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Economy
US slowdown hits Asian economies
By Nick Beams
2 June 2001
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The downturn in the United States, where the estimated annual
growth rate in the first quarter has been cut from 2 percent to
1.3 percent, is starting to have a significant impact on the once
miracle economies of East Asia.
Across the region reports are coming in of falling exports,
cuts in manufacturing and declining growth rates. According to
the chief economist at UBS Warburg in Hong Kong, the overall effect
of the slowdown in the US economy, which accounts for 25 percent
of the region's exports, has been brutal.
The figures for the first three months of this year give a
clear indication of the damage so far, amid fears that much worse
may be to come.
In the year to April, exports dropped 11.3 percent in Taiwan,
10 percent in Thailand, 9.9 percent in Korea and 2.4 percent in
Hong Kong.
The South Korean economy, considered to be the strongest in
the region, grew only 3.7 percent in the first quarter, compared
with 8.8 percent for the year 2000, and 12.6 percent for the corresponding
quarter last year. The International Monetary Fund has cut its
forecast for Korean growth in 2001 from 6.5 percent to 3.5 percent.
Malaysia, where electronics account for 59 percent of total
exports, has been badly affected by the bursting of the high-tech
bubble in the US. The economy grew by 3.1 percent in the first
quarter of this year, compared to 8.3 percent growth in the year
2000.
In Indonesia, first quarter growth fell to 4 percent, compared
to 4.8 percent last year, and the government statistics bureau
expects the economy to slow further in the second quarter. In
Thailand Prime Minister Thaksin maintains a growth rate of 5 percent
is possible, but the IMF predicts 3 percent.
The Philippines' growth rate has fallen to its lowest level
in two years2.5 percent compared to the rate of 3.8 percent
in the previous quarter. Year-on-year growth in manufacturing,
which accounts for about a quarter of the economy, fell to 2.4
percent in the first quarter from a rate of 4.4 percent for the
final quarter last year. The main reason was the decline in shipments
of semiconductors and computer equipment to the US and Japan,
the country's two largest markets.
In Hong Kong the growth rate for the first quarter fell to
2.5 percent compared to 6.9 percent in the previous quarter and
14.1 percent a year earlier. Singapore, which expanded rapidly
last year, recorded a growth rate of 4.5 percent in the first
three months of this year compared to 11 percent in the previous
quarter.
One of the most significant expressions of the impact of the
US decline is the figures for the Taiwan economy. The growth rate
for the first quarter fell to just 1.06 percentthe lowest
in 26 yearsafter exports slumped by 17 percent. The official
forecast is for a growth of 4 percent this year, but this is considered
optimistic.
While the East Asian economies are being squeezed by the slowdown
in the US, the situation in Japan goes from bad to worse.
Figures published earlier this week showed that industrial
production fell by 1.7 percent in April compared to a month earlier,
lifting the fall in the past four months to an annual rate of
decline of 20 percent. Unemployment rose to 4.8 percent (just
below the 4.9 percent record it reached last December) and spending
by wage-earners was 4.4 percent down compared to a year ago.
And there are no signs of a turn around. On the contrary, with
the major Japanese banks weighed down with bad debts, estimates
of the country's long-term potential growth rate have fallen to
1-1.5 percent compared to almost 4 percent in the 1980s.
Moreover, there does not seem to be any alleviation of the
bad debt problem. According to figures released by the Financial
Supervisory Agency (FSA) this week, the level of bad loans for
the 16 biggest banks was 11,600 billion yen ($95.8 billion) at
the end of March. While this was 1,000 billion yen lower than
at the end of September 2000, the banks had written off 4,400
billion yen in the intervening period. In other words, while the
worst debts were being written off, the banks discovered 3,400
billion yen worth of new bad loans.
The FSA commissioner said the increase in the problem loans
reflected weakness in the general economy during the past
fiscal year and deteriorating financial health of the debts
as well as the introduction of stricter guidelines on loan assessments.
In addition to the problems created by the US slowdown and
the continued stagnation of Japan, so-called emerging
economies are going to be affected by a downturn in international
capital flows as a result of the financial turbulence in Argentina
and Turkey, both of which have been on IMF bailout programs.
A report by the Institute of International Finance, an association
of 320 of the world's largest banks and financial institutions,
said private capital flows to emerging markets this
year would drop to their lowest level since 1992, falling to $140
billion from $168 billion last year. The institute said economic
growth in emerging markets would fall to 3.5 percent
this year from more than 5.5 percent last year.
It warned of further financial turbulence if the US trade deficit
continued to remain high and the US economy did not return to
higher levels of growth. A sharp and disorderly adjustment
in exchange rates with the potential to disrupt markets and inhibit
capital flows remains possible, the report said.
See Also:
Economic slowdown in euro
zone
[26 May 2001]
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