76982 world bank east asia and pacific economic UPDATE APRIL 2013 A Fine Balance world bank east asia and pacific economic UPDATE APRIL 2013 A Fine Balance © April 2013. The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank 1818 H Street NW Washington DC 20433 Telephone: 202-473-1000 Internet: www.worldbank.org All rights reserved 1 2 3 4 13 12 11 10 This volume is a product of the staff of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank. The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed in this volume do not necessarily reflect the views of the Executive Directors of The World Bank or the governments they represent. The World Bank does not guarantee the accuracy of the data included in this work. 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All other queries on rights and licenses, including subsidiary rights, should be addressed to the Office of the Publisher, The World Bank, 1818 H Street NW, Washington, DC 20433, USA; fax: 202-522-2422; e-mail: pubrights@worldbank.org. ISSN: 2079-5874 Key title: World Bank East Asia and Pacific Economic Update … (Print) Abbreviated key title: World Bank East Asia Pac. Econ. Update (Print) Cover photo: The World Bank Photo Collection a  fine balance Contents Preface and Acknowledgments 1 Summary2 Recent Developments 4 Outlook and Risks 12 Policy Considerations 18 List of Figures Figure 1. East Asia remained the fastest growing developing region in the world… 4 Figure 2. …and an engine of global growth during the global turmoil 4 Figure 3. Growth was supported by strong domestic demand 5 Figure 4. Fiscal policy has been expansionary, including through SOEs and off-budgets 6 Figure 5. Credit growth has been strong 6 Figure 6. Net exports deducted a few percentage points from growth, except for the Philippines 7 Figure 7. Current account surpluses have declined, and Indonesia recorded a deficit 7 Figure 8. Exports are starting to rebound although the momentum is uneven 8 Figure 9. Imports are rapidly rising on the back of strong domestic demand 8 Box Figure 1. Value Added in Exports, Select EAP Countries 9 Figure 10. The real sector rebound follows different patterns across the region 10 Figure 11. PMIs are on the uptick 10 Figure 12. Capital flows to the region are on the upsurge 10 Figure 13. Countries supplying Japan with parts and components may benefit from a weakening Yen 15 Figure 14. Prospects are vulnerable to an abrupt decline in Chinese investment 15 Figure 15. Inflation remains in check across the region but price pressures are building-up 16 Figure 16. The sum of general government, non-financial corporate and household debt now exceeds 150 percent of GDP in Malaysia, Thailand, and China 17 Figure 17 . External debt is high in Mongolia, Papua New Guinea and Lao PDR 17 Figure 18. Investment efficiency—measured by incremental capital output ratios (ICORs)—has deteriorated, except in Indonesia 19 Figure 19. Productivity growth has stagnated since mid-last decade 19 List of Tables Table 1. East Asia and Pacific: Capital Flows  10 Table 2. East Asia and Pacific: GDP Growth Projections 13 Table 3. East Asia and Pacific: Output Gap 15 Contents  |  iii world bank east asia and pacific economic update APRIL 2013 Abbreviations ADB Asian Development Bank Countries ASEAN Association of Southeast Asian Nations CHN China ASEAN-4 ASEAN members Indonesia, Malaysia, FJI Fiji Philippines and Thailand HKG Hong Kong, SAR China ASEAN-5 ASEAN members Indonesia, Malaysia, IDN Indonesia Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam KHM Cambodia BIS Bank for International Settlements KOR Republic of Korea BOP Balance of payments LAO Lao People’s Democratic Republic (PDR) CPI Consumer price index MNG Mongolia DECPG Development Economics Prospects Group, MMR Myanmar of the World Bank MYS Malaysia ECB European Central Bank PHL The Philippines e.g. For example PNG Papua New Guinea EU European Union SLB Solomon Islands FAI Fixed asset investment SGP Singapore FDI Foreign direct investment THA Thailand FY Fiscal year TMP Timor-Leste GDP Gross development product TWN Taiwan, China ICOR Incremental capital output ratio VNM Vietnam IMF International Monetary Fund AUS Australia IPO Initial public offering CHL Chile LIBOR London inter-bank offer rate NZL New Zealand LHS Left-hand-side axis of the graph MSCI Morgan Stanley Capital International Regions, World Bank classification MYR Malaysian ringgit EAP East Asia and Pacific NIEs Newly-industrialized economies ECA Europe and Central Asia OECD Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development LAC Latin America and the Carribean PMI Purchasing managers index MENA Middle East and North Africa PPP Purchasing power parity SAS South Asia qoq Quarter-on-quarter SSA Sub-Saharan Africa REER Real effective exchange rate RMB Chinese renminbi saar Seasonally-adjusted annual rate US United States US$ United States dollar WDI World Development Indicators WDR World Development Report WTO World Trade Organization RHS Right-hand-side axis of the graph SOEs State-owned enterprises TFP Total factor productivity yoy Year-on-year iv  | Abbreviations a  fine balance Preface and Acknowledgments The East Asia and Pacific Economic Update was prepared by Antonio Ollero, Ekaterine Vashakmadze, and Jennifer Golan. The team worked under the guidance of Shubham Chaudhuri (Sector Manager, Poverty and Economic Management, East Asia and Pacific Region), Sudhir Shetty (Director, Poverty Reduction and Economic Management, East Asia and Pacific Region) and Bert Hofman (Chief Economist, East Asia and Pacific Region). Andrew Beath of the Chief Economist Office East Asia and Pacific coordinated the Office’s contributions. World Bank country economists throughout the East Asia and Pacific Region provided country write-ups and tables and assisted with the analysis. They include: Karlis Smits, Xiaofan Liu, Min Zhao, Xiaoli Wan, Ashley Taylor, Alex Sienaert, Magda Adriani, Fitria Fitrani, Frederico Gil Sander, Intan Nadia Jalil, Kai Kaiser, Karl Kenrick Tiu Chua, Marianne Juco, Paul Mariano, Kirida Bhaopichitr, Amornsak Mala, Nattaporn Triratanasirikul, Habib Rab, Viet Tuan Dinh, Enrique Aldaz-Carroll, Sodeth Ly, Genevieve Boyreau, Somneuk Davading, Keomanivone Phimmahasay, Tae Hyun Lee, Altantsetseg Shiilegmaa, Khwima Nthara, Douglas Addison, Virginia Horscroft, Tobias Hauqe, Lucy Pan, Timothy John Bulman, Hans Anand Beck, and Young Hwan Cha. The country economists worked under the supervsion lead economists Chorching Goh, James Brumby, Mathew Verghis, Rogier J. E. Van Den Brink, Deepak Mishra, and Vivek Suri. Other World Bank officers and staff provided inputs to the report, including Andrew Burns and Theo N. Janse Van Rensberg of the Development Prospects Group (DECPG), and Carl Patrick Hanlon, Chisako Fukuda and David Llorico Llorito of East Asia and Pacific External Affairs (EAPXT). The report was designed and typeset by Budy Wirasmo. Developing East Asia and Pacific as used in this report includes China, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, Lao People’s Democratic Republic, Mongolia, Myanmar, Timor-Leste, Fiji, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands and other island economies in the Pacific. The Newly Industrialized Economies (NIEs) include Hong Kong, SAR China, the Republic of Korea, Singapore, and Taiwan, China. The ASEAN member countries are Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Indonesia, Lao PDR, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam. The ASEAN-4 are Indonesia, Philippines, Thailand and Malaysia. Preface and Acknowledgments  |  1 world bank east asia and pacific economic update APRIL 2013 Summary The developing economies of East Asia and Pacific (EAP) remain resilient amidst a challenging global environment. Collectively, they grew by 7 .5 percent in 2012, lower than the 8.3 percent growth recorded in 2011, but still higher than any other region. Because of weaker economic activity in the first half of the year due to depressed external demand and policy tightening as part of its rebalancing efforts, China’s growth slowed to 7.8 percent in 2012 from 9.3 percent in 2011. But growth in the other developing economies of the region increased to 6.2 percent in 2012, up from 4.5 percent in 2011, due to strong domestic stimulus measures in the largest economies in EAP and reviving global demand in the second half of 2012. Middle-income EAP—Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand—out-performed expectations, due to stronger than anticipated growth especially in the last quarter of 2012. Elsewhere in the region, growth impressed in the smaller states, but turned out mixed in the Pacific Island countries. Domestic demand supported growth across EAP with governments marshaling both fiscal and monetary policy to boost consumption and investment. External demand was a drag on growth in 2012 in most EAP economies. Consequently, current account surpluses deteriorated last year but international reserve positions remained strong, reflecting considerable capital inflows. Data in the first quarter of the year indicate that external weakness may be abating, while domestic demand remains resilient. Meanwhile, capital inflows continue to surge on loose monetary policies and deleveraging globally, while the region’s financial markets remain solid. Though the volatility leading up to the Cyprus bailout illustrates how fragile financial market confidence still is, and is likely to remain for considerable time to come, global financial market conditions have greatly improved since mid-last year. Although weak, there are signs of a turnaround in real activity in the high income countries. Our baseline projections for global growth are for a modest expansion of 2.4 percent in 2013, gradually strengthening to 3.1 percent in 2014, virtually unchanged from the outlook in December last year. Within the region, available data in the first quarter of the year indicate that external weakness may be abating, while domestic demand remains resilient. The expectation of some stabilization in external demand, coupled with still resilient domestic activity, may be showing in the industrial production and Purchasing Managers Index numbers, which are generally positive. After declining through much of 2012, inflation has ticked up in a number of countries in the region in the first months of 2013. Our growth forecasts for EAP for 2013 and 2014 remain roughly similar to those of December last year. We expect that with improving external conditions and strong domestic demand, regional growth will rise moderately to 7 .8 percent in 2013 and then adjust back to 7 .6 percent in 2014 and 2015, reflecting continued rebalancing in China. Policy-induced movements in some high-income currencies, in particular the yen, are likely to affect the dynamics of trade in manufactures in the EAP region in the short-term and will likely help cut trade deficits with Japan, developing EAP’s largest import source and fourth largest export market. Both the global and regional outlooks are subject to several risks, most of which are by now familiar. The likelihood of a serious crisis of confidence in the Euro Area has declined significantly since mid-last year, 2  | Summary a  fine balance but remains a factor to consider as does policy uncertainty in the United States, where possible fiscal deadlock could yet affect the US and the global economy. And while a progressive decline in China’s unusually high investment rate is expected over the medium-term, an unexpectedly rapid disorderly unwinding could have significant consequences, particularly for developing commodity exporters and for the EAP region. Though the developing economies of East Asia are generally well-prepared to absorb external shocks, an emerging concern is the risk of over-heating in some of the larger economies in the region. The latest numbers suggest that if global demand continues to revive and the recovery in the global economy is more robust than expected, these economies may be reaching the limits of their productive capacity. Continued demand-boosting measures, which have helped sustain growth, may now risk stoking inflationary pressures and amplifying the credit and asset price risks that are emerging in the context of a strong rebound in capital inflows. Policy makers in developing EAP should strive to strike the right balance between managing the near-term risks, and sustaining and increasing inclusive growth in the medium-term by enhancing the underlying productive capacity—human and physical—of these economies. That means, above all, investing in infrastructure and in the skills of the growing labor force. Middle-income EAP countries have to raise levels of investment, as these remain below the median for middle-income countries globally, and have to improve on the quality of investment, as investment efficiency has declined in most. Moreover, developing EAP must strive to improve productivity, the growth of which has stagnated since mid-last decade. Summary  |  3 world bank east asia and pacific economic update APRIL 2013 Recent Developments The developing economies of the East Asia and Pacific region grew by 7.5 percent in 2012, lower than the 8.3 percent growth recorded in 2011, but still higher than that of any other region. Because of weaker economic activity in the first half of 2012 due to depressed external demand and policy tightening as part of its rebalancing efforts, China’s growth slowed down to 7 .8 percent in 2012 from 9.3 percent in 2011. But growth in the other developing economies of the region increased to 6.2 percent in 2012, up from 4.5 percent in 2011, due to strong domestic stimulus measures in the largest economies and reviving global demand in the second half of 2012 (Figure 1). Specifically, growth in the ASEAN countries increased to 5.4 percent in 2012, up from 4.5 percent in 2011. And the region as a whole continued to be an engine of global growth, contributing around 40 percent of global growth in 2012 (Figure 2). Figure 1. East Asia remained the fastest growing Figure 2. …and an engine of global growth during developing region in the world… the global turmoil GDP growth, 2012, in percent contribution to global growth, in percentage points 9 4 0.2 8 Developing EAP 3 0.2 7 0.1 ASEAN-4 2 6 0.1 1 5 0 4 Developing countries 0 excl. EAP -0.1 3 -1 World -0.1 2 High income -2 -0.2 1 -3 -0.2 0 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 CHN THA IDN SSA SAS MENA ECA LAC East Asia High income (excl. Asian NIEs) Developing (excl. EAP) ASEAN (rhs) Source: World Bank staff estimates. Source: World Bank staff estimates. Middle-income EAP—Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand—outperformed expectations, due to stronger than anticipated growth in the second half and especially the last quarter of 2012. The Philippines led the ASEAN-4, accelerating from 3.9 percent GDP growth in 2011 to 6.6 percent in 2012, spurred by robust private consumption, a recovery in government spending, strong performance of the construction sector and of exports. Thailand rebounded strongly from the devastating floods of 2011, posting a historic 18.9 percent growth in the fourth quarter last year, a performance slightly exaggerated by base effects, but V-shape sharp nevertheless. GDP growth in Thailand was 6.4 percent for the full year, compared with 0.1 percent the year before. Malaysia’s GDP growth rose a half percentage point higher than baseline expectations, chalking up a 5.6 percent growth rate on strong investment activity buoyed by election spending. Indonesia stayed resilient, with 6.2 percent growth in 2012, slightly lower than the 6.5 percent growth in 2011, but the same as in 2010. China slowed down as it moved to rebalance internally from an overdependence on investment to a greater reliance on consumer demand. Policymakers engineered a soft landing, countering global headwinds with looser monetary conditions that benefited investment, notably in property, a central government stimulus that boosted construction and manufacturing, and a surge in local government investment. Vietnam slowed 4  | Recent Developments a  fine balance to a thirteen-year low 5.0 percent growth. Stabilization policies helped avert a macroeconomic crisis, reducing inflation, strengthening the fiscal and external accounts, stabilizing the exchange rate, but lowering growth. Elsewhere in the region, growth impressed in the smaller states, turned out mixed in the Pacific Island countries. Cambodia grew faster than expected, at 7 .3 percent, bolstered by the strong performance of agriculture, construction and tourism and a recovery in garments. Lao grew faster than last year, at 8.3 percent, driven by robust investment in the non-resource sectors and a notable rise in mining output in the fourth quarter (reflecting the completion of a new gold mine). Mongolia was one of the fastest growing economies globally, expanding 12.3 percent, following the first-phase development of the Oyu Tolgoi mine project, a revival in agriculture, and steady growth in construction. Backed by political and economic reforms, growth accelerated in Myanmar to 5.5 percent in 2011/12 and an estimated 6.25 percent in 2012/13. In the Pacific Island economies, where growth has averaged 2.0 percent in the past twenty years, the performance was mixed. The Marshall Islands, supported by rising fisheries exports, stayed on this average at 2.0 percent. Samoa, struck by a major cyclone, grew only at an estimated 0.9 percent. Domestic demand supported growth across the Figure 3. Growth was supported by strong domestic demand region (Figure 3). Consumption rose on the back domestic demand contribution to growth, in percentage points of higher household income in China, government 10 cash transfers and pay increases in Malaysia, strong 9 remittances in the Philippines, and government 8 social spending in Thailand. Real disposable income 7 ASEAN 2012 of urban households rose by more than 9 percent in 6 China in 2012, supporting final consumption. Private 5 ASEAN 2011 consumption expanded 7 .7 percent in Malaysia, 4 3 bolstered by salary increases and bonuses for civil 2 servants and MYR 2.34 billion of cash transfers 1 that were distributed to almost 70 percent of all 0 households. Remittances grew 6.3 percent in the Philippines Indonesia Thailand Malaysia 2011 2012 Philippines in 2012, sustaining private consumption, Source: World Bank staff estimates. which expanded 6.1 percent. The country reported an expanding base of remittances, with the number of workers deployed overseas increasing to 1.8 million in 2012 from 1.68 million in 2011. In Thailand, household incomes received a boost from the introduction of a new minimum wage in six provinces in 2012. Other policy measures, including incentives for auto purchases, also boosted consumer spending. Private consumption rose 3.4 percent in the year, from 0.5 percent in 2011. Investment strengthened significantly in most of middle-income EAP . Investment was boosted by FDI in Indonesia, catalytic public enterprise investment and infrastructure spending in Malaysia, and post-flood reconstruction in Thailand. FDI continued to flow at a rapid pace in Indonesia, topping 2.3 percent of GDP on a gross basis, and 1.6 percent in net terms, in 2012. Fixed investment grew 9.8 percent in Indonesia last year, contributing 2.4 percentage points to overall GDP growth of 6.2 percent. In Malaysia, large investments by non- financial public enterprises, especially Petronas, catalyzed private investments in the oil and gas and real estate sectors, complementing a pick-up in infrastructure investments funded by the budget and through government guarantees. Fixed investment surged 19.9 percent in Malaysia last year and contributed 4.7 percentage points to GDP growth of 5.6 percent. Post-flood reconstruction efforts jump-started investment activity in Thailand in 2012. Some ambitious water management projects are still to be launched and progress on these should keep investment activity on a high gear in the near to medium term. Fixed investment grew by 13.3 percent in Recent Developments  |  5 world bank east asia and pacific economic update APRIL 2013 Thailand last year and contributed 2.9 percentage points to GDP growth of 6.4 percent. In both Malaysia and Thailand, gross investment boosted growth proportionately more than consumption did. Governments marshaled both fiscal and monetary policy to boost consumption and investment. Fiscal support came from central government deficits and more — off-budget spending, state-owned enterprise activity, and local government investment. Accommodative monetary conditions spurred credit growth, and not just from depository institutions but from the shadow banking system as well. Fiscal policy remained supportive of domestic demand, with most governments adopting expansionary fiscal policies in the year. Fiscal deficits (in percentage of GDP) generally increased last year from their levels in 2011 (Figure 4), although the size of the deficits remained a fraction of those at the height of the global financial crisis in 2009. In China, where the central government fiscal deficit was held to 1.5 percent of GDP , versus 1.8 percent of GDP in 2011, fiscal support came from higher local government spending. In Indonesia, the actual fiscal deficit, 1.8 percent of GDP , was narrower than the planned 2.2 percent of GDP . But energy subsidies rose to almost a third of total central government spending, reaching 3.7 percent of GDP in the year, from 3.4 percent in 2011. In Malaysia, fuel subsidies were also a major contributor to government spending in Malaysia at 2.7 percent of GDP . The fiscal deficit was 4.5 percent of GDP, only slightly lower than the 4.8 percent of GDP in 2011. In Thailand, spending on measures to boost consumption increased the fiscal deficit to 3.2 percent of GDP in 2012. The government’s rice pledging scheme, by which it buys rice from farmers at prices higher than the world market, has its costs: it could help push government debt toward the 60 percent-of-GDP statutory ceiling. Figure 4. Fiscal policy has been expansionary, Figure 5. Credit growth has been strong including through SOEs and off-budgets budget balance, in percent of GDP credit growth, real, seasonally-adjusted, in percent 0 35 30 -1 25 -2 20 15 -3 10 -4 5 0 -5 -5 Jan-07 Jun-07 Nov-07 Apr-08 Sep-08 Feb-09 Jul-09 Dec-09 May-10 Oct-10 Mar-11 Aug-11 Jan-12 Jun-12 Nov-12 -6 Vietnam Malaysia Thailand Philippines Indonesia China 2011 2012 2013 China Indonesia Malaysia Philippines Thailand Source: World Bank staff estimates. Source: World Bank staff estimates. Monetary policy continued to be accommodative. Most central banks cut policy rates in the year. Malaysia was the exception, staying on hold as robust domestic demand and strong credit growth offset concerns about external weakness. Vietnam cut rates the most, by 600 basis points between March and December. Bank credit remained anemic in Vietnam, however, barely growing 9 percent in the year, versus a target of 15 percent, spurring the central bank to slash rates another 100 basis points in March this year. Elsewhere, however, bank credit expanded robustly, particularly in China and Indonesia (Figure 5). In China, bank loans ” or off-balance sheet bank lending did not breach the RMB8.5 billion target for the year, but “social financing, expanded. Inflation remained generally under control in the region, decelerating on an annual basis in 2012 to half the rates the year before in China, Malaysia and Vietnam. Recently, though, prices have started to crawl 6  | Recent Developments a  fine balance back up, with headline inflation higher in the fourth quarter last year than in the third and higher in February than in January. In Indonesia, headline inflation accelerated to 5.9 percent in March. Although some of the recent increase in prices, which has been driven by a handful of food items, is expected to fade, inflation in 2013 may remain close to the top end of the central Bank’s 3.5–5.5% target band due to higher minimum wages, pass- through from currency movements, and reforms in some administered prices, principally electricity. External demand was a drag on growth in 2012 in most EAP economies, with the exception of the Philippines. Global imports by the European Union fell, from $2.4 to $2.3 trillion, while those by the United States and Japan remained essentially flat, at $2.3 and $0.9 trillion respectively. Imports by China, the world’s third largest importer after the European Union and the United States, rose the least (at 4.4 percent) in the three years since the global financial crisis, adding to global trade woes. Across the region, export growth rates fell to single-digits and net exports posted negative contributions to growth (Figure 6). In Malaysia’s open economy (with an export to GDP ratio exceeding 100 percent in most years), net exports deducted 3.8 percentage points from overall growth last year. In Indonesia, whose share of exports in GDP (25 percent) is much lower, but two thirds of that is commodities or commodity-based manufacturing, net exports deducted 1.5 percentage point from 2012 growth. The numbers confirm that the downturn in trade last year was broad, affecting both manufactures and commodities. Figure 6. Net exports deducted a few percentage Figure 7. Current account surpluses have declined, points from growth, except for the Philippines and Indonesia recorded a deficit net exports contribution to growth, in percentage points current account balance, in U.S. dollar billions 3 50 500 2 40 400 1 30 300 0 20 ASEAN 2011 -1 10 200 ASEAN 2012 -2 0 100 -3 -10 0 -4 -20 -5 -30 -100 Philippines Indonesia Thailand Malaysia 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2011 2012 China Malaysia Thailand Indonesia Philippines Source: Haver Analytics and World Bank staff estimates. Source: Haver Analytics and World Bank staff estimates. Current account surpluses fell in the region last year, the result of a weak external environment and strong domestic demand growth in the ASEAN-4 countries. The combined current account surplus in the ASEAN-4 contracted by $40 billion, or by 70 percent, in 2012 compared to 2011 (Figure 7). Most of this decline consisted of a $26 billion, or 3.0 percent of GDP, adjustment in Indonesia, reflecting a record trade deficit of $1.7 billion on weak external demand for the country’s coal, tin and palm oil commodity exports and strong growth of fuel imports supported by price subsidies. Among the region’s small economies, Mongolia’s current account deficit was a large 31 percent of GDP because of high foreign investments in mining, Lao’s was 16 percent, and Cambodia’s was 11.5 percent. In China, the current account surplus stabilized at 2.6 percent of GDP last year, following the sharp decline from a 2007 peak of 10.1 percent of GDP to 2.8 percent of GDP in 2011. The adjustment was largely due to a lower trade surplus and reflected the combined effect of weak external demand, strong domestic investment (which lifted imports), worse terms of trade, and a stronger real exchange rate. Recent Developments  |  7 world bank east asia and pacific economic update APRIL 2013 International reserve positions remained strong across the region, reflecting considerable capital inflows. Net FDI flows amounted to 1.6 percent of GDP in Indonesia. Net portfolio investment more than doubled to 6.4 percent of GDP in Malaysia and 1.0 percent of GDP Indonesia and increased by a third to 1.3 percent of GDP in Thailand. Net bank flows reversed to net inflow of 2.6 percent of GDP in Thailand from a net outflow of 2.2 percent of GDP the year before. China upped its international reserves by $128 billion; Malaysia, the Philippines and Thailand, by $6 billion each; and, Indonesia, by $3 billion. The reserves continue to serve as buffers against a possible deterioration in the external environment. Available data in the first quarter of the year indicate that external weakness may be abating, while domestic demand remains resilient. Recent trade data (Figure 8 and Figure 9), hold out some hope that the downturn in exports may have bottomed out. Caution remains warranted, though, in part because data for the first two months of the year reflect lunar year effects in East Asia with spikes in January and washouts in February. Countries in the region which are more deeply integrated in regional and global supply chains will gain the most from a rebound in global trade (Box 1). Meanwhile, indicators of domestic consumption and investment remain generally firm. In China, retail sales rose 10.4 percent year-on-year in the first two months of the year. Retail sales picked up 13.9 percent year-on-year in February in Indonesia from 8.2 percent in January. Retail sales averaged 21.7 percent growth in January-February this year in Thailand from 8.3 percent in the same period a year ago. Growth in car sales has cycled down in Thailand as the effects of the first car buyer incentive program—which spurred sales to an 80.9 percent growth last year—wind down. In contrast, car sales remain strong in the Philippines, with a 48 percent year-on-year growth in January and December, and in Indonesia, with 26.5 percent year-on-year growth in January and 19.4 percent in February. In China, fixed asset investment grew faster in January and February than in December last year. And construction investment is still growing, around 20 percent year-on-year in Thailand and the Philippines in January and 8 percent in Indonesia. Figure 8. Exports are starting to rebound although Figure 9. Imports are rapidly rising on the back of the momentum is uneven strong domestic demand export volumes, percentage change, 3-month over 3-month, seasonally import volumes, percentage change, 3-month over 3-month, seasonally adjusted annualized adjusted annualized 40 50 50 30 40 40 30 20 30 20 10 20 10 0 0 10 -10 -10 -20 0 -20 -30 -10 -30 May-12 Jul-12 Sep-12 Nov-12 Jan-13 May-12 Jul-12 Sep-12 Nov-12 Jan-13 China (rhs) USA Asia’s NIEs World ASEAN China Korea NIEs USA EAP excl. China Source: Haver Analytics and World Bank staff estimates. Source: Haver Analytics and World Bank staff estimates. Overall, the industrial production and Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) numbers—indicators of output and sentiment respectively—are generally positive. An uptick in external demand, or at least the signs of some stabilization in external demand, coupled with still-resilient domestic activity, may be showing up in the industrial production and Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) numbers. Industrial production rose 2.8 percent in January from December on a month-on-month seasonally-adjusted basis in the Philippines (an 18.5 percent 8  | Recent Developments a  fine balance Box 1. Value Added in Trade The recently-published OECD-WTO Trade in Value Added (TiVA) database allows the identification of origins of value added in country exports. Measuring trade flows in value-added terms provides a more accurate assessment of an economy’s position in global supply chains by eliminating the over-counting that occurs with complex cross-border production processes and by quantifying the value-added of both domestic production and trade partners. For example, while China’s gross export statistics record the full $178.96 shipping price of an iPhone, domestic value added is only $6.50, with the remainder accounted for intermediate goods and services imported from abroad.1 The origins of value added in exports by Japan, South Korea, China, and Indonesia in 2005 and 2009 are shown in Box Figure 1. Of the four countries, China and South Korea exhibit relatively high exports to GDP ratios and relatively deep integration into global supply chains. Japan and Indonesia, on the other hand, are less integrated into global supply chains, but for different reasons: Japan possesses integrated domestic production processes, which accounts for the low imported component in exports, whereas and Indonesia’s exports is increasingly dominated by unprocessed or semi-processed commodities, which require little in terms of imported inputs. While the export share of GDP for Japan, China, and Indonesia fell between 2005 and 2009—potentially due to the effects of the global financial crisis—South Korea exhibited not just an increase in its export share, but also a deeper integration into global supply chains. The analysis of sources of value added is a Box Figure 1. Value Added in Exports, Select EAP relatively new dimension to trade analysis, but Countries is already providing some important insights. in percent of GDP The analysis well underscores the links between 50 7 import and export performance, by demonstrating 4 5 40 the extent to which the exemplary export 4 4 5 5 5 4 performance of economies such as China and Imported Inputs 17 5 (share of exports) 6 30 7 9 15 South Korea is anchored in complex global supply Domestic Contents 15 chains. Countries that seek to curb imports of (share of exports) 13 7 20 various commodities, thus, may be inadvertently 64 60 64 82 10 85 limiting their export potential by discouraging the 71 87 85 entry of firms into such global supply chains. And 0 countries that have challenges in the logistics of Japan Korea, Rep. China Indonesia Indonesia China Korea, Rep. Japan import and exports may well exclude themselves Australasia & North America Europe Rest of World from such global supply chains and therefore Domestic limit trade’s contribution to growth. Source: OECD and WTO. 1 , Asian Development Bank Xing, Y, and Detert, N., 2010, “How the iPhone widens the United States trade deficit with the People’s Republic of China” Institute Working Paper No. 257 , December. year-on-year rate) and 1.3 percent in Indonesia (an 11.5 percent year-on-year rate). The year-on-year gains are more modest but still positive in Malaysia (4.5 percent) and Thailand (10.2 percent), although the month-on- month outturns have reversed, an indication that the boost from last year’s policy action is winding down (Figure 10). In China, the PMI, which fell to 50.4 in February (an index reading of 50 and above indicates expansion) from its two-year high of 52.4 percent in January, has bounced back 51.7 in March (Figure 11). In Indonesia, the Recent Developments  |  9 world bank east asia and pacific economic update APRIL 2013 Figure 10. The real sector rebound follows different Figure 11. PMIs are on the uptick patterns across the region industrial production, percentage change, 3-month over 3-month, seasonally diffusion index, greater than 50=expansion adjusted annualized 50 14 59 40 12 57 30 55 10 20 53 8 10 51 6 0 49 4 -10 47 -20 2 45 -30 0 43 Jul-12 Aug-12 Sep-12 Oct-12 Nov-12 Dec-12 Jan-13 Feb-13 Jan-10 Jun-10 Nov-10 Apr-11 Sep-11 Feb-12 Jul-12 Dec-12 China (rhs) Thailand Malaysia Philippines Indonesia Korea, Rep. Singapore China Indonesia Vietnam ASEAN World (excl. China) Source: Haver Analytics and World Bank staff estimates. Source: Haver Analytics and World Bank staff estimates. PMI picked up to 50.5 in February from 49.7 in January. In Vietnam, the PMI slid to 48.3 in February from 50.1 in January. Meanwhile, capital inflows continue to surge on restored investor confidence and less bank deleveraging globally. Gross capital flows to the region rebounded strongly to $46.8 billion in the first quarter of 2013, up 86.3 percent from a year ago (Figure 12 and Table 1). Equity flows more than doubled from $5.6 billion in the first quarter of 2012 to $13.2 billion in the first quarter of 2013. Banks loans increased 77 .6 percent, including from the United Kingdom, France, the Netherlands and Germany as well as from China, Japan and the Asian NIEs, reflecting less intense deleveraging. Bond flows increased 67 .5 percent, featuring public offerings in China and the ASEAN-4. Southeast Asia, including Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippines, overtook North Asia in initial public offering (IPO) issuance in the first quarter on strong investor appetite for the rapidly expanding economies. On a monthly basis, capital flows to EAP eased in February and March to a monthly average $11.7 billion after hitting a five-year record high $23 billion in January, but the January number includes an extraordinary $13 billion cumulative bond issuance. Figure 12. Capital flows to the region are on the Table 1. East Asia and Pacific: Capital Flows upsurge in U.S. dollar billions in U.S. dollar billions 50 Gross Equity Bond Bank Capital Flows Issues Issues Loans 40 2009 96.3 55.7 19.2 21.3 2010 144.3 87.3 26.3 30.7 30 2011 116.1 39.5 33.0 43.6 2012 139.9 49.5 49.6 40.9 20 Q1-09 15.5 6.5 4.5 4.4 Q1-10 19.4 7.4 6.8 5.2 10 Q1-11 33.9 9.4 9.5 14.9 Q1-12 25.1 5.6 10.8 8.7 0 Q1-09 Q1-10 Q1-11 Q1-12 Q1-13 Q1-13 46.8 13.2 18.1 15.5 Equity issue Bonds Bank Loans Gross Capital Flows Source: Dealogic and World Bank staff estimates. Source: Dealogic and World Bank staff estimates. 10  | Recent Developments a  fine balance The region’s financial markets remain solid. The regional stock market composite, the MSCI AC Far East (excluding Japan) Index, slid 0.7 percent in the first quarter this year, but it remains 15.2 percent higher than its 2012 low of May last year. By contrast, the global emerging market benchmark, MSCI Emerging Market Index, has lost 2.6 percent year-to-date and is only 12.8 percent higher than in May last year. The performance varies across markets in the region, with the Philippines (up 19.0 percent from December), Vietnam (18.7 percent), Indonesia (15.1 percent), and Thailand (14.0 percent) posting the largest gains. Bonds in the region are more mixed, with the 10-year local-currency government issues rising in the Philippines and Vietnam but falling in Indonesia and Thailand. The benchmark 10-year government bond yield has dropped the most (125 basis year- to-date) in the Philippines, which earned its first investment-grade credit rating ever in March (the new “BBB-“ credit rating from Fitch Ratings applies to the country’s foreign currency -denominated long-term debt). The yield has also dropped in Vietnam, by 90 basis points year-to-date, on solid demand for government bonds from banks, which have slowed lending. Meanwhile, the yield has increased by 38.5 basis points year-to-date in Indonesia, where headline inflation topped 5.9 percent in March. Currency markets are relatively stable with most exchange rates appreciating or depreciating nominally against the U.S. dollar by an average 0.5 percent since the end of last year. The Thai baht has appreciated the most, by 4.1 percent since end-December. Inflows into Thailand’s asset markets are quite large and continue to provide support to the currency. Recent Developments  |  11 world bank east asia and pacific economic update APRIL 2013 Outlook and Risks Global financial market conditions have greatly improved since mid-last year. Three policy factors have underpinned confidence in the financial markets: the extension of quantitative easing in the United States; the agreement on regional banking institutions in the European Union and the European Central Bank commitment to support the Euro; and the announcement of a higher inflation target in Japan. Gross capital flows to developing countries bounced back strongly in the second half last year, rising 17 percent from 2011 to a record $530 billion in 2012. Developing country bond spreads have declined by 86 basis points since June and are now well below their long-term average. Additionally, developing country stock markets have increased 9.8 percent since mid- last year. Recently, though, volatility following the Euro Area finance ministers’ decisions on support for Cyprus illustrates how fragile financial market confidence still is, and is likely to remain for considerable time to come, as developed countries reform their economies and financial systems. Although economic activity in high income economies is still weak, there are signs of a turnaround in real activity. GDP declined in the fourth quarter in most of the G-7 , dropping as much as -2.6 percent in the European Union, but the weakness appears to be easing. High-income country industrial production is now falling at a -2.2 percent annualized pace, compared to a 5.0 percent drop in the fourth quarter last year. Purchasing Managers Indices (PMIs) are on the rise and sentiment among German businesses reached an eleven-month high in February. Trade is also picking up in the high-income economies with exports expanding at a 5.6 annualized pace in January, including 7 .2 percent in the European Union. Meanwhile, output and sentiment remain strong in the developing countries. Industrial production in developing countries outside of China strengthened to an annualized pace of 4.6 percent in the three months through January from zero percent in October. PMIs in developing countries outside of China have also been rising and are now at their highest levels since April 2011. Imports in developing countries outside of China are expanding at a 20.1 percent annualized pace in January. Baseline projections for global growth are for a modest expansion of 2.4 percent in 2013, gradually strengthening to 3.1 percent in 2014, virtually unchanged from the outlook in December last year. For high-income countries, fiscal consolidation, high unemployment and still weak consumer and business confidence will continue to weigh in on activity in 2013, but growth should firm to 2.0 percent in 2014. For developing countries, improved financial conditions, a relaxation of monetary policy and somewhat stronger high-income growth will prompt an acceleration of growth to 5.4 percent this year and to 5.7 percent in 2014. The baseline outlook also envisions a recovery in global trade starting in 2013, with the volume of trade in goods and nonfactor services rising 5.8 percent in the year and 6.6 percent in 2014 from 3.1 percent in 2012. Our growth forecasts for EAP for 2013 and 2014 are roughly similar to those we made in December last year. We are lowering our forecasts for China and Indonesia but only very slightly—by a tenth of a percentage point in each country (Table 2). In Indonesia, the new forecast assumes continued strength in consumer spending but some moderation in real investment growth, from 9.6 percent in 2012 to 8.0 percent in 2013. We are upgrading our forecasts for Malaysia and Thailand, prompted by stronger outcomes in the fourth quarter last year in both countries. In Malaysia, a number of capital projects that contributed to the surge in investment in the first half of 2012 will continue to contribute a larger amount of value added to the economy in the near 12  | Outlook and Risks a  fine balance Table 2. East Asia and Pacific: GDP Growth Projections percent from a year earlier Changes from Dec-2012 Forecast Forecast forecast (in percentage points) 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2013 2014 East Asia 9.3 7.1 5.8 6.5 6.7 -0.1 +0.1 Developing East Asia 9.7 8.3 7.5 7.8 7.6 -0.1 0.0 China 10.4 9.3 7.8 8.3 8.0 -0.1 0.0 Indonesia 6.2 6.5 6.2 6.2 6.5 -0.1 -0.1 Malaysia 7.2 5.1 5.6 5.1 5.4 +0.1 +0.3 Philippines 7.6 3.9 6.6 6.2 6.4 0.0 0.0 Thailand 7.8 0.1 6.4 5.3 5.0 +0.3 +0.5 Vietnam 6.8 6.0 5.0 5.2 5.7 -0.3 0.0 Cambodia 6.0 7.1 7.3 7.0 7.0 +0.3 0.0 Fiji 0.1 1.9 2.1 2.2 2.3 0.0 0.0 Lao, PDR 8.5 8.0 8.3 7.6 7.7 +0.1 +0.2 Mongolia 6.4 17.5 12.3 13.0 11.5 -3.2 -0.7 Myanmar 5.3 5.5 6.3 6.5 6.6 0.0 0.0 Papua New Guinea 7.6 9.0 8.0 4.0 7.5 0.0 0.0 Solomon Islands 7.8 10.5 3.7 4.0 4.0 0.0 +0.7 Timor Leste 9.5 10.6 10.6 10.4 10.2 +0.4 +0.2 Memo: Dev. East Asia exc. China 7.0 4.5 6.2 5.7 6.0 0.0 +0.2 Memo: ASEAN 8.0 4.5 5.4 5.4 5.7 Assumptions about the global environment World 4.0 2.8 2.3 2.4 3.1 -0.1 0.0 High-income countries 2.9 1.7 1.3 1.3 2.0 -0.2 0.0 Developing countries 7.5 6.0 4.9 5.4 5.7 -0.1 -0.1 Source: World Bank data and staff estimates. term. In Thailand, the recovery last year from the historic floods in 2011 will continue into this year. We are keeping our outlook for the Philippines unchanged but reducing our forecast for Vietnam. In the Philippines, the fundamentals remain strong, policy responses have been appropriate so far, and reform efforts by the government appear sustainable. In Vietnam, growth is likely to remain moderate in the year given structural problems in the financial sector and in state-owned enterprises that have yet to be decisively addressed. The prospects for the region’s small economies have markedly improved, although last year’s strong performance will not likely be matched this year. We are upgrading our forecasts made in December last year for Cambodia and Lao. Most output gains in mining would have been realized from the completion of the new gold mine project in Lao PDR last year, but the Nam Ngum 5 and the Theu Hinboun hydropower expansion projects will also start commercial operations this year, providing some lift to growth. In Cambodia, a likely stabilization in high-income country conditions should support further improvements in garment production and exports. Projections for Mongolia are more difficult to pin down, as recent growth has to a considerable extent been driven by the progress in major mining projects. The government forecast of an 18.5 percent growth this year will be hard to achieve, in light of the uncertainty surrounding the start date of production in the Oyu Tolgoi mine. In Myanmar, we expect the reform momentum and continued improvements in the international environment to drive growth gradually to 6.5 percent in 2013/14 and 6.6 percent in 2014/15. The government recently enacted a new foreign investment law, removed licensing requirements on imports and exports, and cleared the country’s arrears with the ADB and the World Bank, resulting in the resumption of lending by the two institutions to Myanmar. We are upgrading our outlook for Timor-Leste for 2013 and 2014 to match the government projections. Public spending dominates growth, contributing 7 percentage points to Outlook and Risks  |  13 world bank east asia and pacific economic update APRIL 2013 nonoil GDP growth of 9.5 percent in 2010, according to new national accounts data; and spending for 2012–16 has increased nearly 10 percent in real terms. Meanwhile, the outlook for the Pacific Island economies are not much changed from historical growth levels: Fiji, 2.2 percent in 2013; Kiribati, 2.5 percent; Marshall Islands, 2.0 percent; Samoa, 2.0 percent; and, Vanuatu, 3.2 percent. Movements in some high-income currencies could affect trade and investment flows in the region in the short-term. Japan’s policy effort to support growth—featuring the adoption of a higher inflation target last January and the switch toward an open-ended asset purchase program starting in 2014—has led to a depreciation of the Japanese yen by 19.7 percent in real effective terms from July last year to March. The weaker yen is mirrored in the region’s currencies’ strength, notably Thailand (8.8 percent real effective appreciation since July), Korea (6.7 percent), and Singapore (4.8 percent). Continued depreciation of the yen could affect the dynamics of trade in manufactures in the region in the short-term, as Japan is the region’s largest source of imports and its fourth largest export market (Figure 13). Competitors of Japanese exporters in third markets, principally Korea (electronics, motor vehicles, and scientific equipment), may experience competitive pressures in the short term. On the other hand, suppliers of parts and components to Japan in regional production networks, like Thailand (motor vehicle parts) and to a lesser extent the Philippines (electronics and machinery parts), may benefit from advances made by Japanese exporters in global markets and gain even more from potentially larger Japanese FDI. More general, if Japan manages to escape its deflation and rekindle growth with the measures taken, all developing economies in the region would benefit through higher exports. The external headline risks to the regional outlook are similar to those of the past few years, but the probability that the worst-case scenarios will materialize has declined. The likelihood of a serious crisis of confidence in the Euro area, which could trigger a freezing up of financial markets bloc-wide, has declined significantly. A series of national and European Union-wide efforts to reduce fiscal deficits, to initiate pan- European schemes for a banking union and foreign rescue funds and to strengthen regional institutions has helped reduce headline risks. Moreover, the European Central Bank’s commitment to do whatever it takes to preserve the Euro has reduced chances on a worst-case outcomes. Fiscal policy uncertainty remains in the U.S., with a breach of the debt ceiling and full sequestration being clearly downside risks. But the worst case scenario—one involving a loss of confidence in the U.S. dollar—now seems unlikely. Unconventional policy responses by the advanced economies to persistent bouts of economic weakness have, however, generated a set of subsidiary risks to emerging economies. Near zero interest rates and new and protracted rounds of quantitative easing in the United States, European Union, and Japan are inducing large capital inflows into emerging markets including in East Asia. Portfolio flows have close to tripled in Indonesia in the past year on a net inflow basis and have doubled in Malaysia, reaching as much as 6.4 percent of GDP in the latter. The risk of an asset boom in the markets, in which global liquidity spills over is emerging, with asset valuations moving ahead of fundamentals and possibly a correction down the road. Stock market indices have surged by 56 percent in the Philippines and by 48 percent in Thailand in the past 14 months alone. Large capital inflows are also exerting upward pressure on the region’s currencies. Most policy responses to contain excessive inflows have drawbacks on macroeconomic and financial stability. Unsterilized intervention creates excessive liquidity and feeds inflation, whereas sterilization keeps interest rates high and attracts more inflows, while capital controls are leak-prone and distort capital flows. China’s internal rebalancing poses continued risk to the regional outlook. The government has set an indicative GDP growth rate target of 7.5 percent for the coming years. There are, however, domestic headwinds buffeting the government-managed slowdown: risks in the property sector, in the financial system, and in 14  | Outlook and Risks a  fine balance local government finances. A sharper than expected slowdown in China would affect East Asia in particular (Figure 14), reducing the region’s aggregate GDP by 1.3 percent should the growth of investment in China drop by 5.0 percentage points. It would drag down exports in the rest of the region and would particularly affect commodity exporters—suppliers to China’s investment-heavy growth model—through both lower Chinese commodity import volumes and softer international commodity prices. However, government-influenced investment and urbanization-related reforms are likely to keep growth in China above target in the next two years. Moreover, risks in the property sector, in the financial system, and in local government finances appear to be manageable. Strong credit growth will take some pressure off troubled property developers. The financial system is still strong enough overall to absorb potential losses, including in the shadow banking system. And, the central government has the fiscal buffers to assume ownership of problem assets of indebted local governments. Figure 13. Countries supplying Japan with parts Figure 14. Prospects are vulnerable to an abrupt and components may benefit from a weakening Yen decline in Chinese investment trade with Japan, as share of total real exchange rate appreciation, change in real level of GDP, in percent trade with world, in percent in percent 16 12 0 8 -0.2 12 -0.4 4 -0.6 8 0 -0.8 -4 -1.0 4 -8 -1.2 0 -12 -1.4 THA PHL IDN AUS MYS KOR CHN HKG CHL NZL CHN Other EAP ECA LAC MENA SAS SSA Trade exposure to Japan (lhs) REER appreciation Sep ‘12–Feb ‘13 (rhs) Source: World Bank staff estimates. Source: World Bank, Global Economic Prospects, January 2013. Note: The simulations attempt to measure the effect on GDP of a precipitous 5 percentage point decline in investment by China. Though the developing economies of East Asia are generally well-prepared to absorb external shocks, an emerging concern is the risk of over-heating in some of the larger economies. The latest numbers suggest that if global demand continues to revive, the major East Asian economies may be reaching the limits of their current productive capacity. Comparisons of actual against potential output indicate that the output gap—a measure of how much slack there is in the economy—has virtually been closed or has narrowed last year, although to varying degrees, in China, Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines (Table 3). Actual output will Table 3. East Asia and Pacific: Output Gap actual GDP minus potential GDP, in percent of potential GDP, - = slack China Indonesia Malaysia Philippines Thailand Vietnam 2010 2.01 0.06 -0.81 0.52 0.52 -0.15 2011 1.94 0.73 -0.32 -0.36 -2.99 -0.29 2012 /e 0.74 1.19 -0.17 0.01 -2.22 -0.56 2012 0.65 1.19 0.24 0.48 -0.84 -0.81 2013 /f 0.06 1.40 0.77 0.73 0.75 -0.71 2014 /f -0.48 1.70 0.85 0.97 1.81 -0.60 Source: World Bank staff estimates. e = estimate, in December 2012 f = forecast, in April 2013 Outlook and Risks  |  15 world bank east asia and pacific economic update APRIL 2013 likely outpace potential in Thailand this year if the forecast GDP growth rate of 5.3 percent is achieved. This implies that governments may have overplayed fiscal and monetary policy last year. Continued demand-boosting measures may now be counterproductive. Countercyclical demand policies have helped sustain growth, but they may now risk stoking inflationary pressures and amplifying the credit and asset price risks that are emerging in the context of strong capital inflows into the region. Inflation rates had fallen last year, until the third quarter in China, Thailand and Vietnam and until the fourth quarter in Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines, but, with the exception of Thailand, they are clearly all cycling up early this year (Figure 15). In China, although the headline rate remains under the central bank target of 3.5 percent, price pressures are mounting. The inflation momentum reached a 3.6 percent annualized rate in the three months to February, the highest since October 2011, and 3.3 percent in the three months to March. In Malaysia and Thailand, currency appreciation combined with broadly stable commodity prices has helped curb inflationary pressures so far, despite expansionary fiscal policies. In Indonesia, inflation has recently increased rapidly, with the headline rate reaching 5.9 percent year-on-year in March, and the inflation momentum accelerating to a 7 .8 percent annualized rate in the three months to March. Much of this recent increase has been Figure 15. Inflation remains in check across the region but price pressures are building-up driven by a handful of food items which have CPI inflation, 3-month over 3-month, seasonally-adjusted annualized rate been subjected to trade restrictions, alongside a 9 35 rise in administered electricity prices. While these 8 factors should prove temporary, with food price 30 7 pressures in particular likely to abate following 25 6 policy responses to the recent price increases and 20 5 the beginning of the harvest season, there is a risk 4 15 of second-round effects filtering into inflation from 3 10 cost-push pressures due to the relatively weak 2 Rupiah, higher minimum wages and the possibility 1 5 of additional energy subsidy reforms. In Vietnam, 0 0 inflation accelerated to double digit rates in the last Jan-11 Jul-11 Jan-12 Jul-12 Jan-13 China Indonesia Malaysia Philippines months of 2012 following a significant fall-off earlier Thailand Vietnam (rhs) reflecting stabilization measures. Source: Haver Analytics and World Bank staff estimates. Monetary easing and the fiscal stimulus since the global financial crisis, coupled with surging international capital flows from global liquidity, has resulted in the accumulation of debt in the region. General government debt has expanded from 41.2 percent of GDP in 2007 to 53 percent in 2012 in Malaysia, from 38.3 percent to 44.2 percent in Thailand, and from 19.6 percent to 22.2 percent in China. More significant than the growth of government debt has been the expansion in corporate and household debt (Figure 16). Combined non-financial corporate and household debt has grown from 113.6 percent of GDP in 2007 to 126.4 percent in 2012 in Malaysia. Non-financial corporate debt is now 126.4 percent of GDP in China, up from 113.6 percent five years ago. And household debt is now 63.4 percent of GDP in Thailand, up more than 15 percentage points from 2007 , and 29.2 percent of GDP in China, up more than ten percentage points from 2007 . Meanwhile, external debt is now relatively high for some of the region’s small economies (Figure 17). This buildup in debt warrants careful monitoring of domestic credit creation and cross-border debt flows, and where appropriate, use of macro-prudential measures in the financial system. Beyond the risks affecting the region as a whole, EAP economies face idiosyncratic risks. In Indonesia, an erosion of consumer real purchasing power through higher inflation, higher consumer and investor borrowing 16  | Outlook and Risks a  fine balance Figure 16. The sum of general government, Figure 17. External debt is high in Mongolia, Papua non-financial corporate and household debt now New Guinea and Lao PDR exceeds 150 percent of GDP in Malaysia, Thailand, and China debt, in percent of GDP debt, in percent of GDP Lebanon Panama Indonesia Mongolia Zimbabwe Montenegro Papua New Guinea Maldives China Bulgaria Serbia Bhutan Laos Sudan Thailand Mauritania Sao Tome & Principe Kyrgyz Rep. Cape Verde Malaysia Ukraine Moldova Romania 0 50 100 150 200 0 30 60 90 120 150 180 General government Non-financial corporations Households Source: World Bank staff estimates based on IMF and BIS data. Source: World Bank staff estimates based on IMF and BIS data. Note: Excludes financial sector debt. costs from tightened policy, weaker commodity markets, and regulatory uncertainties and uncertainties related with the 2014 elections may all negatively affect private investment spending. A halving of investment growth to 5.0 percent in 2013 would reduce GDP growth by one percentage point. In Malaysia, lower international commodity prices would reduce export earnings; and, post-election fiscal consolidation could disrupt the growth momentum. The Philippines is concerned with asset bubbles in the stock market and in the housing sector. Vietnam faces several downside risks: core inflation is still high at 11 percent; foreign reserves are still low by international standards; asset quality in credit institutions is worsening; public debt could rise sharply if some contingent liabilities in the banking sector and SOEs are realized; and delayed implementation of restructuring of banks, SOEs, and public investment will could affect investors’ confidence. Outlook and Risks  |  17 world bank east asia and pacific economic update APRIL 2013 Policy Considerations Policy makers in developing EAP have sucessfully navigated the global financial crisis and maintained high growth. There are, however, a number of short- and medium-term challenges that need to be addressed. Policy makers need to strike the right balance between managing the near-term risks and sustaining and increasing inclusive growth in the medium-term by enhancing the underlying productive capacity—human and physical—of these economies. For managing short-term risks, three areas of policy are relevant. First, as the global economy recovers, countries where output gaps are closing, inflationary pressures are rising, asset markets are heating up, credit growth is surging, and debt is quickly building up, could gradually withdraw policy stimulus. For countries that show signs of inflationary pressures, it would be a good time for policy buffers. Second, several countries in the East Asia region need to manage renewed strong capital inflows. Maintaining an appropriate macroeconomic stance and sufficient flexibility in the exchange rate and applying macroprudential measures to ensure these flows do not fuel asset bubbles are priorities. The bulk of capital flows into China and Indonesia are still in the form of FDI. But portfolio flows are sizable in Malaysia, comprising 6.4 percent of GDP in 2012 on a net basis, up from 2.9 percent of GDP in 2011, leaving the economy vulnerable to asset price risks and flow reversals. In Thailand, bank flows have expanded significantly, comprising 2.6 percent of GDP in 2012 in net terms, twice the size of portfolio flows into the country. Consequently, the Thai authorities would need to be aware of the risk of rapid credit expansion on the back of those flows. Third, countries in the region have to remain prepared for possible disruptions in the global economy. Commodity export dependent countries, some of which are in East Asia, would in particular be well advised to prepare for possible disruptions in global growth. Rebuilding policy buffers for fiscal and monetary policy action when needed would pay off, notably for those countries that currently show some signs of overheating. A good example of that is the Philippines, where the government is gradually rebuilding the tax base through administrative reforms, which increased from 12.3 percent of GDP in 2011 to 12.9 percent last year. Recent passages of the long-awaited “sin tax” reforms will further strengthen revenues and increase the country’s fiscal space in case of need. The challenge that the developing countries of East Asia face in the medium-term is to ensure that growth is sufficiently inclusive. In 2012, the number of people living under PPP$2 a day was 512 million. A decade earlier in 2002, the number of poor was 959 million. This means that the number of poor (less than PPP$2 per day) in the developing countries of EAP has gone down by about half a billion. While many of those who have risen out of poverty still remain vulnerable, nearly 600 million are now in what might be considered the lower middle-class and another 200 million are solidly in the middle class. Given the region’s growth dynamism, the middle class in East Asia is likely to grow dramatically in absolute terms in the coming decade, and it is likely to be largely urban. The challenge is to ensure that growth is sufficiently inclusive, so that inequality does not rise too fast, that lagging regions and segments of society share in the region’s increasing prosperity, and that the middle class grows equally as a share of the population. 18  |  Policy Considerations a  fine balance For sustaining and increasing inclusive growth in the medium-term, the underlying productive capacity—human and physical—has to be increased, and that means, first and foremost, investments both in infrastructure and in skills. Since the Asian financial crisis, investment in physical capital has declined significantly in most of middle-income EAP . On average in the past decade, the levels of investment have remained below the median for all middle-income countries (27 .6 percent of GDP in 2000–11) in the Philippines (20.4 percent of GDP), Malaysia (23 percent), Thailand (26 percent) and Indonesia (26.3 percent). In the Philippines, lagging infrastructure development is a long-standing impediment to private investment. And in Indonesia, where aggregate investment has now recovered to its levels in the mid-1990’s, the public investment ratio remains among the lowest in the region and infrastructure gaps are cited in most business surveys as major constraints to greater private activity. Raising the levels of investment would raise growth prospects in developing EAP . The focus differs across the middle-income economies. In Indonesia, an open investment and trade regime will make it more attractive to foreign investors. Malaysia is currently boosting investment through large-scale projects under the Economic Transformation Program. But wide ranging structural reforms remain necessary to sustain investment levels. In the Philippines, catching up on government infrastructure spending will provide the fiscal spark that is still missing in the country’s growth path, although infrastructure spending is gearing up recently: in 2012 it was equivalent to 2.4 percent of GDP , up from 1.6 percent of GDP in 2011. In Thailand, rebuilding manufacturing facilities and public infrastructure, following recent disasters, is necessary to restore the country’s productive base. Pursuing productive investment is as important as raising the level of investment. Investment efficiency, measured in terms of the investments needed for an increase in GDP , has deteriorated in the last decade in Malaysia, the Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam (Figure 18). In all cases, countries have to emphasize quality investment. In China, measures of the efficiency of investment did not change markedly in the 2000s, but has deteriorated in recent years. The country’s quality investment could well constitute the core of the internal rebalancing effort. As China’s policymakers de-emphasize investment and seek a greater reliance on consumer demand for growth, they must ensure that the investment that is pursued is productive and efficient. In Figure 18. Investment efficiency—measured by Figure 19. Productivity growth has stagnated since incremental capital output ratios (ICORs)—has mid-last decade deteriorated, except in Indonesia ICOR = change in capital stock, over the change in output; total factor productivity , growth, in percent increase = investment is less efficient 8 6.0 3.5 7 5.8 3.0 6 5.6 2.5 5.4 5 5.2 2.0 4 5.0 1.5 3 4.8 1.0 2 4.6 1 4.4 0.5 0 4.2 0 China Indonesia Malaysia Philippines Thailand Vietnam 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 1990–99 2000–09 China (lhs) Indonesia Malaysia Philippines Thailand Vietnam Source: World Bank staff estimates. Source: World Bank staff estimates. Policy Considerations  |  19 world bank east asia and pacific economic update APRIL 2013 Vietnam, further rationalization of the state owned enterprises (SOE) sector should help improve investment project selectivity even if it scaled back aggregate investment spending. Beyond raising the level and quality of investment, the region must regain its focus on improving productivity. Higher total factor productivity remains the most sustainable source of faster growth as the contributions of investment and higher labor participation eventually diminish. But productivity gains, which generally improved in middle-income EAP in the aftermath of the Asian financial crisis, have either declined or stagnated since the middle of the last decade (Figure 19). At its core, raising productivity will require continued reforms in the region’s product and factor markets, improvements in governance and in the business climate, and investment in infrastructure and human development. 20  |  Policy Considerations WORLD BANK EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC ECONOMIC UPDATE APRIL 2013 A Fine Balance