Despite lingering financial
volatility, economic growth could have accelerated in the third quarter from
the previous six months on the back of sustained domestic demand, Budget
Secretary Florencio Abad said.
“I can say with confidence that
third quarter growth will be better than first half growth,” Abad said.
Economic growth – as measured by
gross domestic product (GDP) – slowed to 5.3 percent in the first semester even
after it picked up to 5.6 percent in the second quarter from five percent in
the first three months.
Abad, the chairman of the
interagency Development Budget Coordinating Committee (DBCC), earlier said the
government is sticking to its seven to eight percent growth goal this year even
as he admitted reaching it is a “challenge.
” The third-quarter GDP data will
be reported next month.
Asked what could have driven the
July-September growth, Abad particularly cited stronger government spending
during the period. Treasury data showed state expenditures rose nine percent
year-on-year in the first half.
This paled in comparison with an
average of 20-percent expansion in July and August. The fiscal performance for
September has yet to be released.
Private spending could have also
contributed, Abad said, pointing to traditional drivers of overseas Filipino
remittances and receipts from business process outsourcing (BPO) industry.
From January to August, remittances
grew 4.01 percent to P16.21 billion, central bank data showed. Large dollar
inflows and BPO earnings give Filipino families more money to spend and invest,
helping boost growth.
On the flip side, Abad said exports
and imports, which are also “significant drivers” of GDP, likely dragged
growth. For the first eight months, exports were down 4.4 percent, while
imports inched up 0.1 percent as of July. “I’m not too sure how these
sub-sectors performed in the context of global slowdown and uncertainties, but
with a low inflation regime…, third quarter still should be better than the
first half,” the budget chief explained.
Earlier, Abad said economic
managers are no longer meeting this year to review macroeconomic targets and
would likely wait until full-year growth data is available.
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