016e 2017f 2018f 2019f 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 JJWorld ▬▬Advanced economies ▬▬Emerging and developing economies JJEAP JJSAR JJECA JJLAC JJMENA JJSSA Source: World Bank staff estimates. Source: World Bank staff estimates. Note: Horizontal lines denote long-run precrisis (1990–2008) average growth. Data for 2016–18 for all regions other than EAP refer to the values published in World Bank (2016c). e = estimate; f = forecast. EMDE growth is expected to accelerate to 4.2 percent in 2017, from 3.4 percent in 2016. With commodity prices gradually recovering, growth among commodity-exporting EMDEs is projected to average 2.3 percent in 2017 after two consecutive years of near stagnation, still significantly below historical averages. In contrast, growth in commodity-importing EMDEs is expected to remain broadly stable at 5.6 percent. The growth divergence between commodity exporters and importers is projected to narrow, but regions with a large number of commodity exporters, such as Latin America and the Caribbean and Sub-Saharan Africa, will continue to underperform in 2017 (Figure BI.B.1.2). In contrast, regions dominated by large commodity- importing economies, such as East Asia and Pacific and South Asia, are projected to continue to experience solid growth this year. Growth in low-income countries is expected to recover from 4.7 percent in 2016 to 5.6 percent in 2017, as the external environment is expected to improve gradually, with commodity prices increasing moderately from low levels, and global trade regaining some momentum. Global trade is projected to grow faster than global output in 2017. The recovery in global trade growth will be supported by stronger import demand from major advanced economies, and a diminished drag from weak import demand in commodity-exporting EMDEs. However, structural impediments to trade, including maturing global value chains and uncertainty about trade policies in the United States, will continue to weigh on the medium-term outlook. 1 Growth forecasts are based on Global Economic Prospects January 2017: Weak Investment in Uncertain Times (World Bank 2017b). Commodity price forecast are drawn from Commodity Markets Outlook January 2017 (World Bank 2017a). (continued) 30 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE (Box I.B.1 continued) Energy and nonenergy commodity price indexes Figure BI.B.1.3. World commodity prices forecast. are projected to increase by 26 percent and Nominal U.S. dollars, 2010 = 100 3 percent, respectively, in 2017. These increases 130 represent slight upward revisions from the October 120 110 2016 forecasts. Oil prices are expected to average 100 US$55 per barrel in 2017, up from US$43 per 90 barrel in 2016 (Figure BI.B.1.3). The increase 80 largely reflects the agreements among some 70 Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries 60 (OPEC) producers and non-OPEC producers to limit 50 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 output in the first half of 2017. Prices are projected ▬▬Energy ▬▬Agriculture ▬▬Metals and minerals to increase to US$60 per barrel in 2018 assuming Sources: World Bank staff estimates. a balanced market and no additional OPEC supply restraint. Average metal and mineral prices are projected to rise by 11 percent in 2017, the first increase in six years, as a result of supply constraints, including closures of large lead and zinc mines and stronger-than- expected demand from China. Overall agricultural prices are expected to remain stable in 2017, but the outlook varies across individual commodities depending on supply conditions. Small increases are expected for oils and agricultural raw materials, owing to adverse weather affecting supplies from East Asia. These will be offset by a small decline in grains prices, given favorable growing conditions in Central Asia, Europe, and North America. Monetary policy normalization, improved growth prospects, and elevated policy uncertainty in advanced economies are likely to weigh on capital flows to EMDEs in 2017. The United States is expected to increase interest rates at a moderate pace in 2017 and 2018, following two earlier hikes implemented in this tightening cycle. The tightening cycle could gather pace if fiscal stimulus were undertaken in the United States, although this is not assumed in the baseline projections absent additional details. In Japan, the Central Bank has committed to expanding its monetary base and maintaining policy rates at record-low levels until inflation exceeds 2 percent for a sustained period. However, rising inflation could lead to a slow unwinding of large asset purchase programs earlier than expected. Overall, aggregate capital inflows to EMDEs are expected to remain subdued, affecting local currencies and assets. Capital outflows from China— the key driver of aggregate outflows in EMDEs—should continue to ease, reflecting tighter capital controls and heightened foreign exchange interventions. Relatively attractive valuations should support portfolio inflows to EMDE, but FDI is likely to remain weak. Higher oil and commodity prices could partly offset the negative impact for commodity exporters. This outlook is conditioned on an improved EMDE growth outlook and a gradual tightening of global financing conditions. Although the external environment is expected to gradually improve for EMDEs, the range of possible outcomes has widened significantly given ongoing policy uncertainties, and there are still significant risks to global growth. Political developments in 2016—most notably, the U.S. presidential elections and the U.K. Brexit referendum—have heightened policy uncertainty, and their effect may be compounded by upcoming elections in several European countries. This and other risks, including in particular financial market disruptions amid tighter global financing conditions, may be amplified over the medium term by mounting protectionist tendencies, slower potential growth, and elevated vulnerabilities in some EMDEs. However, any fiscal stimulus in major economies, such as the United States, could lead to stronger-than-expected global growth, improving the outlook. I.B. Outlook and Risks 31 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 dissipates, and in line with favorable market sentiments and continued strong FDI flows. In Thailand, activity is expected to benefit from improved confidence following the adoption of the new constitution and the royal transition, large public investment projects, and robust tourism, although continued weak productivity will cap growth at 3.4 percent even in 2019. The smaller regional economies are generally expected to continue to benefit from rapid growth in their neighbors and higher commodity prices. In Cambodia, growth will remain around 6.9 percent, as stronger fiscal expansion, agricultural reforms, and continued buoyancy of tourism offset a slight moderation in construction and garments. Lao PDR also enjoys a strong outlook, as increases in electricity generation and exports offset the impact of the envisaged fiscal consolidation. In Myanmar, growth is projected to accelerate as infrastructure spending (in power, transportation, and communications) rises, and delayed foreign investment commitments are unlocked in response to strengthened macroeconomic stability and progress on structural reforms. In Mongolia, growth will stagnate in 2017, partly reflecting efforts to reduce public debt to sustainable levels, before staging a modest recovery in 2018. A strong rebound is projected starting in 2019, reflecting successful macroeconomic stabilization, structural reforms, and the likely expansion of mining investments. Similarly, in Papua New Guinea, growth will gradually recover as a number of mining and petroleum prospects come on stream. In Timor-Leste, the elections later this year will slow some public investment projects; however, nonoil growth will recover in outer years, as the impact of falling oil production is cushioned by large withdrawals from the sovereign wealth fund. Poverty will continue to fall across most of the region, reflecting rising labor incomes and low unemployment Extreme and moderate poverty, already low in Table I.B.2. Poverty is projected to continue falling across most countries developing EAP compared to other developing 2016 2017 2018 2019 regions, is projected to continue falling across most Poverty, US$1.90-a-day (2011 PPP): countries, consistent with sustained or gradually Estimates and projections increasing growth  (Table I.B.2). In China, continued Developing EAP robust growth, the shift to more labor-intensive services, Poverty rate (%) 2.0 1.7 1.5 1.3 buoyant job creation and wages, and falling income Number of poor (millions) 41 35 31 27 inequality will continue driving poverty reduction. In the Developing EAP excluding China Poverty rate (%) 4.7 4.2 3.7 3.3 Philippines, as the economic and social reforms of the Number of poor (millions) 30 27 25 22 new development plan are implemented, reductions in Poverty, US$3.10-a-day (2011 PPP): poverty and inequality are projected to continue or even Estimates and projections accelerate. Likewise, in Indonesia, poverty is expected Developing EAP to continue falling, although at a slightly slower pace. Poverty rate (%) 10.6 9.5 8.4 7.6 Number of poor (millions) 215 193 173 156 Prospects for poverty reduction are in some cases Developing EAP excluding China being strengthened by propoor policies. Indonesia Poverty rate (%) 19.6 18.5 17.5 16.5 Number of poor (millions) 129 123 118 112 boosted its conditional cash transfer program in 2016, Sources: World Bank East Asia and Pacific Team for Statistical Development; PovCalNet. and similar measures are expected in Malaysia. In Note: The most recent household income and expenditure surveys vary from 2006 in Kiribati to 2015 in Indonesia. Estimates are extrapolated based on per capita GDP growth and historical estimates of the Thailand, the public investment program is being growth elasticity of poverty. PPP = purchasing power parity. 32 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE increasingly focused on less well-off regions. In Lao PDR and Timor-Leste, continued investments in basic infrastructure, including roads, electrification, irrigation, and water and sanitation, aim to improve access to services and opportunities for income generation. However, the outlook for poverty reduction remains mixed in a few countries and among some groups. In Mongolia, the recent decreases in poverty may decelerate or even reverse in the short term, reflecting the sharp growth slowdown and high unemployment. But the medium-term outlook remains more positive, assuming successful macroeconomic stabilization and the projected recovery in commodity prices. Vulnerability to weather shocks remains a challenge for faster poverty reduction among the region’s rural, agricultural poor. Domestic demand will support growth, with a rising contribution from exports, across much of the region Private consumption will remain buoyant, supported by tight labor markets and higher public transfers. Overall, private consumption will account for more than 40 percent of all growth, or 60 percent in the region excluding China (Figure I.B.1). Private consumption growth is expected to stabilize at around 7 percent in China, the Philippines, and Vietnam, 6 percent in Malaysia, and above 5 percent in Indonesia. Robust labor markets will put upward pressure on wages: unemployment is currently at its lowest level since at least 2012 in China, Indonesia, the Philippines, and Vietnam, and remains low in Malaysia and Thailand. As a result, monthly earnings have been trending upward in Indonesia and Vietnam, although pressures remain more subdued in Malaysia and Thailand. Increases in social transfers, and growing remittances, will also continue supporting household incomes. The outlook for public consumption varies, reflecting countries’ different policy choices. Public consumption growth is expected to accelerate in Cambodia, Malaysia, and the Philippines, where the 2017 budgets all envisage increases in public sector wages, and in Indonesia. In contrast, public consumption growth is projected to decelerate in Mongolia, consistent with efforts to narrow the large fiscal imbalance and support macroeconomic stabilization, and in Lao PDR and Vietnam. Investment growth will moderate in China and Vietnam but increase in most of the rest of the region, as governments embark upon ambitious public investment projects, and businesses benefit from continued low interest rates and improved sentiment. In China, investment growth is expected to moderate, as the authorities attempt to contain the buildup in debt and reduce excess capacity. In the region excluding China, the contribution of investment to growth is expected to rise from 1.8 percentage points in 2016 to 2.4 percentage points in 2019, reflecting a scale-up of public investment, as well as robust private investment underpinned by broadly sound fundamentals and in some cases ongoing structural reforms. In recent years, a number of economies, including Cambodia, Malaysia, Myanmar, and Vietnam, have seen a decline in capital expenditure and as a result, a number of developing EAP countries, including Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand, and Fiji, may be underinvesting in infrastructure (Asian Development Bank 2017). Looking ahead, the authorities in several countries have announced ambitious plans to increase capital expenditure and address infrastructure bottlenecks. Investment is projected to grow especially rapidly in the Philippines, where the authorities are embarking upon a multiyear infrastructure program of about US$160 billion (approximately half of 2016 GDP) (Figure I.B.2). In Thailand, the 2017 budget I.B. Outlook and Risks 33 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 Figure I.B.1. Domestic demand will support growth, with at most a modest contribution from net exports, across the region as a whole… Contribution of expenditure components to GDP growth (percentage points) Developing EAP Developing EAP excluding China 8 8 7 7 6 6 5 5 4 4 3 3 2 2 1 1 0 0 -1 -1 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 JJPrivate consumption JJGross capital formation JJNet exports JJPrivate consumption JJGross capital formation JJNet exports JJGovernment consumption ▬▬GDP JJGovernment consumption ▬▬GDP Source: World Bank staff estimates. Figure I.B.2. …across most large economies Contribution of expenditure components to GDP growth (percentage points) China, Indonesia, and Malaysia Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam 8 15.0 7 12.5 6 10.0 7.5 5 5.0 4 2.5 3 0 2 -2.5 1 -5.0 0 -7.5 -1 -10.0 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 China Indonesia Malaysia Philippines Thailand Vietnam JJPrivate consumption JJGross capital formation JJNet exports JJPrivate consumption JJGross capital formation JJNet exports JJGovernment consumption ▬▬GDP JJGovernment consumption ▬▬GDP Source: World Bank staff estimates. Figure I.B.3. …and in the smaller economies Contribution of expenditure components to GDP growth (percentage points) significantly increases capital expenditure, including 25 investments directed to economically lagging regions, 20 and the long-delayed recovery in private investment is 15 expected to firm up. In Malaysia, the budget envisages 10 several large infrastructure projects, including roads 5 and high-speed railways, to complement robust private 0 investment. Significant but more moderate increases -5 are projected in Indonesia and Lao PDR. In Mongolia, investment growth is expected to recover over time, -10 conditional on macroeconomic stabilization, given the -15 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 Cambodia Lao PDR Mongolia JJPrivate consumption JJGross capital formation JJNet exports JJGovernment consumption ▬▬GDP Source: World Bank staff estimates. 34 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE projected pickup in commodity prices and strong prospects for mining FDI. In Vietnam, in contrast, fiscal tightening will contribute to lower investment growth. Exports are projected to gradually recover across most of the region; in some countries, rising domestic demand will also significantly boost imports. Regional manufacturing exporters are expected to benefit from the pickup in global demand, and commodity exporters from firming commodity prices (Figure I.B.1, Figure I.B.2, and Figure I.B.3). At the same time, robust domestic demand, and the region’s strong participation in global value chains, will also boost imports. This effect will be particularly pronounced in the Philippines, given its investment push and buoyant consumption, as reflected in the accounting contribution of net exports to growth. In Thailand, the export potential remains limited by continued productivity weakness. In China, however, exports are expected to recover over the medium term, while the ongoing rebalancing limits import growth. In Vietnam, export performance will remain robust, building on strong FDI inflows. In Malaysia, commodity exports are expected to grow over time. In Cambodia, export growth will be underpinned by a resilient garment sector and emerging diversification into other manufacturing products. In Lao PDR, electricity exports will grow over time, partly offset by depletion of deposits at the country’s two large mines. In some commodity exporters, production bottlenecks could limit the supply response to recovering commodity prices. In Myanmar, natural gas exports will be affected by capacity constraint. In Papua New Guinea, petroleum exports will be affected by similar concerns, and mining exports by production disruptions at two mines, with knock-on effects on consumption and investments. In Mongolia, recently announced mining projects will require time to develop. In Timor-Leste, oil resources are being rapidly depleted. The normalization of monetary policy in advanced economies may test the region’s resilience, especially in countries with elevated external debt, or high and rising private sector leverage Global financial conditions may tighten faster Figure I.B.4. Markets are expecting a faster normalization of U.S. interest rate policy than anticipated, with significant implications Probability of increases in the U.S. federal funds rate (percent) for capital flows and financial volatility. In the 90 United States, the expected pace of monetary policy 80 normalization was recently revised upward, in response 70 to the strength in U.S. labor markets and the expectation 60 of fiscal stimulus from the new administration (Figure 50 I.B.4). Further sharp increases are possible, and/or 40 the term premium on long-term interest rates may 30 increase, if inflationary pressures emerge. This could 20 have significant repercussions, especially for the large, 10 0 financially integrated regional economies. Such shocks No v-1 6 De c-1 6 Jan -17 Feb -17 Ma r-1 7 would be associated with reduced capital inflows or ▬▬At least two hikes in 2017 ▬▬At least three hikes in 2017 Source: World Bank staff estimates, based on Bloomberg data. indeed capital outflows from the region, U.S. dollar appreciation against regional currencies, and likely I.B. Outlook and Risks 35 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 increased volatility and risk premia in financial markets, as seen in the immediate wake of the U.S. election and the late-2016 increase in U.S. policy rates. As a result, debt-service burdens and debt-rollover risks would increase, especially for unhedged borrowers with short-term, foreign-currency-denominated debt. Malaysia, and to a significantly lesser extent Indonesia, Thailand, and Vietnam, have sizable external debt stocks (Figure I.B.5); in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand, a significant amount of debt is denominated in foreign currency, including in U.S. dollars (World Bank 2016b); and, in Malaysia and Thailand, a significant share of external debt is short term (Figure I.B.6). Still, generally robust reserves provide a cushion against short-term volatility.3 Figure I.B.5. Malaysia, and to a significantly lesser extent Figure I.B.6. In Malaysia and Thailand, a significant share Thailand and Indonesia, have sizable external debt stocks of external debt is short term Gross external debt (percent of GDP) Short-term debt (percent of gross external debt, Q3 2016) 90 45 80 40 70 35 60 30 50 25 40 20 30 15 20 10 10 5 0 0 2000 2003 2006 2009 2012 2015 2017 IDN MYS THA PHL KHM ▬▬CHN ▬▬IDN ▬▬PHL ▬▬VNM ▬▬MYS ▬▬THA Source: World Bank-International Monetary Fund Quarterly External Debt Statistics Database. Sources: Bank for International Settlements; IMF; World Bank. Note: Short-term debt refers to debt with a maturity of less than one year, based on the original maturity. Data for Cambodia and Malaysia refer to end-2014. Figure I.B.7. Debt service ratio of private nonfinancial Figure I.B.8. Interest coverage ratio of listed firms sector Percent of income 25 14 12 20 10 15 8 6 10 4 5 2 0 0 -08 -09 -10 -11 -12 -13 -14 -15 -16 Jun Jun Jun Jun Jun Jun Jun Jun Sep 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 ▬▬CHN ▬▬MYS ▬▬THA ▬▬IDN ▬▬CHN ▬▬IDN ▬▬MYS ▬▬PHL ▬▬THA Source: Bank for International Settlements. Sources: Bloomberg; World Bank staff estimates. Note: The interest coverage ratio equals the ratio of available company earnings, before interest and tax, to current interest payments. Across the large economies, these concerns are reinforced as rising corporate and household debt has already led to a gradual deterioration in debt-servicing capacity. In turn, this has raised the risk of financial 3 In Malaysia, several additional factors mitigate risks. In particular, most corporate debt takes the form of trade credits and intercompany loans, in most cases hedged by export earnings. Relatedly, loans of RM100 million (approximately US$23 million) and above require central bank approval, and must be adequately hedged or supported by foreign currency receivables. 36 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE stress, which could spill over to banks. Debt service ratios for the private nonfinancial sector have been rising steadily over the past five years (Figure I.B.7), and are now particularly high in China, Malaysia, Thailand, and probably Vietnam. Likewise, interest coverage ratios (the ratios of available company earnings to current interest payments) have weakened significantly over the past five years in several countries, suggesting a deterioration in the financial health of corporates (Figure I.B.8). The rise in real estate prices across much of the region is also raising financial vulnerabilities, although these risks still appear manageable, in part because of recent corrective measures. The rapid growth of credit for real estate transactions has pushed up property prices and increased household indebtedness across many regional economies. There is a risk that sharp downward corrections in real estate prices will lead to a large deterioration in banks’ asset quality, and a reduction in their profitability and lending capacity. Indeed, in recent decades, boom-bust patterns in property prices have frequently led to systemic banking crises, whose resolution can prove extremely costly.4 In response to rising vulnerabilities, some countries have been introducing macroprudential measures. Partly as a result, the trend of rising credit and prices has moderated over the past year (Box I.B.2). Figure I.B.9. Return on assets in the banking sector Figure I.B.10. Return on equity in the banking sector Percent Percent 3.5 24 22 3.0 20 2.5 18 2.0 16 1.5 14 12 1.0 10 0.5 8 0 6 -14 -14 -14 -14 -15 -15 -15 -15 -16 -16 -16 -14 -14 -14 -14 -15 -15 -15 -15 -16 -16 -16 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 ▬▬KHM ▬▬CHN ▬▬IDN ▬▬MYS ▬▬PHL ▬▬THA ▬▬KHM ▬▬CHN ▬▬IDN ▬▬MYS ▬▬PHL ▬▬THA Sources: IMF Financial Soundness Indicators; China Banking Regulatory Commission. Sources: IMF Financial Soundness Indicators; China Banking Regulatory Commission. Overall, the region’s banks are relatively well capitalized, but vulnerabilities are increasing. Banking systems are facing an increasingly difficult operating environment, characterized by lower bank profitability, deteriorating asset quality, and potential liquidity risks. Banks’ profitability is steadily decreasing across most of the region (Figure I.B.9 and Figure I.B.10). This partly reflects a steady increase in nonperforming loans (NPLs) (Figure I.B.11); reported NPL levels remain generally low by global standards, but whether these data accurately reflect the true extent of the deterioration in asset quality is in question in several countries.5 Further, bank lending margins are being squeezed as yield curves flatten worldwide. In response, banks in Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand are increasingly turning to very short-term wholesale funding, including interbank and money market financing, but this exacerbates maturity mismatches and increases exposure to interest rate risk. In China, smaller regional banks have been relying heavily on shadow banking products for liquidity, and could be 4 For instance, in Ireland, in the wake of the post-GFC deflation of the housing-price bubble, the public bailout of banks amounted to 40 percent of the country’s GDP. 5 Including Vietnam, with a significant backlog of unresolved legacy nonperforming assets, and to a lesser extent China, with increasingly frequent instances of corporate distress, especially in highly indebted sectors with excess capacity. I.B. Outlook and Risks 37 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 significantly affected by the tightening of regulations on these instruments. That said, banks in the region are in general relatively well capitalized, with most of the larger economies already meeting Basel III capital requirements (Figure I.B.12),6 and well positioned to meet other Basel III requirements, including minimum liquidity standards.7 Figure I.B.11. Nonperforming assets are steadily Figure I.B.12. Banks in the region are in general well increasing across the region capitalized Nonperforming loans (percent) Tier 1 capital adequacy ratio (percent) 3.5 27 25 3.0 23 2.5 21 2.0 19 1.5 17 15 1.0 13 0.5 11 0 9 -12 -12 -13 -13 -14 -14 -15 -15 -16 -16 -12 -12 -13 -13 -14 -14 -15 -15 -16 -16 Q1 Q3 Q1 Q3 Q1 Q3 Q1 Q3 Q1 Q3 Q1 Q3 Q1 Q3 Q1 Q3 Q1 Q3 Q1 Q3 ▬▬KHM ▬▬CHN ▬▬IDN ▬▬MYS ▬▬PHL ▬▬THA ▬▬KHM ▬▬CHN ▬▬IDN ▬▬MYS ▬▬PHL ▬▬THA ▬▬EAP F&EM Source: IMF Financial Soundness Indicators. Source: IMF Financial Soundness Indicators. Note: F&EM = frontier & emerging markets. Table I.B.3. Banking resilience: estimated impact of shocks due to U.S. monetary policy tightening and depreciation against the U.S. dollar China Indonesia Malaysia Philippines Shock – baseline (percentage points) Return on assets (percent) -0.35 -0.09 -0.09 -0.01 Nonperforming loans (percent) 0.39 0.05 0.10 0.17 Loans / deposits (percent) 1.11 — 0.88 1.62 Memo: GDP growth (percent) 0.5 0 2.2 -0.3 Sources: Haver Analytics; IMF International Financial Statistics; national central banks; and World Bank staff estimates. Note: Estimates based on a Bayesian VAR comprising eight variables: •  Domestic block: GDP, credit growth, exchange rate vs. U.S. dollar, domestic policy rate, nonperforming loans, loans/deposits, return on assets. •  External block: U.S. policy rate.  The following shocks are applied simultaneously: •  U.S. monetary policy shock: U.S. policy rate increases by 300 basis points. •  Exchange rate depreciation shock: 20 percent depreciation of local currency vs. U.S. dollar.  Domestic monetary policy is allowed to respond to the U.S. monetary policy tightening. The model is estimated using quarterly data for Q1 2006 – Q3 2016, detrended using an HP filter. — = not available. Illustrative, model-based resilience tests suggest that financial systems in the region are broadly resilient to shocks, but there exist risks. Simulations indicate that even large shocks to U.S. monetary policy, combined with large exchange rate depreciations, would exert significant but in general manageable effects on banking sectors (Table I.B.3). The largest strains would emerge in China, with particularly sharp increases in nonperforming loans and decreases in profitability. And the need for caution is heightened by uncertainties about the current level of nonperforming assets, and the potential for distress at the level of individual banks to affect the rest of the financial system. In Malaysia, despite large open foreign exchange positions, negative impacts appear to be dampened by the banking sector’s significant buffers. 6 Comprising a 6 percent minimum Tier 1 capital, a 2.5 percent capital conservation buffer, and an up to 2.5 percent countercyclical capital buffer. 7 Yao 2016. 38 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE Box I.B.2. The Real Estate Sector and Risks to Financial Stability1 Low interest rates and ongoing residential shortages, due to rapidly rising real incomes, have driven up housing prices in several large regional economies in recent years, although the upward trend generally moderated in 2016. Regional banks have provided plenty of capital to the real estate sector at favorable conditions. Real housing prices have increased significantly since 2010 in several countries, in particular Malaysia, but also the Philippines and Thailand (Figure BI.B.2.1). In Indonesia, in contrast, growth in residential property prices has trended down over the past three years, reflecting the moderation of the credit boom. In China, house prices have generally been rising fast in large (“Tier 1”) cities, but much more slowly in the smaller (“Tier 2” and “Tier 3”) cities (Figure BI.B.2.2), reflecting stronger demand for, and lower supply of, housing in the large cities.2 Figure BI.B.2.1. Real housing prices Figure BI.B.2.2. Real housing prices, China Index, Q1 2010 = 1 Percent, year-on-year growth 1.6 30 1.5 25 1.4 20 1.3 15 1.2 10 1.1 5 1.0 0 0.9 -5 0.8 -10 -10 3-10 1-11 3-11 1-12 3-12 1-13 3-13 1-14 3-14 1-15 3-15 1-16 -13 -13 -14 -14 -15 -15 -16 -16 -17 Q1 Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Jan Jul Jan Jul Jan Jul Jan Jul Jan ▬▬IDN ▬▬MYS ▬▬PHL ▬▬THA ▬▬National ▬▬First-tier cities ▬▬Second-tier cities ▬▬Third-tier cities Source: IMF Global Housing Watch. Source: National Bureau of Statistics, China; IMF International Financial Statistics. Figure BI.B.2.3. Growth in residential floor space sold in China Percent Panel A. Select provinces Panel B. Select cities 120 140 100 120 100 80 80 60 60 40 40 20 20 0 0 -20 -20 -40 -40 -60 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 JJInner Mongolia JJHainan JJHunan JJNational average JJNational JJBeijing JJShanghai JJTianjian Source: CEIC. 1 Prepared by Ana Maria Aviles and Radu Tatucu. 2 Large cities have experienced much faster population growth, reflecting significant inflows of migrants attracted by greater availability of jobs. At the same time, in large cities a significant scarcity of land has slowed the construction of new buildings since 2005, whereas in smaller cities land supply is continuing to grow. (continued) I.B. Outlook and Risks 39 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 (Box I.B.2 continued) Real estate sales are volatile. In China, there have been significant swings over time in sales of residential floor space (Figure BI.B.2.3, Panel A), especially at the level of individual cities (panel B), and in overall real estate sales (Figure BI.B.2.4). In Indonesia, property sales have also experienced significant volatility over the past five years (Figure BI.B.2.5). Figure BI.B.2.4. Real estate sales growth, China Figure BI.B.2.5. Real estate sales growth, Indonesia Percent Percent 60 50 50 40 40 30 30 20 20 10 10 0 0 -10 -10 -20 -20 -30 -13 -13 -14 -14 -15 -15 -16 -16 c-1 6 -11 -11 -12 -12 -13 -13 -14 -14 -15 -15 -16 -16 Jan Jul Jan Jul Jan Jul Jan Jul De Q2 Q4 Q2 Q4 Q2 Q4 Q2 Q4 Q2 Q4 Q2 Q4 ▬▬Floor space sold ▬▬Floor space sold, residential ▬▬Floor space sold, commercial ▬▬Property sales growth, quarter-over-quarter Source: Bank Indonesia. Figure BI.B.2.6. Real estate loans to total loans Figure BI.B.2.7. Commercial and residential real estate loans Percent Percent 50 20 48 180 45 18 31.5 160 40 32.8 40 16 140 35 14 32 120 30 12 100 25 10 24 80 7.5 20 8 13.2 15.3 14.1 12.4 16 60 15 6 8.2 2.5 7.0 10 4 40 8 14.2 13.7 5 2 20 4.8 8.3 8.1 8.2 6.1 9.2 7.6 0.6 0 0 0 0 -10 3-10 1-11 3-11 1-12 3-12 1-13 3-13 1-14 3-14 1-15 3-15 1-16 3-16 EM Adv. Q1 Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q CHN KHM IDN PNG PHL MYS THA VNM (x. EAP) econ. ▬▬PHL ▬▬THA ▬▬VNM ▬▬IDN ▬▬CHN ▬▬MYS ▬▬PNG, rhs ▬▬KHM, rhs JJResidential real estate loans to total loans, lhs Sources: IMF Financial Soundness Indicators; Haver Analytics; Bank Negara Malaysia; StoxPlus JJCommercial real estate loans to total loans, lhs QQTotal private sector credit to GDP, rhs estimation from State Bank of Vietnam. Sources: Bank Negara Malaysia; Haver Analytics; IMF Financial Soundness Indicators; IMF Note: rhs = right-hand side. International Financial Statistics; StoxPlus estimation from State Bank of Vietnam; World Bank staff estimates. Note: lhs = left-hand side; rhs = right-hand side. The banking sector’s exposure to real estate continues to increase, but at a moderate pace. Over the past two years, real estate loans (RELs) have accounted for a rising share of total banking loans across much of the region, and now constitute more than 20 percent of total loans in China, Malaysia, Thailand, and Vietnam (Figure BI.B.2.6). The majority of RELs are directed toward residential rather than commercial loans, in all countries except the Philippines and Indonesia (Figure BI.B.2.7). These trends are in line with the experience of other emerging markets.3 Banking sector risk is mitigated because the prices of residential 3 Overall, RELs account for 21 percent of total loans in emerging markets, and 42 percent of total loans in advanced economies. RELs for residential purposes account for 60 percent of RELs in emerging markets, and almost 80 percent of RELs in advanced economies. (continued) 40 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE (Box I.B.2 continued) real estate, best viewed as a durable good rather than an investment asset, are in general less volatile than those of commercial property, which is more responsive to short-term macroeconomic conditions. Real estate in the region is increasingly viewed Figure BI.B.2.8. Real estate investment by sector, as an attractive investment opportunity, further China RMB mn supporting prices. Continued low interest rates, and 80,000,000 an increasing pool of institutional investors searching 70,000,000 for yield, are boosting real-estate purchases in large 60,000,000 metropolitan areas. Overall, there seems to be a 50,000,000 strong preference among international investors 40,000,000 30,000,000 for emerging market destinations (PwC and ULI 20,000,000 2016). In fact, China became the largest market for 10,000,000 real estate investors in East Asia and Pacific during 0 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 c-0 c-1 c-1 c-1 c-1 c-1 c-1 c-1 2016, overtaking Japan and Australia (Real Capital De De De JJState-owned and holding enterprise De De De JJResidential buildings De De JJOffice buildings Analytics 2016). Real estate investment (REI) in JJCommercial buildings JJOthers China tripled during 2009–16, although growth has Source: CEIC. Note: Real estate investment includes investment by real estate development companies, moderated since 2014 (Figure BI.B.2.8). Most of it commercial buildings, construction companies, and other real estate development units in buildings (including residential buildings, factory buildings, warehouses, hotels, guesthouses, is focused on residential buildings. The Philippines holiday villages, office buildings, and the complementary service facilities and land development projects, such as roads, water supply, water drainage, power supply, heating, telecommunications, has also seen a significant increase in REI over the land leveling, and other infrastructure). It excludes simple land transactions. past four years.4 A more detailed examination of country-level trends also suggests broadly manageable risks. In Malaysia, banks are considerably exposed to real estate, which accounts for approximately half of total loans. However, growth in loans and housing prices moderated in 2016, and the deceleration is expected to continue in 2017.5 Residential transactions account for about two-thirds of total real estate transactions, and risks are mitigated by households’ financial capacity—aggregate household assets are about twice as large as household debt. Further, financial institutions are relatively well capitalized. In the Philippines, the rapid expansion of the real estate sector over the past four years reflects still low rates of home ownership and limited alternative investment opportunities. Commercial RELs increased by 117 percent, and residential RELs by 80 percent, between Q1 2013 and Q3 2016. As a result, real estate prices have been rising rapidly in Metro Manila. Buyers from China probably also contribute, at least in the high-end condo market.6 So far, nonperforming RELs have been decreasing.7 In Vietnam, growth in real estate loans to households and developers is moderating. However, real estate developers are focusing on high-end real estate projects, which currently yield large profit margins, creating a risk of potential oversupply in the medium term. In contrast, residential housing for low- and middle-income households remains limited.8 4 Between Q1 2013 and Q3 2016, REI financed by debt securities increased by 91 percent, and REI financed by equity securities by 107 percent. 5 Property Buying Sentiment Index, prepared by Financial Times Confidential Research. 6 Foreigners are not allowed to buy houses. 7 Gross nonperforming commercial RELs decreased from 3.2 percent to 1.4 percent of total loans, and gross nonperforming residential RELs from 3.2 percent to 2.9 percent of total loans, between Q1 2013 and Q3 2016. 8 Vietnam Association of Real Estate. (continued) I.B. Outlook and Risks 41 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 (Box I.B.2 continued) Across much of the region, macroprudential measures have been introduced to mitigate potential risks associated with the expansion of credit to the real estate sector. In Malaysia, measures already introduced to rein in excessive property market speculation include stringent loan requirements for housing loans, and a 70 percent loan-to-value ratio cap on third-home purchases. In Vietnam, to curb the growth of real-estate business loans, caps have been imposed on loan-to-deposit ratios (80 to 90 percent, depending on the type of bank) and on the share of long-term loans financed using short-term deposits (60 percent in 2016, 50 percent in 2017, and 40 percent in 2018). In China, mortgage loans have been rising quickly until recently,9 leading to growing household leverage. To cool the property market, local governments in more than 20 cities rolled out tightening measures during the fall of 2016. Policies have included raising mortgage down payments, tightening loan-to-value limit, and posting home purchase restrictions, especially for citizens without a local household registration. Several cities have also introduced measures to control land prices, including imposing caps on land auction prices. Indonesia, however, has gone in the opposite direction, with the authorities recently implementing a number of measures to support real estate activity. These measures include cutting the key interest rate, giving tax incentives to Indonesian real estate investment trusts, easing restrictions on individual foreign ownership,10 increasing the maximum loan-to-value ratio, and increasing the threshold for luxury property tax. A tax amnesty was also expected to lead to repatriation of assets and to their investment in real estate assets.11 In Mongolia, real estate led to significant financial vulnerabilities. Mongolia’s real estate market emerged after the privatization of the housing sector in the late 1990s, and in tandem with the rapid expansion of Ulaanbaatar over the last two decades. Housing construction has been a major driver of growth since the early 2000s, reflecting high housing demand,12 and the sector has been supported by the authorities through various programs. The mortgage program funded by the Central Bank was one of the key contributors to a 30 percent price jump for quality houses between 2012 and 2013; the nontargeted program allowed middle-income borrowers to refinance previous mortgages or buy second homes.13 However, housing prices began to fall at end-2014 as economic growth slowed significantly, and continued dropping through January 2017. As a result, the banking sector’s nonperforming loans increased sharply.14 Looking ahead, and within the framework of a reform program to be supported by development partners, the authorities will consider transferring the housing mortgage loan program out of the central bank and restructuring it, which will help tackle the distortions in the system. 9 Household loans, mostly mortgages, accounted for 90 percent and 71 percent of total new bank loans in, respectively, July and August 2016. 10 In early 2015 foreigners were allowed to buy luxury real estate properties. In December 2015 foreigners were allowed to own landed houses for up to 80 years. 11 In June 2016, the government passed a Tax Amnesty Law giving taxpayers the opportunity to pay a certain amount of tax to have their outstanding tax liabilities (including penalties and interest charges) forgiven. As repatriated assets must be invested in Indonesia in defined instruments and stay at least three years in the country, the real estate market is expected to be one of the main beneficiaries of this measure. 12 Over half of Ulaanbaatar’s population lives in the so-called Ger Districts with limited or no access to basic urban services, and one of the government’s Millennium Development Goals is to house 67 percent of the population in proper dwellings by 2020. 13 At present, mortgages extended under this program account for over 77 percent of total mortgage loans outstanding, and borrowers under this program account for over 73 percent of all mortgage borrowers. 14 From 5 percent in 2014 to 7 percent in 2015 and over 9 percent at end-2016. 42 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE A sharp slowdown in world trade or in China could significantly affect the region Developing EAP is extremely open, and could therefore prove particularly vulnerable to a slowdown in international trade. The region is significantly more open to trade than South Asia or Latin America and the Caribbean (Figure I.B.13, panel A). Among the large economies, trade openness is particularly high in Malaysia, Thailand, and Vietnam (panel B). Advanced economies, including the United States and the European Union, account for a significant share of the trade of several countries (including Cambodia, China, Malaysia, Thailand, and Vietnam), and in particular constitute a critical source of final demand for the region’s exports (World Bank 2016b). This significantly raises the region’s vulnerability to a slowdown in trade, whether stemming from trade restrictions or from unanticipated weakness in global activity. Among key concerns, the change in administration in the United States has brought in expectations of mounting protectionist pressures, including potential unilateral measures to tackle perceived currency manipulation and other unfair trading practices, especially vis-à-vis countries with which the United States runs large trade deficits.8 Illustrating such risks, the withdrawal of the United States from the Trans-Pacific Partnership could cause Vietnam and to a lesser extent Malaysia to miss out on gains from expanded trade and investment (World Bank 2016a). Any new U.S. trade restrictions would have a particularly significant impact on countries whose direct trade links with the United States are sizable or that are deeply integrated into regional value chains, including China, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Vietnam. Antiglobalization sentiment has also been picking up in other advanced economies holding elections this year, including France, Germany, and the Netherlands. Again, the recent recovery in economic activity in the European Union could be dented by a disorderly Brexit, or by the outcome of the upcoming elections. Compounding risks, disruptions to world trade would also likely affect capital flows; and more tense international economic relations could lead to more complex geopolitical relations. Figure I.B.13. Much of developing EAP displays significant trade openness Exports plus imports (percent of GDP) Panel A. Developing regions Panel B. Developing EAP 115 250 105 95 200 85 150 75 65 100 55 45 50 35 25 0 2000 2003 2006 2009 2012 2015 2000 2003 2006 2009 2012 2015 ▬▬Developing EAP ▬▬Developing EAP excl. China ▬▬CHN ▬▬IDN ▬▬MYS ▬▬MNG ▬▬PHL ▬▬THA ▬▬VNM ▬▬KHM ▬▬SAR ▬▬ECA ▬▬MENA ▬▬SSA ▬▬LAC Sources: IMF World Economic Outlook; World Bank staff estimates. Note: Trade openness is defined as total exports and imports of goods and services, as a ratio to GDP. 8 The new administration’s 2017 Trade Policy Agenda explicitly indicates a commitment to “focusing on bilateral negotiations rather than multilateral negotiations … Renegotiating and revising trade agreements … Strictly enforcing U.S. trade laws to prevent the U.S. market from being distorted by dumped and/or subsidized imports” (https://ustr.gov/about-us/ policy-offices/press-office/reports-and-publications/2017/2017-trade-policy-agenda-and-2016). I.B. Outlook and Risks 43 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 In China, the ongoing slowdown constitutes a short-term risk to growth in the rest of the region, but rebalancing will also generate medium-term opportunities for several lower-income countries. China accounts for a large and rising share of demand for goods and services from the rest of the region, both to meet its own final demand and as inputs into further exports. It exerts a critical influence on world commodity prices, especially for metals. Financial links, especially through outward FDI, are also growing rapidly. As a result, China’s orderly, gradual slowdown to date has been an important factor behind the region’s continued strong growth resilience. However, if the slowdown in activity were to prove faster than anticipated, spillovers to other countries could prove significant (World Bank 2016b). At the same time, the ongoing transformation in China’s economic structure opens up new export opportunities for its trade partners. In particular, it will create space for other countries to expand their production of labor-intensive manufactures, and to meet China’s growing demand for agricultural commodities and for services. Reaping these opportunities will, however, require countries to adjust their production and export structures, which will in turn require reforms to ensure that labor and product markets are more flexible (Box I.B.3). Fiscal deficits are expected to remain elevated in several countries, in some cases posing risks to fiscal sustainability Fiscal deficits are expected to widen or remain elevated in a number of countries in 2017. In China, the consolidated fiscal deficit is projected to expand slightly (to around 3.8 percent of GDP) as recent tax measures (including tax breaks and lower pension contribution rates) adversely affect collections (Figure I.B.14). Among the other large economies, the increase in the deficit will be particularly marked in Thailand as a number of large infrastructure projects are launched. A stronger expansion is also projected in the Philippines, largely reflecting increased expenditure. More limited fiscal expansion is expected in Indonesia, where higher capital expenditure will be partially offset by tax reforms and higher commodity revenues. Similarly, deficits will increase or remain elevated in Cambodia and Lao PDR, reflecting rising public sector wages in the former and high infrastructure spending in the latter. Both countries have announced plans to lower deficits over the medium term, but have not spelled out details of the policies that might underpin such adjustment. In Timor-Leste, a large structural deficit Figure I.B.14. Fiscal deficits are expected to remain elevated across much of the region General government fiscal deficit (percent of GDP) 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 China Indonesia Malaysia Philippines Thailand Vietnam Cambodia Lao PDR Mongolia Myanmar JJ2015 JJ2016 JJ2017 JJ2018 JJ2019 Source: World Bank staff estimates. Note: Data refer to general government fiscal deficit, except for Indonesia, where they refer to central government fiscal deficit, and Cambodia, where they refer to general government fiscal deficit before grants. 44 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE Box I.B.3. The Long-Run Impact of China’s Rebalancing on Developing East Asia and Pacific1 China’s ongoing reform process will lead to a rebalancing of its economic structure, and slower but more sustainable growth, with potentially significant repercussions for the rest of developing EAP. The goal of these reforms is to reorient the economy toward consumption, services, and higher-value- added activities, so as to reverse the recent slowdown in productivity growth. Given China’s central role in the global economy, this structural transformation will have a significant impact on world trade flows and prices. In turn, this will affect its trading partners, including in the region, both directly, and indirectly as other trading partners adjust and reallocate resources. The implications of China’s rebalancing for other countries in developing EAP are analyzed by contrasting outcomes under “full reform” with those under “partial reform.” Full reform is characterized by more pronounced rebalancing, and results in faster long-run productivity growth. Specifically, the full reform scenario assumes significant rebalancing from investment toward consumption (Figure BI.B.3.1, Panel A) and from industry toward services. GDP growth decelerates only modestly, to 6 percent by 2025 (Panel B). In contrast, the partial reform scenario assumes greater emphasis on policies that maintain short-run growth above potential, and less on rebalancing toward consumption and services. As a result, GDP growth, after rising initially, decelerates rapidly to 4 percent by 2025.2 In contrast, and for reference, a continuation of the current economic model, with GDP growth around 6.5 percent and limited or no rebalancing toward consumption or services, would require implausibly rapid productivity growth, pointing to the difficulty of sustaining current growth rates without continued reforms. Figure BI.B.3.1. China’s slowdown and rebalancing under full reform and partial reform Panel A. Share of investment in GDP Panel B. GDP growth Percent Percent 48 8 46 7 6 44 5 42 4 40 3 38 2 36 1 34 0 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 ▬▬Partial reform ▬▬Full reform ▬▬Partial reform ▬▬Full reform Source: Lakatos and Go (Forthcoming). The focus of the analysis is on long-run responses to Chinese policy reforms rather than on short- run impacts, and it assumes that other economies are flexible enough to adjust their production and export structure in response to China’s rebalancing. The analysis is based on a dynamic general 1 Prepared by Csilla Lakatos and Delfin S. Go, based on Lakatos and Go (Forthcoming). 2 The full reform scenario roughly corresponds to the “baseline,” and the partial reform scenario to the “no-reform scenario,” considered in IMF (2015). (continued) I.B. Outlook and Risks 45 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 (Box I.B.3 continued) equilibrium model that captures trade links across countries and sectors.3 It goes beyond short-run cyclical effects to capture long-run responses of supply, demand, and trade to changes in relative prices. It allows for China’s production structure to shift toward higher-value-added manufactures and services, and for the import intensity of China’s consumption to increase in response to rebalancing. It also allows other economies to adjust to China’s structural transformation by reallocating resources. In contrast, econometric and input- output studies tend to capture short-run effects, as they implicitly assume that the sectoral composition and import intensity of consumption and investment remain constant. In general, the deepening of the ongoing reforms in China affects other countries through trade links, changes in world prices, and terms-of-trade effects. By 2025, output, household consumption, and even investment in China are significantly higher under full reform than under partial reform.4 Increased consumption acts to increase China’s demand for other countries’ exports, and in particular puts upward pressure on prices of agricultural commodities and food products (Figure BI.B.3.2, Panel A). At the same time, and as set out in the “Made in China 2025” plan, China aims to upgrade its manufacturing sector toward high-value-added manufactures, including by targeting the development of sectors such as robotics, aerospace, new-energy vehicles, and advanced transport equipment. The increase in China’s supply of machinery and transport equipment exerts a downward pressure on their world prices. Cheaper imports of these capital goods improve the terms of trade of countries that are net importers and act to boost their domestic investment. In addition, diminishing supply in China of low-value-added manufactures, such as textiles and apparel, acts to increase their world prices. Overall, across most of developing EAP, full reform leads to terms-of-trade gains, and increases in exports and consumption. In economies that specialize in the production of low-value-added manufactures including textiles and apparel, such as Cambodia and Vietnam, or low-tech electrical and electronic items, such as Malaysia and the Philippines, firms benefit from higher world prices (Figure BI.B.3.2, Panel B) and expand domestic supply and exports (Panel C). Conversely, the fall in the price of capital goods boost imports of these products, with a positive overall effect on total imports. Consumption rises across developing EAP, by up to 0.6 percent (Panel D), reflecting overall terms-of-trade gains. The analysis highlights how developing EAP countries that can respond to the new sources of demand in China will gain the most from China’s structural transformation. Overall, the magnitude of the output effects is limited, with output falling by a maximum of 0.1 percent (Panel E). Put differently, in aggregate terms, the impact of reforms is felt mainly within China, with only limited trade spillovers to the rest of the region. But there is variation across developing EAP. Underlying all this, as China upgrades 3 The analysis uses LINKAGE, a dynamic, multiregion, multisector, multifactor computable general equilibrium model (van der Mensbrugghe 2011, 2013). It relies on the Global Trade Analysis Project (GTAP) 9.1 global trade database for 2011. The simulations are based on an aggregation corresponding to 14 regions and 12 sectors (agriculture, energy, food products, textiles and apparel, chemicals, metals, transport equipment, electronics, machinery, other manufactures, utilities, and services). Projections for key macroeconomic variables, including GDP, the current account, and investment, are based on the IMF World Economic Outlook. See Lakatos and Go (Forthcoming) for details. 4 With full reform, output is approximately 14 percent higher, which reinforces the positive impact of rebalancing on consumption, and more than offsets its negative impact on investment. (continued) 46 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE (Box I.B.3 continued) its production structure, other countries adjust their own supply structures to dampen any initial adverse impact. Exporters of low-value-added and low-tech manufactures, including Cambodia, Vietnam, Malaysia, and the Philippines, stand to benefit from supplying the excess demand in both Chinese and international markets (Panel F). On a cautionary note, the required inter-sectoral reallocation may imply significant distributional impacts, particularly in the short run. Figure BI.B.3.2. The impact of full reform in China on developing EAP, in 2025 Relative to partial reform, percent Panel A. World prices Panel B. Terms of trade 2.0 2.0 1.5 1.5 1.0 1.0 0.5 0.5 0 0 -0.5 -0.5 -1.0 e . t. -1.0 tur rgy d el als etals equip nic s ner y s fac tilitie ervice s icul Ene Foo appar emic M ort ctro achi manu U S Agr s & Ch n s p Ele M e r -1.5 MMR AUS hic xtil e Tra Oth MNG KHM IDN LAO MYS PHL THA VNM + TMP + NZL EAP Te JJFaster growth JJRebalancing QQFull vs. partial reform JJFaster growth JJRebalancing QQFull vs. partial reform Panel C. Exports Panel D. Household consumption 1.0 0.6 0.5 0.5 0.4 0 0.3 0.2 -0.5 0.1 0 -1.0 -0.1 -1.5 -0.2 MMR AUS hic MMR AUS hic MNG KHM IDN LAO MYS PHL THA VNM + TMP + NZL EAP EAP KHM IDN LAO MYS PHL THA VNM + TMP + NZL EAP EAP JJFaster growth JJRebalancing QQFull vs. partial reform JJFaster growth JJRebalancing QQFull vs. partial reform Panel E. Output growth Panel F. Export growth 0.8 2.5 0.6 2.0 1.5 0.4 1.0 0.2 0.5 0 0 -0.2 -0.5 -1.0 -0.4 -1.5 -0.6 -2.0 -0.8 -2.5 MMR AUS hic MMR AUS hic MNG KHM IDN LAO MYS PHL THA VNM + TMP + NZL EAP MNG KHM IDN LAO MYS PHL THA VNM + TMP + NZL EAP JJChemicals JJAgriculture JJEnergy JJFood JJTextiles and apparel JJChemicals JJAgriculture JJEnergy JJFood JJTextiles and apparel JJMetals JJTransport equipment JJElectronics JJMachinery JJServices JJMetals JJTransport equipment JJElectronics JJMachinery JJServices JJUtilities QQTotal Source: Lakatos and Go (Forthcoming). Note: “Full vs partial reform” denotes the overall impact of full reform, which is decomposed into “faster growth” (the impact of higher GDP, holding constant the consumption share), and “rebalancing” (the additional impact from changes in the consumption share). See Lakatos and Go (Forthcoming) for details. I.B. Outlook and Risks 47 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 has emerged and is projected to widen over time (from 24 percent of GDP in 2016 to 30 percent of GDP in 2017, with further increases afterward), reflecting the exhaustion of its oil reserves. Its large sovereign wealth fund can finance this deficit in the medium term, but is being steadily depleted. A few countries, however, are expected to take some early steps toward fiscal consolidation. In Vietnam, the deficit is projected to decline to 5.3 percent of GDP by 2019, although the implementation of previously announced consolidation measures remains lackluster. In Malaysia and Myanmar, fiscal deficits are also expected to decline, with some support from higher commodity prices, as well as comprehensive reforms to tax policy and administration and to public financial management in Myanmar. In Mongolia, the deficit ballooned to 17 percent of GDP in 2016, but is expected to decline sharply as the country implements its ambitious adjustment program with support from its development partners. Similarly, in Papua New Guinea, a fiscal adjustment program, targeting both revenues (including through removal of exemptions and higher fees) and expenditures, is projected to lower the deficit over time. Rapid growth will generally help contain debt burdens, but there are exceptions. Widening deficits in Cambodia, China, Indonesia, and the Philippines will have a minor impact on debt-to-GDP ratios (Figure I.B.15), given rapid growth and (with the exception of Cambodia and to a lesser extent the Philippines) the relatively limited magnitude of the expansion. In Malaysia, public debt is expected to remain stable, reflecting the offsetting impact of relatively low deficits and the elevated initial debt level. In Papua New Guinea, fiscal consolidation is expected to help place public debt on a downward trajectory. In Thailand, in contrast, the expansionary fiscal stance could see public debt increase to 49 percent of GDP by 2019, although threats to fiscal sustainability remain low. And, in Lao PDR and Vietnam, public debt is expected to stabilize only once the planned consolidation efforts are more advanced. In Vietnam, concerns are amplified by the banking sector’s unresolved impaired assets, which could eventually translate into significant liabilities for the public sector. In Mongolia, approval and implementation of an adjustment program supported by the international financial institutions will prove critical to restoring debt sustainability, including meeting the large external debt repayments due over the coming year. Figure I.B.15. Government debt is projected to rise rapidly in Mongolia and, to a lesser degree, Vietnam, and remain elevated in Malaysia General government debt, percent of GDP 100 80 60 40 20 0 China Indonesia Malaysia Philippines Thailand Vietnam Cambodia Lao PDR Mongolia JJ2015 JJ2016 JJ2017 JJ2018 JJ2019 Source: World Bank staff estimates. Note: Data refer to general government fiscal balance, except for Indonesia, where data refer to central government debt. 48 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE The diverse fiscal outlooks across the region are reflected in varying credit risk assessments. The region is characterized by the full spectrum of credit ratings, including strong investments grades (in China and Malaysia), as well as speculative grades (in Mongolia and Papua New Guinea). Ratings were in several cases revised downward in the first half of 2016, but have since stabilized, reflecting (actual or planned) reform programs. In particular, Mongolia’s credit rating was maintained, following repeated earlier downgrades, in the wake of the announcement of the stabilization and reform program. Indonesia’s credit outlook was improved from “stable” to “positive”. And the most recent IMF-World Bank Debt Sustainability Analyses, for most of the countries where they have been carried out, indicate low risks to public debt sustainability, albeit with significant exceptions; in particular, there are moderate risks in Timor-Leste and Vietnam, and high risks in Lao PDR and Mongolia. The outlook for the Pacific Island Countries is positive, but they remain especially vulnerable to shocks The outlook for the Pacific Island Countries (PICs) is positive, given recent trends in fisheries and tourism, and expanding opportunities for migration and connectivity. Fishing license fees will contribute significantly to government revenues and domestic demand, although in a few countries they are expected to decrease from recent peaks, reflecting changes in the climate cycle. Tourism is expected to benefit from the expansion of capacity in several economies. The implementation of public infrastructure projects, including in ICT, could see the subregion’s potential growth rate increase as the impact of remoteness and distances is lowered. Recent agreements that expand access for PIC workers to labor markets in Australia, New Zealand, and other economies could enhance job opportunities. Over the longer term, fully exploiting these opportunities could increase long-term growth rates for most PICs by 0.7 to 1 percentage points (Box I.B.4). Inflationary pressures should remain contained, given the gradual and limited recovery in commodity prices. However, PICs are especially vulnerable to natural disasters, climate change, and terms-of-trade shocks. Nearly every year, at least one country is hit by a major natural disaster; vulnerability will remain high even with an increased policy focus on disaster risk management. In the long run, many PICs are also highly vulnerable to sea level rise. Shocks to world commodity prices significantly affect livelihoods across the PICs, because they are highly dependent on imports, and face transportation costs that are both large and heavily influenced by oil prices. I.B. Outlook and Risks 49 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 Box I.B.4. What is Possible in the Pacific in 2040?1 The combination of extreme remoteness, small size, geographic dispersion, and environmental fragility severely limits the range of economic opportunities for many of the Pacific Island Countries (PICs). As a consequence, a number of PICs have seen only limited increases in per capita incomes over the past 25 years. The World Bank has launched a program of research and dialogue on long-term economic opportunities and challenges in the Pacific, titled Pacific Possible. This assesses whether fully exploiting available opportunities and dealing effectively with major threats could lead to significantly better growth outcomes over the next 25 years.2 Opportunities in tourism, labor mobility, the knowledge economy, fisheries, and deep sea mining are considered. It also examines the impact of two risks that could undermine development gains over the next 25 years if not managed well: noncommunicable diseases (NCDs), which are already affecting the lives of many Pacific Islanders; and climate change and natural disasters, to which the PICs are heavily exposed. For each of the opportunities, Pacific Possible develops an “opportunity scenario” in which the PICs and their development partners intervene (for instance, through policy changes) to exploit the available opportunity. It then estimates the potential gain in per capita incomes, employment, and government revenue compared with baseline projections, which typically reflect historical trends. Opportunities Tourism will provide the main opportunity to accelerate growth and generate employment for many countries, with the potential for an additional 1 million tourist arrivals in the region by 2040. Increasing the Chinese market, increasing the number of luxury resorts, capturing more of the retiree market, and basing cruise ships in the Pacific could lead to an additional 1 million tourists on top of the approximately 3 million tourists who are expected to arrive in 2040 under the baseline, business- as-usual projections. In Vanuatu, Samoa, and Palau, tourism opportunities could potentially increase per capita incomes by more than 20 percent, with employment 7 percent, 19 percent, and around 50 percent (respectively) higher than the 2040 baseline. In Fiji and Tonga, per capita incomes and employment could rise by about 10 percent relative to the 2040 baseline. Additional labor mobility opportunities would generate substantial benefits for the labor-receiving and labor-sending countries, and for the migrants themselves. Pacific Possible estimates that new access agreements between the PICs and Australia and New Zealand (including an Australia-New Zealand 1 Prepared by Kim Alan Edwards and Robert Utz. 2 The countries included in this study are the Federated States of Micronesia, Fiji, Kiribati, the Marshall Islands, Palau, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, the Solomon Islands, Tonga, Tuvalu, and Vanuatu. See also World Bank (2016c), Box I.C.3, “Boosting Growth and Shared Prosperity in the Small Pacific Island Countries”. (continued) 50 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE (Box I.B.4 continued) Atoll Access Agreement and a Pacific Access Category for Australia), new Pacific caregiver programs, and access to new labor markets such as Canada and the Republic of Korea, could generate additional income of about US$13 billion for about 240,000 additional permanent migrants (a 30 percent increase in migrants compared with the 2040 baseline).3 Workers from Fiji, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, and Tonga would be likely to benefit most. Labor-sending countries would benefit from remittances and incomes earned by seasonal workers, which by 2040 could lead to an increase in per capita incomes of more than 10 percent for Kiribati and Tonga and of more than 5 percent for the Solomon Islands and Vanuatu. Improved internet access and connectivity could translate into additional income of about US$1.5 billion and an additional 150,000 jobs by 2040. In recent years, the PICs have liberalized telecoms markets and invested heavily in fiber optic cable connections. This creates the basis for significant increases in mobile and internet penetration over the next 25 years, which could improve productivity; enhance the quality and attractiveness of existing services, for example, in tourism, education, and health; and create new market opportunities such as business process outsourcing. The larger PICs are most likely to benefit from ICT-enabled opportunities, provided they develop an adequately skilled workforce and a conducive business environment. Pursuing these opportunities could add more than 10 percent to per capita incomes and around 6 percent to employment in Fiji, and around 2 to 4 percent to per capita incomes and employment in Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Tonga, Vanuatu, and the Solomon Islands. Fisheries could generate more than US$300 million in additional revenue by 2040, raising revenues by more than 40 percentage points of GDP in Kiribati and Tuvalu, and significantly boosting incomes in these countries and in the Federated States of Micronesia. Among other measures, broadening participation in the vessel day scheme to include major resource owners such as the Philippines and Indonesia, ensuring compliance with robust catch limits to maintain valuable tuna fisheries stocks, allowing easier access to and trading of vessel days, and gradually moving from a vessel-based to a catch-based system, could by 2040 yield more than US$300 million in additional public revenue, without an increase in catch levels or threats to the sustainability of the fisheries stock.4 In Kiribati and Tuvalu, this could translate into an increase in per capita incomes of close to 40 percent, while the Federated States of Micronesia could see an increase of around 20 percent. Deep sea mineral mining still entails significant uncertainty and knowledge gaps with regard to economic viability and to social, cultural, and environmental impacts. While several countries have granted deep sea mining exploration permits, no commercial deep sea mining operation is yet up and running, and there remain significant uncertainties around the potential of the resource, the technological requirements, and environmental and social impacts. A precautionary approach is required to ensure that 3 All U.S. dollar values in this Box are expressed in 2015 constant US$. 4 The current purse-seine vessel day scheme implemented in 2009 by the Parties to the Nauru Agreement (PNA) works similarly to a “cap-and-trade” scheme for fishing. Each year, the PNA countries (the Federated States of Micronesia, Kiribati, the Marshall Islands, Nauru, Palau, Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, and Tuvalu) set the total catch limit needed to maintain a healthy fish stock, and translate that catch limit into individual vessel fishing days, which are allocated to and sold by individual countries. (continued) I.B. Outlook and Risks 51 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 (Box I.B.4 continued) cost-effective measures are taken to minimize environmental impacts, even if uncertainty remains as to the potential for damage. Effects on income, employment, and government revenue Exploiting these opportunities could increase the long-term average annual growth rate for most PICs by 0.7 to 1 percentage points, resulting in incomes that are about 20 to 30 percent higher in 2040 compared to projections based on historical trends ( Figure BI.B.4.1). For Vanuatu, Samoa, and Palau, tourism would be the main driver of higher growth, while fisheries would support higher growth in Kiribati, Tuvalu, and the Federated States of Micronesia. Fiji and Tonga have multiple opportunities to achieve higher growth, including tourism, labor mobility, and ICT-enabled opportunities. Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands are projected to receive relatively modest increases in economic growth from the specific opportunities discussed in Pacific Possible, but will likely have alternative drivers of growth over the next 25 years (for example, in natural resources). The Marshall Islands shows few growth opportunities, reflecting the special challenges faced by atoll nations, and the fact that its additional gains from fisheries are likely to be more modest than for Kiribati and Tuvalu.5 Figure BI.B.4.1. Growth in real income per capitaa: Figure BI.B.4.2. Employment growth: opportunity opportunity scenarios, 2015–40 scenarios, 2015–40 Percent Percent 120 120 100 100 80 80 60 60 40 40 20 20 0 0 FJI PNG SLB VUT WSM TON TUV FSM KIR PLW MHL FJI PNG SLB VUT WSM TON TUV FSM KIR PLW MHL JJCurrent growth projections JJLabor mobility JJTourism JJFishing JJICT JJCurrent growth projections JJLabor mobility JJTourism JJFishing JJICT Source: World Bank staff estimates. Source: World Bank staff estimates. Note: aGross national income plus remittances. Note: ICT = information and communications technology. Tourism, labor mobility, and ICT-enabled opportunities can boost job growth in the Pacific  (Figure BI.B.4.2). Tourism and ICT-enabled opportunities could directly create up to 280,000 new jobs. The increases to national income created by opportunities in fisheries and labor mobility (through increased government revenues and remittances) would also boost domestic demand and employment. Moreover, enhancements to labor mobility schemes could create up to 240,000 opportunities for migration (not shown in Figure 5 While the Marshall Islands already has open access to the U.S. labor market, they could potentially make better use of this access through education and skills development, which would allow migrants to access higher-paying jobs (opportunities in these areas were not fully explored by Pacific Possible). (continued) 52 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE (Box I.B.4 continued) BI.B.4.2) and hence reduce pressures in domestic Figure BI.B.4.3. Domestic revenues per capita: labor markets. opportunity scenarios, 2015–40 US$ 7,000 Development assistance will remain important 6,000 for many PICs to be able to deliver an adequate 5,000 level of public services. Pacific Possible estimates 4,000 the resource requirements that would enable the 3,000 PICs to achieve human development outcomes and 2,000 infrastructure levels comparable to the average 1,000 for small states. Fisheries revenues and income 0 FJI PNG SLB VUT WSM TON TUV FSM KIR PLW MHL gains from the other Pacific Possible interventions JJCurrent 2040 projections JJIndirect gains from Pacific Possible have the potential to significantly boost available JJDirect gains from Pacific Possible QQ2015 Source: World Bank staff estimates. government revenue in some countries (Figure BI.B.4.3). But even with these increased revenues, adequate funding of public services will remain difficult in the North Pacific countries, Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, and Vanuatu. Improving public financial and investment management systems can ensure that scarce resources are used efficiently and on projects with high returns. Nevertheless, aid will remain a critical part of the ongoing collaboration between PICs and their development partners to fill structural financing gaps. Risks to the outlook Economic costs of natural disasters are already high for most PICs—on average between 0.5 and 6.6 percent of GDP is lost annually—and climate change will increase vulnerabilities. There is, however, deep uncertainty around the future speed and intensity of climate change. The annual costs of coastal adaptation and adaptation of infrastructure to changes in rainfall and temperature alone are estimated to vary from between 1 and 2 percent of 2040 GDP in Samoa to between 12 and 24 percent of GDP in Kiribati and the Marshall Islands (with the ranges depending on scenarios for temperature, rainfall, and sea levels). International climate finance is thus critical to ensure that climate financing needs do not crowd out human development and infrastructure funding. The economic burden of NCDs in the Pacific is already high compared with other middle-income countries, and is increasing over time, especially as incomes rise. The PICs could lose between 3 and 10 percent of GDP by 2040 if no action is taken. Apart from continuing to strengthen the evidence base on NCDs, priorities include instituting measures to reduce the consumption of unhealthy foods, tobacco, and alcohol (including through taxes and regulation), and improving the efficiency and impact of their health spending. I.B. Outlook and Risks 53 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 I.C. Policy Considerations Global policy uncertainty remains high, strengthening the case for an emphasis on macroeconomic prudence, addressing critical vulnerabilities, and maintaining medium-term fiscal balances that are seen as sustainable. Among the region’s large economies, mobilizing additional revenues will create the space to sustain growth and foster inclusion, while ensuring that risks to fiscal sustainability remain low. In Lao PDR, Mongolia, and some Pacific Island Countries, policies need to focus on reducing threats to fiscal solvency. Most countries may need to start considering adjusting their accommodative monetary policies as inflation approaches target levels, and given potential pressures on capital flows and exchange rates. China should address risks stemming from an overleveraged corporate sector and poorly performing state-owned enterprises. Across the region, containing risks from rapid credit growth requires improvements in supervision and prudential regulation. The longer-term challenge for the region lies in sustaining rapid growth while ensuring greater inclusion. To that end, countries must increase productivity, successfully manage a scale-up of public investment, and attract private investment. Reallocating public spending toward capital expenditures and underfunded sectors, including health and social protection, and increasing the efficiency of such expenditure can bring benefits. Boosting regional integration, including by enhancing labor mobility, can partly mitigate the impact of potential global protectionist tendencies. And, as the region becomes more prosperous and its environmental footprint grows, efforts to reduce agricultural pollution can make growth more sustainable. Elevated global policy uncertainty places a large premium on macroeconomic prudence The risks that the region continues to face, related to the availability and cost of external financing, and to the prospects for global trade growth and export demand, strengthen the case for a continued focus on addressing key macroeconomic vulnerabilities. The baseline scenario projects robust domestic private demand and recovering external demand. Nevertheless, global financial conditions could tighten more rapidly than anticipated, triggering renewed financial volatility and amplifying the risks from high domestic leverage. And protectionist pressures in advanced economies could have a large impact on the region, given its trade openness. Policy makers should therefore retain their emphasis on maintaining sustainable medium-term fiscal frameworks, standing ready to adjust accommodative monetary policies, and addressing corporate and financial vulnerabilities. ÌÌMaintaining sustainable medium-term fiscal frameworks Across the region’s large economies, mobilizing additional revenues will create space for measures to sustain growth and foster inclusion, while ensuring that risks to fiscal sustainability remain low. Given broadly robust domestic demand and the prospects for a gradual increase in external demand, there is little rationale for additional fiscal stimulus at this time. In contrast, efforts to broaden the tax base and improve tax administration can yield significant gains. In China, increasing the clarity of government and state-owned enterprise (SOE) finances, as well as strengthening fiscal discipline and hardening budget constraints for subnational 54 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE governments and public-benefit SOEs, will help moderate growth in public investment and place public finances on a more sustainable path.1 A broadening of the tax base, especially at the local level to lower the dependence of revenues on land sales, and improvements in VAT administration can make room to reform labor taxation and streamline fees levied on businesses. In Indonesia, the 2017 budget introduced more realistic assumptions. However, tax collections remain relatively weak, after adjusting for the one-off impact of the tax amnesty. Meeting the 2017 deficit target may therefore require further measures with respect to tax policy (beyond the implemented increases in tobacco excises) and administration. In Malaysia, there is significant scope to broaden the base for personal income tax, and to reduce exemptions from the general sales tax. The Philippines could build on the existing package of tax reforms, focused on eliminating VAT exemptions and increasing excises on fuels and automobiles. Further, the economy’s continued rapid growth will hinge on how well the government manages the large increase in public expenditure. In Vietnam, where public debt is expected to breach the legally prescribed ceiling of 65 percent of GDP, there is an urgent need to strengthen the credibility of the medium-term fiscal framework. Some smaller commodity-exporting economies need to focus on lowering threats to fiscal solvency. In Mongolia, fiscal consolidation, including more progressive taxation and greater rationalization and better targeting of expenditures, remains the main priority as part of stabilization. In Lao PDR, elevated public debt is generating vulnerability to shocks. Efforts are required to boost revenues, on a declining trend in recent years, and contain expenditure. In Myanmar and Papua New Guinea, limited sources of financing again call for fiscal prudence, despite somewhat lower public debt. In Myanmar, prudence will also require refraining from monetizing the deficit. In general, while many countries have announced fiscal consolidation plans, these have been lacking in detail. A focus on implementing a country-specific mixture of revenue measures (involving increases in tax rates, adjustments to the generous, untargeted tax exemptions, a strengthening of property and natural resource taxation, and improved tax administration) and expenditure measures (targeting both the level and efficiency of spending) would be appropriate. ÌÌStanding ready to adjust accommodative monetary policies Much of the region also may need to adjust accommodative monetary policies. While the increase in consumer prices has so far proved moderate, the more rapid pickup in producer prices and the projected recovery in commodity prices suggest that pressures will intensify, albeit from a low base. In Indonesia, which lowered policy rates by 150 basis points during 2016, the monetary easing cycle likely needs to be placed on hold. Similarly, in the Philippines, policies must be ready to adjust to rising inflationary pressures. If external financing conditions tighten more rapidly than anticipated, this will place regional exchange rates under pressure, and again call for domestic monetary tightening. The expected pace of U.S. monetary policy normalization has already increased sharply over the past months, and could do so again, leading to renewed capital outflows. The large, financially integrated economies of Malaysia, and to a lesser degree Indonesia and Thailand, remain relatively exposed to exchange rate risk, potentially affecting both corporates and banks. Relatedly, short-term volatility could increase again, although foreign exchange reserves in general appear broadly 1 The government work report recently presented to the National People’s Congress proposes steps in that direction. I.C. Policy considerations 55 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 adequate. In China, continued liberalization of the exchange rate and domestic financial markets may help stem capital outflows and increase the effectiveness of the monetary transmission mechanism. Some of the smaller economies are already facing significant exchange rate pressures. In Papua New Guinea and Myanmar, in particular, a combination of greater exchange rate flexibility (Box I.C.1) and monetary tightening appears warranted. Similarly, Lao PDR should make greater use of the flexibility in the existing exchange rate regime and consider monetary tightening in case credit growth continues to accelerate. Given the limited effectiveness of monetary policy in several smaller economies, these measures may need to be supported by greater fiscal adjustment. In Mongolia, macroeconomic stabilization will require continued monetary policy tightness and exchange rate flexibility. Conversely, in dollarized Cambodia, the adjustment to any further U.S. dollar appreciation and the implied loss in competitiveness would require strong demand management. ÌÌAddressing corporate and financial vulnerabilities In China, reforms of the corporate sector, including restructuring of SOEs, and measures to bring credit growth under control are critical to reducing vulnerabilities. Reforms to address excess industrial capacity, including closures of outdated production facilities and strict controls on new projects, have been initiated and, as emphasized in the 2017 government work report, remain key tasks for the authorities. They could be usefully complemented by measures to enhance SOEs’ corporate governance and efficiency. Relatedly, the rapid expansion of credit increases the risk of disorderly deleveraging with steadily decreasing returns. A continued gradual tightening of financial discipline, and increased tolerance for insolvencies and bankruptcies, including of SOEs, would assist financial markets in allocating resources efficiently. Monetary policy started tightening in early 2017, but further adjustments may be required,2 and better regulation and supervision of shadow banking activities remains important. Strengthening social transfers and active labor market policies, and facilitating migration to areas where new jobs are created, will help mitigate any adverse impact on livelihoods and economic activity. In addition, mortgage debt is rising rapidly, albeit from a low base, and needs to be monitored carefully. Elsewhere in the region, rapid private sector credit growth and sizable external debts could catalyze the buildup and transmission of risks; improvements in supervision and prudential regulation are required. Credit growth remains elevated across much of the region, including Cambodia, Lao PDR, the Philippines, Myanmar, and Vietnam. The policy response must involve efforts to strengthen regulation and supervision in line with international best practice. Arrangements for resolving nonperforming loans also need to be improved.3 As total debt stocks continue increasing, macroprudential regulation will prove increasingly important. In Vietnam, where strong external positions have been used to build up reserves, greater sterilization and refraining from the use of administrative credit targets will also help temper credit growth. 2 The authorities also disclosed in October 2016 guidelines for a pilot debt-equity swap program for corporates, which aims to address high leverage. However, it is yet unclear whether these efforts are having any material impact. 3 In the above economies, the recovery rate in dealing with bankruptcies rarely exceeds 20 percent, compared to the EAP average of 33.9 percent. And Vietnam needs to address the banking system’s significant legacy nonperforming assets. 56 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE Ensuring sustained growth and greater inclusion Sustaining medium-term growth and promoting inclusion will require efforts across a range of areas. Regional GDP has already recovered well above its precrisis level, and short-term prospects are encouraging. However, several economies have been experiencing trend slowdowns in both productivity (Box I.C.2) and, in particular, investment growth (Box I.C.3). This deceleration has occurred at much lower levels of income per capita than characterized the earlier generation of fast-growing economies in East Asia. While the precise causes differ across countries, the underlying drivers of this trend include weaknesses in the institutional environment and investment climate, rising private debt burdens, weak growth prospects in advanced economies, and negative terms- of-trade shocks. Sustaining robust growth over the medium term will involve addressing a range of bottlenecks, so as to increase the impact of public investment on productivity, and help crowd in both domestic and foreign private investment. This issue of the East Asia and Pacific Economic Update discusses three broad reform areas: improving the quality of public expenditure, responding to potential global protectionist pressures through greater regional integration, and dealing with the rising threat of agricultural pollution. ÌÌImproving the quality of public expenditure Across the region, improving the quality of public spending can bring benefits. While all countries can gain, this agenda is especially critical in economies with limited fiscal space, as it will help ensure that needed fiscal adjustments do not affect the most vulnerable or the delivery of key public services. In China, significant improvements in access to and quality of public services can be achieved through reform of public finances. Current revenue and expenditure mismatches at the local level result in wide disparities in welfare expenditure and social service provision. Lower infrastructure spending, combined with a reallocation of funds from distortionary agricultural support programs, can help free up resources. If combined with complementary sectoral reforms, these resources can help finance a consolidated, streamlined social protection system, more equitable educational spending, and improved access to health services for the poor. A number of economies need to both improve service delivery and sustain infrastructure spending.4 In Indonesia, more efficient spending on education and agriculture will allow for a reallocation toward underfunded programs with greater development impact. The 2017 budget represents a step in the right direction, with its emphasis on sustaining higher allocations for infrastructure, health, and social assistance, and improving the targeting of energy subsidies and social programs. In Malaysia, priorities include improving the targeting of social protection, maintaining support for infrastructure development, and increasing the quality of education to address skills constraints. In Myanmar, limited fiscal space must be refocused toward capital expenditure, including on critical energy and transport infrastructure, and toward currently underfunded social protection. Public investments and broader reforms can have a significant impact on agricultural productivity and food prices, with important implications for poverty. Across the region, both urban and rural poor remain vulnerable to higher prices, especially for rice and other staple foods. Price stabilization policies have often been 4 In the World Economic Forum 2016–17 Global Competitiveness Report (World Economic Forum 2016), only three countries in developing EAP rank higher than 50th in the world for quality of infrastructure. I.C. Policy considerations 57 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 ineffective in containing prices. Measures to boost agricultural productivity and enhance logistics (including through improvements in irrigation and transport infrastructure, more effective agricultural research, stronger land titling, and greater competition) are more likely to be effective in reducing food prices and boosting the incomes of the poor (Box I.C.4). Greater infrastructure expenditure must be accompanied by a focus on ensuring value for money, and tackling underlying legal and regulatory barriers to project implementation(World Bank 2016b). Improved project planning and implementation systems, including procurement regulations, will boost the productivity of public investment and increase its fiscal multiplier effects. There is significant scope in most countries to strengthen investment appraisal and planning processes, and bolster interagency collaboration and coordination on investment projects. In Thailand, reform of public investment management should address the history of challenges with respect to the timely implementation of large infrastructure projects. ÌÌBoosting regional integration to offset greater global protectionism Developing EAP could benefit significantly from Figure I.C.1. Greater regional integration has already led to a significant increase over time in intraregional trade further deepening regional integration. Greater Exports from developing EAP excluding China, by destination (US$ billions) regional integration, including within ASEAN, has 1,000 already led to a significant increase over time in 900 intraregional trade (Figure I.C.1). Indeed, intraregional 800 700 trade in general exceeds the values predicted by a 600 simple gravity model (Table I.C.1). Nevertheless, there 500 are opportunities to increase integration, especially 400 in services trade, which remains subject to significant 300 restrictions across most of the region. Opening up 200 markets, harmonizing standards, and streamlining 100 0 the business environment would significantly boost 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 the productivity of service industries, as well as JJCHN JJHigh-income EAP JJDeveloping EAP excl. China JJRest of the world JJUS JJEU JJSAR manufacturing which relies critically on service inputs Source: IMF Direction of Trade Statistics. (ASEAN Secretariat and World Bank 2015). Several initiatives provide an opportunity to advance regional integration. The United States has withdrawn from the proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership. However, alternative regional platforms are being discussed to advance developing EAP’s trade integration. Such agreements will provide greater benefits to the region if they cover all trade, in both goods and services, do not discriminate against nonmembers, and feature functioning dispute resolution mechanisms. In particular, faster progress on the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (comprising the 10 ASEAN members, China, Japan, Korea, Australia, New Zealand, and India) could help sustain the integration agenda, provided it addresses such issues as nontariff barriers. The evolving ASEAN Economic Community could also help promote further liberalization of goods, services, and capital markets. And additional gains might be available from the various ASEAN+3 initiatives, which involve China, Japan, and Korea. 58 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE Significant gains could arise from lowering barriers Table I.C.1. Exports to rest of developing EAP Excess of actual over predicted values, 2010–15 (percent of predicted values) to labor mobility within ASEAN. The free mobility of China 8 skilled labor constitutes a key pillar of the envisaged Indonesia 36 economic integration under the ASEAN Economic Malaysia 15 Community. Nevertheless, existing policies to facilitate Philippines 97 such mobility are likely to have a limited impact. Further, Vietnam 17 the focus on skilled labor does not cover the majority of Mongolia -23 Sources: World Bank staff estimates using IMF Direction of Trade Statistics, CEPII, and IMF World ASEAN migrants. Broader measures to reduce the costs Economic Outlook data. Note: Estimates are based on the following gravity model: of labor mobility, both across borders and domestically ln Trade = Α + Β ln (y y ) + Β ln (GDP/Pop) + Β ln (GDP/Pop) +Γ ln Dist + ijt 1 1 it jt 2 it 3 jt 1 ij Γ Contig + Δ ComLang + Δ Colony + Δ Col45 + Δ CurCol + Δ SameCountry across regions and sectors, will increase aggregate 2 ij +Τ +Σ 1 ij 2 ij t 3 ijt ij 4 ij 5 ij gains from migration, while minimizing any negative where the subscripts i and j denote countries; the subscript t the year; Trade the bilateral trade between  two countries; GDP total GDP; Pop population; Dist the bilateral distance between the two countries’ impact on the domestic labor force. Greater labor capitals; Contig whether the countries share a border; ComLang whether they share a common language; Colony whether they have ever had a colonial link; Col45 whether they had a common colonizer after mobility would also reinforce the impact of measures to 1945; CurCol whether they currently have a colonial relationship; and SameCountry whether they were/ are part of the same country. The sample includes all available countries during 1990–2015. liberalize trade and investment. In this context, policy reforms are required in both labor-sending and labor- receiving countries. Specific priorities include: strengthening regulation of international recruitment agencies, and providing comparable protection to migrant and local workers; introducing mutual recognition of qualifications, and increasing the portability of social protection benefits; and adjusting quantity restrictions on migration regularly, based on economic needs (Chapter II.A, “Boosting Labor Mobility in the ASEAN Economic Community”). Seizing broader opportunities to expand international trade can also provide significant payoffs. The WTO’s Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA) came into force in February 2017. Full implementation of the TFA is expected to lower trade costs in Asia by 14 percent (ad valorem tariff equivalent), with significant gains for Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand, and Malaysia (World Trade Organization 2015). Relatedly, economies in South Asia are expected to expand rapidly in the next few years, and developing EAP may be able to benefit from penetrating these fast-growing markets, and helping the region diversify risks. ÌÌDealing with the rising threat of agriculture pollution The agricultural sector’s increasingly adverse environmental footprint needs attention across the region. The aggregate cost of local environmental degradation exceeds 1 percent of GDP across most of the region.5 Much of this reflects the impact of agriculture on soil quality, water quality, and deforestation, with increasingly serious consequences for human health and biodiversity, and increasingly the productivity of agriculture itself (chapter II.B, “Tackling Farm Pollution in Developing East Asia”). This particularly threatens the poor, whose livelihoods are especially dependent on natural resources, and who lack the means to cope with environmental shocks. So far, policy responses have typically occurred late, lacked the required scale, and ultimately failed to tackle incentives that distort farming practices and the broader structure of farming. Indeed, agricultural pollution is often encouraged by current public expenditure programs, including subsidies and regulations favoring the livestock industry, and direct or indirect fertilizer subsidies. Looking ahead, agricultural agencies must increasingly 5 Exceptions include Fiji, Malaysia, and the Philippines. Data refer to 2013. Source: World Bank staff estimates based on the costs of (a) forest depletion (World Development Indicators); (b) greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuels (World Development Indicators), with damage estimated at US$20 per ton of carbon; (c) greenhouse gas emissions/removal from forestland, cropland, and grassland (FAOSTAT Database), with damage estimated at US$20 per ton of carbon; and (d) various pollution, environmental, and hygiene risks (IHME 2013), with damage calculated as the loss of expected lifetime earnings due to premature death. I.C. Policy considerations 59 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 focus on health and environmental outcomes, including by giving greater weight to resource conservation, and redefining food security in terms of micronutrient content and diversity as well as caloric and protein availability. Similarly, health and environmental agencies must bring agriculture more fully into their fold, to help curb the rise of chronic disease. ÌÌAn agenda for the Pacific Island Countries In the Pacific Island Countries (PICs), maintaining fiscal sustainability, while preserving and increasing allocations for critical sectors, remains a critical challenge. The fiscal position of many PICs remains vulnerable, despite recent fiscal surpluses, as both revenue and expenditure are subject to large and frequent shocks. To ensure fiscal sustainability, reforms need to shore up revenues, contain unproductive spending while boosting critical expenditures on health and education, and build up buffers against shocks. Policy reforms in selected sectors may prove transformational over the medium term. Tourism provides major opportunities to accelerate growth and boost employment. To maximize its benefits, PICs need to tap more into Chinese tourism, increase the number of luxury resorts, capture more of the retiree market, and encourage cruise ships to base in the Pacific. Increases in labor mobility, through the expansion of existing and the negotiation of new agreements, complemented by investments in workers’ human capital, could generate substantial benefits. Increases in mobile and internet penetration, complemented by a conducive business environment and the development of a skilled workforce could boost productivity; enhance the quality and attractiveness of existing services, including tourism, education, and health; and create new market opportunities, including business process outsourcing. And income from fisheries could be significantly increased, without threatening the sustainability of the fisheries stock, by broadening participation in the “vessel-day scheme” cooperative agreements to include East Asian countries with major fishing grounds, such as the Philippines and Indonesia; ensuring compliance with robust catch limits; allowing easier access to, and trading of, vessel days; and gradually moving to a catch-based scheme (Box I.B.4). 60 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE Box I.C.1. Exchange Rate Regimes in Developing East Asia and Pacific Exchange rate management has been a focus of significant attention in developing EAP since the 1997–98 Asian financial crisis. With the passage of time, there is now greater consensus on the ultimate causes of the crisis.1 In particular, the inflexibility of exchange rate regimes appears to have amplified shocks in several of the affected countries: once the crisis was triggered, the decision to defend currencies ultimately led to significant losses in output and reserves. Relatedly, market overreaction and herding behavior meant that even neighboring countries that were widely regarded as having broadly adequate exchange rate frameworks proved vulnerable to contagion. Regional currencies could now be again put to the test as global financial condition tighten. The region has already been facing significant capital outflows, reflecting the modest global financial tightening that has already occurred, but also perceived economic and political risks (Box I.A.3). It is therefore important to analyze to what extent exchange rate regimes are contributing to imbalances, as evidenced by sharp real exchange rate appreciation or misalignment, and whether countries have sufficient buffers to support the selected regime. The analysis here abstracts from the broader issue of the optimal exchange rate regime for developing EAP.2 Developing EAP countries use a wide range of exchange rate regimes, which cover the spectrum of available options. Most countries engage to some degree in exchange rate intervention. Nevertheless, three broad groups may be identified, drawing on IMF classifications: •• Flexible exchange rates. Indonesia, the Philippines, and Thailand all have floating exchange rate regimes (Table I.C.1). Similarly, Malaysia’s regime is characterized as “other managed arrangement,” but it is generally regarded by analysts and the authorities as lying on the flexible end of the managed exchange rate spectrum.3 All these countries were tightly pegged to the U.S. dollar prior to the Asian financial crisis (Indonesia had a crawling peg). They were significantly affected by the crisis and, over time, have generally moved away from using the exchange rate as an anchor for monetary policy, and toward inflation targeting. In addition, Mongolia has had a floating exchange rate regime since 2009, and Myanmar can be included in this group following its exchange rate reforms of 2012. In all countries, the authorities do intervene to dampen day-to-day volatility in their currencies, but allow them to move substantially over longer periods (Klyuev 2016). For instance, in response to the recent appreciation of the U.S. dollar, the authorities intervened to limit fluctuations in Mongolia, Myanmar, the Philippines, and to a lesser extent, Thailand. But the currency still depreciated in most countries, most strongly in Mongolia and Myanmar. 1 Key drivers likely included the premature liberalization of capital markets, combined with exchange-rate policies that dramatically reduced perceived volatility. See Corsetti, Pesenti, and Roubini (1999) and Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars: Asia Program (2007) for a fuller discussion. 2 The existing literature in general discusses the choice of exchange rate regime in terms of the importance of an independent monetary policy, the degree of exchange rate risk, and the need for a nominal anchor for monetary policy. Among important arguments for flexibility, exchange rate volatility is often found to have at most small adverse effects on trade and on investment (Frankel 1999). Further, even fixed exchange rates are in many cases unable to provide a tight anchor for the price level (Williamson 1999). 3 www.thestar.com.my/business/business-news/2015/08/14/no-peg-no-controls. (continued) I.C. Policy considerations 61 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 (Box I.C.1 continued) •• Less flexible exchange rates. Cambodia, China, Lao PDR, and Vietnam all have a “stabilized arrangement” or “other managed arrangement.” The authorities are heavily involved in setting the exchange rate, and intervene frequently to keep the currency within predetermined ranges. In several cases, the countries are either de jure or de facto anchoring or pegging to the U.S. dollar or a basket of currencies. For instance, over the past year, China intervened significantly to prop up the currency after it came under pressure from large capital outflows. In Lao PDR, foreign exchange has been rationed, resulting in the emergence of a 3 to 5 percent parallel exchange rate premium. Cambodia and Vietnam, however, intervened by purchasing excess foreign currency as strong inflows resulted in appreciation pressures. •• Fixed exchange rates. The Pacific Island Countries typically either lack their own currency, and instead use the U.S. dollar or Australian dollar, or have hard pegs.4 Exchange rate policies are supported by a relatively frequent use of capital-flow management measures across the region, particularly in the large economies. In general, developing EAP has less open financial accounts than other regions, with a broad increase in capital-flow management measures since the 2000s (IMF 2014). In 2013, Indonesia and Thailand were most open to capital flows; China, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, and Vietnam all had significantly more controls in place.5 In Malaysia, while central bank interventions recently moderated, the authorities tightened currency regulations.6 China, after some liberalization of bond and stock markets during 2016, intensified restrictions on outward investments in early 2017. Countries with flexible exchange rates have in general experienced less real appreciation over the past few years.7 It is well documented that East Asian economies in general have focused on maintaining competitive exchange rates: their “fear of appreciation” is manifested in a willingness to allow depreciations, but reluctance to allow appreciations (Rajan 2012). Indeed, among countries with flexible exchange rates, only Indonesia has recently experienced significant real appreciation. Appreciating trends in the Philippines and Myanmar peaked in early 2015 and mid-2016, respectively, but have since been reversed. Mongolia has experienced a rapid loss in the value of its currency, following the rapid appreciation through 2012 and the sharp decline in commodity prices since. Conversely, among economies with less flexible or fixed exchange rates, Cambodia, Lao PDR, Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, and Vietnam have all seen continued real appreciation. That said, in China, developments since the second half of 2015 have reduced the extent of appreciation. And there is no significant appreciation pressure in Fiji, Samoa, or Tonga. 4 No separate legal tender in Kiribati, the Marshall Islands, the Federated States of Micronesia, Palau, and Tuvalu. Hard pegs in Fiji, Samoa, the Solomon Islands, and Tonga. 5 Countries may be classified as “open” when on average they have capital controls on less than 10 percent over the sample period (1995–2013), and do not have any years in which there are controls on more than 20 percent of their transactions subcategories. Countries may be classified as “walls” when they have capital controls on more than 70 percent of their transactions subcategories over the sample period, and do not have any years in which there are controls on more than 60 percent of their transactions subcategories. Countries have “gates” when they are neither open nor walls. During 1995–2013, all the large regional economies had walls or gates, and none were open (Fernandez et al. 2015). 6 The authorities reinforced rules against offshore currency trading, required exporters to convert at least 75 percent of their export proceeds to local currency, and adopted measures to deepen onshore financial markets to ensure liquidity in domestic financial markets. 7 Appreciation of the exchange rate is not necessarily a sign of unsustainable policies. Countries can cope with the appreciation provided there are sufficient productivity gains. However, prolonged real appreciations can be a signal of misalignment and imbalances. (continued) 62 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE (Box I.C.1 continued) Experience from across the region suggests that significant exchange rate misalignments can be avoided with either flexible or fixed exchange rate regimes, provided these regimes are consistent with the overall macroeconomic policy stance. Economies with flexible exchange rates have proved broadly successful at avoiding misalignments, with the exchange rate typically assessed as in line with fundamentals or moderately undervalued (Table I.C.1). The only exceptions are Myanmar, where the evidence points to only moderate overvaluation, and Mongolia. Conversely, a number of countries with less flexible or fixed exchange rates have also been able to avoid the build-up of imbalances. In particular, in China, Vietnam, and most PICs, there is no clear evidence of misalignment. And in Cambodia and the Solomon Islands there is only moderate overvaluation. In contrast, Lao PDR and Papua New Guinea continue to have overvalued exchange rates. And managed exchange rate regimes may be able to avoid overvaluation, but at the cost of contributing to the build-up of risks in other sectors. For instance, in Cambodia, China, and Vietnam, unsterilized foreign exchange intervention likely fueled rapid credit growth. Table BI.C.1.1. Exchange rate regimes Country Exchange rate Comment Degree of misalignmenta date of IMF Article IV report arrangement Cambodia Other managed US$ as anchor for Moderately overvalued (10.1 percent to 5.7 percent arrangement monetary policy above equilibrium value) (November 2016) China Other managed Broadly in line with fundamentals (4.1 percent arrangement above to 1.5 percent below equilibrium value) (August 2016) Fiji Conventional peg Moderately overvalued (14.4 percent above to 3 percent below equilibrium value) (February 2016) Indonesia Floating Broadly in line with fundamentals (0.5 percent above to 6.2 percent below equilibrium value) (February 2017) Kiribati No separate legal No assessment (September 2016) tender Lao PDR Stabilized De facto anchor to Overvalued (38.3 percent to 20.1 percent above arrangement US$ equilibrium value) (January 2017) Malaysia Other managed Moderately undervalued (1.4 percent above to 30.7 arrangement percent below equilibrium value) (May 2016) Marshall Islands No separate legal Broadly in equilibrium (July 2016) tender Micronesia No separate legal tender Mongolia Floating Overvalued (14 percent to 11 percent above equilibrium value) (April 2015) Myanmar Other managed Moderately overvalued (17 percent to 5.8 percent arrangement above equilibrium value) (February 2017) Palau No separate legal Broadly in equilibrium tender Papua New Guinea Craw-like De facto anchor to Overvalued (28.5 percent above to 46 percent arrangement US$ below equilibrium value) (January 2017) (continued) I.C. Policy considerations 63 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 (Box I.C.1 continued) Table BI.C.1.1. Exchange rate regimes Country Exchange rate Comment Degree of misalignmenta date of IMF Article IV report arrangement Philippines Floating Broadly in line with fundamentals (24.5 percent above to 7.7 percent below equilibrium value) (September 2016) Samoa Conventional peg No significant misalignment (18.8 percent above to 17.5 percent below equilibrium value) (July 2015) Solomon Islands Conventional peg De facto anchor to Moderately overvalued (17 percent above to 12 a composite percent below equilibrium value) (March 2016) Thailand Floating Broadly in line with fundamentals (3.1 percent above to 2.9 percent below equilibrium value) (June 2016) Timor-Leste No separate legal No assessment (June 2016) tender Tonga Pegged exchange De facto anchor to Broadly in line with fundamentals (2.2 percent rate within a composite above equilibrium value) (June 2016) horizontal bands Tuvalu No separate legal No evidence of misalignment (October 2016) tender Vanuatu Other managed Other Broadly in line with fundamentals (7.9 percent arrangement to 2.4 percent above equilibrium value) (October 2016) Vietnam Stabilized De facto anchor to No evidence of misalignment (22.9 percent above arrangement the US$ to 11.2 percent below equilibrium value) (July 2016) Sources: IMF AREAER database; IMF Article IV staff reports; World Bank staff estimates. Note: a. The range of reported values for the degree of misalignment reflects the estimates produced by different modeling approaches. Figure BI.C.1.1. Reserve cover Panel A. Months of imports of goods Panel B. Percent of reserve money Percent of forex deposits/ Panel C.  liabilities 25 350 1,200 300 1,000 20 250 800 15 200 600 150 10 400 100 5 200 50 0 0 0 L N T M M O I SM SLBPNGTON FJW L N T M M O I SM SLBPNGTON FJW L N T M M O I SM SLBPNGTON FJW PH IDNTHAMYS R G MM MN CH VU KH VN LA PH IDNTHAMYS R G MM MN CH VU KH VN LA PH IDNTHAMYS R G MM MN CH VU KH VN LA Source: World Bank staff estimates, based on IMF International Financial Statistics, Directions of Trade Statistics, and Financial Soundness Indicators; and national central banks and statistics offices. Note: Data refer to Q3 2016 or later. Imports refer to goods only, CIF basis. Horizontal lines denote the means for the respective groups. (continued) 64 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE (Box I.C.1 continued) Reserve buffers are generally comfortable across the region, regardless of the exchange rate regime. Among countries with flexible exchange rates, reserve cover in months of imports significantly exceeds standard benchmarks in the Philippines, Thailand, Indonesia, and Malaysia (Figure I.C.2, panel A). However, similarly strong reserve cover exists in countries with less flexible exchange rates, such as China and Vanuatu, or with pegs, such as Fiji and Tonga. Conversely, the countries with relatively limited reserve cover are equally diverse, including some with flexible exchange rates, such as Myanmar, and others with less flexible or fixed exchange rates, such as Lao PDR, Samoa, and Vietnam.8 Again, reserves are relatively low as a share of reserve money (panel B) or of foreign currency liabilities (panel C) in economies with both flexible exchange rates, such as Mongolia, and less flexible exchange rates, such as Cambodia. Ultimately, the presence and extent of imbalances depends not only on the exchange rate regime per se, but on the coherence of the overall macroeconomic framework; exchange rate flexibility per se is no panacea. Among the large regional economies that were affected by the Asian financial crisis, greater exchange rate flexibility has helped preserve competitiveness and maintain adequate reserves. Looking ahead, if the U.S. dollar continues appreciating, such flexibility may help maintain trade competitiveness, without leading to unmanageable debt servicing costs. Nevertheless, similar outcomes can be achieved with less flexible exchange rate arrangements, if these are combined with disciplined fiscal and monetary policies (Baig 2001). And several countries in developing EAP, including, in particular, Cambodia and China, have indeed been able to avoid imbalances through such discipline. But in other countries, such as Lao PDR and Papua New Guinea, significant real appreciation and low reserve buffers suggest that the exchange rate regime is not properly aligned with their fiscal and monetary policies. If the U.S. dollar continues strengthening, these countries risk further erosion of competitiveness and difficulties in maintaining their exchange rate regime. 8 Vietnam, however, has recently seen a significant increase in reserves. I.C. Policy considerations 65 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 (Box I.C.1 continued) Box I.C.2. Productivity Trends in Developing East Asia and Pacific1 In developing EAP, there is some evidence of a productivity slowdown, but with no consistent pattern across countries or over time. Total factor productivity (TFP) measures the efficiency with which factors of production are used to produce goods and services, and plays a key role in explaining differences in income levels across countries.2 Across the large regional economies, aggregate TFP growth fell sharply with the 1997–98 Asian financial crisis (Figure BI.C.2.1, panels A and B). It subsequently broadly recovered, but fell again during the global financial crisis (GFC). Since then, it has continued decelerating in China, and remains well below pre-GFC levels in Thailand and to a lesser extent Malaysia. In contrast, TFP growth has returned to pre-GFC levels in the Philippines and Indonesia, and is rising in Vietnam. Among the small economies, TFP growth is well below pre-GFC levels in Cambodia, and remains low in Lao PDR (panel C). Figure BI.C.2.1. Total factor productivity growth Growth in output per capita: contributions of TFP, physical capital, and human capital (annualized, percent) Panel A. China, Indonesia, and Malaysia The Philippines, Thailand, and Panel B.  Panel C. Small economies Vietnam Percent Percent Percent 10 10 10 8 8 8 6 6 6 4 4 4 2 2 2 0 0 0 -2 -2 -2 -4 -4 -4 -6 -6 -6 -8 -8 -8 20 –10 20 –10 20 –10 20 –10 20 –10 20 –10 20 –10 20 –10 19 –96 99 99 19 96 99 99 19 –96 99 99 19 –96 99 99 19 96 99 99 19 –96 99 99 19 –96 99 99 19 96 99 99 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 20 007 20 007 20 007 20 007 20 007 20 007 20 007 20 007 –1 –1 –1 –1 –1 –1 –1 –1 19 96– – 19 96– 19 96– 19 96– – 19 96– 19 96– 19 96– – 19 96– 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 –2 –2 –2 –2 –2 –2 –2 –2 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 China Indonesia Malaysia Philippines Thailand Vietnam Cambodia Lao PDR JJHuman capital JJPhysical capital per capita JJTFP Source: World Bank staff estimates, based on data from the Penn World Tables, World Development Indicators, and National Statistical Offices. Note: Estimates based on growth accounting decomposition. An aggregate Cobb-Douglas production function is assumed, with physical capital, labor, and human capital as inputs. Physical capital is estimated using the perpetual inventory method. Human capital is estimated based on average years of schooling and Mincer rates of return to education. This decomposition measures the proximate sources of growth, but TFP levels, and their differences across sectors, ultimately affect output growth also by changing the incentives to accumulate both physical and human capital. Similarly, the pace of structural transformation has decelerated in some but not all countries, broadly in line with aggregate productivity trends. The reallocation of labor toward sectors enjoying higher productivity (“static reallocation”) or faster productivity growth (“dynamic reallocation”), and in particular from agriculture toward manufacturing, construction, and non-traditional services, was for extended periods an important channel underpinning aggregate productivity gains in the region.3 However, this transformation 1 Prepared by Geno Najdov and Nikola Spatafora, with inputs from the Enterprise Analysis Unit. 2 Hsieh and Klenow 2010. 3 McMillan and Rodrik 2011 (continued) 66 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE (Box I.C.2 continued) has stalled in Thailand, and its pace remains weak in Malaysia and the Philippines since the Asian financial crisis (Figure BI.C.2.2). In contrast, the pace of labor reallocation is increasing in Indonesia, and remained robust in China through 2010. In Vietnam, detailed studies suggest that intersectoral reallocation continues to account for approximately half of labor productivity growth, with no signs of a slowdown.4 Figure BI.C.2.2. Intersectoral labor reallocation Growth in labor productivity: contributions of intersectoral reallocation and within-sector productivity growth Annualized, percent 10 8 6 4 2 0 -2 -4 -6 0 2 1 2 1 6 9 6 9 6 9 6 9 6 9 7 7 7 7 7 –1 –1 –1 –1 –1 –9 –9 –9 –9 –9 –9 –9 –9 –9 –9 00 00 00 00 00 07 07 07 07 07 90 96 90 96 90 96 90 96 90 96 –2 –2 –2 –2 –2 20 20 20 20 20 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 99 99 99 99 99 19 19 19 19 19 China Indonesia Malaysia Philippines Thailand JJStatic reallocation JJDynamic reallocation JJWithin-sector growth Source: World Bank staff estimates, based on data from the Groningen Growth and Development Centre 10-Sector Database; www.rug.nl/ggdc/productivity/10-sector. Note: Aggregate labor productivity growth is decomposed as follows: n n n ΔΡt = Σ i=1 Θi,t-k ΔΡi,t + Σ i=1 ΔΘi,tΡi,t-k + Σ i=1 ΔΘi,t ΔΡi,t  here P and p denote, respectively, economy-wide and sectoral labor productivity; Θ denotes sectoral employment shares; the subscripts i and t refer, respectively, to the sector and year; and the Δ operator w denotes changes over time. The first term on the right-hand side captures the impact of within-sector productivity growth; the second and third terms capture the impact of structural reallocation, that is, shifts toward sectors with higher initial productivity (“static reallocation,” the second term), or higher productivity growth (“dynamic reallocation,” the third term) (de Vries et al. 2015). The analysis employs data on value added at constant prices, and on employment, for the following 10 sectors: agriculture, hunting and forestry, and fishing; mining and quarrying; manufacturing; electricity, gas, and water supply; construction; wholesale and retail trade, hotels, and restaurants; transport, storage, and communications; finance, insurance, real estate, and business services; government services; and community, social, and personal services. Data are available for the following periods: China, 1952–2010; Indonesia, 1961–2012; Malaysia, 1975–2011; the Philippines, 1971–2012; and Thailand, 1960–2011. Large productivity differences across firms suggest that resource misallocation may have a significant impact on aggregate productivity. Additional insights may be gained from the firm-level productivity data in the World Bank Enterprise Surveys. Much of the following discussion focuses on labor productivity, since estimating TFP at the firm level is challenging.5 Average labor productivity in both manufacturing and services is in general correlated with output per capita. But several regional economies, including China, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Vietnam, are characterized by significant differences in productivity across firms, in both manufacturing (Figure BI.C.2.3, panel A) and services (panel B).6 The continued survival of a large number of underperforming firms may be indicative of capital-, labor-, or product-market distortions constraining relatively more efficient producers.7 These differentials might reflect differences across firms in the capital intensity and technology intensity of production, as measured by the ratio of sales to labor costs (panels C and D). 4 McCaig and Pavcnik 2013 5 Among the key technical difficulties, differences across firms in TFP are likely to be correlated with firms’ choice of inputs, as well as with the (typically unmeasured) price deflators for firms’ inputs and outputs. 6 For a more detailed analysis of Malaysia, see Malaysia Economic Monitor: The Quest for Productivity Growth, World Bank, Washington, DC, December 2016. 7 For an analysis of misallocation in manufacturing see Hsieh and Klenow (2009), and in agriculture see Restuccia and Santaeulalia-Llopis (2017). (continued) I.C. Policy considerations 67 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 (Box I.C.2 continued) Figure BI.C.2.3. Labor productivity, firm level Panel A. Sales per worker, in manufacturing Panel B. Sales per worker, in services By firm quartile (2009 US$) By firm quartile (2009 US$) 140,000 250,000 120,000 200,000 100,000 80,000 150,000 60,000 100,000 40,000 50,000 20,000 0 Selected 0 Selected KHM IDN LAO MYS MMR PHL THA VNM ASEAN CHN higher- KHM IDN LAO MYS MMR PHL THA VNM ASEAN CHN higher- 2016 2015 2016 2015 2014 2015 2016 2015 income 2016 2015 2016 2015 2014 2015 2016 2015 income QQ25th percentile QQ50th percentile QQ75th percentile QQ25th percentile QQ50th percentile QQ75th percentile Panel C. Sales to total labor costs, in manufacturing Panel D. Sales to total labor costs, in services By firm quartile By firm quartile 18 35 16 30 14 25 12 10 20 8 15 6 10 4 5 2 0 Selected 0 Selected KHM IDN LAO MYS MMR PHL THA VNM higher- KHM IDN LAO MYS MMR PHL THA VNM CHN higher- 2016 2015 2016 2015 2014 2015 2016 2015 ASEAN CHN income 2016 2015 2016 2015 2014 2015 2016 2015 ASEAN income QQ25th percentile QQ50th percentile QQ75th percentile QQ25th percentile QQ50th percentile QQ75th percentile Source: World Bank Enterprise Surveys. Note: “Selected higher-income” includes Chile, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Israel, Latvia, Mexico, Poland, the Slovak Republic, Slovenia, Sweden, and Turkey. Table BI.C.2.1. Reported constraints to firm-level productivity in developing EAP Constraint Percentage of firms identifying Countries where it ranks among the top five it as the biggest constraint constraints Practices of the informal sector 16.0 Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Lao PDR, Malaysia, Philippines, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Tonga, Vietnam, Vanuatu Access to finance 11.5 Cambodia, China, Fiji, Indonesia, Lao PDR, Micronesia, Mongolia, Myanmar, Philippines, Samoa, Timor-Leste, Vanuatu, Vietnam Tax rates 10.9 China, Fiji, Indonesia, Lao PDR, Malaysia, Micronesia, Mongolia, Philippines, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Thailand, Tonga, Vietnam Political instability 10.4 Cambodia, Fiji, Indonesia, Malaysia, Mongolia, Papua New Guinea, Thailand, Timor-Leste, Tonga Corruption 8.8 Mongolia, Papua New Guinea, Philippines, Solomon Islands, Timor-Leste, Tonga Access to land 7.0 Myanmar, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands Inadequately educated workforce 6.9 Cambodia, China, Micronesia, Lao PDR, Myanmar, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Tonga, Vietnam, Vanuatu (continued) 68 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE (Box I.C.2 continued) Table BI.C.2.1. Reported constraints to firm-level productivity in developing EAP Constraint Percentage of firms identifying Countries where it ranks among the top five it as the biggest constraint constraints Electricity 6.3 Lao PDR, Micronesia, Myanmar, Philippines, Thailand, Vanuatu Transportation 4.7 Cambodia, China, Micronesia, Thailand, Vietnam Business licensing and permits 4.1 Indonesia, Mongolia, Malaysia, Timor-Leste Labor regulations 3.4 Fiji, Myanmar, Thailand Tax administration 3.3 Malaysia Crime, theft, and disorder 2.7 Fiji, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Timor-Leste, Vanuatu Customs and trade regulations 2.7 None Courts 1.2 None Firm-level productivity is significantly influenced by several aspects of the business environment. In general, a wide range of factors is correlated with firm-level productivity; whether there is a causal link is less clear. That said, formal-sector firms across the region repeatedly refer to specific key constraints to their activities, including access to finance, tax rates, political instability, corruption, an inadequately educated workforce, and competition from the informal sector (Table BI.C.2.1). And, indeed, labor productivity is lower among firms that self-report such constraints, or that can be objectively identified as being affected by them (see, for instance, Figure BI.C.2.4, panels A, B, C, and D). Quantitatively, addressing shortages of skills and infrastructure can significantly improve firm performance. In Malaysia, firms that find adequate labor more easily are 16 percent more productive (Figure BI.C.2.5). In that context, not just education systems but also firm-level training programs have an impact.8 Firms that offer formal training opportunities are 23 percent more productive in Malaysia, 30 percent more productive in Cambodia, and 130 percent more productive in Myanmar. Again, improving infrastructure yields a significant payoff: in Malaysia, firms that do not experience power outages are 50 percent more productive. Likewise, productivity is associated with easier access to credit, especially among small and medium enterprises (SMEs), and with focus on innovation. Firms that are not financially constrained expand employment much more rapidly in the Philippines (Figure BI.C.2.6, Panel A), and enjoy higher labor productivity in Vietnam (Panel B). Access to credit is especially challenging for SMEs and for longer-term financing. However, it could be boosted by measures to strengthen creditor and property rights, improve credit information systems, and enhance financial supervision and regulation.9 Again, innovative firms are more productive. In Vietnam, firms that invest in formal R&D create three times more jobs, and see much faster sales growth (Figure BI.C.2.7). 8 For an analysis of education systems and skill development strategies in developing EAP, see World Bank, East Asia and Pacific Economic Update, October 2014: Enhancing Competitiveness in an Uncertain World, chapter II.A, “Moving from Education to Skills in East Asia and Pacific.” 9 For an analysis of the potential for technological change to boost financial inclusion, and the policy changes required to fully reap this opportunity, see World Bank, East Asia and Pacific Economic Update, October 2016: Reducing Vulnerabilities, chapter II.B, “How Will Technology Disrupt Financial Services in East Asia and Pacific?” (continued) I.C. Policy considerations 69 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 (Box I.C.2 continued) Figure BI.C.2.4. Estimated constraints to firm-level productivity Panel A. Vietnam: access to finance Panel B. Thailand: political stability Average sales per worker (2009 US$) Average sales per worker (2009 US$) 120 60 100 50 80 40 60 30 40 20 20 10 0 0 No Yes No Yes Firm identifies access/cost of finance as a major constraint Firm identifies crime, theft and disorder as major constraints Panel C. Malaysia: security costs Panel D. Vietnam: labor regulations Average sales per worker (2009 US$) Average sales per worker (2009 US$) 40 120 35 100 30 80 25 20 60 15 40 10 20 5 0 0 No Yes No Yes Security costs >= 5% of sales Firm identifies labor regulations as a major constraint Source: World Bank Enterprise Surveys. Note: Results are statistically significant after accounting for firms’ age, location, sector size, exporter status, foreign ownership status, manager experience, and whether the firm is part of a larger firm. Figure BI.C.2.5. In Malaysia, productivity is higher among firms that can more easily find the required skills, offer training opportunities, and have access to better infrastructure Percentage difference in TFP between Firms that do not identify labor skills as a major constraint, relative to the ones that do Firms that offer formal training, relative to the ones that do not Firms that do not experience power outages, relative to the ones that do 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 Source: World Bank Enterprise Surveys. (continued) 70 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE (Box I.C.2 continued) Figure BI.C.2.6. Easier access to credit can increase productivity  hilippines: employment growth and credit Panel A. P Vietnam: labor productivity and credit constraints Panel B.  constraints Employment growth (percent) Average sales per worker (2009 US$) 5 140,000 4 120,000 100,000 3 80,000 2 60,000 1 40,000 0 20,000 -1 0 No Yes No Yes Fully or partially credit-constrained Fully or partially credit-constrained Source: World Bank Enterprise Surveys. Note: Firms are defined as fully credit-constrained if they cannot obtain any form of external financing. They typically fall into two categories: (a) those that applied for a loan and were rejected; and (b) those that did not apply either because of unfavorable terms and conditions, or because they did not think their application would be approved. Firms are defined as partially credit-constrained if they have external financing but (a) were discouraged from applying for a loan from a financial institution; or (b) applied for a loan that was partially approved or rejected. For an analysis of the impact of these financial constraints, see Kuntchev et al. (2014). Figure BI.C.2.7. More R&D spending is associated with greater job creation and faster sales growth in Vietnam Panel A. Employment growth and R&D expenditure Panel B. Sales growth and R&D expenditure Employment growth (percent) Sales growth (percent) 14 14 12 12 10 10 8 8 6 6 4 2 4 0 2 -2 0 -4 No Yes No Yes Firm spent on formal R&D Firm spent on formal R&D Source: World Bank Enterprise Surveys. I.C. Policy considerations 71 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 Box I.C.3. The Investment Slowdown in Developing East Asia and Pacific1 Long-term investment trends in developing EAP Investment rates in developing EAP since the 1997–98 Asian financial crisis have been significantly higher than in other developing regions ( Figure BI.C.3.1, panels A and B). Developing EAP accounted for almost 20 percent of global investment, and more than 40 percent of global investment growth, during 2000–16 (panels C and D). These high investment rates led to a rapid accumulation of physical capital and expansion of productive capacity, and contributed to the region’s rapid GDP growth. In China and Vietnam, investment was the main source of GDP growth, accounting for about half of GDP growth between 2004 and 2010. In the rest of the region, investment growth contributed about 1.3 percentage points, or about one- quarter of the 4.9 percent annual GDP growth during the same period. The high investment levels reflect rapid growth in private investment, which proved resilient to shocks. Figure BI.C.3.1. Investment Panel A. Investment growth, developing regions Panel B. Investment growth, developing EAP Percent Percent 15 25 13 11 20 9 7 15 5 10 3 1 5 -1 -3 0 -5 -7 -5 -9 -11 -10 20 09– 8 20 09– 8 20 09– 8 20 09– 8 20 09– 8 20 09– 8 20 09– 8 20 09– 8 20 09– 8 20 09– 8 20 09– 8 20 09– 8 20 09– 8 2003– 2 13 12 2003– 2 13 12 2003– 2 13 12 2003– 2 13 12 2003– 2 13 12 2003– 2 13 12 2003– 2 13 12 2003– 2 13 12 2003– 2 13 12 2003– 2 13 12 2003– 2 13 12 2003– 2 13 12 2003– 2 13 12 19 15 19 5 19 15 19 5 19 5 19 15 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 2098–97 2098–97 2098–97 2098–97 2098–97 2098–97 2098–97 2098–97 2098–97 2098–97 20 8– 7 20 8– 7 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 –1 –1 –1 –1 –1 –1 –1 –1 –1 –1 9 9 20 – 9 – – – 1990– 19 0– 1990– 1990– 1990– 1990– 1990– 1990– 1990– 1990– 1990– 1990– 1990– 8 9 9 9 9 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 JJEAP JJEAP excl. China JJECA JJLAC JJCHN JJIDN JJMYS JJTHA JJMENA JJSAR JJSSA ▬▬1990–2015 average JJPHL JJVNM ▬▬1990–2015 average Panel C. Share of world investment Panel D. Share of world investment growth Percent Percent 50 80 70 40 60 50 30 40 30 20 20 10 10 0 0 -10 1993–99 2000–08 2010–16 1993–99 2000–08 2010–16 JJEAP JJECA JJLAC JJMENA JJSAR JJSSA JJEAP JJECA JJLAC JJMENA JJSAR JJSSA Sources: Haver Analytics; World Economic Outlook. Note: GDP-weighted averages, using 2010 real GDP at constant prices and market exchange rates as weights. Panel C: each column shows the period-average share of global investment contributed by the various developing regions. Panel D: each column shows the period-average share of global investment growth contributed by the various developing regions. These developing regions comprise 95 countries. The remainder is contributed by 30 advanced economies. 1 Prepared by Ekaterine Vashakmadze with research assistance provided by Trang Nguyen and Liwei Liu. The analysis draws on Global Economic Prospects January 2017: Weak Investment in Uncertain Times (World Bank 2017b). (continued) 72 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE (Box I.C.3 continued) Investment in developing EAP was largely supported by high domestic saving rates, but foreign capital also played an important role. Domestic savings in developing EAP have been significantly higher than in other developing regions (Figure BI.C.3.2). East Asia is the only developing region in which savings have consistently exceeded investment, making it a net exporter of capital: since the Asian crisis of 1997– 98, the region has recorded current account surpluses averaging around 4 percent of GDP. That said, foreign capital played an important role in various key aspects of investment growth in developing EAP, including transfer of new technologies and know-how, formation of human resources, integration in global markets, increase of competition, and firms’ development and reorganization (Moura and Forte 2010). Developing EAP has been successful in attracting a large share of global FDI in the postcrisis period (Figure BI.C.3.3, panel A). FDI stocks were significant in both large and small economies (panels B and C). Figure BI.C.3.2. Savings and current account balances Panel A. Regions Panel B. Developing EAP Saving rate (percent of GDP) Saving rate (percent of GDP) 50 50 40 40 30 30 20 20 10 10 0 0 -10 -10 -20 -20 20 09– 8 20 09– 8 20 09– 8 20 09– 8 20 09– 8 20 09– 8 20 09– 8 20 09– 8 20 09– 8 20 09– 8 20 09– 8 20 09– 8 20 09– 8 2003– 2 13 12 2003– 2 13 12 2003– 2 13 12 2003– 2 13 12 2003– 2 13 12 2003– 2 13 12 2003– 2 13 12 2003– 2 13 12 2003– 2 13 12 2003– 2 13 12 2003– 2 13 12 2003– 2 13 12 2003– 2 13 12 19 5 19 15 19 15 19 5 19 5 19 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 2098–97 2098–97 2098–97 2098–97 2098–97 2098–97 2098–97 2098–97 20 8– 7 20 8– 7 7 2098–97 2098–97 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 –1 –1 –1 –1 –1 –1 –1 –1 –1 –1 –1 9 9 20 – 9 – – 1990– 1990– 1990– 1990– 1990– 1990– 1990– 1990– 1990– 1990– 1990– 1990– 1990– 8 9 9 9 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 JJEAP savings JJEAP excl. China savings JJECA savings JJLAC savings JJCHN savings JJIDN savings JJMYS savings JJTHA savings JJMENA savings JJSAR savings JJSSA savings JJCurrent account deficit JJPHL savings JJVNM savings JJCurrent account deficit Sources: Haver Analytics; World Economic Outlook. Figure BI.C.3.3. FDI inflows and stocks Panel A. FDI inflows, developing EAP Panel B. FDI stock, East Asia FDI stock, Pacific Island Panel C.  Countries Two left-most bars: percent of total EMDE FDI inflows; other Percent of GDP Percent of GDP bars: percent of GDP 40 150 105 30 110 65 20 70 10 25 30 0 0 0 0 0 –1 1–15 –1 1–15 –1 1–15 –1 1– 15 07 1 07 1 07 1 07 01 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 2 Commodity -10 -15 Share of China Commodity importers total EMDE exporters excl. China MNG KHM VNM THA MYS LAO MMR IDN PHL CHN PLW TON FJI VUT SLB PNG TMP WSM KIR JJChina JJCommodity exporters JJ2015 ▬▬Difference from 1990–2008 average JJ2015 ▬▬Difference from 1990–2008 average JJCommodity importers excluding China Sources: Haver Analytics; World Economic Outlook. (continued) I.C. Policy considerations 73 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 (Box I.C.3 continued) Investment trends since 2010 In Emerging Markets and Developing Economies (EMDEs) as a whole, investment growth has slowed sharply since 2010. Investment growth declined from 10 percent in 2010 to 3.4 percent in 2015 (Figure BI.C.3.4, panels A, B, and C). The slowdown affected most economies: in 2015, investment growth was below its long-term average in more than 60 percent of EMDEs, the largest share over the past quarter century outside serious global downturns. Postcrisis investment weakness affected both public investment, which accounted for 31 percent of investment during 2010–15, and private investment. In all regions except Sub- Saharan Africa, public investment growth has slowed steadily from elevated levels during the global financial crisis to below long-term averages. This slowdown partly reflected increasing financing constraints as fiscal space eroded with crisis-related fiscal stimulus and slowing postcrisis growth. Following a postcrisis rebound in 2010, private investment growth also slowed sharply and remained below the long-term average in more than half of all EMDEs. Developments have varied widely across regions, however, reflecting the presence of commodity importers or exporters, the degree of political stability, and spillovers from key trading partners and investors. Since 2010, investment growth has declined particularly sharply, and in some cases even proved negative, in regions with a large number of commodity exporters, notably in Europe and Central Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean, the Middle East and North Africa, and Sub-Saharan Africa. Investment growth in developing EAP has steadily declined, but less so than in developing economies as a whole, and its pace has stabilized since 2015. Regional investment growth declined from 12.1 percent in 2010 to 6.5 percent on average in 2015–16. The slowdown affected most regional economies, and was particularly pronounced in China (Figure BI.C.3.4, panels D and E). It reflected decelerating public and private investment growth, as the coordinated fiscal stimulus following the global financial crisis was unwound. As a result, in many developing EAP economies, investment and savings rates have peaked well before their incomes reached advanced economy levels, in contrast with the experience of the current high-income East Asian economies. China is an exception: its investment rate and the contribution of its investment to growth remain elevated, exceeding 40 percent in 2016 (Figure BI.C.3.5, panel A). In commodity exporters in the region, investment growth slowed particularly sharply during 2012–14. Since 2015, investment growth has stabilized or begun to recover in several countries (Figure BI.C.3.5, panels B and C). Overall, investment growth in developing EAP was approximately twice as high as in other developing regions during 2013–16. Much of the regional investment decline is accounted for by decreases in construction investment and, to a lesser extent, machinery and equipment investment. Construction investment accounts for well over half of total investment (of which around one-third is residential construction investment). Machinery and equipment investment spending has had a less pronounced cycle. The small “other investment” category, which is mainly breeding livestock and intangibles, has been broadly constant at around 1 percent of GDP. (continued) 74 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE (Box I.C.3 continued) Figure BI.C.3.4. Investment growth Panel A. Advanced Economies & Emerging Markets Panel B. Developing regions Percent Percent 14 14 12 12 10 10 8 8 6 6 4 4 2 2 0 0 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2012 20 14 2012 20 14 2012 20 14 2012 20 14 2012 20 14 2012 20 14 15 15 15 15 15 15 10 011 012 013 014 015 2011 2011 2011 2011 10 011 012 013 014 015 2011 2011 10 011 012 013 014 015 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 EMDEs Advanced economies World EAP ECA LAC MENA SAR SSA ▬▬1990–2008 average ---- 2003–08 average ▬▬1990–2008 average ---- 2003–08 average Panel C. Share of EMDEs below long-term average, 2015 Panel D. Developing EAP Percent Percent 90 14 80 12 70 10 60 50 8 40 6 30 4 20 10 2 0 0 Commodity importers EAP ECA LAC MENA SAR SSA China excl. China Commodity exporters JJBelow long-term average JJBelow zero ▬▬50 JJ2010–14 JJ2015 JJ2016f ▬▬1990–2008 ---- 2003–08 Panel E. Investment rates, developing EAP Percent of GDP 50 40 30 20 10 0 8 8 8 8 8 8 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 5 5 5 5 5 5 7 7 7 7 7 7 –0 –0 –0 –0 –0 –0 –0 –1 –0 –1 –0 –1 –0 –1 –0 –1 –0 –1 –1 –1 –1 –1 –1 –1 –9 –9 –9 –9 –9 –9 03 03 03 03 03 03 98 09 98 09 98 09 98 09 98 09 98 09 13 13 13 13 13 13 90 90 90 90 90 90 20 20 20 20 20 20 19 20 19 20 19 20 19 20 19 20 19 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 19 19 19 19 19 19 ▬▬1990–2015 ave. JJCHN JJIDN JJMYS JJTHA JJPHL JJVNM Sources: Haver Analytics; World Economic Outlook. Key drivers of postcrisis investment slowdown in developing EAP Overall, investment weakness since 2010 in EMDEs as a group has been largely driven by terms-of- trade shocks (for commodity exporters); slowing FDI inflows and weak growth prospects in advanced economies (for commodity importers); and rapidly rising private debt burdens, political risk, and weaknesses in the institutional environment and investment climate (for all EMDEs). In oil exporters, (continued) I.C. Policy considerations 75 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 (Box I.C.3 continued) Figure BI.C.3.5. Investment stabilization in developing EAP  hina: contribution of Panel A. C Investment growth: Indonesia, Panel B.  Investment growth: Panel C.  consumption and investment Malaysia, and Thailand the Philippines to GDP growth Percent Percent Percent 70 7 25 65 6 20 60 5 55 15 4 50 3 10 45 2 40 5 35 1 30 0 0 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Indonesia Malaysia Thailand 2010–12 2013 2014 2015 2016 ▬▬Consumption ▬▬Investment JJ2016Q1 JJ2016Q2 JJ2016Q3 JJ2016Q4 Sources: Haver Analytics; World Economic Outlook. the oil price decline from 2014 onward accounted for about half of the investment slowdown during 2011– 15. In commodity importers, slowing FDI inflows accounted on average for more than half of the investment slowdown. Rising private debt burdens have had increasingly adverse effects on investment, as the impact of a large “debt-overhang”2 is compounded by an environment with weak growth prospects. High or rising political uncertainty, as measured by the International Country Risk Guide’s political risk index, may have accounted for one-tenth of the investment slowdown since 2011: when firms are uncertain about future demand or policies, they may not be willing to commit to irreversible physical investment.3 The institutional and regulatory environment remains critical: postcrisis, private investment recovered faster in countries with more developed financial market infrastructure, and with generally better governance.4 In developing EAP, and especially in China, slowing investment growth partly represents a correction from high precrisis investment growth and the immediate postcrisis fiscal and monetary stimulus. China and several ASEAN countries experienced rapid credit growth in the postcrisis period. Large debt stocks now continue to weigh on investment growth in China, Malaysia, Mongolia, Papua New Guinea, and Thailand. Relatedly, investment efficiency, as measured by incremental capital-output ratios (ICORs), has been deteriorating until recently. In China, ICORs were particularly high, reflecting large investment in infrastructure and real estate. 2 Elevated debt can discourage investment because many of the benefits of investment will then flow to the creditors of leveraged firms rather than to their owners. In addition, high debt may reflect misallocation of capital to less innovative firms. 3 Alesina and Perotti 1996; Julio and Yook 2012. 4 Qureshi, Diaz-Sanchez, and Varoudakis 2015. (continued) 76 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE (Box I.C.3 continued) Regional commodity exporters have been significantly affected by terms-of-trade declines, and regional commodity importers by policy tightening. In large commodity exporters (Indonesia and Malaysia), investment was significantly affected by two factors: the decline in commodity prices (especially raw materials, fertilizers, metals, and minerals) from their early-2011 peaks; and related policy tightening, particularly in response to financial volatility during the 2013 “Taper Tantrum.” In smaller, more heavily commodity-dependent economies, including Mongolia and Papua New Guinea, investment contracted as FDI for mining-sector projects declined, and as domestic policies again tightened sharply in response to balance-of-payments stress. Regional commodity importers other than China, until 2015, faced investment headwinds from tight monetary, fiscal, and prudential policies that were designed to contain the previous rapid credit growth. Their effects were compounded by political uncertainty in Thailand, and delays in investment project approvals in the Philippines. The more recent stabilization of investment in the region broadly reflects stabilizing commodity prices, reduced policy tightening, and lower political uncertainty. Investment has been encouraged by stabilizing commodity prices (for commodity exporters); more accommodative policies, amid low inflation and benign global financial conditions; and buoyant FDI. In Thailand, investment growth is recovering amid improved confidence. Public investment has accelerated particularly sharply in the Philippines, and in China it has offset the continued moderation of private investment. I.C. Policy considerations 77 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 Box I.C.4. Food Prices and the Poor in Indonesia and the Philippines1 The poor are vulnerable to higher prices, especially for rice and other staple foods. With low and vulnerable incomes, and a limited ability to smooth consumption out of savings, the poor are particularly susceptible to sharp increases in the cost of living. The poor spend more on food than on anything else—it makes up 60 percent of total consumption in Indonesia and up to 70 percent in the Philippines (Figure BI.C.4.1). Within food consumption, rice is the main staple of both countries and by far the highest single expenditure, representing around 15 to 20 percent of all consumption for the extreme and moderate poor.2 Moreover, rice prices in both countries are considerably higher than world prices. The price in the Philippines is twice that in Thailand and Vietnam, while Indonesian prices are around a third higher than world prices. Figure BI.C.4.1. Poor Indonesians and Filipinos spend Figure BI.C.4.2. Soaring rice prices in 2006 saw 60 to 70 percent of all consumption on food, with rice poverty rise in Indonesia by nearly 2 percentage points, the main staple the only increase in the past 17 years  Household per capita consumption Indonesian national poverty rate  Percent Percent 100 25 90 Global financial crisis 80 20 70 60 15 50 40 10 Asian financial crisis 30 Food price crisis 20 5 10 0 0 Extreme poor Moderate poor Extreme poor Moderate poor Indonesia Philippines 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 JJRice JJOther food JJNonfood Source: Statistics Indonesia. Sources: For Indonesia: Susenas 2016; for the Philippines: Family Income and Expenditure Survey 2015. Note: The extreme poor are approximated by the poorest per capita decile in the consumption distribution in each country, living on less than US$1.90 per person per day (in purchasing power adjusted terms), while the moderate poor are approximated by the second and third poorest deciles, living on less than US$3.10 per person per day. As a consequence, the poverty rate is sensitive to food price increases. For example, in 2006, the national poverty rate increased by nearly 2 percentage points in Indonesia, the first such increase since the Asian Financial Crisis, and the only increase in the last 17 years (Figure BI.C.4.2). This was largely attributed to a 33 percent increase in rice prices due to an import ban.3 Moreover, the slowing of poverty reduction in Indonesia in recent years has been due in part to continued high food price inflation.4 In the Philippines, during the 2008–09 food price crisis, the 35 to 40 percent increase in rice prices was seen as driving the 1 Prepared by Matt Wai-Poi and Kevin Chua. 2 In both countries, the poorest decile of household per capita consumption roughly represents the extreme poor (living on less than US$1.90-a-day PPP), and the next two deciles the moderate poor (living on less than US$3.10-a-day PPP). 3 World Bank (2006). 4 Indonesia Economic Quarterly, World Bank, October 2015 and March 2016. (continued) 78 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE (Box I.C.4 continued) 2.5 percentage point increase in poverty.5 A 10 percent increase in food prices in the Philippines has been estimated to lead to a 2.7 percentage point increase in poverty.6 Higher food prices affect both urban and rural households. The urban poor and vulnerable are affected by higher food prices when supplies are tight. However, most rural households are also affected, even those with some farming income. Most poor households are net rice consumers; even poor farmers generally consume more rice than they produce. This is true in both Indonesia7 and the Philippines.8 In fact, due to the larger number of rural households living just above the poverty line compared to urban areas, poverty during the 2007–08 food price crisis increased by 5.2 percentage points in rural areas, higher than the 4.5 percentage point increase in urban areas.9 In Indonesia, rice-price stabilization policies have been relatively ineffective in containing price increases. A ban on rice imports led directly to the food price crisis of 2006 and the consequent increase in poverty. Imports have since resumed, conducted solely by the government logistics agency, which uses imports to supplement purchases from local producers to maintain rice stocks. The agency then conducts market operations, releasing stocks into local markets when rice prices are high, according to a set formula. However, market operations have been relatively small (equivalent to less than 1 percent of rice production), are often conducted with delays, and have been through large traders who may not pass lower prices onto consumers. Consequently, they have historically proved ineffective at containing prices.10 Further, the way market operations are conducted often provides signals to the market, which contribute to price volatility. Informed traders watch government stocks and import announcements, often choosing to restrict sales in the expectation that prices will rise in the short term.11 In the Philippines, over the past decades, a policy focus on rice self-sufficiency has led to an inadequate rice supply, and domestic rice prices significantly greater than world prices. Rice imports are controlled by the National Food Authority.12 Restrictions on, and the mistiming of, imports have caused several price hikes;13 in general, low rice stocks are clearly associated with increases in rice prices (Figure BI.C.4.3). At the same time, substantial but poorly planned and executed government investments have 5 Reyes et al. 2009. 6 ADB 2008. 7 Three-quarters of the poor are net consumers of rice in Indonesia. Almost one-third of rice farmers and two-thirds of all farmers were net consumers of rice in 2004 (World Bank Indonesia Economic Quarterly, March 2015). 8 Manzano and Prado 2014; World Bank, Washington (2015b). 9 Fujii 2013. Similarly, Reyes et al. (2009) find that rural poverty is significantly more sensitive to food price increases than urban poverty. 10 World Bank (2015a); World Bank (2016f). 11 World Bank (2015a). 12 Private sector traders may apply for rice import permits and be allowed to import rice, but with a collective limit of 805,200 metric tons per year, and subject to 35 percent tariffs. 13 For instance, in 2014, domestic rice prices increased owing to importation lags, even as world rice prices fell. (continued) I.C. Policy considerations 79 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 (Box I.C.4 continued) failed to boost domestic supply, while attempts to Figure BI.C.4.3. When the Philippines’ National Food protect farmers by buying rice at high prices remain Authority rice stocks drop below around 600,000 metric tons, rice price inflation rises sharply poorly targeted.14 Rice price inflation (percent) 15 However, import and stock management 10 has improved in the last two years, which has effectively contained rice prices. Both 5 countries have improved rice stock management, 0 in part through higher and timelier imports. In the -5 Philippines, total imports reached 1.5 million tons -10 in 2015.15 This supplemented existing stocks to keep 0 200 400 600 800 1,000 1,200 prices from increasing as they had the year before. NFA stock (‘000 metric tons) Indonesia imported 1.5 million tons between October ▬ ▬Predicted rice price inflation Sources: Philippine Statistics Authority, CountrySTAT; World Bank staff estimates. 2015 and March 2016, and channeled 177,000 tons through market operations. As a consequence, rice and food price inflation remained relatively low, and March 2016 saw the first significant reduction in poverty in three years.16 However, this recently improved effectiveness in rice stabilization relies upon continued political commitment. Nationalist economic sentiments and arguments to increase self-sufficiency through import restrictions remain common in the public discourse. A return to lower imports (or poorer import timing) owing to changes in leadership or in views would put the new price stability at risk. Inflation remains moderate but has recently been increasing in the Phlippines and Indonesia, with risks for poverty. In the Philippines, food prices have been rising at around 3.5 percent (year-on-year), driven in part by higher rice prices (Figure BI.C.4.4). Continued food-price increases could threaten the poor.17 In Indonesia, food-price inflation remains lower than in recent years, owing to substantially lower rice price inflation. However, increases in regulated prices (electricity and government services) and the gradual recovery of global commodity prices are driving inflation higher (Figure BI.C.4.5).18 If significant food price inflation also materializes, this could have significant adverse effects on poverty. To meet growing rice demand and help contain prices, a liberalization of rice imports should be complemented by measures to boost agricultural productivity and enhance logistics. The world rice market is relatively thin: only 6 to 7 percent of total global rice production is traded internationally.19 This leaves importing countries vulnerable to aggregate shocks in regional exporters such as Vietnam and 14 For a fuller discussion, see World Bank (2016f). 15 Reflecting partial liberalization of private-sector rice imports via the “Minimum Access Volume” scheme in 2015. 16 World Bank (2016g). 17 For instance, World Bank staff estimates indicate that food price inflation of 5 percent, assuming 3 percent nonfood price inflation, could result in a 0.7 percentage points increase in poverty. 18 World Bank (2015a). 19 World Bank, (2015a). (continued) 80 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE (Box I.C.4 continued) Figure BI.C.4.4. Food price inflation has been Figure BI.C.4.5. In Indonesia, both food and rice increasing in the Philippines, driven by higher rice price inflation remains lower than in recent years, but prices, although overall price increases remain increases in regulated prices have caused inflation to moderate increase Philippines Indonesia Percent, year-on-year Percent, year-on-year 16 25 14 20 12 10 15 8 6 10 4 5 2 0 0 -2 -4 -5 -12 -12 -13 -13 -14 -14 -15 -15 -16 -16 -17 -12 -12 -13 -13 -14 -14 -15 -15 -16 -16 -17 Jan Jul Jan Jul Jan Jul Jan Jul Jan Jul Jan Jan Jul Jan Jul Jan Jul Jan Jul Jan Jul Jan ▬▬Core ▬▬Food ▬▬Rice ▬▬Core ▬▬Food ▬▬Rice Source: Philippines Statistics Authority. Source: Statistics Indonesia. Note: y-o-y = year-over-year. Note: y-o-y = year-over-year. Thailand. However, in both Indonesia and the Philippines, there is significant scope to both raise domestic agricultural productivity and lower the cost of transportation; this will help to both lower food prices and boost incomes. Specifically, Indonesian farm productivity is low for several reasons.20 Farms are smaller than in Thailand and the Philippines, making them less efficient and impeding mechanization; Indonesia is characterized by higher labor intensity than China, India, the Philippines, Thailand, or Vietnam. Productivity is also restricted by poor infrastructure (including irrigation, water resources, and road access to market), low use of high-yielding seeds, low agricultural research spending, and limited titling (needed for bank loan collateral). In the Philippines, the rice supply chain has high milling, drying, and transportation and storage costs, reflecting insufficient investments in roads and postharvest facilities, policy distortions, and a lack of competition.21 At the same time, effective social protection is needed for times of shock. In addition to improved productivity and logistics, effective social protection programs are needed to protect the poor and vulnerable from food price shocks in times of domestic or international natural disasters. Domestic and imported supplies of rice and other foods can easily be disrupted by droughts, floods, and other climate events. Ensuring that poor and vulnerable households have a safety net in times of high food prices remains critical, particularly in urban areas where the recent migrants and other urban poor often lack the strong informal coping mechanisms relied upon in rural areas, such as borrowing from friends and family. 20 World Bank (2015a). 21 World Bank (2016g). I.C. Policy considerations 81 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 References ADB (Asia Development Bank). 2008. Food Prices and Inflation in Developing Asia: Is Poverty Reduction Coming to an End? Manila: Asia Development Bank. Alesina, A., and R. 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World Trade Report 2015: Speeding up trade: benefits and challenges of implementing the WTO Trade Facilitation Agreement. Geneva: World Trade Organization. ———. 2016. “Overview of Developments in the International Trading Environment.” World Trade Organization, Geneva. Yao, Walter. 2016. “Why Asian Banks are Well Positioned for Basel III.” Pacific Exchange Blog. www.frbsf.org/ banking/asia-program/pacific-exchange-blog/why-asian-banks-are-well-positioned-for-basel-iii. 84 PART I. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK SUSTAINING RESILIENCE Part II. Medium-Term Development Agenda  85 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 II.A. Boosting Labor Mobility in the ASEAN Economic Community1 Greater trade integration among ASEAN countries will create significant new economic opportunities. The ability of both high- and low-skilled workers to move freely across ASEAN countries will be an important determinant of whether these new opportunities are in fact seized. Existing commitments by ASEAN member states to facilitate international labor mobility are limited in scope, and progress putting them into action has likewise been limited. As a result, significant barriers to labor mobility persist, reflecting weaknesses in the migration systems of both migrant-receiving and migrant-sending countries. Immigration regimes frequently do not reflect economic needs; information asymmetries among recruitment agencies, migrants, and employers result in high recruitment costs; entry and exit requirements are time-consuming and costly; and information about overseas employment opportunities is often lacking. To boost labor mobility, migrant-receiving countries should work toward migration systems that are responsive to economic needs. Sending countries should balance protection for migrant workers with the needs of economic development, support the reintegration of returning workers, and strengthen connections to diasporas. And greater coordination is required between receiving and sending countries. Specific measures to support this agenda include developing national migration strategies to guide policy making, shortage lists to inform immigration restrictions and link them to economic needs, predeparture orientation programs, better oversight of recruitment agencies, a combination of sanctions and incentives to encourage return migration , and more comprehensive and flexible bilateral labor agreements. Economic integration and international labor mobility Economic integration in ASEAN has the potential to spur economic growth in the region. ASEAN has been working toward regional integration for several decades through a series of agreements designed to tie the economies of member states more closely together. In part due to these efforts, intraregional tariffs have declined significantly and intraregional trade has increased to account for about a quarter of the region’s world trade (Figure II.A.1). However, regional integration is not complete. Nontariff barriers remain an issue (OECD 2016), and trade in services is still constrained by restrictive policies (ASEAN Secretariat and World Bank 2015). Removing the remaining barriers to integration would significantly boost GDP, exports, and total employment (Figure II.A.2; ILO and ADB 2014). Further integration would also hasten structural change in several countries. The ability of workers to move freely across countries and access newly created jobs will be an important determinant of whether the new economic opportunities created by integration are in fact seized. Reaping the full benefits of economic integration in ASEAN will require significant shifts in employment across countries and sectors. Conversely, barriers to labor mobility, which reduce the ability of workers to react to economic changes, will erode the positive effects of integration and diminish welfare. This chapter focuses on barriers to international labor mobility, such as rigid immigration systems or high international recruitment costs, which can dissuade 1 Prepared by Mauro Testaverde and Harry Moroz. 86 PART II. MEDIUM-TERM DEVELOPMENT AGENDA SUSTAINING RESILIENCE potential migrants from moving abroad or lead to undocumented migration. Barriers to domestic labor mobility2 are largely beyond the scope of the analysis, although they interact with and reinforce barriers to international mobility, and in addition make it more difficult for domestic workers to adjust to the entry of immigrant workers. Figure II.A.1. Intraregional trade in ASEAN, 1990–2014 Figure II.A.2. Change in GDP in ASEAN with deeper integration Percent of global trade Percent 30 8 7 25 6 20 5 15 4 3 10 2 5 1 0 0 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2020 2025 Source: OECD 2016. Source: ILO and ADB 2014. Figure II.A.3. ASEAN’s actions to facilitate labor mobility     É#5'#0(TCOGYQTM É(KTUV#'%$NWGRTKPV É#ITGGOGPVQP É#'%EQOGUKPVQ #ITGGOGPV5GTXKEGU /QXGOGPVQH HQTEG É%GDW&GENCTCVKQP 0CVWTCN2GTUQPU É#'%$NWGRTKPV The commitments made by ASEAN member states to facilitate labor mobility, as part of efforts to promote deeper regional integration, have been limited in scope. The most ambitious efforts have targeted high-skilled workers, partly in recognition that their mobility is critical to services integration. The 1995 ASEAN Framework Agreement on Services provided for the temporary movement of skilled professionals across borders, in line with the World Trade Organization General Agreement on Trade in Services Mode 4 provisions, with mobility-related commitments later collected in the ASEAN Agreement on Movement of Natural Persons (Figure II.A.3). One of the five pillars of the AEC, which envisions deeper economic integration and trade within ASEAN through the creation of a single market, is the free movement of skilled workers along with the free movement of goods, services, and investment and the freer flow of capital. In laying out the vision for the AEC in 2003, ASEAN member states pledged to “facilitate movement of business persons, skilled labor and talents,” and then laid out specific actions for doing so in the 2007 AEC Blueprint, such as facilitating the issuance of visas and employment passes for ASEAN professionals and skilled workers. In contrast, efforts to facilitate the mobility of low-skilled workers have been much more limited. The 2007 Declaration on the Protection and Promotion of the Rights of Migrant Workers (the Cebu Declaration) set out the obligations of migrant-receiving countries, including promoting fair employment; of 2 Stemming for instance from time-consuming job searches; skills mismatches that occur when worker’s skills are not perfectly transferable across firms, occupations, or sectors; and rigid employment policies such as employment protection regulations. II.A. Boosting Labor Mobility in the ASEAN Economic Community 87 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 sending countries, including regulating recruitment; and of ASEAN itself, including data sharing, capacity building, and developing an instrument for the protection and promotion of migrant workers’ rights.3 There has been limited progress putting into action these commitments to facilitate labor mobility. ASEAN member states have formulated mutual recognition agreements (MRAs) in seven professions and a framework agreement in an eighth. The MRAs take steps toward the creation of regional certification authorities and of processes for professionals to work abroad. Many ASEAN countries have made progress in areas like recruitment, migrant orientation programs, and complaints mechanisms for low-skilled workers. However, progress has been limited and barriers to international labor mobility remain. The MRAs only cover an estimated 5 percent of employment in ASEAN (Batalova, Shymonyak, and Sugiyarto 2017). Host country immigration and regulatory restrictions remain in place even where MRAs have been implemented. For example, Thailand bans migrants from working in 39 occupations including engineering, accounting, and architecture, which are covered by MRAs. The Cebu Declaration remains unratified in member states and is not binding (Martin and Abella 2014; Asia-Pacific RCM Thematic Working Group 2015). The implications of labor mobility for worker welfare Lowering barriers to mobility would increase the welfare gains enjoyed by workers in ASEAN countries following economic integration. Models of trade integration can be expanded to recognize that adjustments to trade shocks can be disrupted by the costs workers face when trying to move across countries, sectors, and occupations (Hollweg et al. 2014). This expansion permits exploration of how worker outcomes are affected by barriers workers face to moving in response to the new economic opportunities created by integration. When barriers to mobility are relaxed for skilled workers, as the AEC currently envisions, economic modeling shows that trade integration has a substantially larger positive effect across all ASEAN countries than if skilled workers continue to face high barriers to movement (Figure II.A.4).4 In ASEAN, the effect of enhanced trade integration on welfare is 14 percent higher if such barriers are reduced. When barriers to mobility are reduced for all workers in ASEAN, the positive effects of trade integration are even higher across ASEAN countries (Figure II.A.5). In ASEAN, the effect of enhanced trade integration on welfare is 29 percent higher if barriers to mobility for all workers are reduced rather than those for high-skilled workers alone.5 These results suggest that further trade integration without reducing barriers to mobility would leave significant welfare gains unrealized. Welfare gains from improved mobility can manifest themselves in a variety of ways. Welfare is typically measured using employment, wages, and other variables such as the potential to move to different jobs for higher wages, which impact a worker’s well-being. The growing body of literature on the impacts of migration on workers 3 The ASEAN Forum on Migrant Labor promotes implementation of the Cebu Declaration. 4 Enhanced trade integration within ASEAN is modeled as the removal of remaining intraregional tariffs, the liberalization of nontariff barriers in goods and services, and the introduction of advanced trade facilitation measures. The model underpinning these simulations, unlike standard trade models, does not assume that workers can change jobs without friction: mobility between countries, sectors, and occupations is possible but costly. 5 ASEAN is a diverse region, characterized by significant cross-country differences in technologies and productivity. As a result, international trade and migration are likely to prove complementary. That is, the gains from trade between ASEAN countries are likely to increase when migration is liberalized. And, conversely, flows of workers across borders in ASEAN are likely to continue even as trade integration proceeds. Indeed, two other globally important regional trade blocs that included mobility-liberalizing provisions, the European Union and the North American Free Trade Agreement, both experienced increases in international migration following integration, although these increases were temporary. 88 PART II. MEDIUM-TERM DEVELOPMENT AGENDA SUSTAINING RESILIENCE offers concrete examples of how labor mobility can impact welfare. This literature can help illustrate what improved welfare means for workers and provide evidence of its potential implications for countries. Figure II.A.4. Estimated change in welfare under trade Figure II.A.5. Estimated change in welfare under trade integration: lower barriers to mobility for high-skilled integration: lower barriers to mobility for all workers workers versus no reduction in barriers versus lower barriers for skilled workers only Percent change in welfare Percent change in welfare 18 35 16 30 14 25 12 10 20 8 15 6 10 4 5 2 0 0 ASEAN LAO MYS SGP KHM IDN VNM THA PHL MMR ASEAN LAO MYS SGP KHM PHL THA IDN VNM MMR Source: Hollweg 2016. Source: Hollweg 2016. Figure II.A.6. Change in the number of Malaysians Figure II.A.7. Wage impacts of doubling the size of the employed in a state due to the arrival of 10 immigrants immigrant workforce in five immigrant-intensive provinces in Thailand Number of people employed Percent change in wages 6 0.8 0.6 5 0.4 4 0.2 3 0 2 -0.2 -0.4 1 -0.6 0 -0.8 -1 -1.0 Lower Upper Degree Lower Upper High Overall No formal Primary secondary secondary Certificate & above secondary primary school College Source: del Carpio et al. 2015. Source: Lathapipat 2014. Migration generally improves the welfare of workers in migrant-receiving countries through positive, though small, impacts on employment and wages. Most evidence globally finds that migration has small impacts on the labor market outcomes of locals. Docquier, Özden, and Peri (2014) finds that immigration to OECD countries in the 1990s had positive, but small, impacts on wages and employment. Results are generally small in East Asian countries, as well (Ahsan et al. 2014). In Malaysia, immigration to a given state has been found to increase the employment of local workers. An additional 10 immigrants in a state results in the employment of an additional 5 locals in that state as Malaysian workers relocate (Figure II.A.6). Impacts on wages are small and positive for local workers but larger and negative for existing migrants (Özden and Wagner 2016). These results suggest that cheaper immigrant workers lower production costs, which results in expansions of output that in turn require expansions of employment. II.A. Boosting Labor Mobility in the ASEAN Economic Community 89 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 However, migration can negatively affect the welfare of certain groups of workers in destination countries, particularly the low skilled. The positive impacts of immigration on employment found in Malaysia are smaller for the least educated locals who, unlike the more highly educated, compete directly with immigrants. Similarly, the impact of immigration on wages is small and positive for local workers overall but negative for local workers with at most primary education. In Thailand, doubling the size of the immigrant workforce in five provinces would increase the wages of local workers with high school and college education by about half a percent but decrease them for less-educated workers (Figure II.A.7). Domestic barriers to mobility shape how migration impacts the welfare of workers in destination countries. Local workers who face rigid labor markets and have a difficult time switching jobs, firms, and geographic locations have trouble taking advantage of and adjusting to the presence of immigrant workers. In Europe, there is evidence that immigration to more rigid labor markets characterized by high firing costs, rigid wages, and high business entry costs results in more job losses among locals than immigration to more flexible labor markets (Angrist and Kugler 2003). The disruptive effects of rigid labor markets on adjustment to immigration were also found in Germany in the 1990s, although there it was existing migrants who suffered employment losses due to rigid wages (D’Amuri, Ottaviano, and Peri 2010). Migrants themselves benefit significantly from migration, as do the recipients of their remittances. Migrating workers gain because of the large wage differentials between source and destination countries.6 And their remittances boost the budgets of recipient households in migrant-sending countries, relax credit constraints, act as insurance against shocks, and help smooth consumption. Out-migration generally improves the welfare of workers in sending countries. The out-migration of significant numbers of migrant workers from sending countries can result in a contraction of labor supply, which reduces competition and increases the wages of non-migrant workers who remain in the source country. A 10 percent decrease in workers in a given skill group in Mexico from out-migration increased average wages by about 4 percent (Mishra 2007); similar increases have been found in Poland, Moldova, Puerto Rico, and Honduras (Mishra 2014). Concerns about “brain drain” are often overstated; “brain circulation” may more accurately describe the process of high-skilled emigration. Source countries frequently worry that “brain drain”, that is, the departure of high-skilled workers for employment abroad, has negative effects. These include the fiscal burden of paying for training that is ultimately used abroad, and depletion of the human capital behind technological upgrading, adaptation, and ultimately economic growth. However, standard analyses may significantly overestimate the extent of brain drain: for instance, almost half of African-born doctors who practice in the United States were trained outside their country of birth, and many African doctors migrate after years of service in their home country (Özden and Philipps 2015). Further, high-skilled emigration may incentivize human capital formation by increasing the perceived returns to migration and encouraging stayers to invest more in education (Beine, Docquier, and Rapoport 2008). In addition, migrants who return may earn a wage premium compared to nonmigrants, while those who remain abroad can reduce the costs of transferring knowledge, ideas, and capital, resulting in broader impacts on trade and FDI flows and even on political institutions (Docquier and Rapoport 2012). 6 For instance, average monthly wages in 2013 amounted to US$119 in Lao PDR but US$3,546 in Singapore (in 2005 purchasing power parity terms; ILO and ADB 2014). 90 PART II. MEDIUM-TERM DEVELOPMENT AGENDA SUSTAINING RESILIENCE International migration can also have broader positive impacts on economies. The impact of international mobility on economic growth is important because it determines whether those who gain from migration can compensate those who lose out (Felbermayr and Kohler 2009). In Malaysia, simulations find that a 10 percent net increase in low-skilled immigrant workers increases real GDP by 1.1 percent (Ahsan et al. 2014). The migrants keep salaries low, reducing domestic prices and production costs and increasing export growth, with the result that unskilled employment and profits increase, which leads to increased investment and demand for (mostly Malaysian) skilled workers. Research in Thailand finds that removing migrants from the labor force would reduce GDP by 0.75 percent. Tight labor markets and some skills complementarity between the skills of local and migrant workers are important factors explaining these results. More general research has found that immigration into countries with high income and/or net inward migration, including Brunei Darussalam, Malaysia, and Singapore, does not impact economic growth in the same decade but has positive long-run impacts on the growth in GDP per capita, likely due to increases in total factor productivity (Brunow, Nijkamp, and Poot 2015). Barriers to labor mobility in ASEAN ASEAN’s diverse levels of economic development attract workers to seek employment abroad. ASEAN countries vary significantly in their economic development. This is reflected, as mentioned, in large wage differentials among countries, which mean that migrants can seek out more highly paid jobs by moving across borders. Indeed, ASEAN’s main immigration magnets are the high-income countries of the region—Singapore, Malaysia, and Thailand—while the region’s low-income countries tend to be senders of migrants. Migration from countries with lower GDPs per capita to countries with higher GDPs per capita dominates ASEAN’s major migration corridors (Table II.A.1). An additional factor in the movement of people for employment in ASEAN is the different rates of population aging in the region. Working-age populations in Singapore, Thailand, and, to a lesser extent, Malaysia will shrink in the coming decades, creating employment opportunities for migrants from countries with younger populations. In 2015, Singapore and Thailand had much older median ages than all of the main countries from which they received migrants (Figure II.A.8). Table II.A.1. Migrant stocks and GDP per capita in Figure II.A.8. The median age in ASEAN’s major migration ASEAN’s major migration corridors in 2015 corridors Origin Destination Percent Destination Median age of ASEAN to Origin GDP 45 migration per capita 40 Indonesia Malaysia 16 2.4 35 Myanmar Malaysia 4 5.1 30 Vietnam Malaysia 1 4.5 25 Singapore Malaysia 1 0.3 20 Malaysia Singapore 16 3.2 15 Indonesia Singapore 2 7.7 10 Myanmar Thailand 29 3.1 5 Lao PDR Thailand 14 2.9 0 MMR IDN MYS VNM SGP IDN MYS SGP LAO KHM MMR THA Cambodia Thailand 12 4.7 Malaysia Singapore Thailand Sources: UN 2015a; World Development Indicators. Source: UN 2015b. II.A. Boosting Labor Mobility in the ASEAN Economic Community 91 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 However, barriers to labor mobility prevent some people from moving while leading others to seek out informal channels. The poorest households may not be able to migrate because of the costliness of international migration. Indeed, there is evidence of an inverse “U-shaped” relationship between migration and wealth, with the least wealthy households unable to finance migration and the wealthiest households unwilling to migrate because of the high opportunity costs of doing so (McKenzie and Rapoport 2007). When barriers to mobility using formal migration processes are too high, migrants seek out informal channels using informal labor brokers to pass borders unofficially, entering countries to work with nonwork visas, and overstaying employment passes. Undocumented migration is significant in ASEAN, though data limitations and the difficulty of defining undocumented migration make an accurate assessment difficult. The long and porous borders between Thailand and Cambodia, Lao PDR, and Myanmar, and between Malaysia and Indonesia, make these receiving countries particularly susceptible to undocumented migration. About 60 percent of migration from Cambodia, Lao PDR, and Myanmar to Thailand is undocumented and around half of the migrant population in Malaysia is undocumented (Huguet 2014; World Bank 2015). International labor mobility costs capture and quantify the barriers to labor mobility that may prevent some migrants from moving and lead others to choose informal channels. Labor mobility costs quantify the costs from restrictive migration policies, documentation costs, and recruitment fees, as well as the cost of job searches and rigid employment policies. The overall costs faced by workers moving internationally can be approximated by comparing observed wage differences between jobs, a measure of their attractiveness, with data on actual job flows.7 For instance, a country with very high wages but few workers observed moving to work in it implies very high labor mobility costs. In other words, labor mobility costs can be estimated by comparing how well workers are able to respond to signals—high wages—of economic opportunity. ASEAN countries that have more developed Figure II.A.9. International labor mobility costs in ASEAN in the 1960s and 2000s migration systems and that have made more Multiple of annual average wage efforts to lower barriers with the world have lower 14 international labor mobility costs. International labor 12 mobility costs have declined over time in Singapore 10 and Malaysia and are quite low relative to other ASEAN countries (Figure II.A.9). This reflects in part the 8 openness of these countries’ economies to globalization 6 and in part their efforts to develop migration systems 4 to fill labor market shortages. Thailand, in contrast, also 2 receives many migrants but has a much less developed 0 migration system, high levels of undocumented ASEAN (average) MMR VNM PHL IDN LAO KHM THA SGP MYS migration, and high international labor mobility costs. JJ1960s JJ2000s Source: Hollweg 2016. ASEAN’s predominantly migrant-sending countries often have restrictions on immigrants, including high- skilled ones, which is reflected in their higher mobility costs. Given the nature of the estimation, comparing labor mobility costs across countries is more informative than focusing on absolute magnitudes.8 7 This measure of labor mobility costs does not attempt to estimate all the costs faced by individual workers, but rather estimates them indirectly. 8 While point estimates facilitate comparisons across countries, each of these estimates represents the midpoint of a range of estimates. 92 PART II. MEDIUM-TERM DEVELOPMENT AGENDA SUSTAINING RESILIENCE High international mobility costs in ASEAN have important consequences for how workers can respond to economic changes. Workers in ASEAN face costs at least several times their average annual wage to move abroad for employment; as a result, they may forego large potential wage gains (Hollweg et al. 2014). Policies to decrease labor mobility costs Weaknesses in ASEAN migration systems result in higher international mobility costs. Migration systems seek to reconcile the often conflicting demands of receiving countries that need both low- and high-skilled migrants to fill labor shortages, of employers in receiving countries that use migrants to fill shortages but whose objective is profit maximization rather than economic growth, of sending countries that benefit from remittances and reduced unemployment, and of migrants themselves who benefit from employment opportunities and higher wages. The migration system can generally be broken down into the legal and institutional framework organizing the system; the rules that govern the admissions, employment, and return of migrant workers; and the enforcement of those rules. Weaknesses and breakdowns in the migration system can be grouped into five major problem areas which increase the cost for migrants of seeking employment abroad (Figure II.A.10): •• Migration systems frequently have difficulty responding to economic needs. Restrictions on the number of migrants a country can receive are often not aligned with economic needs. For instance, the foreign worker levy that Malaysia uses to control the number of immigrant workers has been left unadjusted for significant periods, such as between 1999 and 2005, 2005 and 2009, and 2011 and 2016. When changes to the levy have been announced, employers frequently express surprise, which has twice led to adjustments to the policies after their public announcement. •• Information asymmetries exist among migrants, employers, and recruitment agencies. Though efforts have been undertaken in migrant-sending countries to increase the information available to migrants and to regulate the recruitment industry, migrants remain dependent on recruitment agencies and informal labor brokers, which means that recruitment costs remain high. For instance, in Indonesia, labor brokers, which are unregulated, often play an important role in identifying and providing information to potential migrants, which can drive up costs and subject migrants to abuse. •• Relatedly, employers and recruitment agencies are able to exploit information asymmetries to extract rents from the migration system. Labor brokers can capture a significant portion of the difference in wages between sending and receiving countries simply for connecting employers and migrant workers (Ahsan et al. 2014). •• There is a lack of coordination among sending and receiving countries, employers, trade unions and workers, and migrants. As a result, entry procedures are often cumbersome, and include redundant documentation requirements from multiple agencies. Though some bilateral agreements have been formulated to coordinate migration between sending and receiving countries, those agreements frequently suffer from weaknesses such as lack of transparency and lack of input from employers and migrants. In the case of Thailand’s memorandums of understanding (MOUs) with Cambodia, Lao PDR, and Myanmar, II.A. Boosting Labor Mobility in the ASEAN Economic Community 93 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 the formal migration channels created by the MOUs were overly bureaucratic and very time-consuming for migrants (ILO 2015). •• Finally, both sending and receiving countries tend to focus on the short-term benefits and costs of migration. Thailand, in particular, has struggled to formulate a long-term migration strategy, instead using regularizations of undocumented migrants as a de facto migration policy. In recent years, sending countries have begun to give more consideration to the employment and development impacts of emigration. However, programs to support returning migrants and to connect with diasporas are in their infancy. Figure II.A.10. Migration costs associated with the migration system 'PHQTEGOGPV É .CEMQHGPHQTEGOGPVOCMGUEQUVUOQTGNKMGN[VQCTKUGVJTQWIJQWVVJGOKITCVKQPU[UVGOCUYJGP YGCMQXGTUKIJVQHTGETWKVOGPVNGCFUVQJKIJTGETWKVOGPVEQUVU.CEMQHTGUQWTEGUECPEQPVTKDWVGVQ YGCMGPHQTEGOGPV )QXGTPCPEG É +PEQPUKUVGPVNGIKUNCVKQPCPF DKOWNVKNCVGTCNCITGGOGPVU #FOKUUKQPU 'ORNQ[OGPV 'ZKV CPFWPENGCTKPUVKVWVKQPCN É 'PVT[RTQEGFWTGUECPKPXQNXG É 'ORNQ[OGPVVGTOUVJCVCTG É .CEMQHOGEJCPKUOUVQ TGURQPUKDKNKVKGUNGCFVQ OQPGVCT[EQUVUUWEJCUHGGU VU VQQTKIKFNKOKVDGPGß HCEKNKVCVGGZKVCPFVQETGCVG KPGHßEKGPVRTQEGUUGUCPF CPFQRRQTVWPKV[EQUVUYJGP QRRQTVWPKVKGUWRQPTGVWTP EQPVTKDWVGVQDTGCMFQYPU É 'ORNQ[OGPVRCUUTGPGYCN RTQEGFWTGUCTGNGPIVJ[CPF ECPOCMGTGVWTPß PCPEKCNN[ KPQVJGTEQORQPGPVUQHVJG ECPKPXQNXGOQPGVCT[CPF EQORNKECVGF EQUVN[CPFYCUVGUMKNNU U[UVGO QRRQTVWPKV[EQUVU ICKPGFCDTQCF É 7PPGEGUUCT[EQUVUCTG É .CEMQHGPHQTEGOGPVQH KORQUGFYJGPQDLGEVKXGUCTG CPFCEEGUUVQRTQVGEVKQPU PQVFGßPGFCPFTGUVTKEVKQPU NKOKVUDGPGßVUHQTOKITCPVU CTGPQVTGNCVGFVQGEQPQOKE *QYGXGTQXGTN[DWTFGPUQOG PGGFU RTQVGEVKQPTGIKOGUKP É .CEMQHQXGTUKIJVCPFNCEMQH UGPFKPIEQWPVTKGUECP KPHQTOCVKQPECPNGCFVQJKIJ KPXQNXGJKIJOQPGVCT[CPF EQUVUVQEQPPGEVOKITCPV QRRQTVWPKV[EQUVU YQTMGTUYKVJLQDU 2TQDNGO#TGC.CEMQHTGURQPUKXGPGUUVQGEQPQOKEPGGFU 2 DN #  . M H K V K F 2TQDNGO#TGC+PHQTOCVKQPCU[OOGVTKGU 2TQDNGO#TGC.CEMQHEQQTFKPCVKQPCOQPIUVCMGJQNFGTU 2TQDNGO#TGC*KIJTGPVUYKVJQWVRTQFWEVKXGWVKNK\CVKQP 2TQDNGO#TGC5JQTVVGTOCRRTQCEJ ASEAN countries can implement policies to reduce the labor mobility costs arising from weaknesses in each component of the migration system. The appropriate policies will vary across countries, depending on whether they send or receive migrants, the maturity of their migration management system, and their level of development. Nevertheless, the following broad principles apply. ÌÌGovernance ASEAN countries should consider developing national migration strategies to guide policy making in both the short and long term. Such a strategy can provide clarity to employers and other labor market stakeholders in primarily receiving countries about the official view on immigrant workers and how policy is likely to impact their numbers and characteristics. The plan can also acknowledge potential negative impacts of immigration on some 94 PART II. MEDIUM-TERM DEVELOPMENT AGENDA SUSTAINING RESILIENCE workers and clarify efforts to assist those who are made worse off. In primarily sending countries, migration strategies can elaborate on how policy makers plan to balance protections for migrants while they are abroad with efforts to link out-migration to economic development. In both sending and receiving countries, the national migration strategy should be comprehensive in covering all aspects of migration, organizing institutional responsibilities, and coordinating migration policy with employment, education, and skill strategies. Bilateral agreements are important tools for increasing cooperation between sending and receiving countries. These agreements can provide the basis for sending and receiving countries to reconcile interests and align their legislative and institutional frameworks. Stakeholder engagement, transparency, and monitoring and evaluation are important components of good bilateral agreements and MOUs. The success of an agreement depends on its ability to adjust to emerging labor market needs, continued engagement between sending and receiving country representatives, and the complementarity of national migration and employment frameworks (KNOMAD 2014). Model employment contracts, wage protection measures such as mechanisms for automatic deposit of wages into migrant’s bank accounts, transparency about the contents of MOUs, involvement of public employment services in sending and receiving countries, inclusion of gender-specific issues, and concrete implementation and evaluation measures are all good practices in bilateral agreements and MOUs (Wickramasekara 2015). These practices can lower migration costs by improving the information available to migrant workers, particularly about their contracts, working conditions, and rights. ÌÌAdmissions The admissions process should be transparent with entry paths that are clearly differentiated. Application processes that are confusing and opaque create inefficiencies, increase migration costs, and lead to doubts about the integrity of the admissions process. Transparency helps ensure that both employers and migrants understand eligibility requirements and selection criteria for entry. Systems allowing employers and migrant workers to track their application status can increase confidence and allow for adjustments when bottlenecks are discovered. New Zealand has used an “Expression of Interest” system to select qualified migrants from a pool of migrants who have registered their interest and meet a set of baseline requirements. The system has helped eliminate backlogs of applicants through the initial screening and periodic expirations of registrations (Bedford and Spoonley 2014). Clearly differentiated admissions entry paths can target different types of workers. Singapore, for instance, has three well-defined entry streams for lower-, middle-, and higher-skilled workers that rely on salary and education requirements to distinguish workers of different skill levels. These entry streams then work with employment terms, as the more stringent entry requirements also afford more beneficial employment terms. Shortage lists can be used to improve the responsiveness of the admissions system to economic needs. Shortage lists are used to determine which potential immigrants should be allowed entry. These lists are data- and stakeholder-driven and seek to identify labor market shortages through quantitative and qualitative evidence including labor force surveys, administrative data about immigration admissions, employer surveys, and stakeholder consultations. Using data to identify labor market shortages creates a feedback loop between the immigration system and the labor market to target migrant workers to the occupations in which they are most needed. The lists also reassure the public that policy makers are closely monitoring the labor market and immigration. Shortage lists can expedite the entry process by circumventing the need for employers to advertise jobs in a labor market test. II.A. Boosting Labor Mobility in the ASEAN Economic Community 95 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 This means that applications to hire foreign workers can be processed more quickly, and both migrants and their employers have more certainty about how the needs of the migration system are determined. Malaysia has recently begun using a Critical Occupations List to identify sought-after, hard-to-fill, and strategic occupations that will be used to inform immigration and human resource development policies. Better regulation of the recruitment industry is important to reduce labor mobility costs and improve protections for migrants. Additional licensing requirements can help ensure that recruitment agencies provide quality services to migrant workers, though this depends on available capacity and resources. Good practices include the requirement for recruitment agencies in the Philippines to attend a Pre-licensing Orientation Seminar prior to receiving a license, and a Continuing Agency Education Seminar for license renewal. Australia’s Office of Migration Agents Registration Authority regulates and oversees migration agents, but also provides services to migrants such as helping them identify an agent, advising them on fees, and processing complaints (World Bank 2017). Finally, sending countries may consider requiring licensed agencies to agree to joint and several liability for claims made by migrants against employers, as occurs in the Philippines. Increased information can help reduce the information asymmetries faced by migrant workers while also improving oversight of recruitment agencies. Strategies to improve migrants’ access to information include public employment services to provide potential migrants with job opportunities abroad, and training courses that provide detailed information about migration procedures and employment abroad. The Republic of Korea’s Employment Permit System (EPS) has a user-friendly website with information available to foreign workers in their native language. The Philippines provides a listing of job opportunities available abroad through the job advertising site JobStreet.com.9 The Philippines’ Pre-Employment Orientation Seminar (PEOS) includes modules on working overseas, job search, illegal recruitment, allowable fees and the minimum provisions of the employment contract, and country-specific information. The PEOS is mandatory for potential migrants, but the course can be completed online at no cost. The Moroccan National Agency for the Promotion of Employment and Skills (ANAPEC) promotes the employment of skilled individuals and registers foreign employers and Moroccan youth for job matching. Users of recruitment agencies can also be allowed to evaluate the agencies, with the evaluations made public. Singapore has announced a system to allow employers of foreign domestic workers to rate employment agencies on their performance in explaining the application process, providing advice, and selecting a worker. A more comprehensive system would also permit the worker to rate the agency. Recruitment agencies can be awarded publicly for their effectiveness, as the Philippines does, or even receive expedited processing of licenses or waiver of license renewal obligations. An evaluation of the impact of providing information about the quality of recruitment agencies to potential migrants is currently in process in the Philippines (Bazzi et al. 2015). ÌÌEmployment Employment terms can be used alongside entry paths to differentiate migrants by skill and productivity. Migrant-receiving countries can offer more generous employment terms to more highly skilled migrants including lengthier employment passes and the ability to bring dependents. But in general, allowing migrants, whether low- or high-skilled, to change employers can ensure that rigid terms do not limit productivity by preventing better matches between employers and workers. Rigid employment terms also make migrants vulnerable to mistreatment 9 See http://poea.jobstreet.com.ph/. 96 PART II. MEDIUM-TERM DEVELOPMENT AGENDA SUSTAINING RESILIENCE by employers, who can revoke their employment pass. Both Singapore and Malaysia have a type of employment pass that is not employer-specific, though in both countries the pass is available to only very highly skilled migrants. Finally, the renewal of employment passes should be a fast and easy process. Renewal requirements should be minimal and subject to rigorous cost-benefit analysis. To expedite renewal of employment passes, a trusted employer scheme could be created to limit renewal steps for previously compliant firms or for those whose profile makes them unlikely to violate employment or recruitment procedures. Sending countries have a significant role to play both in protecting migrants while they are employed abroad and in assisting them in the migration process. Sending countries may consider providing predeparture loans to migrant workers, particularly poorer and low-skilled ones, who may not be able to migrate because of high migration costs. Source-country actions to facilitate migration, including reducing information, job search, and documentation costs, do not seem to increase international migration (Beam, McKenzie, and Yang 2015). However, there is some evidence that easing financial constraints may generate additional migration (Angelucci 2015; Bryan, Chowdhury, and Mobarak 2014). Orientation programs can also improve migrant workers’ experience abroad. Evidence on the impact of these trainings is limited (McKenzie and Yang 2015). The Philippines is generally lauded for its commitment to increasing the knowledge of migrant workers. Some good practices identified with the Philippines’ orientation programs are the involvement of local government partners, the inclusion of NGOs to incorporate a rights perspective, developing orientation programs for recruiters, and providing migration information at the local level (Asis and Agunias 2012). Use of a standardized curriculum and oversight of implementation to ensure that all migrants undertake orientation seem to be important elements of success. Offering orientation programs to migrant workers after their arrival at the destination may help reinforce knowledge gained during predeparture training; financial literacy training may also be useful. The Philippines’ Post-Arrival Orientation Seminar (PAOS) provides information about rights, responsibilities, and assistance in some destination countries. Financial literacy programs can improve financial knowledge, though the design of these programs and their targeted beneficiaries are particularly important. A pilot program providing financial literacy training to migrant domestic workers in the Greater Malang area and the Blitar District of East Java in Indonesia had a positive impact on financial awareness and knowledge, budgeting, and savings, but no increase in the quantity or frequency of remittances (Doi, McKenzie, and Zia 2014). Notably, effects were most pronounced when both the migrant and their family members received training. Awareness of mandatory migrant insurance increased significantly. ÌÌExit Sanctions and incentives can work together to encourage the voluntary departure of migrants. In addition to incentives for employers to encourage on-time return as Singapore and Malaysia do, wages might also be withheld from migrants or deposited in a compulsory savings scheme until they return to their source country. In Korea, employers are required to enroll in Departure Guarantee Insurance and workers to enroll in Return Cost Insurance. Similarly, Canada’s Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program requires workers to contribute to a compulsory savings scheme that is available only upon a worker’s return to the source country. However, withholding funds increases II.A. Boosting Labor Mobility in the ASEAN Economic Community 97 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 the risk for migrant workers who are vulnerable to unscrupulous employers who allow their work status to expire (OECD 2013). Positive incentives for return also exist. This type of incentive includes tax rebates, guarantees of future employment, or assistance with transportation, medical examinations, and document preparation (OECD 2013). EPS workers in Korea can receive free vocational training and job counseling during employment, job matching services with Korean employers in home countries, and access to returnee networks that Korea has created to expand job opportunities. Sending-country policies to engage with and incentivize the return of their diasporas can generate numerous benefits for home countries. Diaspora engagement policies help construct diaspora networks, which circulate ideas, technology, and even capital (Dickerson and Özden forthcoming). Programs such as Argentina’s Research and Scientists Abroad (RAICES), Thailand’s Reverse Brain Drain project, and Ethiopia’s Diaspora Volunteer Program seek to create links with talented members of the diaspora to assist in the host country. Sending countries at times support the reintegration of return migrants, though there is little evidence these programs are effective. Source countries can offer reintegration benefits to returning migrants. These can include active labor market policies to help migrants find jobs or start businesses upon return. In general, there is little evidence of the effectiveness of reintegration programs. In the Philippines, which has a suite of reintegration programs, challenges for returning migrants include insufficient resources, lack of expertise, and an inhospitable economic or investment climate (Battistella 2004). However, McKenzie and Yang (2015) describe several concerns about the effectiveness of reintegration programs, including questioning why the programs should be targeted at return migrants, in particular. ÌÌEnforcement Effective enforcement of immigration laws requires coordination among agencies, efforts beyond border enforcement alone, and leveraging data. Ensuring that immigrants do not enter and work without proper documentation requires more than border control which, while effective in some cases, is also costly, particularly along long borders like Thailand’s borders with Lao PDR and Myanmar. Interior enforcement measures that target employers to ensure they are using documented labor and treating immigrant workers appropriately can be effective. Agencies charged with managing labor migration, which often hold data on employers of migrant workers and on those workers, and agencies charged with border enforcement, which hold data on the exit and entry of migrants, can leverage that knowledge to undertake joint enforcement efforts. Systems that are synchronized across agencies can assist with assessing risk and tracking noncompliance through the development of risk-based monitoring to guide enforcement. In low-capacity environments, coordination is even more important to ensure that limited staff and resources are leveraged to the best extent possible. ÌÌCountry-specific priorities  estination countries should work toward migration systems that are responsive to economic needs, and consistent D with domestic policies and human capital levels. 98 PART II. MEDIUM-TERM DEVELOPMENT AGENDA SUSTAINING RESILIENCE •• With low levels of undocumented migration and a sophisticated system of productivity-linked entry paths, Singapore will need to continue to work to build public trust in the migration system and improve protections for migrant workers. •• With high levels of undocumented migration but a less sophisticated admissions system than Singapore, Malaysia will need to work to make its immigration system more responsive to economic needs and work to collaborate more closely with both employers and sending countries. •• With high levels of undocumented migration, Thailand will need to work to formalize its large population of undocumented migrants, rationalize entry procedures that are costly and time-consuming, and rethink immigration policies such as levies and a repatriation fund, which exist only in law but not in practice, undermining the credibility of the migration system. •• As Brunei Darussalam seeks to encourage private sector employment among locals, it will need to ensure that a relatively complex system of quotas and levies based on geography, sector, and employer supports this goal while also meeting economic needs.  ending countries should work to balance protection for migrant workers with the needs of economic development S while also supporting the reintegration of returned workers and connections to diasporas. •• The Philippines has a highly developed support system for migrant workers. However, the country must continue to evaluate and improve its services for migrants. •• Indonesia will need to improve coordination among agencies responsible for managing labor migration. Exit procedures for migrant workers will also need to be streamlined to encourage documented migration. •• Vietnam will need to evaluate its current policies for incentivizing out-migration to determine whether they are meeting the country’s needs. While the intention of these policies is laudable, other reforms are also necessary including review of recruitment agencies’ frequent and at least tacitly sanctioned practice of requiring migrant workers to pay a security deposit to guarantee their return, which is frequently not repaid. A national migration strategy could help guide reforms. •• Lower-capacity Cambodia, Lao PDR, and Myanmar should continue considering how migration can fit into their economic development strategies, shaping programs to make out-migration less costly and to create connections with diasporas to facilitate the transfer of knowledge and capital. These countries can look to the experience of the Philippines to develop institutions serving migrants and services such as predeparture orientation programs. II.A. Boosting Labor Mobility in the ASEAN Economic Community 99 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 References Ahsan, Ahmad, Manolo Abella, Andrew Beath, Yukon Huang, Manjula Luthria, and Trang Van Nguyen. 2014. International Migration and Development in East Asia and the Pacific. Washington, DC: World Bank. Angelucci, Manuela. 2015. “Note: Migration and Financial Constraints: Evidence from Mexico.” The Review of Economics and Statistics 97 (1): 224–228. 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Wickramasekara, Piyasiri. 2015. “Bilateral Agreement and Memoranda of Understanding on Migration of Low Skilled Workers: A Review.” International Labour Organization, Geneva. World Bank. 2014. East Asia Pacific at Work: Employment, Enterprise, and Well-being. Washington: DC: World Bank. ———. 2015. Malaysia Economic Monitor: Immigrant Labour. World Bank: Kuala Lumpur. ———. 2016. “Indonesia’s Global Workers: Juggling Opportunities and Risks.” World Bank, Washington, DC. ———. 2017. “Sending Country Systems.” World Bank, Washington, DC. 102 PART II. MEDIUM-TERM DEVELOPMENT AGENDA SUSTAINING RESILIENCE II.B. Tackling Farm Pollution in Developing East Asia1 In developing East Asia, more intensive agricultural practices have been successful in increasing food availability and the output of agricultural raw materials, but have also resulted in serious pollution problems that have adversely affected the environment, human health, and the productivity of agriculture itself. This pattern of highly productive yet highly polluting agriculture is playing out with consequences that remain poorly understood by most policy makers and the public. Agriculture is often portrayed as a victim of industrial and urban pollution, and this is indeed the case. However, certain farming practices have also become a leading source of soil, air, and water pollution in the most intensively farmed parts of these countries. While a range of policy instruments is available to guide farming practices in directions that will lessen their environmental footprint, most public intervention in this area has tended to be more reactive than preventive and, in many cases, inadequate in scale. In many instances, the implementation of sound pollution control programs has also come up against the impact of broader incentive structures that do not rank environmental outcomes prominently. Governments therefore need to make agricultural pollution a higher policy priority in order to reduce the costs of intensive farming. In addition, more multipronged and evidence-based strategies will be needed to exploit the technical, market, and structural opportunities to control and, more importantly, prevent pollution from intensive farming. The benefits of agricultural intensification Agricultural intensification, that is, technological upgrading and the increased use of inputs, has boosted agricultural productivity in developing East Asia and provided a solid footing for its growth. Across much of the region, agricultural output has expanded rapidly, even as the share of agriculture in GDP has fallen with these economies’ structural transformation. For instance, during 1990–2011, agricultural value added in China Figure II.B.1. Prevalence of food inadequacy in selected Figure II.B.2. Yields of selected crops, 1961–2014 countries, 1990–2016 Percent, 3-year average Index, 1961 = 100 80 1,000 900 70 800 60 700 50 600 40 500 400 30 300 20 200 10 100 0 2 3 8 9 0 1 2 3 8 9 0 1 2 3 0 –9 –9 94 95 96 97 –9 –9 –0 –0 –0 –0 04 05 06 07 –0 –0 –1 –1 –1 –1 14 15 16 61 71 81 91 01 11 90 1991 992– 993– 994– 995– 996 997 998 999 000 2001 002– 003– 004– 005– 006 007 008 009 010 2011 012– 013– 014– 66 76 86 96 06 4 19 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 20 20 20 201 ▬▬MMR ▬▬VNM ▬▬LAO ▬▬THA ▬▬KHM ▬▬MNG ▬▬PHL ▬▬CHN ▬▬Wheat CHN ▬▬Maize CHN ▬▬Rice LAO ▬▬Maize PHL ▬▬IDN ▬▬MYS ▬▬KOR ▬▬Maize VNM ▬▬Rice CHN ▬▬Rice PHL ▬▬Rice VNM Source: Based on FAOSTAT data. Source: Based on FAOSTAT data. 1 Prepared by Emilie Cassou, Steven Jaffee, and Jiang Ru. This chapter is based on a regional study on agricultural pollution, which focuses primarily on China, the Philippines, and Vietnam, while drawing insights from experiences outside the region. The findings from this study will be made available by June 2017. II.B. Tackling Farm Pollution in Developing East Asia 103 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 and Vietnam grew by, respectively, 4.3 percent and 3.9 percent per year on average. Regional agriculture has contributed to plummeting rates of hunger, even though serious nutritional challenges remain. Since 1990, the prevalence of food inadequacy has more than halved in China and decreased by nearly 70 percent in Vietnam. Similar trends can be observed across the region (Figure II.B.1). This achievement has rested centrally on the region’s ability to multiply its production of grains (Figure II.B.2) despite being land-constrained. In the space of 60 years, for example, China’s grain output increased fivefold—a doubling on a per capita basis—even though land devoted to farming remained remarkably stable (Figure II.B.3). Greater use of inputs, irrigation, and mechanization have played major parts in cereals output growth by helping to improve yields, and often by allowing producers to grow more crops per year on a given plot of farmland. Figure II.B.3. Trends in cereals production, yield, and harvested areas in China, the Philippines, and Vietnam, 1961–2013 1961 = 100 China Philippines Vietnam 600 600 600 500 500 500 400 400 400 300 300 300 200 200 200 100 100 100 0 0 0 61 70 79 88 97 06 13 61 70 79 88 97 06 13 61 70 79 88 97 06 13 19 19 19 19 19 20 20 19 19 19 19 19 20 20 19 19 19 19 19 20 20 ▬▬Area harvested ▬▬Yield ▬▬Production ▬▬Area harvested ▬▬Yield ▬▬Production ▬▬Area harvested ▬▬Yield ▬▬Production Source: Based on FAOSTAT data. Note: Increases in harvested area sometimes reflect the more intensive use of farmland to grow more crops per year rather than a spatial expansion of farming. This has been especially the case in Vietnam. Figure II.B.4. Domestic food supply of all animal Agriculture has also proven responsive to rapid products, 2000–11 changes in people’s food preferences and budgets, Index, 2000 = 100 250 especially to exploding demand for animal 230 products ( Figure II.B.4). Animal production has kept 210 up by expanding in space, but also by industrializing. 190 The enormous expansion of aquaculture has rested on 170 both phenomena. Between 1990 and 2014, China’s 150 aquaculture output increased from less than 10 million 130 110 tons to nearly 60 million tons. Over that same period, 90 Vietnam’s aquaculture output rose from less than 70 200,000 tons to nearly 3.5 million tons (a 1,650 percent 50 increase in approximately 25 years). The expansion of 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 ▬▬VNM ▬▬IDN ▬▬CHN ▬▬KHM ▬▬BRA ▬▬PHL ▬▬World agricultural output has also enabled several countries ▬▬MYS ▬▬KOR ▬▬USA ▬▬EU ▬▬THA ▬▬JPN in the region to become major exporters of a broad Source: Based on FAOSTAT Food Balance Sheets. Note: Domestic food supply = production + imports - exports + changes in stocks (decrease or increase). range of agricultural commodities. 104 PART II. MEDIUM-TERM DEVELOPMENT AGENDA SUSTAINING RESILIENCE Significance of agriculture as a polluter  espite the above contributions, the breadth and severity of pollution problems to which agricultural development D has given rise may challenge the sector’s ability to remain a positive force in economic growth, livelihood provision, and social stability. Evidence suggests that intensive farming operations have become a major source of water, soil, ambient air, and climate pollution in China, Vietnam, and the Philippines. •• Water. Farming operations have significantly contributed to the contamination of both surface water and groundwater in parts of the region, with pollutants ranging from nutrients to organic matter, pesticides, and other toxic chemicals. In the Philippines, for example, livestock and other farms have been the largest contributors of organic matter pollution in the monitored waterbodies of Manila Bay and Laguna Lake (EMB 2014). China’s first national pollution survey found that, in 2007, agriculture was the leading source of surface water quality impairment with respect to nutrients and organic pollutants. Consistent with this, agriculture has been the leading cause of eutrophication in China’s lakes and in the Yellow and South China Seas (Strokal et al. 2014). In northern China, farming activities have also led to serious nitrate contamination of groundwater (Zhang et al. 2013a). •• Soil. One major form of soil pollution is acidification, a natural process that can be accelerated by such farming practices as irrigation, fertilization, and the removal of crop residues from farmland. Soil acidification can, in turn, favor the loss of soil nutrients as well as crops’ absorption of heavy metals. In China, the rate at which soils acidified between the 1980s and 2000s is one that would take hundreds of years to materialize under natural conditions (Zhang et al. 2013b). •• Air. Ambient air quality impairment is a major concern in many of East Asia’s densely populated metropolitan areas, and agriculture is known to be implicated. Fine particle and other emissions from agricultural burning, improper manure storage, and fertilizer and pesticide use contribute to air pollution and related disease. Ammonia releases from agricultural sources were recently shown to be detracting from urban air quality in Chinese cities (Gu et al. 2014; Liu et al. 2013). Open burning of agricultural residues has also been tied to an abundance of fine particulate matter in certain cities on a seasonal basis (Zhang and Cao 2015). In Indonesia, fire has been a prominent means of clearing land to grow oil palm, from which lucrative commodities are derived. The resulting haze has badly affected air quality in both rural and urban areas. •• Climate. Farming activities—especially livestock rearing, excess fertilizer use, and rice irrigation—are also significant sources of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in the region. They are the second-largest source of GHG emissions in Vietnam and the Philippines, without counting emissions related to agriculture-driven land-use change (Figure II.B.5 and Figure II.B.6) (based on WRI CAIT 2016). In absolute terms, China’s agricultural emissions are far larger, even though they were outranked by industrial emissions after 2005, putting them in third place nationally. The implication is that changes in farming practices will be needed for countries to meet their international commitments to climate change mitigation.2 2 By one estimate, Indonesian fires—which are predominantly agriculture-driven—emitted an estimated 1,750 million metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent (MtCO2-e) in 2015, close to the 1,800 MtCO2-e that Indonesia reported in its Second National Communication to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) (World Bank 2016a; http://pubdocs.worldbank.org/en/643781465442350600/Indonesia-forest-fire-notes.pdf). II.B. Tackling Farm Pollution in Developing East Asia 105 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 Figure II.B.5. Change in agricultural greenhouse gas Figure II.B.6. Breakdown of agricultural greenhouse gas emissions in selected East Asian countries, 1990–2013 emissions in China, 2014 estimates 1990 = 100 Percent 160 150 5 1 140 29 130 16 120 110 100 90 22 27 80 70 JPN KOR THA MYS IDN CHN PHL KHM LAO VNM ▬▬1990 JJ2000 JJ2013 JJEnteric fermentation from livestock JJManure management JJSynthetic fertilizer Source: Based on WRI CAIT estimates. CAIT 2.0 UNFCCC data derive directly from the UNFCCC Secretariat. JJRice cultivation JJCrop residue & soil management (nonburning) JJBurning Note: Agricultural emissions do not include those from land-use change. Source: Based on FAOSTAT data. Note: Methane and nitrous oxide. Adverse impacts of farm pollution Changing farming patterns and practices represent a growing concern for human and wildlife health, and agricultural productivity. Though evidence linking intensive farming practices to these is incomplete, impacts can be inferred from the levels of pollution being observed based on well-understood impact pathways. From a health perspective, drinking water contamination is a key concern in the region, as are the development of drug-resistant microbes, food contamination, and poor air quality. In China, agriculture bears substantial responsibility for the fact that in 2014, over 61 percent of monitored groundwater sources and nearly 29 percent of monitored rivers were found to be unfit for human contact, and that 39 percent of major lakes and reservoirs failed to meet drinking or bathing water standards (China Ministry of Environmental Protection 2015). In Vietnam, livestock farms are reported to be seriously detracting from the safety of drinking water supplies to Ho Chi Minh City,3 and this is also likely to be the case for Hanoi and Manila, given the intensity of livestock production in their peri-urban areas. Groundwater pollution has been less well studied, but pesticides used in rice fields have been shown to compromise the safety of groundwater extracted from wells in Vietnam (Chau et al. 2015). Farm workers and rural populations are the most exposed to pesticide poisoning (Dasgupta et al. 2007; Nguyen 2016). Meanwhile, a large body of evidence has tied pesticide exposure to elevated rates of chronic disease such as different types of cancers, birth defects, and several types of neurodegenerative and reproductive disorders (Mostafalou and Abdollahi 2013). Exposure to chemicals in plastics, an issue of particular relevance in China, may also have some of these chronic health effects.4 Nitrates in drinking water from animal feces and fertilizer also increase the risk of various health problems (Naidenko, Coc, and Bruzelius 2012; Morales-Suarez, Llopis-Gonzalez, and Tejerizo-Perez 1995; Gulis, Czompolyova, and Cerhan 2002). 3 According to the city’s environmental protection department, as reported in the press (www.haisontq.com/tin-tuc-su-kien/tin-tuc/613-nuoc-thai-tu-chan-nuoi-lam-o-nhiem-song.html). 4 Notably carcinogenic and endocrine-disrupting effects (Colborn, vom Saal, and Soto 1993). 106 PART II. MEDIUM-TERM DEVELOPMENT AGENDA SUSTAINING RESILIENCE For wildlife and ecosystems on the front lines of exposure, the health effects of agricultural pollutants can be even more severe than for people. Mass fish kills are a common occurrence in aquaculture operations in the Philippines, with over 300 incidents recorded just between 2005 and 2014 (Cuvin-Aralar, Ricafort, and Salvacion forthcoming). In China, 30 to 40 percent of monitored surface waters are polluted to an extent that has been associated with biodiversity losses elsewhere. Pollinator disappearance, such as that which has reportedly occurred in fruit-tree-growing parts of Western China, along with recorded instances of fish kills, illustrate how agricultural pollution is threatening the survival of critical populations or species on which humans depend. Agricultural productivity is also adversely impacted. Soil fertility and crop yields are at risk when fertilizer losses, field burning, and the use of plastic ground covers, irrigation, and other farming activities result in soil acidification, salinization, warming, and other disturbances. In southern China, where a full 65 percent of agricultural soils have become severely acidified, fertilizer use has been both a cause and response to soil acidification, fueling a vicious cycle of degradation (Zhang et al. 2013b). Soil acidification has also likely accelerated the uptake of industrial heavy metal pollution by food crops, creating a human health hazard and leading to the rejection of these crops by markets. The loss of pollination and biological control services has already saddled farmers with heavy labor and pesticide costs, notably in China’s fruit-growing regions. And drug resistance in confined livestock and aquaculture operations may open new pathways for pandemics that would adversely affect these industries. The available, although still limited, evidence suggests that the economic costs of farm pollution are high. One research team, for instance, estimated that China’s excessive emissions of nitrogen, related to the production of staple food, cost the country 1.4 percent of annual GDP (close to US$49 billion) during 2001–10 (Xia and Yan 2016). In Indonesia, forest fires tied in large part to the conversion of land for oil palm production cost an estimated US$16.1 billion in 2015, more than the value added by palm oil production in 2014 (US$12 billion) (World Bank 2016a). Sources of pollution from farming practices T  hese practices relate to the management of both inputs and outputs in crop and animal agriculture, including the examples below. Poor livestock waste management. The dumping of untreated manure and feces-laden waste and wastewater from livestock and aquaculture operations into the environment is a rampant, often uncontrolled, and expanding problem, as is its improper storage. For example, an estimated 36 percent of animal waste generated in Vietnam is directly dumped into the environment without treatment (Dinh forthcoming), and up to 80 percent of animal waste is disposed of in this manner in some parts of the Philippines (Catelo, Narrod, and Tiongco 2008). Improper use of feed, drugs, other growth enhancers, and other chemicals in aquaculture and livestock breeding. Reliance on feeds and supplements is a key feature of industrial animal agriculture on both large and small scales, and gives rise to pollution in several ways. Aquaculture operations lose most of the feed (or fertilizer) they add to their waters, and nutrient pollution has become particularly problematic in the open systems that have come to dominate the subsector, as these entail the release rather than the recycling of excess nutrients. II.B. Tackling Farm Pollution in Developing East Asia 107 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 Furthermore, the prophylactic and growth-enhancing use of drugs, hormones, and heavy metals is now a standard practice in the livestock and aquaculture industries in the three studied countries, despite being dominated by smallholders. Over 45 antibiotics are widely used in Vietnamese livestock and aquaculture production (Dương and Nguyen 2015; Kim et al. 2013; Thinh et al. 2015; Tu et al. 2006). In the Philippines, reproductive hormones have been used for years in many different forms of aquaculture (Cuvin-Aralar, Ricafort, and Salvacion forthcoming). Aquaculture operations are also treated with large numbers of potentially harmful chemicals including persistent, toxic compounds (Nguyen et al. 2015; Tu et al. 2006). Figure II.B.7. Fertilizer use per hectare of arable and Excessive or improper fertilizer and pesticide use. permanent cropland in selected countries Tons of nutrients (N&P) The region now features some of the heaviest fertilizer 450 users globally, both in absolute terms and per unit of 400 land (Figure II.B.7). The majority of these fertilizers 350 are not taken up by the targeted plants but instead 300 disperse through the air, soil, and water. In China’s 250 intensive grain-producing areas, there is potential 200 for cutting nitrogen applications by 30 to 60 percent 150 without harming yields (Chen et al. 2014; Ju et al. 100 2009; Wu Liang 2014; Zhang et al. 2013b); and 50 similar “triple win” opportunities for yields, incomes, 0 CHN KOR JPN MYS VNM EU THA World USA IDN PHL and the environment have been identified in relation JJ2002 JJ2007 JJ2010 to the use of fertilizer (and water) to grow coffee in Source: Based on FAOSTAT data. Note: Large discrepancies have been noted in Chinese fertilizer use reported by different sources. In Vietnam’s Central Highlands (Amarasinghe et al. 2015; 2013, the Food and Agricultural Organization estimated the consumption of synthetic fertilizer at close to 40 million tons, whereas China’s National Bureau of Statistics estimated its use at close to 60 million Technoserve 2013). Pesticide use has soared in China tons. and parts of Vietnam. Some of the most toxic pesticides remain in use and nonnegligible volumes of counterfeit and obsolete pesticides are thought to be in circulation, though China, the region’s largest user of pesticides, has made strides on both accounts. Improper disposal of plastics. Another emerging concern is the use and improper disposal of agricultural plastics, many after only a single growing season. This is a particular concern in China, where the use of plastic film “mulch” has transformed and enabled the expansion of vegetable and cotton production in the country’s cold and arid regions. In China, plastic film use grew more than 150-fold between 1982 and 2014 in area terms, and 200-fold in tonnage terms (Figure II.B.8) (Yan 2015; China Rural Statistical Yearbook 2015). The use and disposal of plastics is associated with many concerns relating namely to soil fertility, food safety and health, and the protection of wildlife. Open burning. In many parts of the region, maize, rice, and wheat residues are systematically burned for the sake of expedience and labor savings. Time and labor scarcity, the lack of market channels for straws and husks, and certain agronomic beliefs are among the factors thought to contribute to this practice. 108 PART II. MEDIUM-TERM DEVELOPMENT AGENDA SUSTAINING RESILIENCE Figure II.B.8. The spread of plastic mulch in China, 1991, 2001, and 2011 Kilograms per square hectometer (kg/hm2) Heilongjiang Heilongjiang Nei Mongol Jilin Nei Mongol Jilin Liaoning Liaoning Xinjiang Uygur Xinjiang Uygur Heibei Heibei Tianjin Tianjin Beijing Beijing Ningxia Shanxi Ningxia Shanxi Shandong Shandong Quinghai Quinghai Gansu Gansu Shaanxi Henan Shaanxi Henan Jiangsu Jiangsu Xizang (Tibet) Anhui Shanghai Xizang (Tibet) Anhui Shanghai Hubei Hubei Sichuan Sichuan Chongqing Chongqing Zhejiang Zhejiang > 13 (0) > 13 (3) Hunan Jiangxi Hunan Jiangxi 11 to 13 (0) Guizhou 11 to 13 (0) Guizhou Fujian Fujian 9 to 11 (0) Yunnan 9 to 11 (1) Yunnan Guangxi Guangxi 7 to 9 (1) Zhuang Guangdong Taiwan 7 to 9 (5) Zhuang Guangdong Taiwan Hong Kong Hong Kong 5 to 7 (0) Macau 5 to 7 (9) Macau 3 to 5 (6) 3 to 5 (6) to 3 (23) Hainan to 3 (6) Hainan Heilongjiang Nei Mongol Jilin Liaoning Xinjiang Uygur Heibei Tianjin Beijing Ningxia Shanxi Shandong Quinghai Gansu Shaanxi Henan Jiangsu Xizang (Tibet) Anhui Shanghai Hubei Sichuan Chongqing Zhejiang > 13 (9) Hunan Jiangxi 11 to 13 (2) Guizhou Fujian 9 to 11 (2) Yunnan Guangxi 7 to 9 (7) Zhuang Guangdong Taiwan Hong Kong 5 to 7 (5) Macau 3 to 5 (3) to 3 (2) Hainan Source: China Rural Statistical Yearbook 1992, 2002, 2012. Note: Red, orange, and yellow shading correspond to the most intensive use of agricultural plastics (in kilograms per square hectometer). Structural and policy drivers of farm pollution Demographic growth and a societal focus on output and yield growth, shaped in part by policy, have favored development approaches that regard the environment as a resource for exploitation. Direct and indirect fertilizer subsidies (as those in Indonesia, Vietnam, and China—China’s are undergoing reform—and, formerly, in the Philippines), preferential input loans, extension messages, and product advertising have helped cement a widespread belief among farmers that applying more fertilizer always results in higher yields. This has contributed to the overuse of fertilizer. Specialization in crop agriculture, the simplification of agroecosystems, and the move to monoculture—favored by investment in irrigation infrastructure and extension messages, and sometimes inflexible land-use policies—have accelerated farms’ loss of natural predators and fertility, increased their susceptibility to pests and disease, and driven a greater reliance on synthetic chemicals to address these. The II.B. Tackling Farm Pollution in Developing East Asia 109 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 expansion of irrigated agriculture, a centerpiece of public investment in agriculture in several countries, has also unwittingly contributed to agrochemical runoff, soil salinization, and rice-related greenhouse gas emissions. The sector’s high degree of responsiveness to the emerging demands of urbanizing populations has resulted in a more polluting mix of products and practices, and a greater proximity of populations to agricultural sources of pollution. The rise of animal agriculture, including the surge in confined pig and fish farms, in response to the growth in demand for animal products, has led to increased pollution. The clustering of agricultural activities and their increasing juxtaposition with dense population centers has increased human exposure to the sector’s ever concentrating set of pollutants. Chinese agriculture’s response to rising demand for fruit and vegetables in a water-scarce environment has most recently driven plastic, nutrient, and pesticide pollution concerns. Pollution has, so far, been a major downside of the rapid intensification of production. In a region bent on leap-frogging as a development strategy, the uptake of pesticides and other chemicals in farming has happened so fast in East Asia that it has sometimes outpaced awareness of their dangers on the part of either farmers or regulators, the latter’s capacity to regulate them, and the adoption of safe handling techniques. Importing aquaculture species bred for intensive farming has been a quick way to develop a high-output seafood industry— yet one that has increased the risk of genetic contamination, disease, and biodiversity loss. Some of East Asia’s aquaculture activities have developed around potentially invasive species such as trout, Chinese carps, and tilapia, which can represent a threat to the health and survival of native species. Limited space for agriculture and the continued dominance of small farm size has challenged producers’ and regulators’ capacity to moderate pollution. Limited space for farming has detracted from sound environmental management in some cases. In animal farming, for example, cramped conditions have dissuaded producers from devoting space to waste treatment facilities, especially in light of limited opportunities for market reward and the weak enforcement of waste management regulations. The small size (and limited capacity and resources) of most livestock and aquaculture operations, taken individually, has also possibly dissuaded regulators from imposing more stringent waste management requirements or even just scrutiny over these, even though they generate vast amounts of pollution aggregately. Meanwhile, farmers with limited land are increasingly having to seek off-farm income opportunities to make ends meet, and this sometimes leaves them with insufficient time for judicious farm management practices. However, where consolidation is occurring and industrial farms are emerging, the pollution situation is not always improving. The large, industrial operations that are in fact emerging in the livestock and aquaculture sectors, especially in China and Vietnam, have a mixed record in terms of cleaning up the industry through the use of more sophisticated waste management techniques. Similarly, croplands that have been given over to large players are not always the most exemplary, perhaps because with market dominance and economic strength comes political influence and regulatory capture. 110 PART II. MEDIUM-TERM DEVELOPMENT AGENDA SUSTAINING RESILIENCE Current approaches and why they are falling short of expectations Recognizing the above challenges, governments in the region have started reacting to various degrees. In China, and to a growing extent in Vietnam, the harmful side effects of agricultural intensification have come to light and started to drive changes in policy. China has gone the furthest down this path as the heavy costs of rampant pollution have turned the matter into a simmering public concern. Within the region, China has probably established the most extensive cadre of agriculture-sector-specific laws, regulations, and incentive programs to monitor, prevent, and control pollution. In Vietnam, many government efforts to limit and control agricultural pollution are also underway as its effects are being felt ever more widely. Still, government interventions remain largely reactive and experimental. In the Philippines, where agricultural pollution is of lesser severity overall, or rather more localized, the government has put in place fewer agriculture-specific laws and programs. In all three countries, meanwhile, laws to prevent and control pollution are commonly ignored, and incentive programs are sometimes too weak. In Vietnam, for example, this applies to both laws and incentive programs intended to improve the management of livestock waste. And various successful incentive and demonstration programs have yet to surmount the challenges of sustainability and scale-up. This, for example, will be the next step for Vietnam’s “One Must Five Reductions” approach,5 now that it has demonstrated that rice, incomes, and the environment can benefit when farmers manage inputs and resources more judiciously. Most recently, China and Vietnam have started to embrace a more balanced set of agricultural policies that not only place greater emphasis on environmental sustainability but also link it to emerging and long-standing priorities of agricultural policy such as food quality, competitiveness, yield performance, and food security. In fact, judging from the Sustainable Agricultural Development Plan it adopted in 2015, China may now be turning a corner in starting to address the issue more strategically, with greater attention to prevention and to taking successful approaches to scale. To date, the above logic has not been the norm in the three countries, however, and socializing this way of thinking to see it through is likely to be challenging. This points to the need not only for efforts on the legal, technical, and economic fronts, but also for institutional reforms encompassing the incentives, culture, and priorities of regulators. Adequate public sector funding, as well as market participation, will also help mobilize and sustain adequate resources for such things as monitoring, enforcement, and various forms of subsidy (for sustainable agriculture). Toward an effective strategy: Curbing agricultural pollution will require the public sector to set priorities, effectively compel and motivate farmers, back innovation and learning, and influence the sector’s structure and growth trajectory from farm to table Though imperfect, evidence supports a number of priority areas in which more and better policy intervention is needed. As noted, the data and knowledge gaps surrounding agricultural pollution and its effects on the region are profound. Nonetheless, enough is understood to point to a number of farming patterns that are making critical 5 Developed by the International Rice Research Institute in collaboration with the An Giang Department of Agriculture and Rural Development, this approach calls for farmers to use certified seeds (the “one must”), while reducing the use of four production inputs (seed, water, pesticides, and chemical fertilizers) and postharvest losses (the “five reductions”). II.B. Tackling Farm Pollution in Developing East Asia 111 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 contributions to the region’s pollution woes, and to define a number of priorities. A rank ordering of priorities would differ among countries but, overall, attention needs to be given, among other things, to: •• Promoting more “precise,” less wasteful use of fertilizers, thereby cutting farmers’ expenses and reducing the range of adverse environmental effects associated with fertilizer losses. •• Drastically cutting back on the prophylactic, veterinary use of antibiotics in animal agriculture, the commercial benefits of which may be far overshadowed by the costs of drug resistance. •• Reducing and better managing the organic byproducts of farming—animal wastes and crop residues— including by deriving value from these (for instance, as nutrient resources for crop production). •• Professionalizing the use of pesticides and promoting the use of low-toxicity, low-residue, and high- efficiency control agents. •• Promoting the reuse and recycling of plastics as well as alternative technologies, especially for use in cold, dry, and other conditions in which plastics have revolutionized farming. In relation to each of these areas, a variety of technical solutions exist. In various parts of the region, for example, nutrient management tools, including ones that bypass soil testing, have proven effective at reducing fertilizer use along with waste and imbalances. Soil testing kits and laboratories, formula and slow-release fertilizer, smaller or redesigned chemical containers, and micro-irrigation can also improve fertilizer dosing and reduce waste. Although it has faced challenges scaling up—namely due to small farm size—integrated pest management (IPM) has empowered some farmers to reduce the use of pesticides, especially the most toxic ones, by using the most toxic ones as a last resort, and favoring reliance on prevention and biological controls. Simple protective gear, if it is worn, can reduce farm worker exposure when chemical spraying is deemed necessary. In many cases, farmers need public sector support to adopt technologies and practices that make mitigation a possibility, at least in the near term. In some cases, public sector intervention may only be needed initially to overcome the hurdles of switching. For example, the World Bank-supported Guangdong Agricultural Pollution Control Project in China is promoting a new type of housing for pigs that enables their wastes to be composted on premise, making the wastes more valuable and easier to repurpose as fertilizer on cropland. Together with automatic feeding, cooling, and ventilation systems, these improvements in waste management are also helping to create a healthier environment for pigs and reduce reliance on antibiotics, hormones, and heavy metals. The same project is also promoting no-till farming practices to retain crop residues in the field, conserve water, and limit fertilizer and pesticide runoff. Governments have a wide range of policy instruments at their disposal to promote greener farming practices(Box II.B.1). Many of these are already being used in the region, sometimes on an experimental scale. Typically, governments will need to develop multipronged programs that use combinations of these instruments, including “sticks” and “carrots”, to send clear signals to farmers and facilitate effective responses. This is especially the case where smallholders dominate, and command-and-control regulations will mostly be too costly to enforce. In parts of the sector that have become more consolidated (for instance, for large livestock facilities), command- 112 PART II. MEDIUM-TERM DEVELOPMENT AGENDA SUSTAINING RESILIENCE and-control regulation may be appropriate. Yet experience shows that additional measures are needed to motivate industry to comply and improve program cost-effectiveness. A combination of interventions, sequenced smartly, can be the key to achieving results. A strategy that effectively addresses and prevents agricultural pollution will need to extend beyond the agricultural sector itself, and this calls for greater integration of agricultural, environmental, and health policy. At the highest strategic level, health and environmental outcomes can become a central focus of Box II.B.1. Examples of public sector instruments that can be used to address agricultural pollution Mandates relating to the management of wastes •• Requirements relating to the treatment of waste and wastewater in animal production. •• Restrictions on the open burning of residues. Zoning, size, and environmental rules linked to farm licensing •• Restrictions on livestock rearing within a certain radius of sensitive areas such as residential and water source protection areas. •• Fast-track licensing for investments meeting high environmental management standards. Fiscal measures and other incentives tied to improved farming practices and environmentally beneficial investments •• Taxation of manure generation exceeding certain levels. •• Subsidies for efficient pesticide application and straw residue management machinery. •• Grants or other subsidies for biogas and other biomass energy facilities. •• Grants/loans for enterprises offering products and services that support greener food and agriculture. Funding of scientific research with a public good focus •• Low-emission (methane) rice production. •• Recyclable or biodegradable plastics. •• Alternative animal therapeutics. •• Precision and cellular agriculture. Information, education, and training •• Health and environmental awareness-raising campaigns. •• Support for grassroots, farmer-led movements related to sustainable agriculture. •• Model farms demonstrating best management practices. Investments in measurement systems and capacity •• Investments in assets and people to carry out technical monitoring of air, soil, water, and food pollution. •• Economic valuation of costs and benefits of environmentally friendly agricultural production practices. •• Development of decision tools that help policy makers take action on the basis of technical evidence. II.B. Tackling Farm Pollution in Developing East Asia 113 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 agricultural agencies, and agricultural productivity goals can be defined without losing sight of these. This may mean taking a long view on yield enhancement that gives more weight to resource conservation. Agriculture’s contribution to food security may also come to be as much about its contributions to micronutrient content and diversity as to caloric and protein availability. Concretely, this means that the measurement of agricultural sector performance needs a rethink.6 Health and environmental agencies can also bring agriculture more fully into their fold. A greater orientation toward agriculture and food production will help ministries of health and environment to more effectively curb the rise of chronic disease, and to maintain a productive resource base supportive of food security and industry. At the operational level, public resources can be redeployed more coherently, in ways more consistent with reining in agricultural pollution. Certain uses of public resources are fueling rather than mitigating avoidable forms of agricultural pollution, and these can be redeployed if addressing pollution becomes a high enough priority. Examples include subsidies and preferential regulatory dispositions supporting the expansion of the livestock industry, and direct or indirect fertilizer subsidies. Other uses of resources that have a more neutral or indirect effect on agricultural pollution (such as farmer income support, and investments in irrigation infrastructure, tree replanting, and so forth) also represent a missed opportunity in that they could be leveraged in ways that support greener farming systems. Also at the operational level, developing programs that cut across levels of government, sectors, and administrative boundaries is often necessary to achieve environmentally significant results across all kinds of farms and landscapes. This is acknowledging the fact that environmental challenges do not necessarily respect political boundaries, thus calling for multistakeholder, multilevel, “landscape approaches”. Translating this vision or orientation into effective and sustainable action requires investments in different kinds of knowledge and continuous learning. The needs range in tangibility, going from investments in hardware all the way to the building of technical capacity, the funding of research, the development of decision tools, and consensus building among policy, science, and finance communities around impact indicators. For example, investments in information technology (and training) to lower the costs of monitoring and enforcement can help improve program targeting and bring mandatory measures into the mix of policies. Investments to generate more multidisciplinary evidence on the physical and socioeconomic impacts of farming structures and practices—and on the effectiveness of different interventions—will help guide prioritization efforts as well as course corrections during implementation. To get ahead of pollution—to control and prevent it effectively—governments also need to anticipate and help shape structural change in the sector, from farm to table. Even if government intervenes effectively to bring about the adoption of existing mitigation technology, and effectively stimulates technical innovation, there is a limit to what technical solutions can achieve within existing production systems. In other words, structural solutions are also needed to avert certain path dependencies, effect change at scale, and achieve deeper shades of green (Box II.B.2). In this respect, industry growth represents a one-time opportunity to develop the food system more sustainably. The case for this is especially true in the aquaculture, livestock, and horticulture subsectors, since they are growing particularly rapidly. It is also true with respect to consumer food products and diets, as these are rapidly changing along with incomes, lifestyles, and food marketing channels. 6 See World Bank (2016b) for a broader view of this in the context of Vietnam. 114 PART II. MEDIUM-TERM DEVELOPMENT AGENDA SUSTAINING RESILIENCE In general, examining tradeoffs will be central to determining what structural changes are desirable or needed in the region. Farm consolidation and industrialization, for example, have pluses and minuses when it comes to the control of pollution. On the one hand, a sector with fewer, more formal players is easier to monitor and regulate. It may also have a higher technical and financial capacity to innovate and reduce its footprint. On the other hand, concentration can result in volumes of waste that have the potential to be hugely polluting, and it may not be economically viable to manage these in nonpolluting ways. To take another example, the consumption of animal products is highly valued in the region, as evidenced by the boom in their consumption, despite their high resource intensity and the many health risks these products carry. Box II.B.2. What are some of the aspects of farm sector development that the public sector might influence? ••  The number of animals per operation and their spatial density. ••  The spatial distribution of agricultural activities over the territory; and at the local level, the clustering of operations, especially aquaculture and livestock farms. ••  Farm consolidation, or the ability of small farms to operate as though they were larger ones. ••  The extent of farm specialization, and the embrace of monoculture versus polyculture. ••  Land available for agriculture versus other, nonagricultural uses. ••  The mix of foods and agricultural raw materials that are produced. Because they are seldom a focus of agricultural policy, it is important to highlight that changes in consumer product and diet choices, as shaped by political, economic, and cultural forces, can play a determinant role in directing how the sector and its pollution footprint develop. Consumers can be powerful in expressing preferences with their shopping baskets, whether through their choice of food groups or production characteristics. Even though agricultural pollution is tied to production systems, consumers can play a role in shaping these. Despite this, public sector efforts to mitigate and control pollution have only timidly tried to influence consumption patterns, or to enable greater consumer feedback in value chains. Consumer sensitization can be effective if paired with measures to enhance the availability—and hence the production and marketing—of more benign food products. The promotion of diets centered on plant-based foods can have a particularly significant impact on the sector’s development trajectory and footprint. Support for voluntary food standards along with traceability and certification systems are another way of expanding consumer choice. Economic incentives for marketers to embrace certified products can also help support consumer choice. Consumer awareness of agriculture’s environmental footprint is often stimulated by their concerns for food safety, including the presence of chemicals, antibiotics, and various other contaminants in food. II.B. Tackling Farm Pollution in Developing East Asia 115 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 Looking ahead: Tackling East Asia’s agricultural pollution challenge is not only within reach, but also a business, economic, and leadership opportunity Doing more to avoid pollution and the worst of its effects is within reach. Rapid change in the region bodes well for its ability to redirect farming—and the broader food sector—to a path of more durable and self-serving growth. East Asia’s agricultural performance over the past 50 to 60 years also reflects its inclination for innovation, its willingness to embrace new technology, and its capacity for transformation. Moreover, the strength, plurality, and dynamism of regional food cultures can help provide the impetus that will be needed to green food production and propel these food cultures into the 21st century. Furthermore, like every crisis, agricultural pollution can be treated as an opportunity. While farming may be at risk in parts of the region, far more is at stake than farming. And policy actions that will enable the public sector to act on agricultural pollution more decisively—consistent with the strategies outlined above—may have benefits that are felt more broadly. In particular, the public sector can position agriculture to thrive as a business and evolve competitively by being at the service of human and ecosystem health, and domestic market opportunities. Building domestically oriented capacity to control and prevent agricultural pollution specifically has the potential to help national food industries remain competitive domestically. 116 PART II. 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Country Pages and Key Indicators  121 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 CAMBODIA labor costs, driven in part by rising cost of living and U.S. dollar appreciation, and competition from other regional low-wage countries, particularly Myanmar, continue to exert downward pressures on garment exports. Better weather conditions resulted in improved agricultural production, while tourist arrivals eased further. Rainy season rice production expanded to 7.3 million tons in 2016, an 8.9 percent increase. However, depressed agricultural commodity prices dampened agriculture exports. Due to limited success 2016 in diversification of tourist attraction sites beyond the Population, million 15.8 Angkor Wat complex, growth in international arrivals GDP, US$ billion 20.0 decelerated further to 5 percent yoy in 2016, compared GDP per capita, US$ 1,265 with 6.1 percent in 2015. School enrolment rate, primary (% gross)b 123.0 Life expectancy at birth, yearsb 67.8 Sources: World Bank WDI and Macro Poverty Outlook. Rural households have increasingly diversified their Notes: (a) Most recent value (2012); (b) Most recent WDI value (2014). livelihoods, tapping into both the rural off-farm economy and remittances to help sustain poverty reduction. Declining commodity prices, coupled Summary with weather events in 2013 and 2015, resulted in a slowdown and stagnation in agricultural GDP in recent Growth slightly moderated to 6.9 percent in 2016 years. However, since 2012, households had already (Figure 1), and is projected to remain broadly began to diversify their incomes. By 2014, nonlabor unchanged until 2018. Moderation in garment exports transfer income and nonfarm wage income made up was offset by improved agricultural production, while more than 54 percent of rural incomes compared to commodity prices remain depressed. Rural household less than 31 percent in 2007. Thus, poverty is expected diversification into non-farm sources of income to have continued to decline, despite the stagnation in (garment, services, remittances) could be a significant agriculture, which had driven poverty reduction until contributor to poverty reduction and shared prosperity 2012. in Cambodia in years to come. Downside risks include fallout from a rise in US interest rates and uncertainty Cambodia’s external position improved due to in global trade. continued low oil prices and contained imports growth with weaker demand for basic construction materials. The current account deficit (excluding official transfers) Recent Developments is estimated to have narrowed to 9.5 percent of GDP in 2016, compared with 10.6 percent in 2015, Growth is estimated to have slightly eased to 6.9 percent and continued to be mainly financed by FDI, which in 2016, compared with 7 percent in 2015, in a context accounted for 10.2 percent of GDP. Gross international of moderation in garment exports. Garment exports reserves accumulated further, reaching US$6.4 billion growth has moderated to 8.4 percent (in value terms) (5.4 months of prospective imports) by end-2016, yoy, compared with 12.3 percent in 2015. Soaring compared with US$5.6 billion in 2015. The Cambodian 122Cambodia SUSTAINING RESILIENCE riel—U.S. dollar exchange rate remained broadly are emerging. Gradual expansion of the agricultural stable, hovering above CR 4,000 per U.S. dollar. sector is anticipated, thanks to concerted efforts by all stakeholders, while modest improvements may be Credit growth has moderated. Broad money has seen in the tourism sector, supported in part by newly increased, expanding at 17.9 percent yoy by end- established direct flights and several new initiatives 2016, compared with 14.7 percent in 2015, thanks to boost arrivals, such as “China Ready”. In the to rising foreign currency deposits. Domestic credit medium term, the growth outlook remains favorable, growth, however, has moderated to 25.8 percent yoy by underpinned by regional integration. end-2016, compared to 28.6 percent in 2015, partly as a result of introduced macroprudential measures. The rural nonfarm economy could be a significant Improved confidence may have attracted private sector contributor to poverty reduction and shared prosperity deposits, which accelerated to 19.3 percent yoy by end- in Cambodia in years to come. Cambodia is similar to 2016, from 16.6 percent in 2015. Vietnam, where livelihood diversification in rural areas contributed to poverty reduction and shared prosperity, Inflation has further edged up, fueled in part by rising and nonwage agricultural income in 2015 already consumption. Inflation accelerated to 3.9 percent yoy constituted about 36 percent of incomes for the bottom by end-2016, compared with 2.8 percent at household 40 percent. This trend means that the rural nonfarm consumption with rising wage continued. Strong economy and remittances could be a significant domestic demand, led by household consumption with contributor to poverty reduction and shared prosperity rising wages, continued. in Cambodia in years to come. An increase in public sector wages led to a modest fiscal Downside risks to the outlook are mostly external and deficit. In 2016, public outlay is estimated to have include fallout from a rise in U.S. interest rates, slower risen to 21.4 percent of GDP. Expenditure has been economic recovery in Europe, and uncertainty regarding boosted by the rising wage bill, swelling to 7.4 percent global trade. Domestically, potential election-related of GDP in 2016, from 6.5 percent in 2015, while capital uncertainty may occur in 2018. spending declined from 7.8 to 7.2 percent during the same period. Revenue collection remains strong, at an estimated 18.5 percent of GDP in 2016. The overall Risks and Challenges fiscal deficit (including grants) has, therefore, widened to 1.4 percent of GDP in 2016, compared with a fiscal To improve growth prospects going forward, it is balance in 2015. Cambodia’s debt distress rating in important to boost capital investment, which has been the latest World Bank/IMF Debt Sustainability Analysis, shrinking. Enhancing Public Investment Management conducted in 2016, remained low. is a prerequisite to ensure spending efficiency while boosting investments in progrowth and propoor sectors, such as physical infrastructure, irrigation, education Outlook and health. Capacity building at core and line agencies would also be needed. Growth is projected to remain at 6.9 percent this year and next, but to decelerate slightly to 6.7 percent in Enhancing labor productivity is key to compensate for 2019 (Table 2). While it is partly buoyed by rising rapidly rising private sector wages. In the short run, it government spending, some signs of moderation, would be important to promote vocational and technical particularly in the construction and garment sectors, skills, while reducing energy costs to attract and Cambodia 123 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 compete in high value-added and more sophisticated This, and effectively managing high vulnerability to manufacturing. Investing now in further improvements shocks, are also key for promoting social economic in learning outcomes, coupled with increased secondary mobility in Cambodia. school attainment, will be the key for future success. Figure 1. GDP growth, contributions to growth Figure 2. Trends in rice prices and remittances Percent Percent of GDP Price index (2003=100) 10 3.5 350 8 3.0 300 6 2.5 250 4 2.0 200 2 1.5 150 0 1.0 100 -2 0.5 50 -4 0 0 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 JJAgriculture JJGarment JJConstruction JJReal estate JJOther industr. ▬▬Remittances,lhs ▬▬Rice price, rhs JJTrade JJOther services JJTaxes less subsidies ▬▬GDP growth Sources: World Bank Commodity Price Database, WDI. Sources: National Institutes of Statistics and World Bank staff estimates. Note: lhs = left-hand side; rhs= right-hand side. CAMBODIA  Selected Indicators 2014 2015 2016e 2017f 2018f 2019f Real GDP growth, at constant market prices 7.1 7.0 6.9 6.9 6.9 6.7 Private Consumption 4.5 5.9 6.7 2.1 3.8 3.5 Government Consumption 2.4 4.4 5.7 13.2 18.5 10.8 Gross Fixed Capital Investment 9.1 10.6 10.1 9.8 11.5 12.5 Exports, Goods and Services 11.3 7.2 8.6 8.1 8.3 8.3 Imports, Goods and Services 10.1 6.5 8.6 5.8 7.9 7.9 Real GDP growth, at constant factor prices 6.9 6.9 6.8 6.8 6.8 6.6 Agriculture 0.3 0.2 1.2 1.0 0.8 0.7 Industry 9.8 11.7 10.4 9.8 8.9 8.8 Services 8.7 7.1 6.8 7.1 8.0 7.2 Inflation (Consumer Price Index) 1.7 1.3 3.5 3.7 4.2 5.2 Current Account Balance (% of GDP) -11.3 -12.1 -10.5 -10.1 -9.8 -9.3 Financial and Capital Account (% of GDP) 14.6 14.2 13.6 12.0 11.0 10.8 Net Foreign Direct Investment (% of GDP) 10.0 9.1 10.2 9.4 7.7 6.5 Fiscal Balance (% of GDP) -3.8 -1.9 -3.0 -5.1 -4.8 -4.5 Debt (% of GDP) 32.0 32.1 32.9 33.5 33.8 33.6 Primary Balance (% of GDP) -3.1 -1.6 -2.6 -4.7 -4.4 -4.1 Sources: World Bank, Macroeconomics and Fiscal Management Global Practice, and Poverty Global Practice. Note: e=estimate and f = forecast. 124Cambodia SUSTAINING RESILIENCE CHINA to growth last year. Final consumption contributed 4.3 percentage points to GDP growth, more than in 2015, while investment contributed less (2.8 percentage points). Public spending also supported growth in 2016, with the consolidated fiscal balance recording a deficit of 3.7 percent of GDP, which was larger than the 2015 fiscal deficit of 2.7 percent. On the production side, economic activity was driven primarily by services (particularly real estate), which grew by 7.8 percent, while industry increased by 6.2 percent. Growth in real household incomes and real consumption 2016 expenditures slowed in 2016 but remained robust, Population, million 1,378.7 supporting poverty reduction. Growth in real income per GDP, current US$, billion 11,249.9 capita in both urban and rural areas decelerated, with GDP per capita, current US$ 8,160 urban incomes growing by 5.6 percent and rural incomes Poverty rate ($1.9/day 2011 PPP terms)a 1.9 by 6.2 percent. Higher CPI inflation, at 2.0 percent in Poverty rate ($3.1/day 2011 PPP terms)a 11.1 2016, up from 1.4 percent a year earlier, partly explains School enrolment, primary (% gross)b 108.7 this slowdown. At the same time, job creation remained Life expectancy at birth, yearsb 75.6 Sources: World Bank WDI and Macro Poverty Outlook. steady, with 13.1 million new jobs created in 2016, Notes: (a) Most recent value (2013); (b) Most recent WDI value (2014). up from 12.5 million a year earlier. Growth in real consumption expenditures also declined but remained Summary robust at 7.9 and 5.8 percent for rural and urban areas, respectively. As a result, poverty reduction continued. China’s GDP grew by 6.7 percent yoy in 2016, down World Bank estimates suggest that the proportion of from 6.9 percent in 2015. Fiscal stimulus and credit the population consuming less than US$1.90 a day in expansion supported economic activity. The growth 2011 PPP fell from 1.1 percent in 2015 to 0.8 percent moderation and rebalancing are expected to continue in 2016. The poverty rate calculated using a US$3.10 a in the medium term. Despite the growth slowdown, day poverty line (in 2011 PPP) fell from 7.7 percent in poverty reduction is expected to continue, with the 2015 to 6.2 percent in 2016. extreme poverty rate projected to decline to 0.4 percent by 2019. The trade-off between short-term growth and Despite still strong trade and current account surpluses medium-term structural reform is one of the country’s and a gross foreign reserve position of around key challenges. US$3 trillion, China continued to experience large capital outflows and downward pressures on the renminbi in 2016. By preliminary estimates, the current account Recent Developments surplus was US$210.4 billion (1.9 percent of GDP) in 2016, and capital outflows reached US$653.7 billion China’s transition to slower but structurally rebalanced (5.8 percent of GDP), resulting in a loss of FX reserves of growth continues. GDP expanded by 6.7 percent yoy in US$443.6 billion. The magnitude of outflows was only 2016, down from 6.9 percent in 2015. Economic activity slightly below the outflows of US$674 billion observed was driven by domestic demand, including public in 2015. Improved communication of exchange rate investment, while net exports contributed negatively policy helped to moderate capital outflows considerably China 125 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 in mid-2016, although higher U.S. interest rates and a term. Balancing short-term demand management with stronger U.S. dollar brought more outflows later in the medium-term reform remains a priority, which China’s year, and through January 2017. In the context of a government has recognized as indicated, for example, balance of payments deficit, the renminbi depreciated in the conclusions of the Central Economic Work by 6.8 percent against the U.S. dollar in 2016, although Conference, which took place at the end of 2016. it remained relatively stable against a trade-weighted basket of currencies in the second half of the year. The main challenges to more inclusive growth are related to narrowing the persistent gap in the standards of living between rural and urban areas. The ratio of Outlook rural-to-urban disposable income has remained at 0.36 over the past three years. One way to address the China’s growth moderation and rebalancing are remaining rural-urban income gap is to better target expected to continue in the medium term. GDP growth social assistance to the remaining poor who are more is projected at 6.5 percent in 2017, assuming somewhat dispersed and harder to reach. Promoting equality of stronger net exports than in 2016, as growth in the opportunity, for example, by increasing the quality of real estate sector slows following tightening policy public services available to rural residents, migrants measures. Growth is forecast at 6.3 percent in 2018 and in urban areas, and those in poorer interior provinces, 2019, as economic rebalancing is forecast to continue would also help make growth more inclusive. at a gradual pace. External factors affecting growth in the near term are highly uncertain. New risks have risen with respect to the international environment, particularly future trade policy. Given the positive medium-term growth outlook and only a gradual increase in projected consumer price inflation, poverty rates are expected to decline further. The share of the poor living on less than US$1.90 a day would likely reach 0.4 percent, and those living on less than US$3.10 a day reach 3.1 percent, by 2019. Risks and Challenges Financial stability risks associated with the rapid buildup in domestic debt, including by local governments, are a key near-term challenge. Credit to the government and private nonfinancial sector increased by 16.2 percent in 2016, up from an increase of 15.1 percent in 2015. Although credit expansion contributed to strong growth in 2016, corporate deleveraging could have an adverse impact on growth in the short term. Improved resource allocation and reduced financial vulnerabilities are critical for sustaining China’s growth over the long 126China SUSTAINING RESILIENCE Figure 1. GDP growth (yoy), contributions to growth Figure 2. Poverty rates estimates and projections Percent, percentage points Poverty rates, percent 20 12 15 10 10 8 5 6 0 4 -5 2 -10 0 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 JJPrivate consumption JJGovernment consumption JJGross fixed investment ▬▬Poverty line $1.90 a day ▬▬Poverty line $3.10 a day JJChange in inventories JJNet exports JJStatistical discrepancy Sources: NBS; World Bank calculations. Sources: NBS; World Bank estimates. CHINA  Selected Indicators 2014 2015 2016e 2017f 2018f 2019f Real GDP growth, at constant market prices 7.3 6.9 6.7 6.5 6.3 6.3 Private Consumption 8.2 8.0 7.6 7.2 7.3 7.3 Government Consumption 4.3 9.3 11.4 8.1 7.3 7.2 Gross Fixed Capital Investment 6.9 6.8 6.2 5.9 5.7 5.5 Exports, Goods and Services 6.9 -12.2 -0.4 2.1 2.4 2.4 Imports, Goods and Services 6.2 -12.7 2.1 2.8 3.6 3.6 Real GDP growth, at constant factor prices 7.3 6.9 7.3 6.5 6.3 6.3 Agriculture 4.1 3.9 3.3 3.2 3.1 3.1 Industry 7.4 6.2 6.1 5.9 5.7 5.6 Services 7.8 8.2 9.3 7.7 7.4 7.3 Inflation (Consumer Price Index) 2.0 1.4 2.0 2.2 2.3 2.4 Current Account Balance (% of GDP) 2.6 3.0 1.9 2.0 2.1 2.1 Financial and Capital Account (% of GDP) -1.6 -1.3 -0.4 -0.6 -0.7 -0.7 Net Foreign Direct Investment (% of GDP) 1.4 0.6 -0.5 -0.1 0.3 0.4 Fiscal Balance (% of GDP) -0.9 -2.7 -3.7 -3.8 -3.2 -3.1 Debt (% of GDP) 38.1 38.0 39.2 40.7 40.9 41.0 Primary Balance (% of GDP) 0.6 -1.5 -2.7 -2.7 -2.0 -1.9 Poverty rate ($1.9/day PPP terms)a,b,c 1.5 1.1 0.8 0.6 0.5 0.4 Poverty rate ($3.1/day PPP terms)a,b,c 9.5 7.7 6.2 5.0 4.0 3.1 Sources: World Bank, Macroeconomics and Fiscal Management Global Practice, and Poverty Global Practice. Notes: e = estimate. f = forecast. (a) Poverty data are projections using neutral distribution with pass through of 0.72, based on 2013 Survey data. (b) Years 2014 and 2015 are estimates. China 127 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 FIJI period last year) and slow progress in reconstruction activities also contributed to the slowdown. Inflation rose to 6.8 percent in the year to January compared to 0.2 percent in the previous year, reflecting both the cyclone-related supply shortages in much of 2016 and higher duties on alcohol and tobacco (introduced in the August budget). Despite higher inflation, the Fiji dollar remained largely stable against the basket of currencies, and regained some ground against the U.S. dollar and the euro in the year to January (4 and 7 percent, respectively), while depreciating against the New Zealand dollar, the Australian dollar, and the 2016 Japanese yen (-7, -2, and -0.1 percent, respectively). Population, million 0.9 GDP, current US$, billion 4.4 The external deficit remains elevated at around GNI per capita, current US$ 4,879 6 percent of GDP, reflecting large structural deficits Basic needs poverty rate, percenta 28.1 in the merchandise trade account. A large surplus in Gini coefficientb 42.8 the services account (relating to tourism and transport) Life expectancy at birth, yearsc 70 Sources: Fiji Bureau of Statistics; Reserve Bank of Fiji; and WDI. and continued strength in remittances, which rose Notes: a) Based on National Poverty Line in 2013–14. (b) Most recent value (2008/9). (c) Most recent WDI value (2014). by 10.2 percent in the year to January, are providing needed offsets. Foreign reserves remain adequate at F$1,976 million at end-February, sufficient to cover Summary 5.3 months of imports of goods and services. Growth slowed to 2 percent in 2016 from output losses The planned fiscal deficit for FY2016/17, announced from last year’s Cyclone Winston. Inflation more than in August, widened to 7.3 percent (4.7 percent in the doubled, also reflecting the cyclone-related supply national convention of including privatization receipt shocks. Growth is expected to strengthen in 2017 as as revenue) from 3.5 percent (1.5 percent) from the reconstruction activities gather pace and to remain previous comparable year, around 2.1 percentage above historical trend in the medium term. Downside points of which reflected cyclone-related spending. risk to the outlook has risen, including heightened The actual ratio of fiscal deficit to GDP is likely to be policy uncertainty in major advanced economies and contained despite slower-than-expected growth in the potential disruptions in global financial markets. first four months of the fiscal year due to the under- Restoring fiscal space and enabling private-sector-led execution of reconstruction spending. growth are key to maintaining Fiji’s inclusive growth. Extreme poverty is rare in Fiji, but many people still live below national benchmarks for basic-needs poverty. Recent Developments Preliminary estimates from the 2013/14 Household Income and Expenditure Survey show a decline in the GDP growth slowed to 2 percent in 2016 from 5.3 and share of households with incomes below a basic-needs 3.6 percent in 2014 and 2015, respectively, mainly due poverty line from 31 to 28 percent since 2008/09.1 to output losses in agriculture—a source of livelihood for poor households—from last year’s Cyclone Winston. Softer growth in visitor arrivals (4.9 percent in the year 1 The figures discussed here are income-based estimates produced by the Fiji Bureau of Statistics. The World Bank has not published the consumption based poverty measure to November compared to 7.9 percent in the same using the 2013/14 survey. 128Fiji SUSTAINING RESILIENCE Within this overall trend, rural poverty fell faster (from Risks and Challenges 43 to 37 percent) while urban poverty rose marginally (from 18 to 20 percent). Poverty rates are highest in the Downside risks to the outlook have increased Northern and Eastern Divisions—areas that were hit compared to October. They include heightened policy hard by Winston—at 48 and 40 percent, respectively. uncertainty in major advanced economies, financial market disruptions, growth disappointments in major developed and emerging markets, and rising Outlook protectionist sentiments. Closer to home, Fiji remains vulnerable to extreme weather, and another major Growth is expected to reach 3.7 percent this year as cyclone could undermine Fiji’s ability to implement reconstruction activities gather pace, and remain its recovery program effectively and risk delaying the above-trend over the forecasting period, supported timing of the needed fiscal consolidation. by continued strength in consumption and public investment in infrastructure. Improved connectivity To reduce the impact of external shocks to the economy with Asian markets, especially the launch of direct and protect the vulnerable, the government must build flights to China and Singapore in 2017, should also fiscal space. Although the annual budget estimates support tourism. Inflation is expected to moderate as include three-year forecasts, the medium-term fiscal supply shortages ease and the impact of higher tobacco framework is not well developed and lacks credibility. and alcohol duties are factored in. A modest increase The medium-term implications of the short-term policy in global oil prices and higher costs of imported raw initiatives of government are often not worked out. materials more generally as global recovery takes hold For example, the impact of the rapidly rising capital will prevent a more significant moderation in inflation. investment on operational expenditure has not been recognized, and the full impact of increases in subsidies The external deficit will likely remain elevated from (e.g., school fees, housing) and possible increases in higher import demand for raw materials and capital civil service wages on the outer year forecasts have not equipment for reconstruction and infrastructure been incorporated. projects. The long-run decline in sugar exports is expected to accelerate this year, with the elimination Encouraging private sector growth will require a more of production quotas within the EU sugar market this supportive business environment. Fiji’s overall Doing September. This is widely expected to reduce both the Business ranking declined to 97 in 2017 from 84 in prices and the quantity of sugar imported in the EU 2016, and its “distance to frontier” score deteriorated market, accelerating the ongoing exit of farmers from to 60.7 from 62.5. Fiji’s worsening performance was the sugar sector. External financing will remain a risk, due to deterioration in getting credit (due to closure of but continued support from the donors (including the the credit bureau in 2016) and lack of progress in those EU) and multilateral lenders will be forthcoming. areas where Fiji had already ranked low, including starting a business, getting permits, paying taxes, and The fiscal deficit will likely remain elevated throughout registering property. Fiji scores particularly poorly in the forecasting period, as the government accelerates starting a business—159th of 190 countries—with the reconstruction effort while continuing to focus on 40 days required to start one. spending on priority sectors—health, education, and infrastructure, the central elements of the previous two budgets—until the next election in 2018. The recently announced review of public sector wages, if it leads to large increases in the wage bill, will further challenge the path for fiscal consolidation. Fiji 129 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 Figure 1. Real GDP growth Figure 2. Recurrent spending breakdown Percent Percent 10 100 90 6.7 8.4 8 80 13.8 6 28.6 70 37.8 60 24.5 4 50 2 40 36.9 28.4 0 30 42.3 20 -2 10 22.7 21.5 7.0 -4 0 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018 Fiji Middle-income countries Small states ▬▬Real GDP growth ▬▬5 period moving average JJGoods & services JJWages & salaries JJSubsidies & transfers JJInterest Source: World Development Indicators and staff estimates. Sources: Fiji Ministry of Economy, World Development Indicators, and staff calculations. Selected Indicators FIJI  2014 2015 2016e 2017f 2018f 2019f Real gross domestic product 5.6 3.6 2.0 3.7 3.5 3.3 Exports, Goods and Services 6.9 -4.1 -9.5 3.9 3.4 3.0 Imports, Goods and Services 0.0 -11.2 -6.7 5.9 6.1 5.1 Agriculture 1.9 6.3 -9.7 3.7 2.3 1.5 Industry 1.2 2.2 1.7 5.6 3.1 2.3 Services 7.4 3.6 3.8 3.1 3.9 3.9 Inflation (Consumer Price Index) 0.1 1.6 3.9 3.0 2.9 2.9 Current Account Balance (% of GDP) -7.6 -1.5 -3.4 -7.2 -7.0 -6.8 Fiscal Balance (% of GDP)a -4.2 -4.6 -4.7 -5.6 -5.9 -5.0 Debt (% of GDP) 48.4 45.9 46.2 47.8 51.9 55.3 Sources: Fiji Bureau of Statistics, Reserve Bank of Fiji, World Development Indicators, and staff estimates. Notes: e=estimate, f=forecast. (a) Fiji changed the government fiscal year from the calendar to the August–July fiscal year starting 2016. 130Fiji SUSTAINING RESILIENCE INDONESIA The decline in government expenditure, 4.0 percent, was the largest since Q1 2010, in part due to base effects of strong expenditure growth in Q4 2015. Meanwhile investment growth rose and export growth turned positive after eight quarters of contraction, in line with stronger commodity prices. Despite heightened global policy uncertainty, economic growth edged up to 5.0 percent in 2016 as a whole, from a revised 4.9 percent in 2015. A stable rupiah, record low inflation, and declining unemployment and soaring real wages lifted private consumption. In contrast, falling government expenditure and weaker investment growth 2016 weighed on overall economic growth for the year. Population, million 260.6 GDP, current US$ billion 932.9 While Tax Amnesty revenue increased overall revenue GDP per capita, current US$ 3580 collections, non tax amnesty revenue collection Poverty rate ($1.9/day 2011 PPP terms)a 7.5 weakened in 2016. In contrast, fiscal policy credibility Poverty rate ($3.1/day 2011 PPP terms)a 32.1 was enhanced by cuts in government expenditure, Gini coefficienta 39.4 along with the more achievable revenue targets in the School enrolment, primary (% gross)b 106.3 Life expectancy at birth, yearsb 68.7 2017 budget, which bolstered investor confidence. The Sources: World Bank WDI and Macro Poverty Outlook. fiscal deficit was 2.5 percent of GDP in 2016, lower Notes: (a) Most recent value (2015); (b) Most recent WDI value (2014). than expected and down from the 2.6 percent in 2015. Summary The external sector also strengthened with the current account deficit narrowing to a five-year low of With robust economic growth, a low current account 0.8 percent of GDP in Q4 2016, from 1.9 percent in Q3 deficit, and a conservative fiscal deficit, the fundamentals 2016, largely due to an improvement in manufacturing of the Indonesian economy are strong. Despite global exports. For 2016 as a whole, the current account policy uncertainty, GDP growth strengthened in 2016, balance as a share of GDP narrowed to 1.8 percent from on higher private consumption growth. The economic 2.0 percent in 2015, also a five-year low. outlook continues to be positive, supported by a projected pickup in the global economy and recovering The official poverty rate fell by 0.4 percentage points commodity prices, carrying both investment and between September 2015 and September 2016 to exports. Unexpected changes in U.S. monetary policy, 10.7 percent. This suggests the slight uptick in the a protracted period of elevated domestic inflation, and pace of poverty reduction seen between March 2015 weak fiscal revenues pose downside risks. and March 2016 has continued, off the back of stronger GDP growth, contained inflation, and the lowest core rate of unemployment since 2012. However, this Recent Developments decline is still lower than the rates of poverty reduction achieved between 2007 and 2011, which averaged Real GDP growth in Q4 2016 eased to 4.9 percent yoy 1.1 percentage points annually. from 5.0 percent in Q3, as government expenditure continued contracting and import growth rebounded. Indonesia 131 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 Outlook 0.8 percentage points per year between 2014 and 2018. Over the same period, moderate poverty is projected to With all expenditure components expected to firm, fall 2.6 percentage points on average per year. real GDP growth is projected to edge up to 5.2 percent in 2017, and climb to an average of 5.4 percent in 2018–19. Household consumption growth is projected Risks and Challenges to gain as a stable rupiah buoys consumer confidence. Private investment growth is also poised to increase Risks to the outlook are tilted to the downside. The U.S. as the effects of monetary easing in 2016 and recent Federal Reserve is expected to proceed with monetary economic reforms gain traction. At the same time, as normalization and gradually raise the Fed Funds Rate commodity prices continue to strengthen and lift fiscal in the coming years. Should the Fed hike interest rates revenues and external demand, government spending more rapidly than expected, taper-tantrum-like capital and exports are likely to rebound from their contractions outflows from emerging markets could occur as investors in 2016. While GDP growth rates in the medium term rapidly reevaluate and rebalance portfolios to maximize are projected to surpass those of recent years, they expected gain. Volatility in financial and capital markets are significantly lower than those seen immediately could weigh on growth of the Indonesian economy in the following the financial crisis, as the economy rebounded medium term. In addition, surprise outcomes from the from the global downturn. Continued structural series of upcoming elections in Europe, could further reforms are therefore necessary to further enhance the add to global political and policy uncertainty. economy’s potential growth. A protracted period of elevated inflation poses a key Consumer price inflation is expected to jump from downside risk to consumption growth. Should inflation 3.5 percent in 2016 to 4.3 percent in 2017, due to remain higher and longer than expected, consumer hikes in electricity tariffs and vehicle registration fees, spending may be dampened, resulting in lower output after which, inflation is projected to temper as the growth. In addition, Bank Indonesia may be compelled effects of the price hikes dissipate. to act by tightening monetary policy, which would also cool investment growth. At the same time, weak fiscal The fiscal balance is projected to gradually widen revenues continues to pose a downside risk, if the pace over the forecasting horizon, from 2.6 percent in of reform slows and lower collection constrains fiscal 2017 to 2.8 percent in 2018–19. Higher public spending and much needed infrastructure investment. expenditures, partly due to renewed efforts to boost public infrastructure investment, are expected to be Income inequality remains a key policy challenge. partially offset by revenue growth, in light of stronger Although the Gini coefficient fell in 2015-2016, the GDP growth and dividends from administrative and tax bottom 40 percent of the income distribution saw policy reforms. their share of total consumption decline marginally, suggesting that growth has not been equitably Nevertheless, poverty reduction is projected to be distributed, and that the poor and vulnerable are at risk somewhat sluggish. Despite strengthening growth and of being left behind. contained inflation (and the slight increase in poverty reduction in 2016 in the official BPS statistics), the pace of poverty reduction according to the World Bank’s PPP- adjusted poverty lines is forecast to continue to slow. Extreme poverty is expected to decline by an average of 132 Indonesia SUSTAINING RESILIENCE Figure 1. Despite global policy uncertainty, Indonesia’s Figure 2. Distribution of national consumption GDP growth strengthened in 2016 in Indonesia. Inequality has fallen, but bottom 40 consumption has dropped Percent Percent 8 March 2015 March 2016 Δ 2015–16 6 Top 20 48.25 46.89 -1.36 4 2 Middle 40 34.65 36.09 1.44 0 Bottom 40 17.1 17.02 -0.08 -2 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 JJPrivate consumption JJGovernment consumption JJGross fixed capital formation Source: National Socioeconomic Survey (SUSENAS). JJNet exports JJStatistical discrepancy ▬▬GDP Sources: National Statistics Agency; World Bank. INDONESIA  Selected Indicators 2014 2015 2016e 2017f 2018f 2019f Real GDP growth, at constant market prices 5.0 4.9 5.0 5.2 5.3 5.4 Private Consumption 5.3 4.8 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 Government Consumption 1.2 5.3 -0.1 2.8 3.8 4.0 Gross Fixed Capital Investment 4.4 5.0 4.5 5.7 6.0 6.2 Exports, Goods and Services 1.1 -2.1 -1.7 2.0 2.4 2.8 Imports, Goods and Services 2.1 -6.4 -2.3 1.0 2.0 2.5 Real GDP growth, at constant factor prices 5.0 4.2 5.1 4.6 5.3 5.4 Agriculture 4.2 3.8 3.3 3.7 3.9 4.0 Industry 4.2 3.0 3.9 4.5 5.2 5.3 Services 6.0 5.5 6.8 5.0 5.8 6.0 Inflation (Consumer Price Index) 6.4 6.4 3.5 4.3 3.8 3.8 Current Account Balance (% of GDP) -3.1 -2.0 -1.8 -1.8 -1.9 -2.0 Financial and Capital Account (% of GDP) 3.3 2.1 3.1 3.1 2.9 3.0 Net Foreign Direct Investment (% of GDP) 1.7 1.2 1.6 1.8 1.8 1.9 Fiscal Balance (% of GDP) -2.1 -2.6 -2.5 -2.6 -2.8 -2.8 Debt (% of GDP) 24.7 27.4 27.9 29.0 29.5 30.2 Primary Balance (% of GDP) -0.9 -1.2 -1.0 -1.0 -1.2 -1.1 Poverty rate ($1.9/day PPP terms)a,b,c,d 8.3 7.5 6.5 5.6 4.8 4.1 Poverty rate ($3.1/day PPP terms)a,b,c,d 36.7 32.1 29.9 27.7 25.6 23.6 Sources: World Bank, Macroeconomics and Fiscal Management Global Practice, and Poverty Global Practice. Notes: e = estimate, f = forecast. All fiscal figures are for the central government. (a) Calculations based on EAPPOV harmonization, using 2011-SUSENAS and 2015-SUSENAS. (b) Projection using annualized elasticity (2011–2015) with pass-through = 1 based on GDP per capita in constant LCU. (c) Actual data: 2014, 2015. Nowcast: 2016. Forecast are from 2017 to 2019. (d) Period for elasticities set 2011–2015, rather than the shared prosperity years (2011–14), due to recent changes in the collection of the national socio-economic survey (SUSENAS). Indonesia 133 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 LAO PDR 7.4 percent in 2015. A marked increase in the power sector contribution and certain dynamism in the manufacturing sector were partly offset by slight moderation in construction, flat mining output, and stable public spending. Power exports increased by about 70 percent following the start of operations of the 1,878 MW Hongsa Lignite plant, while export of parts and components, mostly from the Special Economic Zones (SEZs), continued to increase. Low commodity prices and lower ore grade in one of the mines kept mining output flat. Inflation in 2016 remained low at 1.8 percent on average due to low fuel prices, while 2016 core inflation averaged 1.1 percent. Population, milliona 6.9 GDP, current US$ billion 13.1 Natural resources remain a major driver of growth, hence GDP per capita, current US$ 1,900 the pace of poverty reduction continues to be less than Poverty rate ($1.9/day 2011 PPP terms)b 15.3 proportionate to the rate of economic growth. However, Poverty rate ($3.1/day 2011 PPP terms)b 46.0 there are signs the relationship between poverty Gini coefficientb 36.4 reduction and growth is beginning to strengthen, with School enrolment, primary (% gross)c 118.9 Life expectancy at birth, yearsc 65.7 recent expansion of some labor-intensive sectors (trade, Sources: World Bank WDI and Macro Poverty Outlook. tourism and some manufacturing). For instance, the Note: (a) Based on WDI/UN population statistics. According to the 2015 Census, the population was 6.5 million. (b) Most recent value (2012). (c) Most recent WDI value (2014). 8.7 percent increase in the number of insurees in the Social Security Fund points to stronger jobs creation. Similarly, exports of parts and components doubled Summary in 2015 and increased by 20 percent in 2016, further suggesting growth in the manufacturing sectors. Economic growth moderated in 2016 but remained robust. A marked increase in power sector contribution The fiscal deficit widened significantly to 6.2 percent and some from the manufacturing sector was partly in FY2015/16 from below 4 percent in the previous offset by slight moderation in construction, flat mining year largely due to underperformance of revenues. output, and stable public spending. With natural Revenues, as a share of GDP, are estimated to have resources driving growth, poverty reduction in Lao PDR declined to 19 percent of GDP in FY2015/16 from has been slower compared to peers. Growing electricity about 23 percent a year earlier due to lower commodity exports and lower oil prices improved the external prices (copper price affected mining royalties and balance; however, the low commodity prices affected profit tax, while low oil prices affected customs revenue fiscal revenues and widened the deficit, which kept and excise tax), slower economic growth, and lower public debt elevated. grants. Spending cuts were less commensurate to the revenue shortfall, with the expenditure-to-GDP ratio declining from 27 percent in FY2014/15 to 25 percent Recent Developments in FY2015/16. The deficit was financed by increased borrowing, pushing public debt to about 68 percent of The Lao economy is estimated to have grown at GDP in 2016. around 7 percent in 2016, a slight moderation from 134 Lao PDR SUSTAINING RESILIENCE The external balance improved as higher exports of include strengthening nonresource taxation, introducing electricity and parts and components and lower oil new revenue sources, modernizing tax administration, prices offset a fall in copper prices and timber exports. and reviewing and removal of exemptions. At the same Despite the improvement in the current account deficit, time, wage bill spending will be tightly controlled, reserves were about US$940 million in September with additional gains expected from improved public 2016. With a reserve cover of less than two months procurement and public finance management. Efforts of imports and about 25 percent of foreign currency to improve public debt management, including through deposits in the banking sector, the reserve level remains adoption of a Public Debt Law in 2017 and strengthening below standard benchmarks, especially in the context of the debt management function, will be important to a tightly managed exchange rate of the kip to the U.S. reduce the risk to fiscal solvency and sustainability of dollar. With the Bank of Lao PDR limiting interventions public debt. The external deficit is expected to widen in the second half of 2016 to protect reserves, a gap reflecting higher import content of investments. between the official and parallel market exchange rate of about 3 to 5 percent emerged. Risks and Challenges Outlook Uncertainty in the external outlook has increased considerably. Greater disturbances in the region GDP growth is projected to remain at around 7 percent resulting from a growing list of potential triggers during 2017–19, supported by a healthy pipeline could affect Lao PDR’s main economic partners and of power projects and growing opportunities for lower external demand and investment, putting the nonresource sector resulting from closer ASEAN further pressure on the exchange rate. A reversal in integration. China’s growth rates are expected to commodity prices could lower mining and agricultural moderate but remain high, and economic growth in output, put further strain on the fiscal accounts, and Thailand is expected to accelerate slowly, providing a affect livelihoods. Failure to address pressures on the pull for the Lao PDR economy. Also, commodity prices exchange rate risks igniting inflation and testing the (copper, rubber) are expected to edge up. The start of a stability of the banking sector and fiscal solvency, few large investment projects—the construction of the In addition, slippages in public investment in large 420-kilometer railway linking Vientiane Capital to the projects could derail the fiscal consolidation plan and border with China, and the operations of large power heighten the risk to sustainability of public debt. With plants coming on stream in the next few years—will an increasing need for fiscal consolidation, the growing support growth. Tourism will benefit from improved challenge for poverty reduction will be to effectively fund air transport connectivity, and recent entrants into few service delivery in lagging regions to build household sectors (such as insurance and retail trade) are expected endowments and equalize opportunities between the to generate additional dynamism. Inflation is likely nonpoor and the poor. to pick up to around 3 percent in 2017 as oil prices recover. Poverty is likely to continue to decline at a moderate pace as the gradual structural transformation continues. The government plans to gradually consolidate the fiscal position with the deficit stabilizing at 6.2 percent of GDP in 2017 and declining afterward. Revenue measures Lao PDR 135 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 Figure 1. GDP growth, contributions to growth Figure 2. Actual and projected rates and GDP per capita (constant LCU) Percent and percentage point contributions Poverty, percent GDP per capita (constant), in million 14 70 9 12 8 60 10 7 8 50 6 6 40 5 4 30 4 2 3 0 20 -2 2 10 -4 1 -6 0 0 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018 JJPrivate consumption JJGovernment consumption JJInvestment ▬▬$1.9/day PPP ▬▬$3.1/day PPP ▬▬GDP per capita JJNet export ▬▬GDP Source: Staff calculations based on LECS 4-5. Source: Staff estimates based on national statistics. LAO PDRSelected Indicators 2014 2015 2016e 2017f 2018f 2019f Real GDP growth, at constant market prices 7.5 7.4 7.0 7.0 6.8 7.2 Private Consumption 8.0 5.2 4.5 4.9 4.6 4.6 Government Consumption 3.7 -0.4 7.4 7.8 4.3 4.3 Gross Fixed Capital Investment 9.9 17.0 5.7 6.0 7.8 6.5 Exports, Goods and Services 16.6 -6.5 7.2 7.1 7.0 9.0 Imports, Goods and Services 15.8 -3.0 3.0 4.0 4.0 3.8 Real GDP growth, at constant factor prices 7.5 7.4 7.0 7.1 6.8 7.2 Agriculture 8.0 1.4 0.5 2.8 3.2 3.2 Industry 7.2 11.1 11.3 9.7 8.6 9.2 Services 7.5 8.1 7.2 7.1 7.3 7.3 Inflation (Consumer Price Index) 4.1 1.3 1.8 3.0 3.0 3.0 Current Account Balance (% of GDP) -17.9 -17.5 -14.0 -18.4 -19.8 -19.1 Fiscal Balance (% of GDP) -3.8 -3.7 -6.2 -6.2 -5.4 -4.6 Debt (% of GDP) 64.7 65.8 68.2 70.4 71.8 70.0 Poverty rate ($1.9/day PPP terms)a,b,c 10.4 8.3 7.0 5.9 4.8 3.6 Poverty rate ($3.1/day PPP terms)a,b,c 36.9 33.2 30.0 27.0 23.8 20.9 Sources: World Bank, Macroeconomics and Fiscal Management Global Practice, and Poverty Global Practice. Notes: e = estimate; f = forecast. (a) Calculations based on EAPPOV harmonization, using 2012-LECS. (b) Projection using neutral distribution (2012) with pass-through = 1 based on GDP per capita in constant LCU. (c) Nowcast: 2014–2016. Forecast are from 2017 to 2019. 136 Lao PDR SUSTAINING RESILIENCE MALAYSIA Conversely, public consumption and investment tapered after peaking in the first half of 2016 as the government focused on achieving its fiscal deficit target of 3.1 percent of GDP. Efforts to contain operating expenditures were instrumental in ensuring fiscal consolidation remains on track. In addition, revenues from the goods and services tax (GST) helped offset the decline in the government’s petroleum revenue. Exports increased slightly by 0.8 percent (yoy) in the second semester as commodity prices stabilized. The well-diversified export base continued to provide some 2016 support as noncommodity exports remained strong Population, million 30.8 amid expansion in manufacturing exports, particularly GDP, current US$ billion 290.6 in machinery, and electrical and electronics. Exports GDP per capita, current US$ 9448 also benefitted from a modest rebound in commodity School enrolment, primary (% gross)a 106.2 prices towards the year end. Overall, the current Life expectancy at birth, yearsa 74.6 Sources: World Bank WDI and Macro Poverty Outlook. account surplus increased slightly from 2.0 percent of Notes: (a) Most recent WDI value (2014). GDP in 2016 to 2.4 percent of GDP in 2017. Unemployment remains low and stable, registering Summary 3.5 percent in December 2016, while the labor force participation rate declined slightly from 67.9 to GDP growth in Malaysia moderated to 4.2 percent 67.6 percent. (yoy) in 2016, mainly supported by domestic demand despite slower external demand. Malaysia’s economy While Malaysia’s official poverty rate remains less than is expected to grow at 4.3 percent in 2017, mainly 1 percent, measures to protect the welfare of households driven by private consumption. Nevertheless, rising with incomes in the bottom 40 percent remain in place. uncertainties over the global economic outlook could In the budget 2017 announcement, the government weigh on Malaysia’s growth. increased the amount of its cash transfer program, and announced other measures such as incentives for households to generate additional income through Recent Developments ride-sharing services. Malaysia’s GDP growth remained resilient in the second Inflation remained low and stable throughout the half of 2016, growing at 4.3 and 4.5 percent (yoy) in second semester of 2016, averaging 1.5 percent, as Q3 and Q4, respectively. For 2016, growth stood at the base effect of the introduction of the GST in 2015 4.2 percent. Economic growth continues to be driven gradually diminished. In January 2017, inflation rose by private consumption, mainly supported by a stable to 3.2 percent (yoy), driven by higher transport prices labor market and increases in minimum wages and driven by the upward adjustment in domestic fuel civil servants’ salaries. Private investment also grew prices, and higher food prices following increases in the steadily, driven by higher capital expenditures in the prices of fish and other seafood, cooking oil, and base manufacturing and services sectors. effects in vegetable prices. Although inflation remains Malaysia 137 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 contained, there continues to be concerns about the near term. Major transportation and infrastructure increases in the cost of living, particularly within the projects are expected to shore up investment in the lower-income group, which allocates almost 40 percent construction sector. On the external front, rising of its monthly expenditure on food. commodity prices and recovery in growth in advanced economies could contribute to improvement in exports. Volatility and uncertainty in the financial markets The current account surplus is expected to recover from resulted in net portfolio outflows in the second 2.0 percent of GDP in 2016 to 2.2 percent in 2017. semester. Portfolio flows shifted from a net inflow of Meanwhile, the government remains committed with RM13.1 billion (4.9 percent of GDP) in Q1 2016 to fiscal consolidation and has set a fiscal deficit target of a net outflow of RM32.9 billion (5.8 percent of GDP) 3.0 percent of GDP for 2017. in the second half of the year. Portfolio outflows were largely driven by uncertainty over the timing of the External developments will continue to pose risks to the normalization of the U.S. monetary policy and volatility Malaysian economy, stemming from the uncertainty in global oil prices. regarding the potential U.S. fiscal stimulus and trade policies and their prospective impact on global economy Fluctuations in the financial markets and commodity and financial markets. Rising uncertainty in the global prices also contributed to the depreciation of the economy could further undermine domestic sentiment ringgit. In the second semester, the ringgit weakened and exacerbate existing risks. by 11.0 percent against the U.S. dollar. During the period, the central bank introduced currency-tightening measures that require exporters to convert most of their Risks and Challenges exports proceeds to ringgit, in addition to introducing measures to deepen onshore financial markets. These As the economy continues to face challenges arising measures remain in place, and the central bank has from external developments, exchange-rate flexibility been engaging with the public to provide further should remain the primary mechanism for absorbing explanation and clarification. external economic shocks. Monetary policy will continue to operate in an environment of financial The banking system remains resilient, and the volatility affected by the potential acceleration in the banking system indicators suggest that banks are well normalization of US monetary policy. Continuing good capitalized, and net impaired loans are low. Moderation performance on fiscal outcomes could be supported in household credit continues in the banking system, further through raising public revenues, including particularly in the riskier segments (such as consumer widening the personal income tax base and removing lending). Also, banking system liquidity remains some exemptions in the GST. Also, raising efficiency of adequate and provides buffers against liquidity shocks. operational expenditure (for example, improving the targeting of social assistance and growing civil servants’ salaries and pensions) and development expenditures Outlook could provide some additional fiscal space. Malaysia’s GDP growth is expected to accelerate slightly As traditional growth drivers such as infrastructure to 4.3 percent (yoy) in 2016. Domestic demand is development and labor force growth are expected to expected to continue to anchor growth. Stable labor slow, accelerating productivity growth is crucial for market and income support measures such as cash Malaysia to achieve convergence with high-income transfers would help to sustain private consumption in economies. This would entail further opening up the 138Malaysia SUSTAINING RESILIENCE economy to competition, overcoming skills mismatches in the labor force and ensuring further contributions of SMEs in the economy. Figure 1. GDP growth, contributions to growth Figure 2. Government cash transfer Percent and percentage point contributions Cash disbursed, in RM billion No. of recipients 12 8 8 10 7 7 8 6 6 6 5 5 4 2 4 4 0 3 3 -2 2 2 -4 1 1 -6 -8 0 0 -12 -12 -13 -13 -14 -14 -15 -15 -16 -16 Q2 Q4 Q2 Q4 Q2 Q4 Q2 Q4 Q2 Q4 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 JJPrivate consumption JJFixed investment JJChange in inventories JJTotal cash transfer (BR1M) disbursed, lhs QQNumber of recipients (millions), rhs JJGovernment JJNet exports ▬▬Real GDP growth Source: Ministry of Finance. Source: Department of Statistics Malaysia; World Bank staff calculations. Note: lhs = left-hand side; rhs= right-hand side. MALAYSIA  Selected Indicators 2014 2015 2016e 2017f 2018f 2019f Real GDP growth, at constant market prices 6.0 5.0 4.2 4.3 4.5 4.5 Private Consumption 7.0 6.0 6.1 5.6 5.8 5.9 Government Consumption 4.3 4.4 1.0 3.4 3.2 2.6 Gross Fixed Capital Investment 4.8 3.7 2.7 2.2 2.4 2.5 Exports, Goods and Services 5.0 0.6 0.1 2.7 2.4 3.9 Imports, Goods and Services 4.0 1.2 0.4 2.6 2.1 3.5 Real GDP growth, at constant factor prices 6.0 5.0 3.4 4.5 4.3 4.3 Agriculture 2.0 1.2 -0.2 0.1 1.1 1.1 Industry 6.1 5.2 -0.1 0.5 2.0 2.0 Services 6.6 5.4 6.3 7.6 6.2 6.0 Inflation (Consumer Price Index) 3.2 2.1 2.5 2.2 2.3 2.3 Current Account Balance (% of GDP) 4.2 3.0 2.0 2.2 2.3 2.4 Fiscal Balance (% of GDP) -3.6 -3.2 -3.1 -3.0 -2.8 -2.7 Debt (% of GDP) 55.6 57.7 57.8 55.6 56.5 56.1 Primary Balance (% of GDP) -1.4 -1.0 -0.8 -0.6 -0.5 -1.4 Sources: World Bank, Macroeconomics and Fiscal Management Global Practice, and Poverty Global Practice. Notes: e = estimate; f = forecast. Malaysia 139 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 MONGOLIA Poverty conditions are likely to have deteriorated in 2016. Despite subdued consumer price inflation at 1.1 percent at end-2016, private consumption fell by 8.8 percent annually, indicating that continued economic downturn has translated into households. The unemployment rate, despite gradual improvement from 11.6 percent in the first quarter, remained high at 8.6 percent in the fourth quarter. Urban households likely have been hit harder, since key labor-intensive sectors such as construction and services have contracted while agriculture continued to grow, albeit at a slower rate. Real household income declined by 4.7 percent 2016 in the capital city but showed a 0.2 percent rise in Population, million 3.0 rural areas on yoy basis in the last quarter, indicating GDP, current US$ billion 11.0 disproportional poverty effects. GDP per capita, current US$ 3,650 School enrolment, primary (% gross)a 108.9 The current account deficit narrowed to US$329 million Life expectancy at birth, yearsa 69.1 Sources: World Bank WDI and Macro Poverty Outlook. in 2016 from US$948 million in 2015. Underlying Notes: (a) Most recent WDI value (2014). the improvement was the trade surplus, which more than doubled over the same period owing to a strong recovery of coal exports in November and December. Summary Imports declined by 11.6 percent annually, but import compression substantially slowed in the fourth quarter Mongolia continues to experience slow growth. An IMF- due to increasing imports of machinery and rising oil supported reform aims to restore fiscal sustainability prices. and address immediate balance of payments risks. Risks remain high as Mongolia remains dependent on The balance of payments recorded only an US$18 million supportive commodity prices, political pressures are deficit in 2016, as external debt financing of the likely to increase as the reform program is implemented, government and the Bank of Mongolia (BoM) offset the and medium-term financing needs are substantial. current account deficit and other capital outflows. After a 24 percent depreciation between June and November, the exchange rate movement was less volatile, reflecting Recent Developments the improved balance of payments. Gross international reserves, after a drop to US$1 billion in October amid Growth slowed to 1 percent in 2016, but there have been increased intervention, rebounded to US$1,296 million growing signs of recovery in the last quarter. Mining at end-2016. GDP growth dropped to 0.7 percent (yoy) in 2016, but picked up to 1.9 percent in the fourth quarter from the The fiscal accounts sharply deteriorated in 2016. The previous quarter’s contraction due to a 116 percent consolidated deficit, which includes the Development increase in coal production. Nonmining growth slowed Bank of Mongolia’s (DBM) commercial portfolio, more to 1.1 percent annually, but also picked up significantly than doubled to 17 percent of GDP over one year. in the last quarter due to stronger growth in agriculture, Expenditure jumped to 40.6 percent of GDP in 2016 manufacturing, and services. from 33.6 percent in 2015 owing to increasing interest 140Mongolia SUSTAINING RESILIENCE payments, delayed payments to clear promissory is projected to rebound in 2018 and significantly pick notes, and pre-electoral spending. Government debt up in 2019, supported by strong FDI inflows into, and is estimated to have increased by almost one-third in increased production from, Gatsuurt gold mine, Tavan 2016, reaching 85 percent of GDP. Tolgoi coal mine, and Oyu Tolgoia copper mine. Poverty conditions are likely to be adversely affected in the Monetary conditions remained tight, despite a recent near term by continued weak growth, declining real moderate recovery in credit growth. The BoM hiked the household income, high unemployment, and a lagging policy rate by 450 basis points in August to 15 percent labor market recovery. and introduced longer-term central bank bills to mop up excess togrog liquidity, in response to sharp depreciation. In December, the policy rate was lowered Risks and Challenges to 14 percent in light of the weak economic conditions and low inflation. The current economic outlook is subject to substantial downside risks. Unexpected downswings in the A staff-level agreement was reached on a US$440 million commodity market, particularly coal and copper, three-year IMF program on February 19, 2017, which and substantial delays in foreign investment could will be complemented by additional support from other put a significant drag on growth and fiscal paths, multilateral and bilateral partners. Fiscal consolidation and the external positions. The political environment is planned to significantly reduce the consolidated poses another risk, particularly considering the next deficit to less than 6 percent of GDP by 2019. The DBM presidential election scheduled for June, 2017. External will be transformed into an independent commercial risks remain substantial as Mongolia has to repay over entity, and the BoM will not engage in additional quasi- US$650 million of nonconcessional debt in 2018 and a fiscal activities. A comprehensive diagnostic of banks series of large debt repayments from 2020. will be conducted to assess their financial soundness. The most pressing challenge is to restore fiscal Immediate external liquidity risks have been significantly sustainability through strong adjustment of both reduced. The People’s Bank of China, on February 22, expenditures and revenues. Official poverty rates show 2017, rolled over an RMB15 billion bilateral currency a rapid decline of poverty between 2010 and 2014. swap facility by three years. The government successfully Growth deceleration and fiscal consolidation may refinanced a US$580 million bond due in March 2017, decelerate or reverse this trend. An urgent priority is by issuing a seven-year bond at more favorable terms then to strengthen poverty-targeted welfare programs than initially expected. to mitigate adverse impacts on poverty, through fiscally sustainable ways. Outlook Monetary policy should be focused on price stability and replenishing international reserves, keeping the Growth will likely remain weak in 2017, but begin exchange rate flexible. Continued efforts are needed to rebound in 2018–19. In 2017, significant foreign to strengthen the soundness of the banking system, investment into the OT underground mine (OT-2) and through proper asset quality assessment and necessary a gradual recovery in the commodity market would measures to address the problems identified. support the economy, but contractionary effects from fiscal consolidation and lower mineral concentration in OT’s copper concentrates will weigh on growth. Growth Mongolia 141 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 Figure 1. GDP growth (yoy), contributions to growth Figure 2. Poverty headcount ratio Percent, percentage points Percent of total population 50 60 40 49 50 30 38.8 20 40 35.5 33.2 10 30 26.4 27.4 0 23.3 21.6 18.8 -10 20 -20 10 -30 -40 0 Q1-11 Q3-11 Q1-12 Q3-12 Q1-13 Q3-13 Q1-14 Q3-14 Q1-15 Q3-15 Q1-16 Q3-16 Urban Rural Mongolia JJFinal consumption JJGross capital formation JJNet exports ▬▬GDP JJ2010 JJ2012 JJ2014 Source: National Statistics Office. Sources: Mongolia National Statistics Office (based on official poverty line and consumption expenditures as welfare aggregate). MONGOLIASelected Indicators 2014 2015 2016e 2017f 2018f 2019f Real GDP growth, at constant market prices 6.9 2.2 1.0 -0.2 1.9 8.0 Private Consumption 6.3 7.2 -8.8 0.2 3.0 7.1 Government Consumption 3.4 -4.5 8.9 -5.2 -2.9 -3.4 Gross Fixed Capital Investment -21.7 -34.4 4.9 19.0 22.4 36.7 Exports, Goods and Services 53.2 1.2 14.7 2.0 1.5 9.1 Imports, Goods and Services 6.8 -11.5 13.3 5.4 8.3 17.3 Real GDP growth, at constant factor prices 9.4 5.5 1.0 -0.1 1.8 8.2 Agriculture 14.4 9.9 4.8 2.5 2.5 3.5 Industry 12.0 9.7 -1.2 0.3 3.4 13.1 Services 6.2 0.9 1.8 -1.2 0.3 5.5 Inflation (Private Consumption Deflator) 10.7 0.5 2.9 6.1 6.1 6.1 Current Account Balance (% of GDP) -11.5 -4.0 -3.0 -4.9 -9.4 -13.5 Financial and Capital Account (% of GDP) 12.9 5.9 5.5 -0.8 7.9 15.4 Net Foreign Direct Investment (% of GDP) 1.8 0.7 -37.7 9.6 14.3 20.5 Fiscal Balance (% of GDP) -11.3 -8.5 -17.0 -10.7 -8.3 -5.3 Debt (% of GDP) 56.0 61.9 85.0 90.2 95.2 92.7 Primary Balance (% of GDP) -9.1 -5.3 -13.3 -5.4 -3.3 -1.3 Sources: World Bank, Macroeconomics and Fiscal Management Global Practice, and Poverty Global Practice. Notes: e = estimate; f = forecast. 142Mongolia SUSTAINING RESILIENCE MYANMAR Investors continued to bide their time pending greater clarity on economic policy priorities, which the new administration has started to elaborate. Inflation moderated in H2 2016 to 3.5 percent in October (yoy), which is in part a base effect from the preceding period of high inflation, and began to pick up again reaching nearly 8 percent (yoy) in January 2017, due to a combination of ongoing supply constraints and exchange rate pass-through. The kyat depreciated by nearly 10 percent between September and December 2016. 2016 Population, million 54.4 Economic growth led to improvements in living GDP, current US$ billion 67.5 conditions between 2009 and 2015. Household surveys GDP per capita, current US$ 1,242 indicate average expenditure growth of 3.5 percent, Life expectancy at birth, yearsa 65.7 higher ownership of various durable goods, and a Sources: World Bank WDI and Macro Poverty Outlook. Note: (a) Most recent WDI value (2014). substantial increase in household dietary diversity during this period. However, poverty remains substantial in Myanmar. Poorer households remain highly susceptible Summary to shocks, especially to climatic variation that influences production in agriculture, health shocks, and to overall Economic activity in Myanmar has slowed in 2016– macroeconomic stability. 17. Though inflation has moderated, it nonetheless remains elevated. Fiscal and external imbalances Falling exports and slowing foreign investment flows have widened. Growth is projected to recover over have enhanced external vulnerabilities, contributing the medium term, though macroeconomic risks to an overall balance of payments deficit in 2015–16 remain linked to commodity prices, vulnerability to (-0.7 percent of GDP) and low foreign exchange reserves natural disasters, and policy uncertainty. Maintaining (2.3 months of imports at end-October 2016). Falling fiscal and monetary discipline are critical to contain exports were due to gas and agricultural commodities, macroeconomic imbalances. which led to the current account deficit widening from 3.3 percent of GDP in 2014–15 to 4.8 percent in 2015– 16. Recent Developments The government has faced increasingly constrained Economic activity in Myanmar has slowed in 2016– fiscal space due in part to external shocks and losses 17. Growth is expected to moderate from 7.3 percent from state-owned enterprises. The fiscal deficit in in 2015–16 to 6.5 percent in 2016–17. The new 2015–16 nearly tripled to 3.2 percent of GDP from administration has carefully navigated a challenging 1.1 percent in 2014–15, and is expected to rise economic environment since it took office in April further to 4.5 percent of GDP in 2016–17. The draft 2016. Agricultural recovery from last year’s floods was budget proposal submitted to Parliament envisages hampered by long-standing productivity constraints further deterioration in fiscal conditions, though the in the sector. Industrial output has also decelerated. Myanmar 143 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 final approved budget expected by end-March may be stable growth. Lack of clarity or delays in policy further adjusted. implementation could prolong the economic slowdown. Over the medium term, the government faces the Outlook challenge of balancing fiscal prudence with the need to expand public services. Greater fiscal discipline and Economic growth is projected to average 7.1 percent the expansion of the government securities’ market are per year over the next three years. Private and public expected to reduce pressures on monetary policy. There investment in infrastructure services are expected will, however, also be increased liquidity from foreign to accelerate in the near term. There has also been capital inflows and growing deposits in the commercial a significant accumulation of foreign investment banking sector. This will require scaled up central bank commitments in noncommodity sectors. Implementation deposit auctions to help tighten liquidity conditions. of these investment projects is expected to pick up subject to continued macroeconomic stability, progress Monetary discipline and exchange rate flexibility are on structural reforms, and expansion of critical services. important for alleviating external pressures. Monetary expansion has impacted on the current account deficit, Inflationary pressures are expected to ease relative as illustrated by the relative resilience in the import of to 2015–16, averaging 8.9 percent over the course consumer items. This has added to currency pressures of 2016–17 due to the general slowdown in demand and contributed to imported inflation. At the same time, and efforts to reduce fiscal monetization. There are, it is important to maintain exchange rate flexibility however, risks particularly due to the pace of growth by allowing the reference rate to adjust to market in credit to the private sector and a gradual uptick in conditions through the foreign exchange auctions. capital inflows. International commodity prices are also expected to rise during 2017. Rapid growth in credit to the private sector points to emerging banking sector risks. Private sector credit The current account deficit is projected to expand grew at 34 percent in 2015–16, compared to 36 percent further over the medium term due to a combination in 2014–15, and 53 percent the year before that. It is of slowing gas exports, slowing demand in China, difficult to accurately assess the health of the banking and large investment-related import needs. However, system due to data constraints. However, emerging strong FDI flows are projected to remain a stable source signs of risks include growing sector and borrower of financing for the overall balance of payments, and its concentration of lending. deficit should thus moderate in 2016–17. Risks and Challenges Despite the relatively favorable outlook, there are several macroeconomic risks. Low gas prices could increase fiscal and external imbalances, and exacerbate financing pressures. Myanmar’s relatively narrow production base, dependence on primary commodities, and vulnerability to natural disasters pose risks to 144Myanmar SUSTAINING RESILIENCE Figure 1. GDP growth, contributions to growth, by sector Figure 2. Contributions to yearly inflation (yoy percent change) Percent, percentage points Percent change 9 9 8 8 7 7 6 6 5 5 4 4 3 3 2 2 1 1 0 0 2013–14 2014–15 2015–16 2016–17e 2017–18p Apr-15 May-15 Jun-15 Jul-15 Aug-15 Sep-15 Oct-15 JJAgriculture JJIndustry JJServices JJFood JJNonfood ▬▬CPI inflation Sources: Ministry of Planning and Finance; World Bank staff estimates. Sources: Central Statistics Organization; World Bank staff estimates. MYANMARSelected Indicators 2014 2015 2016e 2017f 2018f 2019f Real GDP growth, at constant prices 8.0 7.3 6.5 6.9 7.2 7.3 Agriculture 2.8 3.4 4.3 5.4 5.3 5.3 Industry 12.1 8.7 4.5 6.5 7.2 7.3 Services 9.1 9.1 9.5 8.2 8.5 8.5 CPI Inflation, period average 5.9 11.4 8.9 6.3 5.7 5.5 Current Account Balance (% of GDP) -3.3 -4.8 -6.7 -6.8 -6.7 -6.6 Fiscal Balance (% of GDP) -1.1 -3.2 -4.5 -3.8 -3.3 -3.1 Public Sector Debt (% of GDP) 32.3 29.2 34.1 35.1 35.7 36.0 Sources: World Bank, Macroeconomics and Fiscal Management Global Practice, and Poverty and Equity Global Practice. Notes: e = estimate; f = forecast. Myanmar 145 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 PAPUA NEW GUINEA One of the primary reasons for the lower growth rate in 2016 compared to the two previous years is the base effects associated with PNG’s liquefied natural gas (LNG) project commencing production in 2014 and reaching full capacity in 2015. Further, growth in the resource sector was adversely affected by the shutting down of the Ramu nickel mine for the first few months of 2016 at the behest of the Mineral Resource Authority (MRA) for non-compliance, while the Porgera mine scaled down operations due to a landslide and the sabotage of power transmission lines. 2016 Growth in the nonresource sector has also been Population, million 7.9 adversely affected by lower commodity prices due to a GDP, US$, billion 20.0 curtailing of public and private expenditure given lower GDP per capita, US$ 2,528 revenue receipts and disposable income, respectively. GDP per capita, US$, PPP 2,745 The cash flow shortage in the public sector coupled with Basic needs poverty rate, percenta 39.9 the shortage of foreign currency has contributed to Gini coefficient, consumptiona 41 fewer construction projects completed. Consequently, School enrolment, primary (% gross)b 114.7 Life expectancy at birth, yearsb 62.3 employment in the nonresource sector declined by Sources: World Bank WDI and Macro Poverty Outlook. 4.4 percent yoy to June 2016. In addition to the cyclical Notes: (a) Most recent value (2009/10). (b) Most recent WDI value (2012). downturn in nonresource sector growth, the relatively low growth rate in this sector reflects the need for Summary structural reform. In the lead-up to the 2017 elections, the continuation In contrast, as the drought associated with the El Niño of relatively low global commodity prices limits revenue phenomenon ended, there was some support for growth receipts and foreign exchange inflows. In the medium in 2016, with the resurgence of the agricultural sector, term, growth is expected to edge towards trend. particularly coffee, and the resumption of production at the Ok Tedi mine. Recent Developments Based on the latest household survey data, the national poverty poverty rate in 2010 was 39.9 percent. The Papua New Guinea is gearing up for elections in mid- level of consumption inequality, measured by the Gini 2017. In the midst of preparations, the government coefficient was 41 in 2010. continues to face a cash shortage that emanates from a continuation of the low global commodity price With the lower-than-expected revenue receipts of environment. Economic growth declined to 2.4 percent K1.9 billion (or 3.1 percent of GDP), the government in 2016 from 6.8 percent in 2015. Growth in the passed a supplementary budget for the second nonresource sector contributed 2.3 percentage points consecutive year (in August 2016) in order to curtail to overall growth in 2016, while the resource sector expenditure by K928 million (1.5 percent of GDP). With contributed 0.1 percentage points. the passing of the supplementary budget, the fiscal deficit is expected to be 4.4 percent of GDP. 146 Papua New Guinea SUSTAINING RESILIENCE The government continued to consolidate expenditure The preliminary balance of payments data for the in the 2017 budget with expenditures budgeted at first six months in 2016 indicates an overall deficit of K13.4 billion, K0.2 billion lower than 2016. Revenue K74 million. There is a shortage of foreign exchange in is projected to be K11.5 billion, which is K0.7 the interbank market, with foreign exchange reserves billion higher than in 2016. This reflects a deficit of held by the central bank at US$1.7 billion (3.2 months 2.7 percent of GDP. The 2017 budget undertakes a of import cover) at the end of 2016. Falling commodity number of revenue-raising measures by rationalizing prices have contributed to the steady decline in foreign the taxation regime and reducing tax exemptions and exchange reserves from US$4.0 billion in 2012. special arrangements. The new tax measures include an increase in departure tax from K30 to K114, which is With the decline in commodity prices, the depreciation expected to yield K20 million in additional revenue in of the kina by 9 percent yoy to December 2016 has 2017. contributed to the higher CPI inflation rate of 7.0, from 6.0 percent a year earlier. With significant increases in public wages and debt servicing costs over the past five years, the share of these two expenditure items in total expenditure has Outlook increased from 19 percent to 42 percent. Compensation of public employees increased at an annual average The outlook for growth in the medium term is relatively rate of 22 percent from 2012 to 2017, while debt more sanguine, with the establishment of at least two servicing costs have increased over the same period at large petroleum and mineral projects totaling about an average annual rate of 27 percent. US$20 billion (100 percent of GDP) towards the end of this decade. Coupled with the issuance of domestic government securities, the first tranche (US$200 million) of a five- In 2017, CPI inflation is expected to edge upward further year syndicated commercial loan of USS500 million with the continued depreciation of the currency coupled will be used to finance the deficit. The second tranche with the increased demand driven by expenditure is expected in early 2017. In 2016, government debt associated with the 2017 elections and the cost of (excluding contingent liabilities) is expected to reach organizing Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) 33.5 percent of GDP. Based on assessment of public meetings in PNG. Over the next five years, GDP growth and publicly-guaranteed external debt, the Debt is expected to edge toward trend, which is estimated at Sustainability Analysis indicates that the risk of debt 4 percent. distress in PNG remains low. Given the expected low commodity price environment Notwithstanding the lower commodity prices, on the in 2017 (despite gradual increase), domestic revenue back of LNG exports and import compression due to generation and foreign currency inflows are expected the limited availability of foreign exchange, the current to remain constrained in the near term. Fiscal account is expected to remain in surplus (7.9 percent consolidation, while necessary in the face of lower of GDP) in 2016. The surplus in the current account commodity prices, runs the risk of further moderating is largely offset by financial account outflows due to a growth, while the foreign exchange shortage would buildup in foreign currency account balances of resident continue to dampen necessary imports. Thus, in the mineral companies coupled with net loan repayments near term, risks are weighted to the downside. by the government. Papua New Guinea 147 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 Risks and Challenges service delivery (particularly infrastructure) in the face of limited revenue receipts. Limited foreign exchange There are several challenges both in the near term inflows owing to low commodity prices will continue to and the medium to longer term. Firstly, maintaining be a challenge throughout 2017. Further increases in macroeconomic stability over the election period the federal funds rate in the U.S. this year will make is a near-term challenge. Other domestic near- it more challenging for the government to issue an term challenges include the government’s ability to external sovereign bond. maintain a prudent fiscal stance and ensure public Figure 1. GDP growth (yoy), contributions to growth Figure 2. Key fiscal indicators (% GDP) Percent, percentage points Percent 10 40 29 8 27 30 25 6 20 23 4 21 10 2 19 0 0 17 -2 -10 15 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016e 2017e 2018f 2019f 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016e 2017e 2018f 2019f JJAgriculture, forestry & fishing JJOil & gas extraction JJMining & quarrying JJOverall budget balance, lhs JJDebt, lhs JJConstruction JJOther ▬▬Total ▬▬Total expenditure & net lending, rhs ▬▬Revenue incl. grants, rhs Sources: PNG Treasury, Staff calculations. Sources: Staff calculations, Supplementary Budget 2016. Note: lhs = left-hand side; rhs= right-hand side. PAPUA NEW GUINEA S  elected Indicators 2014 2015 2016e 2017f 2018f 2019f Real GDP growth, at constant market prices 7.4 6.8 2.4 3.0 3.2 3.4 Mining and Petroleum 7.0 4.9 0.1 0.1 0.2 0.2 Non-mining and non-petroleum 0.4 1.9 2.3 2.9 3.0 3.2 CPI inflation, period average 5.2 6.0 7.0 7.5 7.0 6.5 Fiscal Accounts (% of GDP) Revenue 21.7 18.3 17.4 16.5 16.5 16.7 Expenditure 28.3 23.4 21.8 19.2 19.0 18.6 Balance -6.5 -5.1 -4.4 -2.7 -2.4 -2.0 Debt 28.1 30.4 33.5 33.1 33.0 32.3 External Accounts (% of GDP) Current account balance 3.0 10.9 7.9 6.7 6.1 5.9 Resource 12.2 13.3 11.1 10.6 10.3 10.2 Non-resource -9.2 -2.4 -3.2 -3.9 -4.2 -4.3 Sources: PNG Treasury; Bank of Papua New Guinea; IMF; and staff calculations. Note: e= estimate; f = forecast. 148 Papua New Guinea SUSTAINING RESILIENCE PHILIPPINES heightened policy uncertainty in advanced economies. Growth was driven by strong domestic demand, mainly capital formation which was fueled by investments in durable equipment and a public infrastructure push that led to vigorous activities in the construction sector. Private consumption remained strong amidst robust remittance inflows and expanding consumer credit. However, net exports have been a drag on growth as a weaker-than-expected global recovery led to softer external demand. Growth in the services and industry sectors accelerated, expanding by 7.5 percent and 8.0 percent yoy, respectively. Meanwhile, agriculture 2016 contracted, suffering from low productivity and weather- Population, million 102.3 related disturbances. GDP, current US$ billion 304.3 GDP per capita, current US$ 2976 Robust economic performance fueled job creation. Poverty rate ($1.9/day 2011 PPP terms)a 6.6 The unemployment rate fell to 5.5 percent in 2016 Poverty rate ($3.1/day 2011 PPP terms)a 25.3 from 6.3 percent in 2015. As in previous years, the Gini coefficienta 44.4 rapidly expanding services sector remained the largest School enrolment, primary (% gross)b 116.8 Life expectancy at birth, yearsb 68.1 contributor to employment, accounting for 55.6 percent Sources: World Bank WDI and Macro Poverty Outlook. of total jobs in 2016. However, the underemployment Notes: (a) Most recent value (2015). (b) Most recent WDI value (2014). rate remained persistently high at 18.4 percent in 2016 from 18.5 percent in 2015, suggesting that the quality Summary of employment remains a concern. Despite a weak external environment, growth in Fiscal policy was expansionary, following a long period the Philippines accelerated to 6.8 percent yoy from of fiscal conservatism. In 2016, government expenditure 5.9 percent in 2015 on the back of upbeat domestic accelerated by 14.3 percent yoy from 16.8 percent of demand. The Philippine economy is expected to remain GDP in 2015 to 17.6 percent of GDP. Infrastructure a top regional growth performer with growth projected spending grew strongly as a result of the rollout of at 6.9 percent in 2017 and 2018. Growth in recent big-ticket infrastructure projects in roads, education, years went hand in hand with job creation and poverty and health. Revenues decreased slightly as a percent reduction. Extreme poverty (US$1.90/day) has fallen of GDP from 15.8 percent in 2015 to 15.2 percent in by over 1 percentage point per year since 2012 to 2016. Tax collections rose by 9.1 percent yoy, despite 6.6 percent in 2015 and is expected to decline at a the absence of new tax policy measures, yet as a share faster pace. of GDP, tax revenue effort remained at 13.7 percent compared to 13.6 in 2015. The government’s fiscal deficit reached 2.4 percent of GDP, more than doubling Recent Developments from 0.9 percent of GDP in 2015, but close to the government’s deficit target of 2.0 to 2.7 percent of The Philippine economy grew by 6.8 percent yoy in 2016 GDP for the year. Meanwhile, the debt-to-GDP ratio from 5.9 percent in 2015 (Figure 1), despite a global improved to 42.1 percent in 2016 from 44.7 percent in environment of sluggish trade, tepid investment, and Philippines 149 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 2015 as GDP growth outpaced the growth of the debt economy’s primary growth engine and will be tied to stock. the successful implementation of the administration’s infrastructure investment push. Consumption is Monetary policy remained accommodative despite expected to be supported by the continued expansion increasing inflationary pressure toward the end of 2016. in credit and sustained remittance growth. As global Inflation settled in 2016 at 1.8 percent, higher than the demand recovers, exports are expected to rebound, but 1.4 percent in 2015, but still below the central bank’s imports will expand further to fill the domestic capital 2.0 to 4.0 percent inflation target. The central bank goods requirements. only once eased monetary policy by reducing the key policy rate from 4.0 to 3.0 percent in June, and kept it Poverty is expected to decline further with extreme at that level despite increasing inflationary pressures in poverty projected to decrease from 6.6 percent in 2015 the fourth quarter of 2016. Credit expansion continued to 4.0 percent in 2019. The pace of poverty reduction to support economic growth, with commercial bank is likely to be faster pace if the strong economic lending growing by 17.1 percent in 2016 compared to growth performance is sustained and becomes even 14.6 percent in 2015. Nonperforming loans declined more inclusive. Further poverty reduction will likely as a share of the total loan portfolio from 2.1 percent come from the continuous movement of employment in December 2015 to 1.9 percent in December 2016. from agriculture to more productive sectors, and from productivity improvements in agriculture. The poor Poverty reduction was faster during 2012–15 compared and vulnerable are more likely to benefit from strong with previous years. The poverty rate declined from economic growth if they acquire the skills needed to 10.5 percent in 2012 to 6.6 percent in 2015, measured seize job opportunities with higher productivity and by the US$1.90 a day (2011 PPP) poverty line, or higher wages. Continued efforts to improve targeting from 32.0 percent to 25.3 percent, measured by the of public transfer program will further support human US$3.10 a day poverty line. Between 2012 and 2015, capital accumulation and poverty reduction in the long shared prosperity increased: the income of the bottom run. 40 percent grew much faster than the overall population. In particular, the income of the bottom 20 percent grew at 16 percent while the average income grew by Risks and Challenges 6 percent. While poverty declined both in urban and rural areas, poverty incidence in rural areas remained Preserving macroeconomic stability continues to be three times as high as in urban areas. emphasized by the government as a key condition for inclusive growth, as fiscal and inflationary pressures build up gradually from a low base. While economic Outlook growth in the Philippines has become more inclusive in recent years, maintaining this pattern remains The outlook for the Philippines remains positive, with a challenge and requires commitment to structural the economy projected to grow at 6.9 percent in 2017 reforms that encourage investments in human capital, and 2018, before slowing slightly to 6.8 percent in and in sectors that create quality employment. 2019. The strong performance of 2016, and continued policy commitment to the planned increase in public In February 2016, the president approved the new infrastructure spending are expected to carry the Philippine Development Plan 2017–22, which outlines economy’s growth momentum over to 2017–18. the government’s medium-term policy priorities to Growth in capital investment is projected to be the achieve more inclusive growth. The government is 150 Philippines SUSTAINING RESILIENCE embarking on a reform agenda to deliver equitable agriculture sector, where the biggest number of poor tax reforms, enhance market competition, and improve are. Emphasis is also given to peace and economic ease of doing business, while continuing to sustainably development in the largest province of Mindanao, ramp up public investments in infrastructure and social which includes conflict-affected areas and is the poorest services. Crucial support is being extended to the region of the Philippines. Figure 1. GDP growth, contributions to growth Figure 2. Poverty reduction is expected to continue as per capita income increases Percent, percentage points Poverty rate, percent GDP per capita, constant LCU, in thousands 12 40 100 90 35 9 80 30 70 6 25 60 3 20 50 40 15 0 30 10 20 -3 5 10 -6 0 0 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018 JJPrivate consumption JJGovernment consumption JJInvestments ▬▬$1.9/day PPP ▬▬$3.1/day PPP ▬▬GDP per capita, PPP, rhs JJDiscrepancy JJNet exports ▬▬GDP growth Source: Poverty data by GPWG database, GDP data by MFM. Source: Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA). Note: rhs= right-hand side. PHILIPPINES  Selected Indicators 2014 2015 2016e 2017f 2018f 2019f Real GDP growth, at constant market prices 6.2 5.9 6.8 6.9 6.9 6.8 Private Consumption 5.5 6.3 6.9 6.8 6.7 6.6 Government Consumption 3.3 7.8 8.3 13.0 12.2 11.4 Gross Fixed Capital Investment 6.2 15.2 23.5 23.6 23.6 23.2 Exports, Goods and Services 11.7 9.0 9.1 10.2 10.4 10.7 Imports, Goods and Services 9.3 14.0 17.5 18.4 18.5 18.6 Real GDP growth, at constant factor prices 6.2 5.9 6.8 6.9 6.9 6.8 Agriculture 1.7 0.1 -1.3 0.5 0.6 0.7 Industry 7.8 6.0 8.0 8.1 8.1 7.9 Services 6.2 6.8 7.5 7.3 7.1 7.0 Inflation (Consumer Price Index) 4.1 1.4 1.8 3.3 3.0 2.8 Current Account Balance (% of GDP) 3.8 2.5 0.2 0.2 0.5 0.7 Financial and Capital Account (% of GDP) 3.4 1.1 0.3 0.5 0.8 1.1 Net Foreign Direct Investment (% of GDP) 2.0 2.0 2.6 2.5 2.4 2.4 Fiscal Balance (% of GDP) -0.6 -0.9 -2.4 -3.0 -3.3 -3.5 Debt (% of GDP) 45.4 44.8 42.1 40.4 39.2 38.4 Primary Balance (% of GDP) 2.0 1.4 -0.3 -0.7 -1.1 -1.4 Poverty rate ($1.9/day PPP terms)a,b,c .. 6.6 5.8 5.1 4.5 4.0 Poverty rate ($3.1/day PPP terms)a,b,c .. 25.3 23.9 22.5 21.3 20.1 Sources: World Bank, Macroeconomics and Fiscal Management Global Practice, and Poverty and Equity Global Practice. Notes: e = estimate; f = forecast. (a) Calculations based on EAPPOV harmonization, using 2006-FIES and 2015-FIES. (b) Projection using annualized elasticity (2006–2015) with pass-through = 1 based on GDP per capita in constant LCU. (c) Actual data: 2015. Nowcast: 2016. Forecast are from 2017 to 2019. Philippines 151 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 SMALL PACIFIC ISLAND COUNTRIES estimated at 1.9 percent during FY2016. The current account reached an estimated surplus of 8.6 percent of GDP in FY2015 (reflecting fishing license fee receipts), and is expected to remain at around 10 percent of GDP in 2016. FSM’s macrofiscal performance has improved significantly since FY2004. While general tax revenue was 12.4 percent of GDP in FY2015 and has been largely stagnant over past years, nontax revenues tripled over the past three years to 24.7 percent of GDP, reflecting higher fishing license fees, resulting from 2015 the introduction of the Vessel Day Scheme. Recurrent Population, million 0.88 expenditure picked up slightly to 48.8 percent of GDP GDP, US$, billion 3.01 in FY2015, due to higher wages and salaries. Grants GDP per capita, current US$ 4,406 are expected to pick-up, mirrored by a rise in capital Sources: WDI, World Bank staff estimates. expenditure as infrastructure projects under the Compact resume. As a result, the fiscal balance registered a Summary surplus of 10.5 percent of GDP in FY2015, which was subsequently transferred to the government-managed Most Small Pacific Island Countries (PICs) are trust fund aimed at mitigating external shocks. experiencing moderate to strong growth, driven by stimulus from public and donor-funded investments, In Kiribati, growth is estimated at around 3.1 percent reconstruction from recent natural disasters, and in 2016—a third consecutive year of growth above the relatively strong tourism receipts and remittances. historical average of 1.7 percent. Growth is expected Inflation remains moderate due to low commodity to moderate to about 2.5 percent this year, with the prices, which have also supported current account winding down of major donor-financed infrastructure positions. Ensuring fiscal sustainability remains a projects. Inflation remained below 2 percent, as lower challenge for most PICs; despite large fiscal surpluses in food and commodity prices offset pressures from recent years, both revenue and expenditure are subject relatively strong domestic demand and the weak to large and frequent shocks. Australian dollar (which Kiribati uses as its currency). Despite large trade deficits, the current account balance remained in surplus due to high fishing license fees Recent Developments (equivalent to around 63 percent of GDP) and, to a lesser degree, steady remittance inflows and solid Economic growth in the Federated States of Micronesia investment incomes from Kiribati’s sovereign wealth (FSM) was 3.7 percent in FY2015, following a fund (RERF). The fishing license fees were also the key 2.4 percent contraction in FY2014. Strong fisheries driver of the budget surplus in 2016, estimated at about growth contributed 1.5 percentage points of overall 12.5 percent of GDP. growth. During FY2015, formal sector employment dropped by 0.3 percent, cumulating in a 4.7 percent Reversing a decade-long trend of drawdowns, the decline over the past three years. With the recent government made a net transfer of $A50 million to the rebound in commodity and oil prices, inflation is RERF in 2015, and an additional $A70 million in 2016. 152 Small Pacific Island Countries SUSTAINING RESILIENCE The remaining cash reserves were equivalent to three commodity prices and stronger tourism receipts, with the to four months of current spending, consistent with current account narrowing from an 11.8 percent deficit IMF recommendations. Strong fishing license revenue in FY2014 to a deficit of 0.5 percent in FY2015. This increased cash reserves back to nine months of current trend is however expected to have reversed thereafter spending), warranting a further transfer to the RERF. due to weaker tourism receipts and larger infrastructure and related imports. Nauru is estimated to have grown by more than 20 percent annually on average from FY2011 to Palau’s fiscal position strengthened in FY2015 following FY2014, due in part to the reopening of Australia’s spending restraints and the impact of strong economic Regional Processing Centre for asylum seekers in 2012, growth. The current fiscal deficit declined to 5.5 percent currently the main driver of economic activity in Nauru. of GDP in FY2015, while the overall fiscal surplus The resumption of phosphate mining in 2011 and an (including grants) stood at 5.0 percent of GDP. The increase in fishing license fees also spurred growth fiscal position is expected to improve further in FY2016, in recent years. After growth moderated to around as higher airport departure and visa fees offset lower 3 percent in FY2015, the economy is estimated to have tourist arrivals, and as spending restraint continued. expanded by about 10 percent in FY2016 due to the repair of the seaport, strong activity in the services After contraction in the previous year, the economy of sector, and a large increase in government spending. the Republic of Marshall Islands (MHL) is estimated to have expanded by around 0.4 percent in FY2015, Government revenue increased substantially since as the fisheries sector recovered. Growth is expected FY2012 due to RPC-related revenues and fishing to rise to about 1.5 percent in FY2016, as the effects license fees, and increased tax collection from the of the drought from early 2016 are offset by the implementation of employment and services taxes resumption of infrastructure projects. Inflation dropped and improvements in tax administration. However, to -2.2 percent in FY2015 due to falling oil and utility government spending has also increased rapidly, prices and is expected to have risen to about 0.5 percent particularly the wage bill (in an effort to retain key public in FY2016. The fiscal balance is estimated to have been employees). Still, the overall fiscal balance remained a surplus of just under 3 percent of GDP in FY2015, in surplus and has been used to clear arrears, build- reflecting record fishing license fees. A smaller surplus up cash buffers, and make contributions to the Nauru is expected in FY2016. The current account deficit is Trust Fund. To support long-term fiscal sustainability, likely to worsen in FY2016 from an estimated deficit of this trust fund will receive windfall revenues and donor 1.6 percent of GDP FY2015. contributions with a view to providing an additional source of budget financing over the longer term. Economic growth in Samoa accelerated to over 6 percent in FY2016, driven by strong growth in The Palauan economy grew by 9.4 percent in FY2015, retailing and wholesaling, transport, and fishing (due with tourist arrivals and construction activity expanding mainly to a newly established fish processing and by 35 percent. However, the rapid rise in tourism activity packing company). Inflation remained subdued at strained infrastructure, prompting the authorities to 0.1 percent in FY2016, with declines in the prices of limit the number of charter flights in FY2016. The imported goods (particularly fuel) continuing to offset economy, as a result, is not expected to have grown in increases in domestic prices. The current account deficit FY2016. Inflation fell to 2.2 percent in FY2015 and is narrowed in recent years to 2 to 3 percent of GDP, expected to have remained moderate in FY2016. The owing to an increase in tourism-related services, lower external position improved in FY2015, reflecting lower Small Pacific Island Countries 153 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 oil and food prices, and a reduction in reconstruction- mostly in response to cyclone reconstruction needs related imports. and increases in wages for civil servants. The deficit is estimated to have risen to 2 percent of GDP in FY2016, Total revenue in FY2016 was around 29 percent of from 1.1 percent in FY2015, with lower grants from GDP. Comprehensive revenue policy and administrative development partners also affecting the bottom line. reforms have led to significant increases in domestic The government maintains a stance of avoiding new revenue collection over the last five years. Total nonconcessional borrowing, and has plans to finance expenditures (excluding donor-financed development SPG-related costs using non-debt-creating sources of expenditures) were under 30 percent of GDP in FY2016, finance. down from 35.1 percent recorded two years before, mainly due to a reduction in investments, in part to a Economic growth has picked up in Tuvalu in recent years, winding down of cyclone reconstruction and other one- with 2.6 percent growth in 2015 and projected growth off activities. Operating expenses have also declined of around 4.0 percent in 2016, partly on account of over the past two years, due in part to a reduction in recovery spending following Tropical Cyclone Pam (TCP). grants to public bodies. As a result, the government ran Government and donor-funded investments, including a fiscal deficit of just 0.4 percent of GDP in FY2016, in outer-islands schools and clinics, have also supported down from 3.9 percent in FY2015. While Samoa’s public growth. Inflation remained at 3.2 percent in 2015 and is debt remains high compared to other small PICs, it has expected to reach 3.5 percent in 2016, reflecting higher started to decline and stood at just over 50 percent of government expenditures and a shortage of essential GDP at end-FY2016. items due to TCP-related disruptions in transportation and agricultural production. Tonga continued its relatively strong recent economic performance, with growth in FY2016 estimated at The pick-up in government expenditures in recent years 3.1 percent, due to a recovery in agricultural production has been offset by rising fishing license fees, estimated coupled with construction activity in preparation for the at around three-quarters of GDP in 2016 on the back 2019 South Pacific Games (SPGs). Economic activity also of favorable exchange rates, weather conditions, and benefited from prudent macrofiscal management as access fees. As a result, despite the large one-off well as a series of growth-supporting reforms. Inflation expenditures related to TCP, the government achieved in FY2016 stood at 0.1 percent, as low imported food an average fiscal surplus of around 2.3 percent of GDP and fuel prices provided some buoyance to consumers’ in 2015 and 2016. These, together with accumulated real purchasing power. The current account deficit surpluses since 2011, have largely been reinvested into is estimated to have narrowed to 3.1 percent of GDP the Tuvalu Trust Fund. in FY2016 from 7.7 percent in FY2015, while official foreign exchange reserves continue to cover more than The current account is expected to move from a surplus six months of imports. of around 7.6 percent in 2015 to a deficit of around 4 percent of GDP in 2016 as the trade deficit widened The government has focused on increasing domestic due to increased imports for government and donor- revenue and prioritizing expenditure. Domestic funded investment projects. Remittances, dominated revenues increased by over 5 percentage points of GDP by transfers from seafarers, have continued to decline over the last five years, supported by a series of tax as employment opportunities on cargo ships have policy and administration reforms. Concurrently, total dwindled, and are now slightly under 10 percent of public expenditure increased from 25.7 percent of GDP GDP. Steady performance on the assets invested in the in FY2014 to over 29 percent in FY2015 and FY2016, TTF have resulted in higher income flows. Record fishing 154 Small Pacific Island Countries SUSTAINING RESILIENCE license revenues in 2015 and 2016, almost doubling reflecting an increase in imports associated with post- from 2014, also resulted in substantially higher income cyclone recovery efforts. Inflation for 2016 is estimated flows. Gross reserves have remained adequate, covering at 2 percent, a marginal increase over the previous around seven months of imports in 2015 and 2016. quarter, driven by food and transport prices. Vanuatu is still recovering from the impact of March 2015 TCP, which caused damages and losses amounting Outlook and Emerging Challenges to over 60 percent of GDP, and affected much of the rural population. Unusually dry conditions triggered The outlook, particularly for FSM, MHL, Palau, and by El Niño throughout 2015 and early 2016 further Tuvalu, is subject to substantial risks due to their curtailed agricultural production, and led to reports of reliance on tourism, grants, and commodity imports. food and water shortages on Tanna and other islands. In A slowdown in key trading partners, a further U.S. response, the government allocated emergency funding dollar appreciation, and natural disasters could impact for water, sanitation, hygiene and food to mitigate the negatively on tourism activity. Higher commodity prices impacts on the vulnerable in affected areas. could make food and fuel imports costlier. Failure to implement a strategy for sustainable development, Overall, economic growth is estimated at 4 percent including high-return investments, could reduce growth in 2016, driven by the commencement of large in the medium term. These countries will have to rely infrastructure projects, the continuation of post-cyclone on fiscal and structural policies should the above- reconstruction and rehabilitation activities, the gradual mentioned risks materialize. Financial sector volatility recovery of agricultural production, and overall growth could also affect returns on the various trust funds and in visitor arrivals. In the first quarter of 2016, tourism their ability to provide fiscal space for priority spending arrivals declined by 10 percent, as concerns about the or buttress again future shocks, given the limited space condition of the runway into Port Vila’s Bauerfield airport for additional debt and the lack of monetary policy led to the suspension of a number of international levers. flights. By end of the third quarter, air arrivals had fully recovered. Similarly, cruise ship arrivals fell sharply in The outlook for Kiribati remains positive, although the aftermath of the cyclone, but rebounded strongly fishing revenues are expected to decline from recent thereafter. Total tourism arrivals in the first three peaks with changing climate cycles and tuna migration quarters increased by 21 percent compared to the same patterns. Growth is expected to moderate toward its period in the previous year. potential, around 2 percent per year, but if planned major donor-financed infrastructure projects are The dissolution of parliament in late 2015 and election implemented, medium-term growth would shift up. of a new coalition government in January 2016 Maintaining fiscal sustainability remains a challenge delayed the passing of the 2016 budget until March. despite large fiscal surpluses in recent years, as both The incoming government committed to advancing revenue and expenditure are subject to large and a number of major reconstruction projects (which frequent shocks. Kiribati’s main sources of income— had stalled in the latter half of 2015), resulting in a fishing license fees, investment income from the RERF, targeted budget deficit of 17 percent of GDP. In the and foreign aid—will continue to be volatile, while second quarter, a supplementary appropriation was disaster-related expenditure shocks could increase in approved by parliament, increasing the targeted deficit frequency and severity with climate change. A surplus to around 18 percent of GDP. The current account of about 0.2 percent of GDP is budgeted for 2017, deficit is estimated at 15 percent of GDP in 2016, reflecting lower fishing revenue and the maintenance Small Pacific Island Countries 155 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 of recent higher levels of expenditure, including on SPG-related construction. To the extent that Tonga subsidy programs. The country’s large infrastructure manages these expenditures prudently, it will retain the and essential services deficit, high share of poor and fiscal space necessary to meet pressing service delivery vulnerable, and young and growing population require needs and respond effectively to the frequent shocks increased and more effective spending on physical (particularly natural disasters) that it faces. With tourist and human capital. Ongoing efforts to improve the receipts at around 10 percent of GDP, Tonga’s tourism performance of SOEs also need to be maintained, to industry should benefit from the recent redevelopment continue to improve access to basic public services and and reopening of a large luxury hotel, which marks a reduce fiscal risk. much-needed increase in high-end accommodation. Growth in Nauru is projected to moderate to 4 percent For Vanuatu, if public investments are undertaken in FY2017 due to a slowdown in phosphate exports and efficiently, and with due regard to capacity constraints, only limited expansion of the RPC. In the medium term, they should boost Vanuatu’s potential growth rate and Nauru is highly vulnerable to the expected scaling down ensure that services are available to the poorest and of the RPC. Nauru’s biggest challenge is to diversify its most vulnerable. Given the government’s conservative economy beyond reliance on phosphate mining and the fiscal stance in recent years, it now has some fiscal space RPC, neither of which is a sustainable source of income to take on moderate levels of concessional debt to meet in the longer-term. To ensure fiscal sustainability, it will its post-cyclone recovery and broader development be important for the revenue reforms now underway needs. Further, throughout 2016 the new government to be complemented with systematic efforts to contain has made progress in addressing deficiencies in controls the wage bill and recurrent spending, while preserving on anti-money laundering and combating the financing critical expenditures on health and education. of terrorism, which will see Vanuatu withdrawn from the Financial Action Task Force money laundering “grey In Samoa, the pending exit of a major manufacturer is list”, and may impact positively on new foreign business likely to temporarily lower growth in FY2017 and lead investment. to a loss of jobs, although the opening of several hotel developments and increased agricultural exports should provide a partial offset. The growth rate is expected to moderate to 2 percent over the medium term, reflecting a balance between increased productive capacity in the tourism and agriculture sectors and the dampening effect of continued fiscal consolidation and reduced construction activity. Nevertheless, as public debt remains high, it is important that fiscal consolidation continue, consistent with recent efforts to increase domestic revenues, control recurrent spending (while protecting critical social expenditures), and pursue only high-priority and concessionally funded investments. Over the next few years, the key challenge facing Tonga is to maintain its fiscal performance, which will be critically dependent on careful management of the government wage bill and of the financing of 156 Small Pacific Island Countries SUSTAINING RESILIENCE Figure 1. Primary balances Figure 2. Public and publicly guaranteed external debt Percent of GDP Percent of GDP 50 70 40 60 30 50 20 40 10 30 0 20 -10 20 10 -30 0 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 ▬▬KIR ▬▬MHL ▬▬FSM ▬▬WSM ▬▬TON ▬▬TUV ▬▬VUT ▬▬KIR ▬▬MHL ▬▬FSM ▬▬WSM ▬▬TON ▬▬TUV ▬▬VUT Sources: Latest available joint World Bank and IMF DSAs. Sources: Latest available joint World Bank and IMF DSAs. Small Pacific Island Countries 157 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 SOLOMON ISLANDS in 2003, economic growth has depended primarily on the logging sector and a large influx of donor financing. The national basic-needs poverty rate, estimated in 2012/13, is 12.7 percent, while the Gini coefficient, is 37.1. Economic growth for 2016 is estimated at 3.0 percent (compared to 3.3 percent in 2015), reflecting the effects of El Niño weighing on agricultural production and fish catch. Growth was driven by the logging and wholesale and retail sectors, and investments in construction, communications, and manufacturing. 2016 Domestic economic activity, as measured by the central Population, million 0.6 bank’s production index, fell sharply in Q1 of 2016, GDP, current US$ billion 1.3 reflecting a decline in log export volumes, and cocoa GDP per capita, current US$ 2,146 and fish production against the previous quarter. GDP per capita, current US$, PPP 1,984 Production recovered by the end of Q3, as the logging Basic needs poverty rate 12.7 and cocoa industries recovered, and international prices Gini coefficient 37.1 for key export commodities increased, particularly for School enrolment, primary (% gross) 88.4 Life expectancy at birth, years 68.0 copra and palm oil. Preliminary figures suggest that log Sources: World Bank WDI; Macro Poverty Outlook and Ministry of Education and Human Resources production was 17.4 percent higher in 2016 compared Management. to 2015. Summary Formal labor market conditions improved in the first half of 2016 after a decline in the second half of 2015. The Solomon Islands Government continues to prioritize Labor market indicators from the National Provident infrastructure and development in rural areas—where Fund showed the half-yearly average number of active most of the population reside. Growth is expected contributing members rose marginally by 1 percent to to remain around 3 percent. Emerging challenges 55,799 contributors. include a sharper slowdown in the Chinese economy, and ongoing uncertainties, particularly in the mining Since 2015, the government’s fiscal policy has sector. Continued strong and coordinated government targeted investments toward rural infrastructure and action coupled with greater private sector investment to development, and the health and education sectors— promote inclusive growth is necessary to ensure broad- potentially important and direct investments in based improvements in living standards. improving the well-being of Solomon Islands’ poor. The 2016 budget targeted a deficit of 5.7 percent of GDP, financed through a drawdown of cash reserves. Given Recent Developments the historic under-implementation of the development budget, it is unlikely the deficit fully materialized to the The Solomon Islands continues to remain dependent on extent forecasted. foreign aid flows and natural resource extraction, and is heavily exposed to natural disasters and external price Total public and publicly guaranteed external debt shocks. Following the cessation of low-level civil strife stood at 10.2 percent of GDP at end-2016. As such, 158 Solomon Islands SUSTAINING RESILIENCE Solomon Islands continues to enjoy one of the lowest expenditures. The government has indicated it will debt-to-GDP ratios in the EAP region, and globally. The adjust spending in line with revenue collection rates, most recent Debt Sustainability Analysis, undertaken in should spending pressures risk resulting in the deficit early 2016, classifies Solomon Islands at a moderate target being surpassed. risk of debt distress, with the baseline scenario subject to significant risks resulting from a lower-than-expected The current account deficit is expected to widen to growth path and a shock to financing terms. 7.1 percent of GDP by end-2017, reflecting an increase in capital imports related to much needed infrastructure International reserves stood at US$526 million at and energy projects, and the underlying long-run end-2016, equivalent to 10.1 months of imports. The decline in logging exports. current account deficit is projected to have widened from 2.6 percent of GDP in 2015 to 3.8 percent in The Honiara Consumer Price Index (period average) 2016, to support imports related to large infrastructure is expected to remain at around 3 percent over the projects. medium term. Inflation fell throughout 2016 from 2.9 percent in January to negative 2.8 percent in November—far Risks and Challenges below the forecast range of 3 to 5 percent. This outlook is subject to considerable risks, especially in relation to mining. Future developments in the sector Outlook hinge on the development of a legal and regulatory framework conducive to mining, and on clear procedures Solomon Islands’ economy is projected to grow on for the acquisition of land for the exploration and average by 3.1 percent over the medium term. This exploitation of resources. Such frameworks will also baseline scenario is based on the assumption of ultimately impact the extent to which forthcoming resumed gold-mining activity; the exploitation of large benefits from mining are shared across the population. nickel deposits; increased investments in key transport infrastructure, energy and telecommunications projects; A sharper slowdown in the Chinese economy (the and sustained levels of foreign direct investment of main export destination for logs), also poses a risk to around 3.3 percent of GDP. growth and government revenues. With logging sources expected to be depleted in the long run and uncertainty The government has targeted a budget deficit for around the mining potential, the Solomon Islands faces the third consecutive year, however, in line with the the challenge of developing new sources of growth. historic underspending of the development budget, it is unlikely to materialize to the extent projected. The A number of challenges remain in the fisheries 2017 budget projects domestically sourced revenues sector, including licensing, monitoring, and enforcing to significantly increase (by 19.4 percent) against the compliance in offshore fisheries. If sustainably managed, revised 2016 budget, which could pose additional fisheries offer the potential to contribute to growth and fiscal pressures should this target not be met. Total government export earnings over the medium term. government expenditures in 2017 are anticipated to decline by 6.7 percent against the 2016 revised budget, Tourism, which is projected to increase by 5 to 6 percent with a 2.3 percent reduction in recurrent spending per year in the Pacific region until 2020, could also outweighing a 13.6 percent increase in development make an important contribution to broad-based and Solomon Islands 159 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 more inclusive growth, although at this stage it is not Also, should future formal employment opportunities very developed. Challenges in developing the tourism continue to remain concentrated in Honiara and sector include but are not limited to low market exposure the immediate surroundings, this might exacerbate of tourism products, limited transport infrastructure challenges associated with rapid population growth, and services, and weak access to finance for small and rural-to-urban migration, and the growth of urban medium enterprises operating in the sector. squatter settlements. Figure 1. Trade balance Figure 2. GDP per capita US$, thousands Percent Percent Index 800 40 12 160 10 700 30 140 8 600 20 120 6 500 10 100 4 400 0 2 80 -10 0 300 60 -2 200 -20 40 -4 100 -30 20 -6 0 -40 -8 0 05 006 007 008 009 010 011 012 013 014 015 016 017 018 019 020 05 06 07 008 009 010 011 012 013 014 015 016 017 018 019 20 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 20 20 20 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 JJTrade balance as % GDP, rhs ▬▬Imports ▬▬Exports JJReal GDP per capita, percent change ▬▬Real GDP per capita index (2003=100), rhs Sources: Central Bank of the Solomon Islands, World Bank staff estimates, IMF. Sources: World Bank staff estimates, IMF. Note: rhs= right-hand side. Note: rhs= right-hand side. SOLOMON ISLANDSSelected Indicators 2014 2015 2016e 2017e 2018f 2019f Real GDP growth, at constant prices 2.0 3.3 3.0 3.3 3.0 3.0 Per capita GDP -0.8 1.1 0.8 1.0 0.8 0.8 GDP deflator 3.2 1.6 4.3 1.8 1.8 2.5 Inflation (Consumer Price Index, eop) 4.2 2.2 2.7 2.5 3.6 2.3 Fiscal accounts (% of GDP) Expenditures 46.3 46.4 45.1 44.0 41.6 41.4 Revenues 48.0 46.1 43.8 43.4 43.2 42.7 General government balance 1.7 -0.3 -1.4 -0.7 1.6 1.3 Balance of Payments (% of GDP) Current account balance -4.3 -2.6 -3.8 -7.1 -5.7 -4.5 Imports (goods and services) 59.3 52.7 51.3 52.7 51.0 50.0 Exports (goods and services) 49.2 44.6 42.8 40.8 39.8 39.9 Foreign direct investment 1.8 2.0 3.1 3.5 3.4 3.3 Gross reserves (in US$ millions, eop) 514.3 519.6 526.0 544.6 592.1 653.5 In months of next year’s imports 10.2 10.1 10.1 9.7 10.1 10.7 External debt (% of GDP) 10.4 9.8 10.2 11.2 12.4 13.8 Exchange rate to US$ (average) 7.4 7.9 8.0 8.0 8.0 8.0 Sources: World Bank; International Monetary Fund. Notes: e = estimate; f = forecast. 160 Solomon Islands SUSTAINING RESILIENCE THAILAND higher tourism receipts, and lower imports. The growth rate in gross fixed capital formation decelerated, also due to challenges in implementing large public infrastructure projects. The passing of the draft Charter in the August 2016 public referendum and the royal transition following the passing of King Bhumibol Adulyadej helped improve business sentiment and confidence. As a result, private investment increased marginally in 2016 (by 0.4 percent, yoy), while private consumption rose by 3.1 percent, up from 2.2 percent in the previous year. 2016 On the production side, agriculture recovered from a Population, million 68.1 severe drought, with output expanding by 0.6 percent. GDP, current US$ billion 407.8 Manufacturing growth remained relatively constant at GDP per capita, current US$ 5984 1.4 percent, where a significant increase in production of Poverty rate ($1.9/day 2011PPP terms)a 0.0 electrical appliances partly offset a stagnant automotive Poverty rate ($3.1/day 2011PPP terms)a 0.9 sector, while construction expanded by 8.3 percent. Gini coefficienta 37.8 Services expanded by 4.3 percent, including due to School enrolment, primary (% gross)b 97.9 Life expectancy at birth, yearsb 74.2 strong tourism growth. Tourist arrivals increased by Sources: World Bank WDI and Macro Poverty Outlook. 8.9 percent over the year, despite a contraction in the Notes: a) Most recent value (2013); b) Most recent WDI value (2014). last quarter following the clampdown on illegal tour operators. Summary The fiscal deficit widened in 2016, including due to The Thai economy continued to recover, growing by scale-up of public investment toward the end of the 3.2 percent in 2016, up from 2.9 percent in 2015. While year, while public debt remained at 45 percent of GDP. a broad-based recovery has yet to take hold, there are The current account surplus increased to 11.4 percent signs of improvement in private investment and exports. of GDP in 2016, compared to 8.1 percent of GDP The economy is projected to grow by 3.2 percent in 2017 a year earlier, reflecting a gradual pickup in exports amid positive momentum from fiscal stimulus, tourism and subdued imports during most of the year. Capital arrivals, private consumption and exports. Stabilizing outflows intensified, including due to Thai direct agricultural prices may slow further improvements in investment abroad. living conditions in rural areas. The nominal exchange rate depreciated slightly in the second half of the year in line with expectations of a Recent Developments hike in the U.S. Fed Fund rate, but recovered by the end of the year. International reserves further increased Thailand’s economy grew by 3.2 percent in 2016, a to US$183 billion by end-February 2017, equal to slight improvement compared to 2.9 percent in 2015, 3.2 times short-term foreign debt. The policy interest due to fiscal stimulus and higher private consumption rate remained unchanged at 1.5 percent since April and exports. The contribution of net exports to growth 2016 as headline inflation gradually picked up toward increased, mainly due to stronger export demand, Thailand 161 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 the target band of 1 to 4 percent on account of higher Risks and Challenges food and oil prices. A potential deterioration in global economic prospects Thailand has made impressive progress in reducing could weigh on Thai export recovery. Growing economic, poverty over the last two decades. Extreme poverty, political, and institutional uncertainty in response to measured by the international extreme poverty the policies of the new U.S. administration and results line (US$1.90 per day, at 2011 PPP) affected only of upcoming elections in the Euro area could affect 0.03 percent of the population in 2015, down from exports and tighten financing conditions and dent the 14.3 percent in 1988. Based on the national poverty nascent recovery. Still, Thai authorities have ample line (approximately US$6.20 per day 2011 PPP), the monetary and fiscal buffers while a flexible exchange poverty rate was 10.5 percent in 2014. rate serves as a buffer against external shocks. In addition, while the passage of the draft constitution Outlook in the August 2016 public referendum and the royal transition lowered domestic risks, postponing ongoing Real GDP growth is projected to remain at 3.2 percent in political reforms could increase political uncertainty 2017. Consumption would continue to underpin growth, and could delay public spending and economic reforms, as consumer confidence improves and households and could weigh on consumer and investor confidence. deleverage. Stronger public infrastructure projects and some structural reforms would help crowd in private investment. The current account balance is expected to narrow as domestic demand and imports recover. The fiscal deficit is projected to widen to 3.7 percent of GDP in FY2017, with public investment as the key contributor. Similar trends are expected to continue in outer years; however, underlying productivity challenges will cap growth at 3.4 percent even in 2019. Rising agricultural income in recent years mainly reflected a global commodity price cycle, rather than productivity increases in agriculture. As agricultural prices retreat, growth could become less inclusive, with the rural poor negatively affected. Constrained by education attainment and skills levels, a large share of the poor workers might not be able to reap the full benefit of the job opportunities in the high-end services sector. As a consequence, further improvement in living conditions in rural areas may be more muted. 162Thailand SUSTAINING RESILIENCE Figure 1. GDP growth, contributions to growth Figure 2. Poverty rate and GDP per capita growth Percent, percentage points Percent Percent 25 8 7 20 6 5 15 4 3 10 2 1 5 0 -1 0 -2 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016e 2017f 2018f 2019f 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 JJPrivate consumption JJGovernment consumption JJGross fixed investment ▬▬Poverty rate (national), lhs ▬▬GDP per capita growth, rhs JJNet exports JJChange in inventories* ▬▬GDP Sources: National Economic and Social Development Board of Thailand and World Bank staff estimates. Sources: National Economic and Social Development Board of Thailand and World Bank staff estimates. Note: lhs = left-hand side; rhs= right-hand side. Note: *Includes statistical discrepancy. e = estimate; f = forecast. THAILAND  Selected Indicators 2014 2015 2016 e 2017 f 2018 f 2019 f Real GDP growth, at constant market prices 0.9 2.9 3.2 3.2 3.3 3.4 Private Consumption 0.6 2.2 3.1 3.0 3.3 3.4 Government Consumption 2.1 2.2 1.6 3.1 3.1 3.1 Gross Fixed Capital Investment -2.5 5.7 2.9 4.1 4.2 4.2 Exports, Goods and Services 0.2 0.7 2.1 2.0 2.2 2.4 Imports, Goods and Services -5.3 0.0 -1.4 2.2 2.5 2.8 Real GDP growth, at constant factor prices 0.9 3.3 3.4 3.2 3.3 3.4 Agriculture 0.7 -5.7 0.6 0.9 1.2 1.3 Industry -0.3 2.8 2.0 2.0 2.1 2.2 Services 1.8 4.8 4.7 4.2 4.3 4.3 Inflation (Consumer Price Index) 1.9 -0.9 0.2 1.5 2.0 2.5 Current Account Balance (% of GDP) 3.8 8.1 11.4 9.5 9.0 8.5 Financial and Capital Account (% of GDP) -3.7 -7.9 -11.2 -9.3 -8.8 -8.3 Net Foreign Direct Investment (% of GDP) -0.1 -0.1 -0.1 -0.1 -0.1 -0.1 Fiscal Balance (% of GDP) -1.8 -2.0 -2.6 -3.7 -3.7 -3.7 Debt (% of GDP) 44.9 45.3 45.0 46.8 48.2 49.3 Primary Balance (% of GDP) -0.7 -0.8 -1.5 -2.4 -2.4 -2.3 Sources: World Bank, Macroeconomics and Fiscal Management Global Practice, and Poverty and Equity Global Practice. Notes: e = estimate; f = forecast. Thailand 163 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 TIMOR-LESTE significant reduction from the 50 percent poverty rate in 2007, following the end of a period of conflict. Over the same period, the domestic economy grew by 77 percent, with per capita GDP up by 48 percent, although most of this growth was seen in public-sector-led areas of the economy. Using the international US$1.90 a day poverty line, poverty has fallen even more rapidly— from 47.2 to 30.3 percent over the period—a rate of 2.4 percentage points a year. That is rapid progress, and faster than most developing countries have achieved over a similar period. Nonincome indicators of poverty have also improved rapidly, with electricity extended to 2016 72 percent of the population, compared to 37 percent Population, million 1.3 in 2007, and markedly increased access to improved GDP, current US$ billiona 1.6 sanitation and water sources. However, unemployment GDP per capita, current US$a 1,239 and under-employment remain high, education levels Basic needs poverty ratea 41.8 low, and malnutrition and other health problems severe. Poverty rate ($1.9/day 2011PPP terms)a 30.3 School enrolment, primary (% net)b 96.6 Domestic (excluding offshore oil) economic activity Life expectancy at birth, yearsb 68.0 Source: World Bank WDI and Macro Poverty Outlook. is projected to have grown at a reasonable pace Notes: (a) Most recent value (2014). (b) Most recent WDI value (2014). of 4.3 percent in 2014, and around 5 percent in 2015. Trends in government spending—both public Summary investment and current spending—continue to have the most direct effect on economic growth. From 2012 As Timor-Leste enters an election year, it can look back to 2014, GDP growth rates varied in line with stop-start on considerable gains made in poverty reduction at government spending trends. Inflation has been low a faster pace than in most countries. Nevertheless, for the last three years, and over 2016 the economy poverty rates remain high, and there is a heightened experienced deflation, with the national consumer risk of backsliding on progress to date. Oil production price index falling in each month except for December. is ceasing, leaving a large fiscal deficit and a depleting Falling prices have been led by an appreciating U.S. sovereign fund. An accelerated public infrastructure dollar, Timor-Leste’s official currency, which has led to program aims to raise prospects for growth, support the a generalized fall in prices of imports. Continued low diversification of the economy, and create a sustainable commodity prices over 2016, especially oil and food tax base. However, the success of this strategy depends have also contributed to falling prices. on investments representing value for money and on meeting the economic and social development needs Offshore oil production continues to decline as existing of the country. oil fields are depleted. While in 2016 Timor-Leste ceased publishing oil production volumes as part of its reporting in the annual Government Budget, estimates derived Recent Developments from government revenue indicate that production may have fallen by as much as 50 percent in 2016. The latest poverty estimates indicate that in 2014, about Timor-Leste’s non-oil exports are basic and small scale. 42 percent of people lived in basic needs poverty. This is a The most significant commodity export is coffee, while 164 Timor-Leste SUSTAINING RESILIENCE tourism affords some additional income-generating in 2016, and by 50 percent since 2013. Government activities. Coffee has been a long-standing cash crop transfers and capital expenditure have accounted for in Timor-Leste, but the sector has been stagnant for the the majority of increased spending. Transfer payments last decade, suffering from a lack of investment and of veterans’ pensions have continued, supplemented facilitation services. However, provisional data indicate by large (US$218 million in 2016) transfers to the that coffee exports rose sharply over 2016, with annual autonomous zone of Oecusse, a district of Timor- exports of almost US$30 million more than double Leste of approximately 60,000 inhabitants—a budget their level over the last three years. This is likely due allocation of around US$3,500 per person for one year. to a combination of sale of stockpiles built as coffee Increased capital expenditure includes a number of road prices fell, and improvements in yield following adverse projects, which vary radically in cost—one road under weather conditions in the previous two years. While up- construction in a rural, sparsely populated area costs to-date information on visitor arrivals is not available, US$10 million per kilometer and is intended to serve a the latest estimates from 2014 indicate that the number possible future oil industry. A government contribution of visitors is very low by international standards, at towards a new public-private partnership container port just 60,000 per year, although the number has been development of US$131 million was also transferred to gradually increasing. an escrow account in 2016. In 2016, government receipts from the petroleum sector fell sharply from close to US$1 billion in 2015 Outlook to a projected US$400 million in 2016. Over the same period, government expenditure is projected to have Economic activity is expected to be manifestly affected increased by US$350 million, opening up a wider by the conduct of both presidential and parliamentary fiscal gap. The overall government budget (including elections in 2017. Some productive activity is expected oil revenues) fell into deficit for the first time since to be diverted to campaigning efforts, while the recently oil revenues came on stream in 2005, with a deficit prepared 2017 budget marks a reduction in planned of 6.4 percent of overall GDP. In 2016, this deficit expenditure as the administration moves to “caretaker is projected to reach 29 percent of overall GDP. This mode” during the election year. As a result, GDP indicates that even after accounting for the investment growth is expected to fall to 4 percent in 2017, before returns from the Petroleum Fund, the government is recovering to 5 percent in 2018 with the first full-year running down its financial assets. The independently budget of the new government and continuation of estimated level of sustainable budget financing from planned public and private investment activities. the Petroleum Fund in 2016 was US$545 million, whereas actual withdrawals amounted to almost double Following a smooth completion of elections in 2017, that level, at US$900 million. foreign direct investment is expected to continue on a modest upward trend, although substantial scaling In July 2016, the government announced a up of investment is likely to require significant policy supplementary budget to increase expenditure efforts in areas of key concern to business—including appropriations by US$400 million (or 26 percent the quality of ICT and connective infrastructure and of nonoil GDP) for the rest of the year to December effective governance, particularly in areas of property 2016. The supplementary budget documentation notes rights (particularly land) and government service that expenditure is being front-loaded in advance of provision. elections, planned to take place in mid-2017. Projected government expenditure increased by over 20 percent Timor-Leste 165 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 Continued government investment in basic infrastructure such as national highways, local roads, community irrigation, and water and sanitation is expected to support relatively robust poverty-reduction, both via improved standards of living and opportunities for income generation. However, high-cost developments such as the Tasi Mane project are expected to have only a very weak impact on poverty reduction in the near term, and may never yield a social return in a range of feasible scenarios. Risks and Challenges Recent surveys show that since the period of civil conflict in 2006, Timor-Leste has made good progress in alleviating poverty, and the benefits of public investments are becoming evident with sharply improved access to electricity and significant improvements in other basic infrastructure services. However, while it may be appropriate for an initial stage of development, these investments and the associated gains have been achieved using a finite resource of oil revenues. The overriding fiscal challenge for Timor-Leste is to transition to a more sustainable model and rebalancing towards private-sector-led growth over the next 5 to 10 years. The prospect of new oil fields being exploited in Timor- Leste remains highly uncertain. A recent joint statement by the governments of Australia and Timor-Leste indicated that they are engaging in discussions on a permanent maritime boundary, which would determine the national claims to the vast majority of viable oil fields that lie in Australian waters. Even if viable fields were developed, which is unlikely to happen for 10 years, efforts to diversify towards sustainable models of private sector growth would be just as important to provide a range of economic livelihood opportunities and guard against possible effects of Dutch disease. 166 Timor-Leste SUSTAINING RESILIENCE Figure 1. Gross domestic product, expenditure Figure 2. Petroleum Fund wealth per capita components Constant prices, US$ million Constant prices, US$ 2,500 16 2,000 14 1,500 12 1,000 10 500 8 0 6 -500 4 -1,000 2 -1,500 0 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 JJGovernment consumption JJGovernment investment JJPrivate consumption Sources: World Bank staff estimates. JJPrivate investment JJNet exports ▬▬GDP Sources: Government of Timor-Leste and World Bank staff estimates. TIMOR-LESTE S  elected Indicators 2014 2015 2016e 2017f 2018f 2019f GDP growth, at constant market prices (non-oil) 5.9 4.3 5.0 4.0 5.0 6.0 Exports, goods and services, US$ milliona 15.5 18.0 27.4 28.5 29.6 30.8 Imports, goods and services, US$ million -764.0 -692.0 -728.0 -864.0 -914.0 -930.0 Trade in services, net, US$ million -388.0 -414.0 -486.0 -648.0 -647.0 -605.0 CPI inflation, period average 0.7 0.6 -1.3 3.0 4.0 4.0 Current Account Balance, % of GDPa 27.6 12.2 2.4 -11.2 -13.7 -14.8 Foreign Direct Investment, US$ million 47.0 35.0 170.0 200.0 200.0 220.0 Fiscal Balance, % of GDPb 21.8 -6.4 -29.2 -18.8 -35.1 -34.9 Sources: Government of Timor-Leste and World Bank staff estimates. Notes: e = estimate, f = forecast. (a) Denominator is total GDP, since current account includes offshore oil sector as domestic activity. (b) Overall balance including incorporating petroleum receipts and current earnings from Petroleum Fund, as a proportion of total GDP. Timor-Leste 167 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 VIETNAM sectors while manufacturing output and services growth strengthened. The agroforestry-fisheries sector expanded by a mere 1.36 percent, the lowest growth rate since 2011, reflecting unfavorable weather conditions in the first half of the year. The industry and construction sector expanded by 7.6 percent, below last year’s 9.6 percent, driven primarily by a 4 percent contraction in the mining sector. By contrast, growth of the services sector accelerated to 7 percent from 6.3 percent last year due to buoyant private consumption and strong tourism receipts. On the demand side, stronger growth was supported by investment (spurred by strong FDI 2016 inflows) and improved private consumption. Population, million 92.7 GDP, current US$ billion 207.0 Healthy labor market developments point to an GDP per capita, current US$ 2,233 aggregate improvement in welfare and continued Poverty rate ($1.9/day 2011 PPP terms)a 2.8 decline in poverty. Nearly 1 million people moved Poverty rate ($3.1/day 2011 PPP terms)a 10.7 from agriculture, finding jobs mostly in industry Gini coefficienta 34.8 and construction, which saw a 7.6 percent yoy School enrolment, primary (% gross)b 107.5 Life expectancy at birth, yearsb 75.5 growth, and to a limited extent in the service sectors. Sources: World Bank WDI and Macro Poverty Outlook. Observed growth in nonagricultural jobs is expected Notes: a) Most recent value (2014); b) Most recent WDI value (2014). to compensate or was a coping mechanism for the stagnation of incomes in agriculture due to El Niño Summary drought. However, localized increases in poverty are projected in communities (especially ethnic minorities) Economic growth has moderated in 2016 to 6.2 percent, who are both more dependent on agriculture and less accompanied by moderate inflation and a strengthening integrated into the rest of the economy, and those external position. Vietnam’s medium-term outlook affected by the environmental pollution in the central remains positive, albeit subject to downside risks both coastal provinces of Vietnam. domestic and external. An acceleration of structural reform to support a more productivity-led growth model Resilient growth was accompanied by moderate would help Vietnam sustain its long-term development. inflation and a strengthening external position. After Rising antitrade sentiment and associated risks of falling to record lows in 2015, inflation has picked up protectionist measures in major economies pose mainly due to administrative price hikes for health and significant risks to Vietnam’s highly open economy. education services but core inflation remains subdued and headline inflation has stayed below the official target of 5 percent. Despite the unfavorable external Recent Developments economic environment, Vietnam’s exports (in nominal terms) increased 9 percent in 2016, outperforming Economic activity in Vietnam moderated in 2016. most competitors in the region. This, combined with a GDP is estimated to have expanded by 6.2 percent in slowdown in import growth, led to a trade surplus in turn 2016, below the 6.8 percent in 2015. The slowdown widening the current account surplus from 0.5 percent was driven by weakness in the agriculture and mining of GDP in 2015 to an estimated 3 percent in 2016. 168 Vietnam SUSTAINING RESILIENCE Foreign direct investment (FDI) remains an important overall are expected to remain moderate thanks to driver of Vietnam’s trade and more generally economic subdued commodity and energy prices globally. On the performance. FDI inflows peaked in 2016 at a record fiscal front, some fiscal consolidation is expected, as level of almost US$16 billion (7.7 percent of GDP). well as acceleration of divestment, though at a gradual pace that would contain the further rise of public debt. The exchange rate has been relatively stable throughout the year, though the Vietnamese dong started to depreciate in late 2016. The State Bank of Vietnam Risks and Challenges has gradually rebuilt foreign reserves, albeit they remained at a relatively low 2.8 months of imports at Vietnam’s medium-term outlook remains positive, the end of 2016. In the context of a strengthening U.S. but pronounced downside risks remain. Domestically, dollar and sharper depreciation of currencies of major delayed implementation of structural and fiscal reforms Vietnam trading partners, concerns of real exchange could intensify macroeconomic vulnerabilities and lower rate appreciation of the dong and its possible negative potential growth. Externally, intensifying uncertainties impacts on Vietnam’s export competitiveness remain. of the global economy could dim Vietnam’s growth outlook through trade and investment channels. While policy rates have remained unchanged, credit Dealing with vulnerability to shocks—which in recent growth remains elevated. Credit growth reached years are mainly climate and environmental disasters— about 19 percent (yoy) in December 2016. This rapid continues to be a challenge for improving household expansion of credit—more than twice the growth rate welfare, particularly in rural areas. of nominal GDP—provides some cause for concern, particularly since Vietnam’s credit-to-GDP ratio—about 120 percent in December 2016—is already high and the overhang of past non-performing loans has not been fully resolved. Sizable and persistent fiscal deficits have emerged in recent years. The fiscal deficit averaged 5.5 percent of GDP during 2011–16, compared to 2.2 percent of GDP during 2006–10. Preliminary data show that fiscal pressure remained in 2016, where the fiscal deficit was estimated at 6.5 percent of GDP. Persistently high fiscal deficit is the main reason for accumulating public debt which was estimated to reach the legally mandated ceiling of 65 percent of GDP at the end of 2016. Outlook Vietnam’s medium-term outlook remains favorable. GDP growth is projected to improve gradually during 2017-2019, driven by robust domestic demand and export-oriented manufacturing. Inflation pressures Vietnam 169 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017 Figure 1. GDP growth, contributions to growth, by sector Figure 2. Poverty rate and GDP per capita Percent, percentage points Poverty rate, percent GDP per capita, constant LCU 8 80 40 7 70 35 6 60 30 5 50 25 4 40 20 3 30 15 2 20 10 1 10 5 0 0 0 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016e 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013 2016 2019 JJAgri-forestry & fishery JJIndustry & construction JJServices ▬▬$1.90/day PPP, lhs ▬▬$3.10/day PPP, lhs ▬▬GDP per capita, rhs JJTax on products (net) QQTotal GDP Sources: Vietnam Government Authorities and Macro Poverty Outlook. Sources: Vietnam Government Authorities and Macro Poverty Outlook. Note: lhs = left-hand side; rhs = right-hand side. VIETNAM S  elected Indicators 2014 2015 2016e 2017f 2018f 2019f Real GDP growth, at constant market prices 6.0 6.7 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.4 Private Consumption 6.1 9.3 7.4 7.2 7.2 7.0 Government Consumption 7.0 7.0 8.8 5.0 6.7 8.6 Gross Fixed Capital Investment 9.3 9.4 9.3 8.7 8.2 7.8 Exports, Goods and Services 11.6 8.8 17.9 14.6 13.6 14.2 Imports, Goods and Services 12.8 14.3 19.2 15.3 14.0 14.4 Real GDP growth, at constant factor prices 5.7 6.8 6.1 6.4 6.5 6.5 Agriculture 3.4 2.4 1.4 1.7 2.0 2.0 Industry 6.4 9.6 7.6 8.3 8.5 8.6 Services 6.2 6.3 6.9 6.5 6.3 6.2 Inflation (Consumer Price Index) 4.1 0.6 2.7 4.0 4.0 4.0 Current Account Balance (% of GDP) 5.0 0.5 3.0 1.2 0.8 0.5 Fiscal Balance (% of GDP) -6.3 -6.1 -6.5 -6.2 -5.9 -5.3 Debt (% of GDP) 55.1 58.3 62.1 63.6 64.0 65.3 Primary Balance (% of GDP) -4.6 -4.2 -4.4 -4.0 -3.8 -3.1 Poverty rate ($1.9/day PPP terms)a,b,c 2.8 2.5 2.1 1.8 1.5 1.2 Poverty rate ($3.1/day PPP terms)a,b,c 10.7 9.5 8.5 7.6 6.8 6.0 Sources: World Bank, Macroeconomics and Fiscal Management Global Practice, and Poverty Global Practice. Notes: e = estimate; f = forecast. (a) Calculations based on EAPPOV harmonization, using 2014-VHLSS. (b) Projection using neutral distribution (2014) with pass-through = 0.87 (Med) based on GDP per capita in constant LCU. (c) Actual data: 2014. Nowcast: 2015 - 2016. Forecast are from 2017 to 2019. 170 Vietnam WORLD BANK EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2017