East Asia Update November 2004 November 2004 Steering a Steady Course Special Focus: Strengthening the Investment Climate in East Asia East Asia and Pacific Region The World Bank CONTENTS East Asia and Pacific regional overview................................................1 1. Introduction.........................................................................................................1 2. East Asia � at the peak of the cycle?.................................................................6 Growth � securing the path to sustained expansion........................................6 Poverty � down by 250 million in five years...................................................8 3. The international and regional environment ...............................................11 Developed country growth � the pause that refreshes?.................................12 China � what kind of landing?.......................................................................13 Commodity cycles and the oil price shock....................................................16 Box 1. Managing commodity windfall gains........................................21 Trade policy developments ..........................................................................22 Box 2. The end of quotas on garment and textiles trade.......................23 Capital markets and global imbalances ........................................................23 4. Domestic trends and policy challenges...........................................................27 Fiscal policy..................................................................................................28 Corporate sector - trends and reforms...........................................................29 Financial sector...............................................................................................30 Country Sections .............................................................................33 Appendix Tables..................................................... .... ............46 Special Focus: Strengthening the investment climate in East Asia .................54 Key Indicators Tables.............................................................................................63 This Regional Update was prepared by Milan Brahmbhatt, Lead Economist, East Asia PREM, with the assistance of Antonio Ollero, and Nancy Mensah, drawing on inputs and comments from country economists and sector specialists throughout the East Asia and Pacific Region of the World Bank. The report was prepared under the general guidance of Homi Kharas, Chief Economist, and Jemal-ud-din Kassum, Regional Vice President, East Asia and Pacific Region. EASTASIAANDPACIFICREGIONALOVERVIEW Introduction the accountability of politicians to citizens - has been tremendously strengthened through genuinely competitive 2004 has turned out to be a remarkable year for elections for the presidency, the legislature and regional East Asia on several dimensions.1 Economic growth is governments, contested by political parties that seem � by expected to top 7 percent for the region overall, while East Asian standards - relatively cohesive and based on among its developing economies it should reach near 8 differentiated political programs and ideas. A free press percent, the strongest since the regional financial crisis, and a vigorous civil society have emerged, providing and more than one percentage point higher than we had greater scrutiny and transparency over government expected at this time a year ago. Exports have been actions. At the global level Indonesia emerges as the buoyant since late 2002, supported by unexpectedly world's third largest democracy and � not less important � strong recovery in the developed world, cyclical rebound its largest Muslim majority democracy. in the global high tech industry and a surge in intra- regional trade, led by booming exports from the rest of Yet, amid these triumphs, recent data also East Asia to China. Uncertainties about the future of the suggest that the cyclical recovery in East Asia has peaked multilateral trading system - from which East Asia has and that activity is shifting or has already shifted into profited perhaps more than any other developing region � lower gear, while a number of cross-currents and risks appeared to diminish as WTO members agreed a noted in earlier editions of the World Bank's East Asia negotiating framework for the Doha Round. Importantly, Update have intensified, some without and some within the driving forces of the recovery have also been the region. In a word, the environment facing East Asia is evolving, as late 2003 and early 2004 saw the first robust more uncertain. and really widespread rebound in East Asian fixed Some of these risks are discussed in more detail investment spending since the crisis, underpinned by later in the report. Perhaps the one of most concern is the continued gradual improvements in the profitability and steep spike in world oil prices, which will reduce incomes balance sheets of corporations and financial institutions. among the majority of economies in the region that are At some point this year or next, we estimate that net energy importers, as well as among the developed the number of people living on less than $2 a day in East nations which comprise Emerging East Asia's major Asia will fall below one third of the population. As extra-regional export markets � the United States, Japan recently as 1999 that proportion was 50 percent. That is, and Europe. Affected by oil prices, as well as by a variety around 300 million people will have escaped from of domestic factors, growth in the developed world shifted poverty in the years of recovery since the financial crisis. to a lower pace in the second quarter of 2004, most Perhaps most strikingly, this is a time not only of notably in Japan, and to a lesser extent in the U.S., while economic and social progress in East Asia, but also of monthly indicators suggested softening activity in Europe remarkable political advances. This year saw a sweep of in the third quarter. Overlaid on the growth pause in the legislative and presidential elections right across the developed world is the likelihood of another cyclical region, including in Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia, downturn in the global high tech industry, a concern for Korea, Philippines and Taiwan (China). Most recently East Asia which is now the leading location for some 155 million voters � more than 80 percent of the manufacturing and assembly in this industry. East Asian electorate � participated in Indonesia's first ever direct decision makers are also giving much attention to the presidential elections, resulting in the peaceful transition outlook for China. While efforts to slow China's of authority from sitting president Megawati Sukarnoputri investment boom have had some success, a re- to the winner, president-elect Susilo Bambang acceleration could increase the likelihood of a later, more Yudhoyono. severe `hard-landing' that could knock away a key source of new export demand in the region over the next few The Indonesian elections cap what has been in years. Even with a `soft landing,' the growth of East essence a genuine political revolution over the last five Asian exports to China will decline from their recent years, albeit � thankfully � a largely peaceful one, soaring pace, a change that seems to have already begun. bringing about a transition from a highly centralized political system with autocratic powers concentrated in The consensus view remains that the recent the hands of the president, to a representative and slackening of activity in the developed world will prove a substantially decentralized one. Political accountability � temporary pause in a more sustained expansion, while China will continue to expand at rates that � while lower than recently � will remain high by world standards. 1 Nevertheless, the apparently remorseless rise in oil prices East Asia comprises Developing East Asia (China, has heightened worries about a more serious downturn. Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Thailand, Vietnam and These concerns are exacerbated by worries about large some smaller economies) and four Newly Industrialized global macroeconomic imbalances, in particular record Economies or NIEs (Hong Kong, Korea, Singapore and sized and growing U.S. current account deficits and the Taiwan, China). East Asia and Pacific Regional Overview 2 foreign financing they require, notably from the current reform and faster third-party arbitration can help establish account surplus economies of Japan and Emerging East sounder rules-of-the-game. Asia. Unpredictable changes in investor sentiment and risk appetite could result at some point in interest rate The priorities vary by country, but the potential hikes, exchange rate swings and a sharp adjustment in for policy reform to assist in the investment recovery U.S. aggregate demand and imports � a recession. That seems very real in most countries. An overview of the would be a costly outcome for all. Bank's recent surveys and analysis in this area is presented in the Special Focus section at the end of this What should the focus of policy makers be in report, entitled "Strengthening the Investment Climate in this sort of uncertain and potentially volatile East Asia". Developments at the country level are also environment? Rather than fretting too much about a discussed in the "Country Sections" towards the back of cyclical slowdown that is inevitable to some extent, the the report, while fuller Country Briefs are available at the focus is better placed on nurturing the emerging recovery website associated with this report.2 in private investment. This would enhance the supply capacity of the economy and also has advantages from a East Asia - at the peak of the cycle? near-term demand perspective. So far the regional � Economic growth in East Asia is expected to reach recovery has been driven by exports and consumer 7.1 percent in 2004, over one percentage point higher demand. Going forward, however, export growth may be than in 2003. (Table 1). The strength in activity has been crimped by the cyclical factors and imbalances noted widespread, encompassing most of the diverse above. Consumption has been boosted in part by rapid economies in the region. Fixed investment spending has growth in credit to households, but, as recent experience also picked up in recent quarters, not only in fast in Korea and Hong Kong (China) shows, this has its growing economies like China and Vietnam, where it has dangers too. A key issue for policy makers, then, is to been strong for some time, but also in the middle and nurture the recent investment recovery in the region by high income economies, where it has been erratic and strengthening the investment climate, so that the recovery weak in the wake of the 1997-98 financial crisis and the is sustained through the present period of global 2001 high tech crash. Annualized quarter-on-quarter uncertainties and cyclical slowdown. growth in the second quarter of 2004 dipped to an A recent series of Investment Climate Surveys average of only 3-4 percent among the 8 South East undertaken by the World Bank helps document the key Asian and Newly Industrialized Economies. Regional constraints and problems faced by firms and other growth is expected to decelerate in 2005, although businesses in East Asia. One key finding is that in many reaching a relatively robust pace near 6 percent. economies uncertainty about domestic macroeconomic conditions or government policies is an important Table 1. East Asia Economic Growth problem for firms, and more global uncertainty further 2002 2003 2004 2005 raises the premium on credible, transparent and East Asia 6.0 5.9 7.1 5.9 predictable domestic policies. For those East Asian Develop. E. Asia 6.9 7.8 7.9 7.0 countries with high public debt levels, like the S.E. Asia 4.6 5.3 5.8 5.5 Philippines, an example would be a pre-announced Indonesia 4.3 4.5 4.9 5.4 program to reduce debt, thereby bringing down the Malaysia 4.1 5.3 7.0 6.0 sovereign risk premium and borrowing rates for all Philippines 4.4 4.5 5.4 4.5 private investors. Many specific actions can be taken Thailand 5.4 6.8 6.4 5.8 immediately to both cut the costs of doing business and to Transition Econ. reduce corruption and arbitrariness by simplifying China 8.3 9.3 9.2 7.8 business regulation, cutting red tape and improving the Vietnam 7.0 7.2 7.2 7.5 Small Economies 2.6 4.2 4.1 3.4 transparency of procedures. There are likely to be high Newly Ind. Econ. 4.7 3.0 5.9 4.4 dividends from reforms to improve cost effective delivery Korea 7.0 3.1 4.9 4.4 of infrastructure and logistics services, as well as to 3 other NIEs 2.8 2.9 6.9 4.4 improve labor market outcomes through greater flexibility Japan -0.3 2.5 4.3 1.8 and better institutions for upgrading worker skills. World Bank East Asia Region; Oct. 2004. Consensus Forecasts Continued efforts to address remaining private sector for NIEs balance sheet vulnerabilities through financial and corporate restructuring remain worthwhile. Efforts are also needed to strengthen prudential regulation of the � Poverty. The number of East Asians living below $2 financial sector, and further develop capital markets, a day is estimated to have fallen to around 34 percent in which will help diversify risk more broadly within the 2004, amounting to some 636 million people. As economy, for example through leasing and factoring, recently as 1999 that proportion was 50 percent, more institutional investment, pension funds, insurance companies and mutual funds. More broadly, judicial 2 http://www.worldbank.org/eapupdate/ . East Asia and Pacific Regional Overview 3 representing some 890 million people. With per-capita Asia, which grew less quickly in July-August than in the real GDP growth in Developing East Asia having first half of 2004 or 2003, although in most cases still averaged around 6 percent a year in the years since 1999, running at 25 percent or more Beyond these cyclical there could hardly be more striking evidence as to the developments, however, trade between China and the power of sustained economic growth to reduce poverty. rest of East Asia is likely to be sustained by the growing Developments in China, which contains two thirds of the industrial integration of the region, and the continued poor in East Asia � some 418 million -naturally dominate expansion of cross-border production networks and ties the regional picture. Poverty at the $2 a day in China is among multinational companies, their suppliers and estimated to have fallen to about 32 percent in 2004, customers. In the economic boom of the last two years driven by significant recent gains in rural income. Rural (2002 and 2003) China's worldwide imports grew by 69 income gains in 2004 were mainly due to increased percent, led by an 80 percent increase in imports of agricultural output, a more than 30 percent increase in machinery and transport equipment. Imports of grain prices, the introduction of direct subsidies to machinery and transport equipment from other East farmers, and a reduction in agricultural taxes. Outside of Asian economies (excluding Japan) however jumped 117 China, the bulk of recent poverty reduction in terms of percent, implying a gain in market share of over 6 absolute numbers of poor has occurred in three other percentage points in just these two years. economies, Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam. � High tech cycle turning over? Concerns about The international and regional environment slowing OECD and China growth are amplified by evidence of slowing demand growth in the highly � A `growth pause' in the developed world. Growth in cyclical global high tech industry. East Asian tech the OECD economies is expected to reach 3.5 percent in production growth slowed in the third quarter as 2004, about one percentage point stronger than had been customers ran down unwanted inventories. New orders expected a year ago. Growth in the United States and for tech output in the G-3 countries slowed, as did Japan, is expected to reach over 4 percent in 2004, before momentum in global semiconductor sales. slowing in 2005 to a little over 3 percent and a little under 2 percent respectively. In the U.S. consumer � Commodity markets and the new oil shock. Perhaps spending had already shifted to a lower pace in mid the most alarming recent global development is the rise 2004, likely reflecting the impact of higher oil prices, in average crude oil prices over the past year from lower tax rebates and a reduced pace of mortgage around $27 a barrel in September 2003 to $46.7 in the refinancing. In Japan business investment, hitherto one first three weeks of October 2004 (and to $50-55 for the strongest elements in the recovery, took a breather in specific crudes like WTI), although in real terms prices the second quarter, perhaps reflecting concerns about still remain about half their peak level in the 1979-80 higher oil prices, indications of a slowdown in global second oil shock. Prices have surged because of high tech and slowing growth in exports to China and the unexpectedly strong and coordinated global demand rest of Asia. During the third quarter downside surprises growth, led at the margin by rapid growth in China, low were the largest in Europe, where industrial production spare production capacity due to a lack of investment in actually contracted. OECD growth is forecast to ease the 1990s and a series of natural and political significantly to 2.6 percent in 2005, although that would disruptions. Oil prices are currently expected to average still be well above the OECD growth pace in 2001-03, $39 in 2004 and $36 in 2005, thanks to the growing the period of the last major global slowdown and production and fall in price of crudes from the Persian subsequent upturn. Gulf.. Strong world growth has also contributed to a surge in metals and other non-oil commodity prices. � China � what kind of landing? In China the Studies of the impact of the oil shock suggest it could authorities have used a growing array of instruments to knock 0.5 percent off world GDP growth, with a 0.8 try and slow potentially excessive growth in investment percent impact in Asia. Impacts within the region will be spending, including credit restrictions, administrative highly differentiated, with substantial net oil importers controls on investment, and finally, in late October, like Korea, Philippines and Thailand suffering the largest higher interest rates, with some success. Fixed asset income losses. At the other extreme small net exporters investment growth (in current prices) did indeed fall to of both oil and non-oil commodities like Papua New 23 percent in the second quarter, although it recovered Guinea are expected to enjoy very large windfall gains. somewhat in the third, after the completion of Proper macroeconomic management and use of such administrative inspections, and several other demand gains will be a major challenge in such economies. indicators remained strong. However, the quality of adjustment in China might improve now that interest rate � Trade policy developments. The July 31 WTO caps have been removed. That will give much needed General Council agreement on a negotiating framework support to SME lending and to the development of the for the Doha Round of multilateral trade talks is good secondary market in mortgages. GDP growth slowed news for East Asia, which is expected to be one of the from 9.6 percent in the second quarter to 9.1 in the third. main beneficiaries of the Round. The agreement laid out Some impact is being felt on China's imports from East a road map for progress in four areas: agricultural trade East Asia and Pacific Regional Overview 4 liberalization, non-agricultural market access, services � Strengthening fiscal positions. Governments in the and trade facilitation. Most of the hard work of arriving region continue to grapple with the burden of substantial at specific detailed agreements still lies ahead, however. public sector debt built up after the 1997-98 financial East Asian economies, having much to gain, need to be crisis as a result of governments shouldering the cost of active in the negotiations, pushing for a speedy recapitalizing and restructuring insolvent financial conclusion. institutions, the calling of other contingent claims on government, wider public sector deficits and real � International capital markets and flows. After last depreciation of currencies. In light of the weakness of year's return of large scale private capital flows to the fiscal position, the most pressing challenge is in the emerging markets, 2004 has seen something of a pause, Philippines, where gross public debt has reached over with flows continuing at the levels reached in the second 100 percent of GDP. President Macapagal-Arroyo half of 2003, but not growing as rapidly as before. The submitted a package of fiscal measures for approval to pause is likely the result of the heightened uncertainties Congress that, if fully implemented, would help stave off affecting the global outlook, as well as the shift towards a fiscal crisis. In Indonesia several years of prudent higher interest rates in the U.S. That emerging capital fiscal management have helped nudge debt-GDP ratios markets were taking a fairly relaxed view of these steadily lower in recent years, although significant developments was suggested by a number of other challenges remain, including reducing costly fuel indicators. Spreads on East Asian Eurobonds, which fell subsidies so as to free up resources for more sharply in 2002 and 2003, have been largely stable in economically efficient and equitable uses (such as 2004. Stock prices surged in 2003, peaked in January- infrastructure, development spending and debt February this year, pulled back by 5-10 percent in the reduction). Malaysia also is focusing on significant second quarter, before starting to move higher once more fiscal consolidation in its latest budget. In Thailand, in the third quarter. where budgets moved into surplus a couple of years ago, � East Asia and Global Rebalancing. If Emerging the government has boosted public investment and is East Asia is a recipient of private capital inflows, it, pondering a five year program of large scale together with Japan, is also one of the major suppliers of infrastructure projects. finance for the main macroeconomic imbalance in the Recent corporate sector trends and issues. The world at present, the U.S. current account deficit, which � profitability and balance sheet position of East Asian amounted to $568 billion in the year to the second firms have continued to strengthen, providing a more quarter of 2004. The Emerging East Asian economies secure foundation for the recent upswing in investment alone had current account surpluses of about $138 billion spending observed around the region. Ordinary income over this period, which, combined with net capital to sales ratios for listed non-financial firms have risen inflows, allowed them to accumulated over $250 billion substantially from their low points in 1998, while debt- of official foreign exchange reserves, a significant equity ratios have fallen, and are now broadly in line proportion being invested in U.S. financing instruments. with international norms. Countries continue to make There is now a consensus that these imbalances cannot efforts to resolve the situation of weak firms and deal continue in this fashion for too much longer, and that with the remaining stock of distressed assets. Since the policy makers need to find a means of achieving a special debt workout frameworks that were established in `global rebalancing' that is not disruptive of global the aftermath of the crisis have mostly been wound growth. A part of this obviously depends on U.S. policy down, progress on corporate restructuring increasingly efforts to boost national savings by reducing the U.S. depends on the effective functioning of the legal and budget deficit. But global imbalances have also judicial system, and, in particular of effectively increased because of the sharp fall in domestic functioning bankruptcy systems and market-based asset investment in many emerging East Asian economies disposition. More generally, policy makers are after the regional financial crisis � averaging about 11 increasingly focusing on measures to strengthen the percentage points of GDP between 1997 and 2003. broader investment climate, the subject of the `Special Within the region, the major surplus economies are Japan Focus' in this report. and the NIEs, but even developing Asian economies will need to play a part. The best outcome is for East Asia's � Recent financial sector trends and issues. Banks contribution to global rebalancing to center on fostering have also benefited from the acceleration of economic much stronger domestic private investment, which would activity over the past one and a half years. The also position these economies for sustained long run profitability of commercial banks--as measured by the growth. Continued adjustment in exchange rates can rates of return to assets and equity--has improved also play a role, as can sustained trade liberalization sizably in Indonesia and Thailand, and marginally in the efforts, in particular in services sectors, where East Asia Philippines and Korea, and remains comfortable in has tended to lag other developing regions. Malaysia. Average risk-weighted Capital Adequacy Ratios (CAR) have also been above the 8 percent BIS Domestic trends and policy challenges norm in all five countries for several years now, while East Asia and Pacific Regional Overview 5 Non Performing Loan (NPL) ratios have continued to decline, reflecting, to varying degrees, continued restructuring efforts, improved capacity of borrowers to repay, and new loan growth. Some caveats should be noted. First, despite progress, NPL ratios remain in double digits in Thailand and the Philippines. Second, aggregate numbers on profitability and loan quality can sometimes mask considerable differences across groups of banks; some segments remain vulnerable. One trend and potential vulnerability across countries in the region has been rising household debt and with it, increases in the share of NPLs from household lending. In Korea household debt grew quickly between 2000 and 2002, and subsequent problem with credit card delinquencies have had a serious macroeconomic effect in slowing consumer spending. Household debt has also grown in Malaysia and Thailand, without so far running into serious difficulties. Countries are also continuing to make progress on various aspects of strengthening the financial system in terms of regulation and supervision. East Asia Update 6 EASTASIAANDPACIFICREGIONALOVERVIEW East Asia � at the peak of the cycle? such as Hong Kong, Singapore and Taiwan (China) that � while less directly affected by the financial crisis � experienced more serious effects from the deep recession Growth in the East Asia region is expected to in the global high tech industry in 2001, as well as from rise to a little over 7 percent in 2004, more than a adjustments to changing comparative advantage and other percentage point higher than in the preceding two years, competitive challenges Annual average growth in fixed and more than three percentage points higher than in investment among these economies averaged only 0.3 2001, the trough of the last global economic slowdown. percent in 2001-03. Aggregate demand growth during (Table 1 above). Growth has been especially robust this period has instead been more dependent on private among the Developing East Asian economies, running at consumption, which has been most robust in the South near 8 percent for a second year, led by plus 9 percent East Asian economies, as well as on exports. growth rates in China. Among these economies the last two years have been the strongest period of growth since Exhibit 1 before the 1997-98 financial crisis. As Exhibit 1 shows, the year on year growth rate of quarterly regional GDP in East Asia - Quarterly GDP Growth East Asia has accelerated almost continuously since the (% Change Year Ago) middle of 2001 � interrupted briefly only by last year's 12.0 SARS crisis � to reach around 7.5 percent in the first quarter of 2004 and just over 8 percent in the second. 9.0 Growth � securing the path to sustained expansion Yet, even as the recovery has flourished � 6.0 fostering the first widespread recovery in investment spending since the financial crisis more than 6 years ago � a number of cross-currents and risks have emerged or 3.0 intensified, mostly, though not entirely, associated with the external environment. Policy makers in the region now must carefully ponder the mix of policy efforts and 0.0 reforms needed to steer the regional economy from sharp cyclical recovery of the last 2 years onto the path of sustained medium term expansion. -3.0 Q1-1999 Q3-1999 Q1-2000 Q3-2000 Q1-2001 Q3-2001 Q1-2002 Q3-2002 Q1-2003 Q3-2003 Q1-2004 China NIEs Several features of the recent surge in growth SE Asia E. Asia deserve attention. First, the acceleration or continuing -6.0 strength in activity has been geographically widespread, encompassing many if not most of the diverse economies It is in this group of 8 middle and high income in the region, ranging from a continent sized economy economies that investment spending has rebounded in late like China to small island economies like the Solomons, 2003 and early 2004. Investment, which had made a from high income economies like Singapore and Taiwan negligible or negative contribution to growth in most (China) through middle income economies like Malaysia economies in 2003, made the largest positive contribution and Thailand to low income economies like Lao PDR, in many in the first half of 2004. (Exhibits 2 and 3). The Vietnam, Papua New Guinea and Mongolia. average year on year pace of GDP growth among these Second, recent quarters have seen a widespread economies increased from 4 percent in 2003 to 7.2 strengthening of fixed investment spending around the percent in the first half of 2004, while the contribution of region. Of course investment has already been rapidly fixed investment increased from 0 percent in 2003 to 3.6 expanding for some years now in fast growing economies percentage points in the 2004 first half. In other words like China and Vietnam, in the former case to such an fixed investment contributed half of the growth in extent that curbing excessive investment has this year expenditures on GDP in the first half, with especially become a central preoccupation for the authorities. In strong outcomes in Malaysia, Thailand, Hong Kong, many other economies, however, investment has been Singapore and Taiwan (China). much more erratic and weak over the last 5-6 years. A number of positive trends have helped foster These include economies affected by the 1997-98 the investment revival in the region, some of which are financial crisis such as Indonesia, Malaysia, the explored at greater length in this report. Exports Philippines, Thailand and Korea, as well as economies accelerated and have remained strong since late 2002, East Asia Update 7 foreign reserves have bolstered confidence and allowed Exhibit 2 lower interest rates in many economies. Public sector debt Contributions to GDP Growth in S.E. Asia has also trended lower or at least been stable in most � (% change year ago) though not all � economies, the Philippines being an 12.0 exception here. Policy efforts to foster financial and Net Exports corporate sector restructuring and reform have continued 10.0 Investment at various rates. Portfolio capital flows returned to the Pub. Consump. region in large volume in 2003. As the review of 8.0 Priv. Consump. corporate sector trends later indicates, firms around the region have used this exceptionally favorable climate to 6.0 reduce excessive debt and improve profitability. The improved financial health of corporates has put in place 4.0 perhaps the final precondition for the present recovery in investment. 2.0 The third important observation about the 0.0 recovery is that East Asian growth is expected to peak in 2003 2004 2003 2004 2003 2004 2003 2004 2004, indeed may already have done so in the first part of -2.0 H1 H1 H1 H1 the year. While year on year growth in the first half of Indonesia Malaysia Philippines Thailand 2004 reached the relatively high rates displayed in Exhibit -4.0 1 above, seasonally adjusted rates of growth from one GDP Growth: quarter to the next were also turning down in several -6.0 4.5 4.7 5.3 7.8 4.7 6.3 6.8 6.4 Contributions may not sum to growth due to statistical discrepancies in Nat. economies at this time. As Exhibit 4 below shows, the seasonally adjusted annualized growth in output in the Exhibit 3 second quarter of 2004 as compared to the first fell on average to only 3-4 percent among the 8 South East Asian Contributions to GDP Growth in NIEs and Newly Industrialized Economies. On a technical 15.0 (% change year ago) note, the apparent contradiction between the two types of Priv. Consump. Pub. Consump. growth rates is explained by the fact that quarter on Investment Net Exports quarter increases in GDP were extremely strong in the third and fourth quarters of 2003, pushing up the year on 10.0 year comparisons in the first half of 2004, even as quarter on quarter growth rates were starting to fall by this latter point. The slower trend in growth will likely be reflected 5.0 in yearly growth rates for the second half of 2004, when there will be a much tougher comparison to high levels of output in the second half of last year. The flash estimate for third quarter growth in Singapore indicated that GDP 0.0 actually contracted from the second quarter, while the 2003 2004 2003 2004 2003 2004 2003 2004 year on year pace dipped to 7.7 percent, down from 12.5 H1 H1 H1 H1 percent in the second. -5.0 Hong Kong Korea Singapore Taiwan (China) A slower trend in East Asian growth would have GDP Growth been expected to some extent in any case, the pace of 3.2 9.5 3.1 5.4 1.1 10.0 3.3 7.2economic activity in the region making a normal -10.0 transition from sharp upswing in the recovery phase of the Contributions may not sum to growth due to statistical discrepancies in Nat. economic cycle to somewhat lower but sustained growth in an expansion phase. However, 2004 has also seen the supported by the recovery in the developed world, a emergence of several key risks or actual trends that are strong cyclical rebound in the global high tech industry already tending to offset the positive factors underpinning and a surge in intra-regional trade, led by booming the recovery in East Asia so far, or may do so in the exports from the rest of East Asia to China. Regional foreseeable future. export growth has run at 25-30 percent on a year earlier in dollar terms through much of 2004. Especially in South Among these factors, several of which are East Asia, firms' cash flow has also been bolstered by discussed in greater detail later in the report, perhaps the robust growth in consumer spending. (Exhibit 2). most immediately of concern has been the steep spike in Macroeconomic conditions have been benign in most world oil prices, from late 2003 onwards which is directly economies, an important factor in reducing business imposing significant income losses among the majority of uncertainty. High current account surpluses and rising economies in the region that are net energy importers, as well as among the major developed nations which East Asia Update 8 comprise Emerging East Asia's major extra-regional shock is occurring in a context of already large global export markets � the United States, Japan and Europe. macroeconomic imbalances, notably the record and Affected by higher oil prices as well as by a variety of growing U.S. current account deficits. These deficits, it specific domestic factors, growth in the developed world must be said, were a help during the last global had already shifted to a lower pace in the second quarter slowdown, when they injected a substantial demand of 2004, most notably in Japan, and to a lesser extent in stimulus into the world economy and helped avert a worse the U.S., while monthly indicators suggested a softening recession, but have required a growing flow of foreign pace of activity in Europe in the third quarter. In financing, most notably from the current account surplus addition, overlaid on the growth pause in the developed economies of Japan and Emerging East Asia. A sharp world is the likelihood of another cyclical downturn in the disruption of these critical financing flows would likely global high tech industry, a concern for a region like East result in increases in dollar interest rates, swings in Asia which is now the leading location for manufacturing exchange rates and a steep adjustment in U.S. aggregate and assembly in this industry. demand and imports � a recession in short. These would be costly outcomes for all concerned. Finding economic Exhibit 4 policies to defuse the mounting imbalances in a cooperative and less costly way will be an increasing East Asia - Quarterly GDP Growth preoccupation not just of one economy and government (% Change Quarter Ago, SAAR) but - necessarily � for all the economies and governments that participate in this relationship. 14.0 NIEs SE Asia Poverty � down by 250 million in five years 10.0 At some point in the latter part of this year or in early 2005 we estimate that the number of people living 6.0 on less than $2 a day in East Asia will fall below one third of the population. As recently as 1999 that proportion was 50 percent. (Exhibit 5). Put another way, the number 2.0 of poor in East Asia (by the $2 a day definition) will have fallen from around 890 million in 1999 to around 636 million just 5 years later, a fall of 29 percent during a -2.0 period in which the total population of the region 2001 2001 2001 2001 2002 2002 2002 2002 2003 2003 2003 2003 2004 2004 increased by about 4 percent (to around 1.85 billion). Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 With per-capita real GDP growth in Developing -6.0 East Asia having averaged around 6 percent a year in the years since 1999, there could hardly be more striking evidence as to the power of sustained economic growth to reduce poverty. Looking back over the last 15 years, the As if all this were not enough, East Asian period since 1999 is the second of two in which fast decision makers are likely devoting as much if not more economic growth has yielded major reductions in poverty. attention to the outlook for China � in particular the The first was the economic boom of the early-mid 1990s, efforts of the authorities to slow the investment boom in when per-capita growth averaged close to 9 percent and that economy while averting a `hard-landing' that could the poverty headcount rate was reduced from two thirds knock away a key source of new export demand in the (67 percent) in 1990 to 50 percent in 1996. In between region over the next few years. Even with a `soft landing' was the period of slow growth associated with the East however, the growth of East Asian exports to China will Asian financial crisis, when per-capita growth fell to decline from their recent soaring pace, a change that around 3 percent a year and the regional poverty rate seems to have already begun. remained flat at 50 percent. The consensus view remains that the recent Looking more closely at the recent gains in slackening of activity in the developed world will prove a regional poverty reduction, developments in China temporary pause in a more sustained expansion, while naturally dominate the regional picture. The number of China will continue to expand at rates that � while lower poor in China comprised three quarters of the poor in East than during the current boom � will remain very high by Asia in 1990, and even today, after years of faster than world standards. But it must be admitted that the average poverty reduction, there are still an estimated 418 apparently remorseless rise in oil prices has heightened million Chinese poor � mostly in the rural areas � worries about the risk of a more serious downturn. These comprising two thirds of the regional total. Relative to concerns are exacerbated by the fact that the oil price China's own population, poverty at the $2 a day level is East Asia Update 9 estimated to have fallen to about 32 percent in 2004. also had an important effect. Until recently the About 90 percent of China's poor live in rural areas, and government operated an extensive food grain procurement rural developments indeed continue to exercise a system that effectively taxed farmers by setting quotas predominant influence on poverty reductions trends. and fixing procurement prices below market levels. Increases in procurement prices had a strong positive Exhibit 5 effect on agricultural output and incomes and served as a powerful short term policy against poverty. Finally Poverty - Headcount Index Ravallion and Chen also find that periods of low inflation ($2 a day poverty line. Percent) had a beneficial effect on poverty reduction in China. Other small * Vietnam Rural living standards in China have indeed S.E. Asia (4) East Asia shown significant recent improvements. Rural residents' China cash income increased by 11.4 percent year-on-year in the 75 first 9 months of 2004, compared to only about 2 percent per year in 2002-2003. Rural incomes grew faster than urban for the first time in 6 years. As a result, rural poverty rates are estimated to have come down significantly. Rural income gains were mainly due to increased agricultural output, a more than 30 percent 50 increase in grain prices, the introduction of direct subsidies to farmers, and a reduction in agricultural taxes. While the fiscal costs of agricultural subsidies are currently modest, experience in developed countries shows the potential for such subsidies to become a concern in the longer run. The government is also moving * Cambodia, Lao PDR, Papua New Guinea to develop a coherent policy and legislative framework 25 for social assistance, on which it issued a white paper in 1990 1996 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 September. This would help ameliorate the disparities in the social protection system between urban and rural areas, and could benefit migrant workers, who often "fall A recent detailed World Bank study of poverty between the cracks" of urban and rural systems. Recently reduction in China by Ravallion and Chen calculates that a growing number of provinces have been implementing 75-80 percent of national poverty reduction over the rural safety net schemes modeled on the urban dibao period 1980-2001 is accounted for by poverty reduction system, which is a cash transfer system based on income within the rural sector, with most of the remainder and asset testing. accounted for by migration from rural to urban areas.3 Efforts to improve social safety net programs are The study finds that poverty reduction has been very also afoot in Mongolia. The government's social security responsive to economic growth - in general a one percent master plan aims to move from a system that targets increase in average incomes has led to a 2.5-3.5 percent social categories or groups to one based directly on the fall in the poverty rate � but that the benefits of growth for actual income and consumption situation of households. poverty reduction have been partly offset by widening The system's ability to target support to those most in income inequality. As might be expected, the sectoral need will be enhanced by the 2002-3 Living Standards composition of growth is also crucially important for Measurement Survey, the first nationally representative poverty reduction; growth in rural incomes is far more household-level survey for Mongolia. The results of the important than urban, as is growth in the primary sector survey, which will be available shortly, will establish (mainly agriculture) as compared to secondary or tertiary baseline poverty information and help in monitoring sector growth. Policies affecting agricultural and rural implementation and results from the country's Economic sector growth are therefore the most powerful from a Growth Support and Poverty Reduction Strategy. poverty reduction perspective. Ravallion and Chen argue that China's agrarian reforms of the early 1980s were Outside of China, the bulk of recent poverty reduction in terms of absolute numbers of poor has responsible for over half of all the poverty reduction in occurred in three other economies, Indonesia, Thailand the period 1980-2001. Agricultural pricing policies have and Vietnam. In Indonesia, economic growth rates have gradually strengthened after the 1997-98 financial crisis, 3 Martin Ravallion and Shaohua Chen. " China's (Uneven) reaching 4.5 percent in 2003 and near 5 percent in 2004. Progress Against Poverty". World Bank Working Paper 3408. The latest Susenas data show poverty using the national September 2004. The study uses a poverty line of 850 yuan for poverty line down to 15.1 percent in 2003, finally below rural areas and 1200 yuan for urban, which are significantly pre-crisis levels. However, while economic management lower than the $2 a day benchmark. has generally been sound during this critical election year, http://econ.worldbank.org/working_papers/38741/ East Asia Update 10 there are some specific areas where policy reforms could variation across the country. Spectacular progress (30 enhance the pace of poverty reduction. Although percent of the population moving out of poverty) has been Indonesia adheres to a generally liberal trade policy made in some parts of the country such as Quang Ninh in regime, some recent moves in a more protectionist the northeastern corner of Vietnam. (Exhibit 6). This area direction could raise the cost of subsistence for the poor, has seen the development of a vibrant tourism industry in particular the seasonal import ban on rice, which will and lies on an important trading route with China. It may tend to raise retail prices for rice, to the detriment of poor also be benefiting from spillover effects of rapid households who are largely net consumers of rice.4 economic growth in neighboring provinces. There are similarly spectacular reductions in poverty in Binh Thuan Increased minimum wages in recent years are province, which neighbors very rapidly-growing also having a negative impact on formal sector provinces in the south east of the country. In other parts of employment in Indonesia. Minimum wages increased in the country the proportion of poor people barely changed. real terms by 13 percent a year between 2000 and 2004. These data were constructed using poverty mapping Widening differentials between formal and informal techniques (for 1998) and household survey data (for sector wages have discouraged formal sector 2002). New data on living standards will become employment. Formal sector employment has fallen from available in mid 2005. 31.8 million in 2000 to 26.5 million in 2003. Open unemployment, which increased to 9.5 percent in 2003, Exhibit 6 will be a major issue facing the new administration. Finally, fuel subsidies, which now eat up 16 percent of the government's budget, are sometimes justified as being pro-poor. Such subsidies are regressive, however, benefiting the better off more than they do the poor. A gradual reduction in the subsidy with compensation for poorer households would allow the new administration to generate significant budgetary savings that could be used for development spending that actually benefits the poor, while also allowing further fiscal consolidation. Between 1998 and 2002 Vietnam saw eight percent of its 80 million population move out of poverty, using a poverty line based on a consumption basket that provides 2100 calories per day and a set of non-food items. However, progress was uneven, with little or no poverty reduction in three out of the country's eight regions. The regional rate of poverty reduction appears closely correlated with the proportion of ethnic minorities among the population (the correlation coefficient is - 0.85). The persistent high poverty rate among ethnic minorities at a national level (69 percent) is caused by a series of factors including geographic isolation, low human capital, lack of secure access to land, and poor governance. The depth of poverty for ethnic minorities (represented by the poverty gap) suggests that sustained economic growth alone will be unlikely to lift these groups out of poverty. A recent calculation of the change in provincial In Thailand poverty at the $2 a day level has poverty rates between 1999 and 2002 shows a large fallen from 22 percent in 2000 to an estimated 14 percent in 2004, benefiting from stronger economic growth and, since 2002, from the boost to rural incomes given by 4The import ban on rice was introduced in January 2004 higher world prices for Thailand's principal export crops. and was only supposed to last till 2 months after the While poverty at the $2 level is still estimated at over 70 harvest, but has since been extended twice. Modeling percent in Lao PDR, at the $1 level it has fallen from 34 work suggests that the ban is equivalent to about a 100 percent in 2000 to an estimated 24 percent in 2004, percent ad valorem tariff. Its initial impact on rice prices supported by growth in a 5-6 percent range. Recent data was not very noticeable because of this year's extremely published by the National Statistical Center provide some good harvest, but this could change in the off-season evidence of rising living standards. The share of food in period, and over time, as harvests return to more normal household expenditures fell from 64 percent in 1992/3 to levels.. 55 percent in 2002/3, suggesting that people were able to East Asia Update 11 devote more of their growing incomes to non-food items. Economic Survey is still in the field and due to be As Exhibit 7 indicates the possession of durable consumer completed at the end of December 2004, but estimates goods is also increasing. based on earlier household level data suggest that poverty Exhibit 7 at the $1 a day level has been flat in a 40-45 percent range in recent years. Even though overall economic growth has Lao PDR: Possession of Durable Goods run in a 5-6 percent range in recent years, growth in the (% of Households) agricultural sector has been less robust. Poverty in its non-income dimensions shows a bleak picture. Child mortality rates are high at 138 per 1000 live births in Electric Rice 2002, almost three times the level for East Asia and Cooker 2002/03 higher than the average for low income countries. 1997/98 Maternal mortality rates at 450 per 100,000 are also three times higher than the East Asia region. In Papua New Refrigerator Guinea poverty at the $1 level is estimated to have drifted higher from 35 percent in 2000 closer to 40 percent now. TV The international and regional environment The year on year pace of Emerging East Asian Motorbike export growth in dollar terms accelerated through much of 2004, picking up from the low 20 percent range early in the year, to near 30 percent in the three months to August. 0 10 20 30 40 50 (Exhibit 8). The strongest performance overall was from Source: NSC. The Household of Lao PDR. March 2004. China and Korea where exports in the middle part of the year were running at a year on year pace of 35-40 percent, while, at the lower end, exports in Indonesia and the Progress on poverty reduction may have been Philippines were quite sluggish, growing at less than 10 less robust elsewhere in the region. In the Philippines percent rates. Most other countries experienced export preliminary data from the 2003 Family Income and growth in a 20-30 percent range. Expenditure Survey (FIES) released by the National By the end of the third quarter there were Statistical Office in August 2004 indicate that average however signs of a deceleration in export growth In both family expenditures and incomes both decreased in real Korea and Taiwan (China) the year on year pace of dollar terms between 2000 and 2003. Real average family exports in the three months to September was lower by expenditures declined by about 7 percent during this about 10 percentage points than the year on year growth period. In 12 out of the 17 total regions, real average rate in the three months to July. (Exhibit 9). An even family expenditures in 2003 declined relative to their sharper deceleration is apparent when these economies' level in 2000. The decline was largest in the National seasonally adjusted growth from one quarter to the next is Capital Region, where real average family expenditures considered. China's year on year export growth also fell over 17 percent during this period. National income dipped about 5 percentage points in the three months to inequality decreased slightly, with a decline in the Gini September as compared to the three months to August. coefficient to 0.47 in 2003 from 0.48 in 2000, but income Other economies, for whom export data were available inequality remains high, with average incomes in the top only through August at the time of writing, did not yet decile over 20 times that of the bottom decile. It should show much indication of a slowdown. be noted that there is a significant discrepancy between the preliminary FIES data, which indicate lower total and Nevertheless there are at least three reasons why average family incomes and expenditures, and the a significant slowdown in East Asian export growth may national income accounts data which indicate increasing now be underway. First, there are indications that growth per capita GDP over the same period. Resolving these in East Asia's major developed economy markets slowed data inconsistencies will be important to obtain a clearer in the second and third quarters of the year. The depth picture of what has actually happened to poverty in the and duration of this `slow patch' in the developed world is Philippines during this period. Poverty incidence uncertain, but it is likely to have some effect on East estimates based on the FIES data are expected to be Asian exports. Second, there are indications that the released by the government shortly. soaring pace of East Asian export growth to China over the last two years is slowing this year. Partly this may Progress on poverty reduction has also been just reflect the fact that some East Asian economies more limited in some of the smaller low income achieved very high growth rates from a very small initial economies of the region. In Cambodia, the latest Socio- volume of exports to China, which was bound to decline. East Asia Update 12 However, although the overall GDP growth rates for Developed country growth China remained as high as 9.1 percent in the third quarter of 2004, there was already a `soft landing' underway in its Growth in the OECD economies is expected to imports, whose growth rate decelerated quite significantly reach 3.5 percent in 2004, the second highest since the at this time. Third, after two years of strong upswing, late 1980s (the highest being in 2000, the climax of the growth in global demand for high tech products appears global high tech boom) and about one percentage point to be decelerating, and this cannot but impact the region stronger than had been expected a year ago. (Table 2). which is now the leading assembler and manufacturer of OECD growth is led by the United States and Japan, high tech products. where it is expected to reach over 4 percent in 2004. As indicated in Exhibit 10, growth in both countries was Exhibit 8 especially strong in the second half of 2003 and early 2004, with quarter on quarter seasonally adjusted East Asia - Export Growth annualized rates (SAAR) occasionally reaching over 6 (US$ 3Mo. Mov. Averages - % Change Year Ago) percent, before slowing in the second quarter of 2004. 50 However, one consequence of this pattern of strong E. Asia SE Asia growth late last year and early this year is that in these two countries growth for the year 2004 as a whole will be 40 China NIEs high as compared to 2003 under most circumstances, even though growth from one quarter to the next during the 30 year may run at lower rates � as indeed occurred in the second quarter, and as monthly data suggest was also the 20 case in the third quarter of 2004. 10 Table 2. International Economic Environment 2002 2003 2004 2005 % Change from previous year, except interest rates 0 GDP Growth World 1.7 2.7 4.0 3.2 Jan-2001 -10Apr-2001Jul-2001 Oct-2001Jan-2002 Apr-2002 Jul-2002Oct-2002Jan-2003 Apr-2003Jul-2003 Oct-2003Jan-2004 Apr-2004Jul-2004 OECD 1.3 2.0 3.5 2.6 United States 1.9 3.0 4.3 3.2 Japan -0.3 2.5 4.3 1.8 -20 Euro Area 0.9 0.5 1.8 2.1 World Trade (Volume) 3.6 6.7 11.1 8.7 Exhibit 9 CPI Inflation - G7 a/ 1.0 1.5 1.8 1.4 East Asia - Export Growth Oil Price - $/bbl 24.9 28.9 39.0 36.0 (US$ 3Mo. Mov. Averages - % Change Year Ago) - % Change 2.4 15.9 35.0 -7.7 50 Non-oil Commodity Indonesia Philippines Prices 5.1 10.0 17.1 -3.3 LIBOR (US$. 6 Mo.) 1.9 1.2 1.6 3.5 40 Korea Taiwan (China) Source: World Bank DEC Prospects Group update Oct. 2004. a/ In local currency, aggregated using 1995 weights. 30 20 Recovery in the United States has been underpinned over the last two years by exceptional 10 growth in productivity, recovering corporate profits, very low interest rates, wealth gains due to higher equity and 0 house prices and the final doses of fiscal stimulus from lower taxes. Growth eased in the second quarter of 2004, Jan-2001 -10Apr-2001 Jul-2001 Oct-2001Jan-2002 Apr-2002Jul-2002 Oct-2002Jan-2003 Apr-2003 Jul-2003Oct-2003Jan-2004 Apr-2004Jul-2004 however, falling to 3.3 percent (SAAR), down from 4.5 percent in the first, the net result of a number of off- -20 setting factors. The biggest contributor to the downturn was lower consumer spending growth, likely reflecting -30 the impact of higher oil prices, lower tax rebates and a reduced pace of house refinancing. Lower net exports also contributed to the slowdown, and were reflected in the second quarter current account deficit of $166 billion, or 5.7 percent of GDP, both record figures. On the other East Asia Update 13 hand, residential and business investments, which have rebound in investment. Reflecting the ambivalence, made a major contribution to the recovery over the past orders for machinery and industrial production continued year, accelerated further in the second quarter, helping to weaken in the third quarter, while, on the other hand offset the downdraft from consumption and next exports. the September Tankan survey indicated that the ratio of A variety of monthly data in the third quarter appeared to corporate profits to sales had risen to match previous confirm that growth was likely to consolidate in a more highs. Business sentiment was also rising. Overall, the modest 3-4 percent range, including slower growth in Cabinet office concluded in October that there were signs retail sales and industrial production, a downturn in of a pause in the economy. Still, consensus views do not consumer confidence and a lower pace of job creation. In so far project a return to stagnation, looking instead for line with this data, the flash estimate for third quarter 2005 growth in the region of 2 percent. growth was 3.7 percent. Exhibit 10 China � what kind of landing? OECD Real GDP Growth Other East Asian economies may perhaps be (% change on previous quarter; SAAR) 8 watching the evolution of the Chinese economy even USA more anxiously than they are economies in the developed Japan world. The reason of course is that in the last two years Euro area China has been much the largest source of export market 6 growth for many of the other regional economies. In 2003, for example, growth in exports to China and Hong Kong contributed 50-60 percent of the overall export 4 growth enjoyed by Korea and Taiwan, and about 25 percent in economies like Malaysia and Thailand. The Chinese authorities, however, are concerned about the rapid pace of domestic demand growth in the Chinese 2 economy, in particular potentially excessive investment spending, which could lead to or worsen excess capacity in various sectors of the economy, as well as add to the 0 bad debt problems of the banking system. Fixed capital formation reached 43 percent of GDP in 2003, while 2003 Q1 2003 Q2 2003 Q3 2003 Q4 2004 Q1 2004 Q2 Fixed Asset Investment, a somewhat different measure of investment, expanded by over 40 percent in nominal -2 terms in the first quarter of 2004.5 An unexpectedly sharp deceleration in the economy, it is feared, could pull down China's imports and so remove an important source of Growth in Japan was especially strong in late export market growth for the rest of the region. 2003 and early 2004, reaching quarter on quarter annual rates of 7.6 percent and 6.4 percent respectively, spurred The authorities have taken a variety of policy by exports, most notably to China, and a recovery in measures to cool the economy. Monetary policy has been corporate profits and business investment. But second tightened through increases in bank reserve requirements quarter 2004 growth fell to an unexpectedly low 1.3 and `window guidance' from the central bank, the percent (q-on-q annualized), pulled down by lower public People's Bank of China (PBC). These measures seem to spending and a fall in the growth of business investment. have been effective in slowing growth in credit Monthly indicators in the third quarter also did not give a outstanding from a peak of 25 percent in the first quarter clear signal as to trend, seeming to indicate that the of 2003 to 7 percent in the second quarter of 2004. economy was sailing in a region of cross-currents. Policy interest rates have recently been slightly increased. Exports remained the strongest demand impetus, although However, with higher producer price inflation, real rates of growth � including those of exports to China and interest rates remain negative, which may tend to the rest of East Asia - were easing. Consumption encourage further investment in areas like real estate. spending has been modest in this recovery, since This could be offset if banks take advantage of the greater households remain concerned about slow employment flexibility they now have to set interest rates at levels that growth and stagnant or falling wages - a trend confirmed reflect underlying market conditions and risk. It is to be by a continuing weakness in third quarter retail sales. hoped that this will provide a better market-based Business sector activity also appeared to be restrained, perhaps by concerns about rising oil prices, indications of 5Statistics on fixed capital formation are only available a slowdown in global high tech and the potential for a on an annual basis, while data on fixed asset investment sharp slowdown in China, although, on the other hand, (fixed capital formation plus sales of land) are published profits continued strong, boding well for an eventual on a higher frequency basis. East Asia Update 14 mechanism through which monetary policy can operate, quarter, although it recovered somewhat to 29 percent in balancing the administrative measures which have so far the third, after the completion of administrative been the crux of the effort to slow demand. In April the inspections. Unfortunately, most of the impact on FAI National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) growth was concentrated in the private sector. Overall issued an order prohibiting investment projects in 359 GDP growth is easing gradually � growth was 9.1 percent sub-industries, while discouraging new projects in another in the third quarter, down from 9.7 in the first half of 2004 175 sub-industries, with construction, steel, and and 9.9 percent in the last quarter of 2003. Retail sales aluminum the main targets. These sub-industries became remained buoyant, increasing 10 percent year on year in subject to credit rationing and restrictions on land use. the January-August period. Industrial production at the end of the third quarter continued to run at about 16 Exhibit 11 percent above year earlier levels, only mildly less than East Asia - Import Growth earlier in the year. As noted above, export growth has (US$ 3Mo. Mov. Averages - % Change Year Ago) generally remained strong. 60 The most accurate overall assessment might be E. Asia that the Chinese economy is slowing but that, on current SE Asia evidence, the slowdown is likely to be gradual and fairly China mild. While inflation has accelerated this year, with CPI 40 inflation reaching 5.2 percent in September, much of the NIEs increase is attributed to increases in volatile food prices, as well as higher raw material and fuel prices. The non- food CPI was however only 1 percent higher in August. 20 Thus, so long as inflation is perceived to remain in check and the problem of excessive investment is seen to be easing, drastic measures to slow the economy are unlikely to be imminent. 0 Given this sort of backdrop China's import demand growth is likely to fall from the heady 40 percent plus rates in the first part of the year, but should continue Jan-2001Apr-2001 Oct-2001Jan-2002Apr-2002 Oct-2002Jan-2003Apr-2003 Oct-2003Jan-2004Apr-2004 Jul-2001 Jul-2002 Jul-2003 Jul-2004 to grow at a relatively health pace so long as China's -20 domestic growth does not stall, and so long as China's own exports to the world maintain their relatively high trend growth. The last point is relevant because a Exhibit 12 substantial proportion of China's imports are demanded as inputs and components for China's own exports � up to China: Imports from East Asia half on some estimates. As Exhibit 11 indicates, the (US$ - % change year ago) slowing may already have begun with import growth in 100 the third quarter falling to 30 percent, compared to 43 2003 percent in the second. Import growth from other East 2004 1-3 Asian economies has also slowed. As Exhibit 12 indicates 75 2004 4-6 import growth from East Asia in July-August was 2004 7-8 generally lower than in the first half of 2004 or in 2003, although in most cases still running at 25 percent or more. 50 A last point is that many East Asian economies have been gaining market share in China's imports over 25 time. The growing complementarity between the East Asian economies may help sustain growth in their exports to China even if China's overall imports slow in the aggregate. The last two years have seen a remarkable 0 jump in this process. Table 3 shows the growth in China's imports between 2001 and 2003, broken down Korea China Indonesia Thailand Philippines Singapore between broad commodity categories and the economies Taiwan, from which they were imported.6 Table 4 shows the These measures have had some success. The 6Here `Raw materials' comprise SITCs 0,1,2,and 4: food most obvious impact has been on fixed asset investment and live animals, beverages and tobacco, crude materials (FAI) growth, which fell to 23 percent in the second (inedible except fuel) and animal and vegetable oils. East Asia Update 15 dollar value in 2003 of China's imports of these broad and ties among multinational companies, their suppliers commodity categories, as well as the market shares in and customers. these categories achieved by the economies that export to China. Table 4. Market Shares in China's Imports 2003 (As % of import category) Table 3. China � Growth in Imports between 2001 Raw Manuf- and 2003 (Percent Change) Total Materials Fuels actures MTE* Raw Manuf- Total Materials Fuels actures MTE* World (US$ Bill.) 413 43 29 146 193 Market Shares (%) World 69.5 55.2 67.2 63.2 80.3 USA 8.2 17.5 0.9 8.0 7.4 USA 29.5 70.2 123.2 50.9 3.7 EU 13.2 5.9 0.9 11.8 17.8 EU 50.0 22.3 -3.3 56.7 49.9 Japan 18.0 4.1 1.9 18.6 23.2 Japan 73.3 27.6 69.2 59.6 85.5 East Asia 36.5 18.3 26.6 41.7 38.3 East Asia 81.1 51.3 47.2 58.3 116.8 Korea 10.4 1.6 6.7 14.6 9.9 Korea 84.5 20.9 1.4 61.3 148.9 Taiwan, China 12.0 1.9 1.2 16.5 12.5 Taiwan, China 80.6 40.4 80.3 64.5 102.3 Singapore 2.5 0.2 5.3 2.2 2.9 Singapore 104.5 102.1 98.6 108.5 107.4 Hong Kong 2.7 1.5 0.6 3.4 2.8 Hong Kong 18.0 44.3 10.8 5.5 30.3 Indonesia 1.4 3.7 3.9 1.3 0.5 Indonesia 47.8 23.2 77.8 43.1 82.6 Malaysia 3.4 4.5 3.2 1.5 4.6 Malaysia 125.4 135.0 114.2 77.1 140.8 Philippines 1.5 0.4 0.2 0.3 2.9 Philippines 224.2 35.2 10.1 105.3 263.6 Thailand 2.1 3.3 2.4 1.7 2.2 Thailand 87.3 36.8 113.5 74.0 119.4 Vietnam 0.35 0.74 2.96 0.13 0.04 Vietnam 44.1 70.9 18.3 190.7 263.4 Cambodia 0.01 0.03 0.00 0.01 0.00 Cambodia -25.3 47.5.. -51.1 -93.4 PNG 0.06 0.48 0.07 0.00 0.00 PNG 88.8 107.9 14.6 -70.7.. * Machinery and Transport Equipment. Source: Comtrade * Machinery and Transport Equipment. Source: Comtrade As would be expected, the newly industrialized high income economies in the region such as Korea, China's overall merchandise imports grew 69.5 Taiwan, China and Singapore were among the principal percent in these two years to reach $413 billion in 2003, beneficiaries of China's investment boom, expanding led by an 80 percent increase in what is now the largest their share of China's machinery and transport equipment category, machinery and transport equipment, which imports to a full 25 percent. However China's imports of includes all manner of high technology electronics, parts equipment from middle income economies in South East and components (as well as consumer electronics and Asia like Malaysia, the Philippines and Thailand, while passenger vehicles). China's overall imports from smaller in absolute value than those from the NIEs, also Emerging East Asian economies gained even more enjoyed some of the strongest rates of growth � more than rapidly, increasing 81 percent, led by a more than tripling in the case of the Philippines (although of course doubling (116.8 percent) in imports of machinery and this was from a low starting point). Even Indonesia, transport equipment from East Asia. East Asia's share in whose non-oil exports have struggled with problems of China's machinery and transport equipment imports declining competitiveness in recent years, achieved an 80 reached 38 percent, which in fact represented a percent increase in this category. remarkable gain in market share of over 6 percentage points in just two years. Japan also slightly increased its China's imports of other categories of raw market share in this category to 23 percent in 2003. Thus materials and manufactures also expanded at a relatively China now sources over 60 percent of its crucial healthy pace, in a 50-70 percent range. As the later industrial, high tech and transport machinery, equipment discussion of commodity and oil markets indicates, rising and components from the wider East Asia region, a mark demand from China has been an important contributor at of the growing industrial integration of the region, and the the margin to the surge in oil and non-oil commodity continued expansion of cross-border production networks prices over the past 1-2 years. Higher commodity prices have been an additional channel through which China's growth has contributed to windfall income gains among commodity exporters in East Asia and elsewhere (while `Manufactures' comprise SITCs 5,6 and 8: chemicals, generating income losses for net commodity importers manufactured goods and miscellaneous manufactures. like Korea and the Philippines). It is noticeable, though, MTE is SITC 7: Machinery and Transport Equipment. East Asia Update 16 that growth in China's imports of these categories was global high tech boom. The year on year rate of sales less than that in machinery and transport equipment. growth in August had however dipped to 34 percent, Formal studies confirm that China's income elasticity of down from 40 percent in June. As Exhibit 13 indicates demand for imports is significantly lower for intermediate sales in this industry are highly volatile and, as would be products, raw materials and consumer goods than it is for expected, are also closely correlated with exports from capital goods. A recent analysis by Eichengreen, Rhee East Asia, the leading region for production, assembly and Tong (2004) estimates that China's income elasticity and exports of electronic and other high tech products. A for imports from Asia in 1990-2002 averaged about 0.6 more sensitive measure of momentum such as growth in for intermediates, 1.5 for consumer goods and 2.2 for seasonally adjusted sales from the previous three month capital goods.7 Thus growth in China's imports of raw period has also dipped in recent months. materials and consumer goods, especially manufactures produced by low wage unskilled labor, is likely to Exhibit 13 generally remain less dynamic than its demand for capital East Asian Exports and World equipment. Semiconductor Sales As Table 3 broadly suggests, East Asia's overall (Dec 1994-Aug 2004; % change year ago) share in these more slow growing markets is also tending 60 to gradually decline as the region's overall comparative World semiconductor advantage shifts towards more sophisticated products. sales 40 East Asian economies that still tend to specialize in raw materials and low wage manufactures are also likely to face intense competition in the Chinese market from 20 domestic producers and exporters in other developing regions. Nevertheless, East Asian economies that succeed in seeking out and sharpening competitiveness in 0 segments of unique comparative advantage, as well as in maintaining a favorable low cost business environment, Dec-1994Dec-1995Dec-1996Dec-1997Dec-1998Dec-1999Dec-2000Dec-2001Dec-2002Dec-2003 -20Jun-1995Jun-1996Jun-1997Jun-1998Jun-1999Jun-2000Jun-2001Jun-2002Jun-2003Jun-2004 should still be able to do well. Examples of fast growing East Asian exports to China among natural resource based products include crude rubber from Malaysia and -40 East Asian Vietnam, cork and wood from Malaysia and Papua New export growth Guinea, vegetable oils from Malaysia, and vegetables and -60 fruits from Vietnam. Examples of fast growing manufactured exports (other than machinery and transport equipment) include professional and scientific instruments from the Philippines and Malaysia, non- Industry reports also suggested a build up of ferrous metals from the Philippines, organic chemicals excess component inventories during the second quarter. and iron and steel from Malaysia and Thailand, and J.P Morgan estimates that inventories of semiconductors rubber manufactures, textile yarns and footwear from at PC component suppliers rose to 84 days in the second Vietnam. quarter of 2004, even higher than a previous peak of 78 days in the first quarter of 2001. According to the Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA), producers Commodity Cycles and the Oil Shock have taken swift action to correct the overbuild by High tech trimming capacity utilization rates in the third quarter.8 In line with these industry reports of inventory correction, A variety of recent information including global tech output among East Asian producers has dropped semiconductor sales, inventories, industry warnings on (from 22 percent annualized month-on-month growth in demand, and weak new orders suggests that there has June to 3.7 percent in July.). Beyond the recent been a downshift in momentum in the global high tech inventory correction, industry participants appear to industry in recent months. World semiconductor sales generally expect that a cyclical peak in 2004 will be have been on a rising trend since the recession lows of followed by a significant slowing in the growth pace of mid 2001 and averaged $18.2 billion in the three months global semiconductor sales and in other market segments to August 2004, not much less than previous global peak sales of $18.7 billion in October 2000, at the height of the 8J.P. Morgan North America Equity Research. 7Barry Eichengreen, Yeogseop Rhee and Hui Tong. "Semiconductor 3Q04 Preview". 07 October 2004. "The Impact of China on the Exports of Other Asian Semiconductor Industry Association Press Release Countries". NBER Working Paper 10768. September "Industry Reacts Quickly to Reports of Excess 2004. Inventories". September 30, 2004. East Asia Update 17 in 2005. Recent data also indicate some slowing in new Metals and agricultural raw material prices, technology orders in the main developed economies. which are more closely tied to industrial demand than High tech exports from East Asia are therefore likely to food prices, have tended to remain more resilient this slow in coming months, although it remains to be seen year. Metals prices have been fairly flat since January, how deep or protracted such a downswing will be. following their 50 percent surge in 2003. Imports and apparent consumption of metals in China have eased Primary commodity demands substantially in recent months, due mainly to a slowdown After significant increases between late 2001 and in the construction sector and tightened credit, making it early 2004, non-oil commodity prices have been generally more difficult to finance imports. Apparent consumption flat or have trended somewhat lower since the spring. It of the major metals fell to 4 percent growth in July remains to be seen whether this represents only a (3mma), from 28 percent in April. Nevertheless low temporary pause or marks the beginning of a more stocks and market deficits for most metals continue to sustained retreat. Dollar prices for non-oil-commodity underpin prices, which could move higher if demand prices had risen about 45 percent on average between the growth and imports to China accelerate once more. Prices end of 2001 and March 2004 � that is, between the end of for agricultural raw materials exported from South East the last global economic slowdown and what is likely to Asia such as rubber and timber have also been fairly have been expected to be the peak of the current global resilient, not falling much from recent peaks at the start of cycle. Prices for metals and minerals and agricultural raw the year. The impact of non-oil commodity price materials were especially strong, rising 50 �60 percent in movements on economies in East Asia is considered at this period. (Exhibit 14). The rebound in commodities the end of the next section, together with the impact of has been underpinned by unexpectedly strong global higher oil prices. demand for industrial raw materials, driven by robust growth in China, other developing economies, the United Exhibit 14 States and Japan, as well as by capacity constraints Non-oil Commodity Prices resulting from low prices and low investment in various sectors in earlier years. Prices in dollar terms were also (Dollar indexes. Jan.1996=1) 1.30 supported by the fall in the U.S. currency against other Non-energy major currencies, as well as by the extended period of low Food interest rates and easy monetary policy with which governments sought to counter the bursting of the global 1.10 Raw Materials stock market bubble and economic slowdown of 2000-01. Metals Several of these underlying forces appear to have at least shifted gear. Global demand growth has eased, 0.90 with some slowing in the U.S. and Japan in the second quarter of 2004, as well as policy efforts to curb the overly rapid pace of growth in China. After falling through 2002 and 2003, the U.S. dollar also reversed 0.70 course and managed a mild appreciation in 2004. At the margin the start of a moderate tightening in U.S. monetary policy may also have contributed to restraining further increases in commodity prices in 2004. 0.50 The overall non-oil index fell 4 percent between Jan-96 Jul-96 Jan-97 Jul-97 Jan-98 Jul-98 Jan-99 Jul-99 Jan-00 Jul-00 Jan-01 Jul-01 Jan-02 Jul-02 Jan-03 Jul-03 Jan-04 Jul-04 March and September 2004, led by declines in various food commodities. Fats and oils prices in particular fell 25 percent, led by a 37 percent fall in soybean prices, on reduced demand from China and improving supply The Oil Price Shock prospects in the U.S. Prices for South East Asian edible oil exports such as palm and coconut oil were also down Perhaps the most alarming recent development after the spring. Although prices for various grains such deriving from the global economy is the relentless rise in as wheat, maize and sorghum have also fallen back on crude oil prices over the past year. The average price of a higher global supply prospects, the price of rice � an number of different qualities of crude oil has risen from export product for farmers in Thailand and Vietnam, and around $27 a barrel in September 2003 � which was also a staple in household consumer budgets throughout the the average price of oil over the preceding three years � to region � has not. Dollar prices have risen about 40 $42 in September 2004 and $46.7 in the first three weeks percent from $168/mt in mid 2001 to a range of $230- 240/mt in 2004. East Asia Update 18 of October 2004.9 As Exhibit 15 suggests, even before 1.3 mbd (or 25 percent) in the second, far higher than the the latest hike, oil prices have generally averaged $8-9 a 7 percent annual average growth in the country's oil barrel higher during the 2000s than the $18 average of the demand over the past decade. Demand growth in China 1990s. Although in nominal terms recent prices has been highest for transport fuels like gasoline and significantly exceed those before the 1991 Gulf War or diesel, but was strong across all segments, including fuel those during the second oil shock of 1980, the comparison for power generation, naptha as feedstock for new is somewhat less alarming in real or inflation-adjusted petrochemical capacity and LPG and kerosene for terms. Oil prices deflated by the U.S. consumer price household and commercial use. Commercial stocking index are only slightly higher than before the first Gulf also often has a large impact on demand in China, War and still slightly under half those at the peak of the although it is unknown what role it played in the first half 1980 shock, when prices were over $90 a barrel in today's of 2004. There were also large demand increases in the prices. (Exhibit 16). rest of Asia and North America. Exhibit 15 Exhibit 16 Monthly Average Crude Oil Price ($/bbl) Average Real Oil Price (Jan 1990-Oct. 2004) (1970 Q1-2004 Q4. Real is Constant 2004 Dollars) 100 50.0 Real oil price - constant 2004 dollars per barrel 80 Average Sept. 1999 - 3 year average of real 40.0 Sept 2003 - $26.2 oil price 60 Average Jan. 1990 - 30.0 Barrel October 2004 Aug 1999 - $18 per 40 US$ 20.0 20 10.0 0 Jan-1990 Nov-1990 Sep-1991 Jul-1992 May-1993 Mar-1994 Jan-1995 Nov-1995 Sep-1996 Jul-1997 May-1998 Mar-1999 Jan-2000 Nov-2000 Sep-2001 Jul-2002 May-2003 Mar-2004 Q1-1970 Q1-1972 Q1-1974 Q1-1976 Q1-1978 Q1-1980 Q1-1982 Q1-1984 Q1-1986 Q1-1988 Q1-1990 Q1-1992 Q1-1994 Q1-1996 Q1-1998 Q1-2000 Q1-2002 Q1-2004 Reasons for the oil price increase Second, while OPEC and non-OPEC sources have pushed production higher to meet rising demand, the There appear to be three main sets of reasons for this cushion of available spare oil production capacity has year's oil spike. First, the unexpectedly strong and become very thin. OPEC crude oil production in the third coordinated global recovery across most of the world has quarter is estimated to have reached 29.4 mbd, nearly 3 fueled sharply higher demand for oil. World consumption mbd more than a year earlier, while non-OPEC averaged 81.8 million barrels per day (mbd) in the first production was also up by perhaps 1mbd. However half of 2004, about 3mbd (or 3.9 percent) higher than the OPEC spare capacity is now down to some 1.5 mbd, as same period of 2003, and well above the expected compared to 6-7 mbd in 2002, so that, in the near term, increase of around 1-1.5 mbd. At the center of the OPEC's capacity to manage prices has been weakened or unexpected strength in demand has been China, where lost, and demand increases are increasingly having to be apparent consumption increased from year earlier levels rationed by higher prices. The present low capacity is by 1 mbd (or 19 percent) in the first quarter of 2004 and generally held to reflect low investment in developing oil production capacity over the past decade, itself a 9 This is the average of West Texas Intermediate (WTI), Brent reflection of low oil prices in the 1990s. The number of and a Dubai crude oil price, which is rather lower than the new oil wells drilled in OPEC countries in 2003 fell by widely reported WTI price, recently near $55. Demand and 6.5 percent, for example. prices for light crudes like WTI have risen much more strongly Lastly oil prices have been pushed higher by a this year than those for heavier crudes. The premium of WTI over the heavier Dubai, usually around $3-4, has recently spiked series of political tensions and natural shocks that have up to $12-14. either directly disrupted production in different locations, East Asia Update 19 or have increased the probability of such disruptions in Oil shock impacts and policy responses the future. These have included terrorist attacks in Iraq and Saudi Arabia, the dispute between the Russian It should be said that since this year's oil price government and the Yukos oil company, political strife in increase is principally the result of rising demand, it is a Venezuela, strikes and violence in Nigeria, the simmering sign of global economic strength rather than weakness. dispute with Iran over its nuclear program, the disruption Nevertheless, with demand running up closer to oil supply of production in the Gulf of Mexico by Hurricane Ivan constraints, rising prices will serve as a mechanism to and, most recently, power outages in Kuwait. slow world growth from its heated pace in 2004. For the East Asia region higher prices will directly curb incomes Oil price outlooks in the majority of larger economies because they are net oil importers. East Asian economies will also be affected Where now for oil prices? Differences of by the impact of higher oil prices on the main export opinion on the market outlook have widened, with some markets in the developed world or OECD countries, analysts arguing that prices could reach $60 or even which overall is an oil importing region. higher over the next year, and could be sustained at over $40 in the longer term. The view that the market has An analysis of the impact of high oil prices by undergone a fundamental structural change is given some the International Energy Agency (IEA) estimates world support by oil futures prices, which have moved higher output would fall by 0.5 percent in a scenario in which oil much more closely in line with spot prices than has prices average $35 a barrel over the whole period 2004- generally been the case in the past. In mid-October the 08, as compared to a base case scenario of $25 a barrel.11 spot price for WTI was around $55 a barrel while the two Under this scenario higher oil prices lead to a transfer of year forward price was around $44. Indeed even the $150 billion a year from oil importing to oil exporting longest dated NYMEX contract for delivery of oil in 2010 economies. (The increase in the oil import bill for was trading as high as $39, although this in particular is a Emerging East Asian economies will be around $20-25 very thinly traded market. billion a year in 2004-05). This is likely to have a net negative effect on world aggregate demand and income, On the other hand the majority or consensus of because, while oil importers suffer an income loss and are oil market forecasts continue to look for prices to expected to cut domestic demand, oil exporters are gradually trend lower from current peaks, although likely expected, as in earlier oil shocks, to save a significant staying above $30 for at least the next two years. While fraction of their increased income, at least initially. In not underestimating the strength of demand and the reality importing countries, on the other hand, the adverse impact of limited capacity, it can be noted that world production effect of the income loss may be exacerbated by structural has in fact recently risen somewhat faster than demand rigidities that lead to adjustment costs in the form of and that OECD crude stocks are in the middle of their temporarily higher unemployment of labor and other historic range. An additional 1.4 mbd of non-OPEC resources. Inflation will rise, although the extent and supply and 0.4 mbd of OPEC supply are expected to enter duration of the rise will depend on the extent to which the market in the fourth quarter, with further capacity labor market rigidities and macroeconomic conditions increases expected in 2005. Indeed Iraq surprised the lead to a price-nominal wage spiral. The real exchange market with an 0.5mbd production increase in September. rate of oil importers would typically depreciate. Demand pressures have been highest for light sweet crudes, but these should abate with the end of the U.S. As regards the impact on OECD economies, one driving season.10 More generally demand pressures mitigating factor is that these economies have become should also ease as consumers adjust behavior and more energy efficient since the oil shocks of the 1970s conserve in response to higher prices. It is notable that and early 1980s. The amount of oil used to produce a unit China's oil imports after increasing 39 percent in the first of real GDP in the OECD halved between 1973 and 2002, eight months of 2004, and by 37 percent in August, grew while these countries' net oil imports fell by 14 percent. by only 5.7 percent in September. Nevertheless as a group OECD economies still import over half their oil needs, with net oil imports amounting The Bank's current outlook is in line with the to $260 billion or about 1 percent of GDP in 2003. The general consensus view; it looks for prices to average $39 IEA study estimates aggregate OECD output would fall a barrel in 2004 and $36 in 2005, before falling to $32 in by 0.4 percent relative to the base case in the first two 2006 and $26 in the longer term. But it is almost needless years of the scenario, with the impact somewhat less in to add that in the present environment all oil projections the U.S. and somewhat higher in the Euro zone. are even more than normally subject to major uncertainties. The impact of the oil shock is expected to be higher among developing countries, due to their generally greater dependence on oil imports and higher 10International Energy Agency. Oil Market Report. September 11IEA. Analysis of the Impact of High Oil Prices on the Global and October 2004. Economy. May 2004. East Asia Update 20 consumption of oil per unit of GDP. As indicated in rise in inflation caused by higher oil prices being passed Table 5, net oil imports amounted to 4-5 percent of GDP into further wage and price increases, leading to a even before the recent price increases in economies such permanent or longer term rise in inflation. At the other as Korea. Philippines and Thailand. Energy intensity extreme policy makers could focus exclusively on among East Asian economies (measured here as BTUs neutralizing the inflationary impact of the oil shock, for per 1995 dollar of GDP at market prices) is generally example by trying to stabilize overall or core inflation higher than among the developed economies because the rates. That could generate significant increases in share of industry in GDP is higher while that of services unemployment. is lower. Energy intensity among the larger Asian economies shown in Table 5, for example, is about twice Exhibit 17 the average among the G7 economies, and in most cases East Asia - CPI Inflation has been rising over the last decade. (2001 Q1 to 2004 Q3) China 14 Table 5. Energy Imports and Consumption Indonesia Malaysia Net Oil Exports Energy Consumption Philippines 2002 (per dollar of 1995 GDP) 10 Korea Mtoe* As % BTU per Avg. % Ch. Thailand of GDP dollar 2002 1990-02 China -61.7 -0.9 35764 -5.2 6 Indonesia 8.6 4.2 20331 2.1 Korea -109.0 -4.7 12340 0.8 Malaysia 11.9 4.5 20897 1.6 2 Philippines -13.1 -3.9 12560 1.2 Thailand -33.1 -5.1 16701 3.3 2001 Q1 2001 Q3 2002 Q1 2002 Q3 2003 Q1 2003 Q3 2004 Q1 2004 Q3 Japan -204.3 -1.6 3876 0.4 -2 Source: IEA Energy Balances, World Bank, U.S. Energy Information Administration. * Mtoe - Million Tons of Oil Equivalent. In practice policy makers will be concerned Output in the Asian region as a whole (including about both inflation and unemployment, and so will have India) is estimated to be reduced by 0.8 percent in the IEA to weigh the gains from policy actions that move one of study, while inflation increases by 1.4 percent. The these variables closer to its target against the losses from estimated decline for China is also estimated at 0.8 the other variable moving away from target. This means percent, with somewhat larger output losses in the more policy makers may have to accept some temporary oil dependent economies of the region. As Exhibit 16 increase in both inflation and unemployment while indicates, East Asian CPI inflation rates did indeed pick keeping close watch that neither diverges too far from its up markedly in the second and third quarters of 2004. The desired target value. The particular weight policy makers median inflation rate in the 9 largest economies rose from attach to the inflation or unemployment target is likely to 1.6 percent in the last quarter of 2003 to just over 3 be affected by the cyclical position of the economy before percent in the third quarter of 2004. Prices were boosted the oil shock. In several East Asian economies the strong not only by higher oil but also by higher food prices, growth of the last 1-2 years, the resulting reduction in reflecting recent substantial increases in international excess capacity and the low prevailing level of real agricultural commodity prices, and in some cases by poor interest rates all suggested the need for tighter monetary domestic harvests. policies, a process that has already begun in China, and For policy makers in oil importing economies more recently in Thailand. With this kind of background the oil price shock has consequences for which there are of strong aggregate demand pressures, policy makers few easy or straightforward policy responses. The oil might initially be more concerned about the inflationary price increase will tend to both increase inflation as well impact of the oil price rise, and so may wish to retain a as reduce real income and create more unemployment. At bias towards further tightening of monetary policy, while one extreme, policy makers could focus policy keeping a close eye on the evolution of output and instruments, in particular monetary policy, on trying to employment. Macroeconomic adjustment among the oil neutralize the demand reducing effect of higher oil prices, importers will also be assisted by some depreciation of thereby stabilizing unemployment. This would risk the the real exchange rate (relative to where it would have East Asia Update 21 been without the oil price increase), something that will But, on the other hand, windfall gains have quite often be easier to accomplish in economies with a flexible been squandered, with few lasting gains for the public, exchange rate regime. and could even lead to countries being worse off in the long run. In oil rich Nigeria, for example, real per-capita Policy makers in the oil and non-oil commodity GDP in 2003 was no higher than in 1970, while the exporting economies of the region will face a somewhat economy was saddled with high debt. Policy makers in different set of problems in dealing with the windfall the small low-income East Asian economies like gains generated by high oil and non-oil commodity prices. Mongolia, Papua New Guinea and Timor-Leste that are Exhibit 18 estimates the initial impact effect of both the receiving large windfall gains this year may therefore find oil and non-oil commodity price increases on several it useful to look at the experience of other countries in this economies in the region. A small economy such as Papua area. New Guinea, a net exporter of both oil and non-oil commodities, could experience a windfall income gain A good starting point is that commodity prices around 10 percent of GDP, while larger net exporters of are very volatile, so most commodity based windfall gains both types of commodity like Indonesia, Malaysia and are only temporary � boom will likely be followed by Vietnam could see windfall gains of perhaps 2-3 percent bust. However policy makers in developing countries of GDP. An economy like Mongolia which is a net oil often mistakenly act on the assumption that a temporary importer could also experience a large net income again income gain is permanent, consuming it immediately, because the price of its main mineral export, copper, is allowing it to be misappropriated through corruption, or expected to have risen almost 60 percent for 2004 as a spent on domestic investments with low rates of return. whole. As Box 1 explains, if improperly managed, such Even worse, it is sometimes used to underpin more large windfall gains can have a variety of unexpected foreign borrowing, which is then used for these purposes economic ill effects. on an even wider scale. The real exchange rate often appreciates, squeezing profitability in the non-natural Exhibit 18 resource export sector or the import competing sector of the economy. When commodity prices fall and the bust Income gains/losses due to selected arrives, however, the country is left with heavy debts but commodity price changes (As % of GDP) few offsetting assets, weaker and more corrupt 10.0 institutions, an overvalued exchange rate and Assumed Price Changes (%): uncompetitive industries that may never fully recover. 2004 2005 Severe macroeconomic adjustment with sharp falls in 8.0 Oil 34.9 -7.7 living standards and growth then follow. 2004 Rice 16.4 -4.3 2005 Edible Oils 14.4 -10.8 The general rule for temporary windfall gains is 6.0 Iron Ore 18.6 8.2 that welfare over time can be improved by saving most of Copper 58.8 -6.2 the gain and using the returns on this investment to enjoy Rubber 18.1 -10.4 a smoother and somewhat higher level of consumption 4.0 over many years. Since the government is commonly the `trustee' for the country's resources, it is primarily 2.0 through fiscal policy that this rule can be implemented, with the government smoothing expenditures over time to avoid the need for large disruptive adjustments. 0.0 A variety of fiscal approaches to managing booms have been attempted. Before getting to specifics, PNG China PDR -2.0 Korea it is worth stressing that the success of any policy will MongoliaMalaysiaVietnamIndonesia Thailand PhilippinesLao Cambodia depend on the incentives for its politicians and bureaucrats to actually implement it, rather than to find a way around it, as well as on the quality of its budgetary and other institutions. Some degree of public financial Box 1. Managing commodity windfall gains accountability is needed simply to know what has come in and where it is going. Decomposing the fiscal accounts It is hard to imagine that when rising commodity into a natural resource and a non-resource balance is also prices sharply boost the income of a poor economy � important for designing good policies. Broad institutional giving it a large windfall gain - that could turn out to be a reforms to strengthen the quality and transparency of bad thing. If the gain is well managed it should not. At fiscal decision-making are thus an essential foundation. different periods economies like Indonesia, Malaysia, Chile, Botswana and Norway have in fact been able to Many countries have found the simplest manage their natural resource wealth to foster expedient to boost savings (after paying off any foreign development and broad welfare gains for the population. commercial debt) is to establish some form of East Asia Update 22 stabilization or savings fund. Commodity revenues are subsidies, better disciplines on export credits and state paid into the fund when commodity prices exceeds a trading enterprises, and introduction of new certain reference level (as with Chile's Copper commitments to reduce trade-distorting farm subsidies, Stabilization Fund), or according to a fixed proportion (50 with deeper cuts in countries with higher subsidies and percent of oil revenues for the Alaska Permanent Fund), significant cuts early on. The impact on East Asia of with the funds being used to accumulate a portfolio of this part of the agreement may be limited because most long term financial assets. Of course all this will only of the region is not a major exporter or importer of matter if the government actually constrains its spending some of the commodities most heavily subsidized in within the limits implied by the rule (rather than `saving' the developed world, such as beef, dairy, wheat or revenues in the fund, on the one hand, and continuing corn. On the other hand there was no specific high spending and foreign borrowing on the other!) agreement on rice, the most important agricultural commodity in the region. Even though it would Julia Devlin and Michael Lewin. "Managing Oil Booms generate large welfare gains for their own consumers, and Busts in Developing Countries". In World Bank there seems little likelihood that East Asian countries (2004). Managing Volatility and Crises: A Practitioner's that heavily protect their domestic rice producers will Guide. allow improved access to domestic markets. One issue of concern for East Asian economies is tariff escalation in developed economies, whereby higher tariffs are Trade Policy Developments imposed on more highly processed products, thereby This has been a banner year for world trade. It is constraining diversification into food processing by estimated that world trade volumes will increase by over developing economies. Another is the use by 11 percent in 2004, almost twice the trend rate of growth developed economies of high and non-transparent in 1990-2003. East Asia has played a central role in this specific duties on agricultural and agro-processed year's trade boom, not only as a key supplier of import products. Even though the framework agreement demands elsewhere in the world, but as itself a new major contains no specific plan for these issues, it would be to source of import demand. This year China alone is East Asian countries' advantage to push for progress estimated to have contributed around 15 percent of the on them. overall increase in world imports volumes, while � Non-agricultural market access. The framework Emerging East Asia as a whole is estimated to have agreement sets the stage for the pursuit of tariff cuts contributed somewhere between one third and 40 percent according to a non-linear formula and the reduction or of world trade growth. elimination of non-tariff barriers. Although many Yet, even as trade itself has boomed, there has issues are still open concerning the next steps in the been a nagging worry that the multilateral system of rules NAMA negotiations, there is clear understanding about upon which the expansion of trade ultimately rests is the importance of achieving progress in this area, under pressure, and might erode if progress fails to be which accounts for more than 60 per cent of made on the present Doha round of global trade talks. international trade. Such concerns were heightened by the failure to reach � Services. WTO members agreed to intensify efforts agreement at last year's Cancun meeting of the WTO, but to increase market access for services. Revised offers they may be relieved by the WTO General Council's must be tabled by May 2005. East Asia has lagged adoption of a negotiating framework for the talks at its behind other developing regions in opening its services meeting of 27-31 July. This is of general importance for markets, even though evidence suggests that the East Asia, which studies find to be among the principal productivity gains associated with more efficient beneficiaries of a successful new global trade round. The services are particularly high. International trade start of 2005 will also see another important trade policy agreements in services can offer East Asia several development, the end of the Multifiber Agreement system benefits: increasing the credibility of reforms as the of quotas on trade in garments. Box 2 below considers result of binding international commitments, and the consequences. facilitating regulatory cooperation. Improved access to The WTO Framework Agreement markets abroad can also be important. The WTO General Council meeting agreed on a � Trade facilitation. There was also agreement to negotiating framework for the Doha trade negotiations; its initiate negotiations in this area, The agreement calls importance lies in getting the talks back on the road, for less red tape, more efficiency in the movement of though it must be admitted that most of the hard work of goods across borders, and clarification and arriving at specific detailed agreements still lies ahead. improvement of WTO rules governing customs There were four principal points: procedures to expedite the movement, release, and clearance of goods. In East Asia port and � Agricultural trade. The agreement lays out a road infrastructure bottlenecks are one of the most map for the elimination of agricultural export significant factors raising costs for potential exports. East Asia Update 23 Red tape and an antiquated approach to customs manufacturing employment, but are closely correlated procedures in some countries can equal a 5-15 percent with those sub-categories where China is presently most tariff.12 Logistics improvements, essential for moving quota constrained. Productivity levels are less than in up the value chain, have very high payoffs in East China, offsetting lower wage levels. The industry is also Asia. High-value agriculture (flowers, fruits, seafood) hampered by longer lead times and a limited domestic and manufacturing (electronics) demand sophistication textiles production capacity. One potential comparative not only in production by also in logistics handling. advantage however is Cambodia's adherence to ILO- Timeliness matters, and a fast, reliable, supply chain is monitored Core Labor Standards, which are viewed essential. In East Asia, the key logistical bottlenecks favorably by some classes of buyers. Cambodia and a seem to be high internal land transport costs and port number of other Least Developed Countries have also logistics. This is in sharp contrast to the high asked for preferential duty-free access to the U.S. market, efficiency of external transport, with trans-Pacific which otherwise imposes a 15 percent duty on garment shipping costs declining sharply over the past decade. imports from WTO members. The WTO framework agreement, which focuses mainly on border issues, is narrower than the broader Even after the end of the ATC, however, trade facilitation agenda that East Asian countries are exporters are still likely to face various types of concerned about. Yet, it can serve as an impetus to protection, including ordinary import tariffs and so-called foster their broader reform agenda. safeguard or anti-dumping measures. The U.S, has already applied one year restraints on three Chinese knitted products, with more likely to follow, while the E.U. is studying measures against synthetic clothing from Box 2. The End of Quotas on Garment and Textiles China. Trade On the whole, however, there will be a much New Year's day 2005 will see the final phasing more fiercely competitive market place for garments and out of the 30 year old system of quotas on world garment textiles. Given the importance of economies of scale, and textiles trade (first under the 1974 Multifiber vertical integration and low labor costs, some speculate Agreement and then under the transitional 1995 that the textile and garment industry will evolve to a two- Agreement on Textiles and Clothing). East Asian tier structure � one, occupied by China and India, will economies, which exported over $100 billion of the total produce the vast majority of low-cost garments, and $226 billion world trade in garments in 2003, will be another tier will be occupied by a number of producers among those most affected by the change. which serve niche markets and help firms diversify the China, whose exports are the most tightly restricted by risk of concentration on China and India. Such niches the present quota system, will be a principal gainer, due to may be defined by brand characteristics, corporate social low unit labor costs, economies of scale (which are responsibility, rapid turnaround or other features. Firm especially important in textiles production), the location decisions will in part be determined by the pace established finance and marketing networks of Hong at which countries establish the right investment climate Kong-based parent companies, and vertical integration for a more flexible, technology-driven sector. Success between its garment, textiles and cotton growing sectors. will depend on good infrastructure and logistics, quick A recent study estimates that China will increase its share turnaround times, openness to trade, efficient trade of U.S. garment imports from 16 to 50 percent as a result facilitation services, low regulatory burdens, flexible of quota removal, and from 20 to 29 percent in the EU labor markets and creating a risk environment that import market. (Nordas, 2004). encourages firms to invest in skill development and technology upgrading. Vietnam is a potential winner. Its garment exports have recently grown at a 30-40 percent annual pace to exceed H. Nordas. (2004) The Global Textile and Clothing $3.5 billion in 2003. With labor costs among the lowest Industry post the Agreement on Textiles and Clothing. in the region and productivity levels quickly rising to W.T.O. (September). those of China, Vietnam is very competitive in garments. However, since it is not yet a member of the WTO, it may continue to face continued volume restrictions in the US, Capital markets and global imbalances EU and Canadian markets while restraints are lifted on others. If Vietnam achieves its planned accession to the WTO in 2005 or 2006, this will be a temporary setback. The second half of 2003 saw a large reflow of private capital flows to emerging markets for the first Cambodia, however, could be quite adversely affected. time since the financial crises of the late 1990s, led by Garments contribute 76 percent of exports and all of flows of portfolio and equity bond flows. International investor demand for emerging market securities appears 12K. Krumm and H. Kharas (eds.). "East Asia Integrates". to have been bolstered by growing confidence about the Oxford University Press and the World Bank, 2004. global recovery and the improving environment for East Asia Update 24 developing economies, improved perceptions of the general quality of policies in these economies, and by the U.S. $ Interest Rates - Short and Long Term low level of interest rates in the developed world. Partial 5 data for 2004 suggest that flows to emerging markets have taken a pause this year � continuing at roughly the same levels reached in the second half of 2003, but not growing as they did last year. Exhibit 19 below shows the 4 total of gross bond and equity issues and commercial bank borrowings by emerging markets as a group and by Asian emerging markets in particular. Gross flows on this 3 definition reached an annualized pace of about $250 billion in the second half of 2003 and remained at about that level in the first three quarters of 2004. Flows to 10-Yr Treasury Note Asian markets followed roughly the same pattern. 2 LIBOR Exhibit 19 Spread Gross Capital Flows to Emerging Markets 1 (US$ Bill. at annual rates) 300 Emerging 1/1/04 1/16/041/31/042/15/043/1/04 3/16/043/31/044/15/044/30/045/15/045/30/046/14/046/29/047/14/047/29/048/13/048/28/049/12/049/27/04 10/12/04 Markets Asia Higher U.S. interest rates can be expected to 200 have some dampening effect on flows to emerging markets, while, on the other hand, the relative mildness of the increase is consistent with the level of flows only flattening out rather than falling this year. Indeed, consistent with the pullback in longer term interest rates 100 during the third quarter, emerging market flows appeared to be strengthening once more towards the end of the year. Gross emerging market flows in September were estimated to have jumped to $31 billion, up from $14 billion in August, those to Asia increasing from $3 to 7 0 billion, including significant bond issues by Malaysia and 2002 2003 H1 2003 H2 2004 H1 2004 Q3 the Philippines. Source: World Bank DECPG Finance Team Other indicators confirm that emerging capital markets have so far taken a relatively relaxed view of increased global uncertainties and the tightening in U.S. The leveling out or pause in emerging market monetary policy. Spreads on some sectors of emerging flows this year is consistent with other trends in the market debt � Latin America for example � did indeed international economy. As noted earlier in this report, rise modestly in the first half of the year, but have fallen uncertainties about the outlook for the global economy back since then. Spreads on East Asian eurobonds, which have tended to multiply this year. In addition, U.S. fell sharply in 2002 and 2003, have been largely stable in monetary policy began tightening at mid year, with the 2004, or seem to have been driven mainly by domestic federal funds rate rising from 1 percent to 1.75 percent at policy or political developments. (Exhibits 21 and 22). present, while the 6 month US dollar LIBOR, the most Spreads for China, Korea, Malaysia and Thailand fell commonly used benchmark for pricing commercial bank below 100 basis points in mid-late 2003, and have stayed loans, has increased by about 100 basis points. The yield below that level in 2004. In the Philippines spreads fell on the 10 year U.S. Treasury Note � the benchmark for by about 100 basis points after Mrs. Macapagal-Arroyo pricing bonds � also rose in the second quarter, before won re-election in the May presidential elections. In falling back over the rest of the year, as concerns Indonesia spreads also spiked briefly by about 100 basis increased about a slower pace of growth in the U.S. points in July because of uncertainties about the economy going forward. (Exhibit 20. Note also the presidential elections there, but have fallen back since falling spread between long and short term interest rates, then. which is often viewed as a predictor of slower growth ahead). Exhibit 20 Exhibit 21 East Asia Update 25 Eurobond Spreads 1/2001 - 11/2004 Exhibit 23 900 Stock Market Indices (Jan 2003 = 1) Korea 1.7 Philippines Indonesia Singapore Philippines Hong Kong 600 1.5 1.3 300 1.1 0 0.9 2001M012001M052001M092002M012002M052002M092003M012003M052003M092004M012004M052004M09 Jan-2001May-2001Sep-2001Jan-2002May-2002Sep-2002Jan-2003May-2003Sep-2003Jan-2004May-2004Sep-2004 Exhibit 22 Exhibit 24 Eurobond Spreads 1/2001 - 11/2004 300 Stock Market Indices (Jan 2003 = 1) China 2.1 Indonesia Malaysia 250 Malaysia Thailand Korea (left) 1.9 200 Thailand 1.7 150 1.5 100 1.3 50 1.1 0.9 0 0.7 2001M012001M052001M092002M012002M052002M092003M012003M052003M092004M012004M052004M09 Jan-2001May-2001Sep-2001Jan-2002May-2002Sep-2002Jan-2003May-2003Sep-2003Jan-2004May-2004Sep-2004 The recent movement of East Asian stock market prices is also consistent with a mild pause in private East Asia and Global Imbalances capital flows. Stock prices surged in 2003 with As was discussed in more detail in the April strengthening growth, the improving financial health of 2004 World Bank East Asia Regional Update, Emerging corporations in the region, and the return of foreign East Asia has tended to run large overall balance of portfolio capital inflows. Stock market prices in Thailand payments surpluses in recent years, as a result of its doubled over the course of 2003, rose 60-70 percent in substantial current account surpluses since the 1997-98 Indonesia and by 30-40 percent in most other economies financial crisis, as well as the more recent resurgence of (Exhibits 23 and 24). Prices generally peaked in January- private capital inflows. February this year, then pulled back by 5-10 percent in the second quarter, before starting to move higher once more in the third quarter. East Asia Update 26 Table 6. Current Account Balances (US$ Bill.) year or 13 percent of GDP by 2010.13 Non-U.S. residents Annual Four-Quarter Sum would of course become unwilling to hold ever growing volumes of U.S. debt long before then. Unpredictable 2003 2003 2004 2004 changes in investor sentiment and risk appetite could then 2001 2002 2003 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 result at some point in a very large dollar devaluation, USA -386 -474 -531 -530 -531 -537 -568 steep U.S. dollar interest rate hikes and a sharp adjustment in U.S. aggregate demand and imports, a Japan 88 112 136 124 136 154 163 severe recession in short. Euro Area -15 52 29 26 29 42 46 Exhibit 25 East Asia 1/. 91 125 164 .. .. .. .. East Asia 2/. 96 120 144 131 144 138 135 East Asia - Foreign Reserves South East Asia 22 27 32 33 32 31 29 (US$ Bill.) Indonesia 7 8 7 7 7 5 4 1,200 China Indonesia Malaysia Philippines Malaysia 7 8 13 13 13 14 14 Korea Taiwan (China) Philippines 1 4 3 4 3 4 5 1,000 Singapore Thailand Hong Kong Thailand 6 7 8 8 8 8 7 Change in reserves from year East Asia NIEs 52 63 86 79 86 90 92 800 ago (US$ bill.) Hong Kong 10 13 17 17 17 15 14 2000: 47 2002: 154 Korea 8 5 12 7 12 20 25 2001: 69 2003 234 600 Singapore 16 19 28 27 28 27 28 2004:7 251 Taiwan, China 18 26 29 29 29 27 26 400 China 17 35 46 .. .. .. .. China trade bal 23 30 25 19 25 18 14 Note 1/. Inclusive of China current account. 2/. Inclusive of China 200 trade balance. 0 Indeed, as Table 6 indicates, Emerging East Asia (and Japan) are among the major suppliers of financing for the main macroeconomic imbalance in the world Jan-1996 Jan-1997 Jan-1998 Jan-1999 Jan-2000 Jan-2001 Jan-2002 Jan-2003 Jan-2004 Jul-1996 Jul-1997 Jul-1998 Jul-1999 Jul-2000 Jul-2001 Jul-2002 Jul-2003 Jul-2004 economy at present, the U.S. current account deficit. The U.S. deficit amounted to $568 billion in the year to the second quarter of 2004, the largest part of the counterpart To adjust global imbalances, policy makers to which were surpluses of around $300 billion in East around the world � and, given the nature of the Asia and Japan. The Emerging East Asian economies imbalances, policy makers around the Pacific Rim in the alone had current account surpluses of about $138 billion first instance � need to consider the means of achieving a in the year to the second quarter of 2004. Combined with less disruptive `global rebalancing' of macroeconomic net inflows on the capital account, these economies imbalances. A part of this obviously depends on U.S. accumulated over $250 billion of official foreign policy efforts to boost U.S. national savings by reducing exchange reserves in the year to July 2004. Total reserves its budget deficit. But global imbalances have also of the 9 economies reached over $1.2 trillion, including increased in recent years because of the sharp fall in significant holdings of U.S. government debt. (Exhibit domestic investment in many East Asian economies after 25). According to the U.S. Treasury Department, six the regional financial crisis, especially in the NIEs. As Asian economies (China, Hong Kong (China), Korea, Exhibit 26 shows, the ratio of investment to GDP Singapore, Taiwan (China) and Thailand) held $381 increased between 1997 and 2003 in only one economy, billion of U.S. government securities in August 2004, China. It fell in every one of the other main economies of while Japan held $722 billion. These Asian economies the region, ranging from a fall of 6 percentage points of thus held $1.1 trillion out of a total $1.8 trillion U.S. GDP in the Philippines to one of 26 percent of GDP in official debt held by non U.S. residents, which in turn was Singapore. The average change across the 9 economies about one quarter of the total $7.3 trillion U.S. federal was an 11 percent fall in investment to GDP ratios. public debt outstanding. Savings ratios also declined, but by much less, on average The recent sharp deterioration in the U.S. current falling by about 3 percent points of GDP. There was account deficit has drawn renewed attention to the need for adjustment of global macroeconomic imbalances. 13 Catherine L. Mann. "Managing Exchange Rates: Studies suggest that on unchanged policies and with no Achievement of Global Re-balancing or Evidence of further dollar depreciation, the U.S. deficit would Global Co-dependency?" Business Economics. July continue to increase, reaching perhaps over $1 trillion per 2004. http://www.iie.com/publications/papers/mann0704.pdf East Asia Update 27 therefore a net swing towards surplus on the external contribution to adjustment can come from further trade current account balance of about 8 percentage points of liberalization in the region, especially in the area of GDP, primarily due to lower investment. services, where liberalization in East Asia has tended to lag other regions. Exhibit 26 Exhibit 27 Changes in Savings and Investment Exchange Rates vs. US$ (1997-2003; % of GDP) 1.500 (Rise=appreciation, Jan 2002=1) Indonesia Thailand Korea Philippines Taiwan, China 1.400 Thailand Yen Singapore 1.300 Euro Taiwan, China Philippines Malaysia 1.200 Korea 1.100 Indonesia Savings 1.000 Hong Kong Investment China 0.900 -35 -25 -15 -5 5 Jan-2002Apr-2002Jul-2002Oct-2002Jan-2003Apr-2003Jul-2003Oct-2003Jan-2004Apr-2004Jul-2004 The recent upswing in East Asian investment therefore makes a contribution towards the global Domestic trends and policy challenges adjustment process. As Table 6 above shows, the East Asian current account surplus has started to fall in 2004 The preceding discussion suggests that most East (although the change is disguised to some extent by the Asian economies have enjoyed an excellent economic recent sluggishness in the Korean economy, which has led recovery over the past two years, supported both by the to a sharp increase in Korea's current account surplus). strength of cyclical factors in the external environment, as China, which has already made a contribution to well as improving macroeconomic, financial and adjustment as a result of its strong recent investment and corporate sector developments at home. This section import boom, may make less of a contribution for some looks at some of the domestic trends more closely. In time, as it attempts to reduce the over-heated pace of addition, since the preceding discussion also suggests that investment in the country. The issue will then become East Asian economies are slowing from their recent fostering more robust and sustained investment spending cyclical peaks and external conditions are becoming more in the other Asian economies. Continued adjustment in uncertain, it also considers the policy efforts and reforms exchange rates is also likely to play a role in the overall that may be helpful to policy makers in the region as they macroeconomic adjustment of the region (though not seek to negotiate the uncertainties and cautiously steer perhaps in every individual case). While in a number of economies from the sharp cyclical upswing of the last 2 cases such as China, Hong Kong and Malaysia, nominal years onto the path of sustained medium term expansion. exchange rates have remained constant against the dollar One useful focus may be to remedy domestic policy as a result of formal pegs or tight bands, in most other weaknesses that are themselves sources of uncertainty, cases exchange rates have generally appreciated against while strengthening policies and institutions that help the dollar over the last 2-3 years, rising by 5-10 percent in alleviate risk and uncertainty. Thailand and Taiwan, China, and 10-20 percent in Indonesia, Korea and Japan. A third significant East Asia Update 28 less than 20 percent of GDP in Malaysia and Thailand, Exhibit 28 and around 40 percent in Indonesia. Public Sector Debt In Indonesia the lower trend in public debt to (As % of GDP) GDP ratios over recent years has been supported by 110 generally cautious fiscal policies; the central government Gross Debt overall deficit has generally been held at less than 2 percent of GDP (Exhibit 29 below), with the primary 90 Net of Reserves balance running a surplus. The overall deficit for 2004 is estimated at 1.3 percent of GDP, although both revenues 70 and expenditures have been boosted by higher oil prices. Obviously, oil and gas revenues are up, but higher market prices for fuel have also pushed the cost of fuel subsidies 50 sharply higher, from 1.7 percent of GDP in 2003 to an estimated 3 percent of GDP in 2004, a hefty chunk of 30 total government expenditures which are 21-22 percent of GDP. Restructuring the fuel subsidy mechanism is one of the most important policy challenges facing the new 10 government. Fuel subsidies encourage inefficiently high- 2001 2004 2001 2004 2001 2004 2001 2004 energy consumption in several East Asian economies including Indonesia, while having a regressive effect on Thailand Malaysia Indonesia Philippines income distribution. A reduction in the subsidy combined Source: National sources, IMF, World Bank. Note: Indonesia is with targeted compensation for the poor would free up central government. significant resources for pro-poor development spending and for fiscal consolidation, while encouraging greater energy conservation and efficiency. Fiscal Policy In Malaysia fiscal policy was mildly expansionary in 2000-03 as the government sought to The years after the 1997-98 regional financial counter adverse shocks and uncertainties in the external crisis saw substantial increases in the levels of gross environment. In 2003 an Economic Stimulus Package public sector debt among the five crisis affected countries, sought to counteract adverse shocks emanating from the -Indonesia, Korea, Malaysia, Philippines and Thailand. SARS epidemic and the Iraq War. Central government Public debt rose as a result of governments shouldering deficits ran at 5-6 percent of GDP in 2000-03, although the cost of recapitalizing and restructuring insolvent public sector deficits were much lower, about 1 percent of financial institutions, the calling of other contingent GDP or less. (Exhibit 29). With the private economy claims on government, wider public sector deficits and recovering strongly, the government has aimed to achieve real depreciation of currencies (although, of course, the substantial fiscal consolidation. The central deficit is specific contributions of these individual causes varied likely to fall to 4.5 percent in 2004, although this would widely across countries). The average of gross public be over 1 percent larger than the original budget for 2004, sector debt in these economies rose from about 30 percent due to rising fuel subsidies. The deficit is budgeted to be of GDP in 1996 � which was rather less than the average further reduced to 3 _ percent in 2005, through higher sin level of public debt among all emerging market taxes and curbs on current and capital spending, although economies at that time - to about 60 percent in 2001, not in fuel subsidies. In Thailand the central government about the same as the emerging market average. and public sector balances moved into surplus in 2002/03 As Exhibit 28 indicates, gross public debt levels (October-September) with higher revenues responding to in Malaysia have been stable in recent years at a little faster growth and more efficient tax administration. over 60 percent of GDP, while falling recently to around Responding to higher than expected surpluses, the 45 percent in Thailand and a little over 50 percent in government introduced a supplementary spending Indonesia.14 In recent years most East Asian economies program in 2003/04, together with a temporary subsidy on have also run current account surpluses and accumulated diesel and gasoline. Public investment spending will large official foreign exchange reserves. Viewed net of grow for the first time since the financial crisis, and is official reserves, public debt levels are estimated at a little expected to rise significantly in 2005 and beyond, when the government is considering a five year program of large scale public infrastructure projects. 14Public debt to GDP in Indonesia was previously reported at around 70 percent. However, a recent revision of the national income accounts has raised estimates of GDP, reducing estimates of debt to GDP ratios. East Asia Update 29 Exhibit 29 Corporate sector � recent trends and reforms 15 Public Sector Fiscal Balance The profitability and balance sheet position of (As % of GDP) 4 East Asian firms have continued to strengthen, providing Source: National sources, IMF, World Bank. Note: a more secure foundation for the recent upswing in Indonesia and Korea are central government investment spending observed around the region. Ordinary income to sales ratios for listed non-financial 2 firms have risen substantially from their low points in 1998, during the financial crisis, and in cases such as Korea and Thailand, even from levels before the financial 0 crisis. (Exhibit 30). Underlying the rise in ordinary 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 income, stronger economic activity has led to some strengthening of profit margins at the operating income level. At the same time there has been continued progress -2 Indonesia in debt restructuring, which, combined with the low Malaysia interest rates that have prevailed over the past year and a Philippines half, has also resulted in sharply lower interest expenses. -4 Thailand Korea Exhibit 30 Ordinary Income to Sales -6 (% - Non-Financial Listed Companies) 15 Public debt issues are much more significant in 10 the Philippines. Gross public debt in the Philippines was already over 70 percent of GDP in the mid 1990s, and, even though the country was less affected by the regional 5 financial crisis than others, public debt has continued to increase through an accumulation of off-budget liabilities, significant central government deficits, deficits in public 0 enterprises and currency depreciation, reaching over 90 Indonesia Korea Malaysia Philippines Thailand USA percent of GDP by 2001 and an estimated level over 100 percent by 2004. Even viewed net of official reserves -5 public debt remained high. The public sector deficit remained large, at an estimated 5.7 percent of GDP for 1996 -10 Source: Worldscope: Sample of Listed 2004. In light of the weakness of the fiscal position, Non-financial companies. 2003 for 1998 President Macapagal-Arroyo announced in August that Indonesia.. 2003 the country is in a fiscal crisis. A package of fiscal -15 measures has been submitted to Congress, including increases in excise, sin and value added taxes, a tax on telecommunications, changes in income taxation, rationalization of tax incentives and measures to Progress on debt restructuring, and equity strengthen tax collection. The government estimates the infusions has also led to lower leverage ratios, which are measures would augment revenues by 1.7 percent of now broadly in line with international norms. At the end GDP, although congressional approval and timing of the of 2003, average debt-to-equity ratios stood at around 1.5 measures remain uncertain. An increase in electric power in Indonesia, and 1.2 in Korea and Thailand.16 However, tariffs was also approved by the industry's regulatory while the majority of firms have resolved debt overhangs body, which should help reduce the public sector deficit and strengthened their financial position, there is still a by around 0.8 percent of GDP, but will need to be segment of very weak firms across countries in the region. complemented by other efforts to reduce the losses of the Thus while the median interest coverage ratio of firms has national Power Company and reform the power sector. Taken together, these measures could go some way to 15 reducing the growth of public debt, but the Philippines Discussion of corporate and financial sector trends is would still remain an outlier in East Asia with respect to based on "East Asian Financial and Corporate Sector the size of its public sector deficit and debt. Developments." World Bank (2004, forthcoming). 16Based on a sample of listed companies in Indonesia, and Thailand. In Korea the ratio refers to the average of manufacturing firms. East Asia Update 30 improved markedly (Exhibit 31), in most countries, about framework for bankruptcy, though further progress is 10-15 percent of total corporate debt is held by firms with needed, particularly with regard to implementation. interest coverage ratios of less than 1. (The exception is Korea, where the weaker firms are now the SMEs, which In Korea, for instance, the unified insolvency bill, generally have lower absolute levels of debt.) submitted to the National Assembly in late 2002 is still awaiting approval. In Thailand, an amendment to the Exhibit 31 Bankruptcy Act aiming to improve the individual Interest Expense to Sales bankruptcy framework was endorsed by the Cabinet, but a (% - Non-Financial Listed Companies) specific time for submission to Parliament has not been 14 designated. Moreover the amendment does not cover the corporate bankruptcy framework, which retains Source: Worldscope: Sample of Listed 1996 12 significant weaknesses and loopholes. Actions to lessen Non-financial companies. 2003 for 1998 Indonesia.. the case backlog in the Civil Courts (such as providing 2003 more budgetary resources and special hours for trials) are 10 still awaiting approval from the National Judicial Committee. 8 In Indonesia, observers agree that the new Bankruptcy Law adopted after the financial crisis is a 6 sound one. Amendments to help correct problems in implementation (seeking, among other things, to better 4 control spurious bankruptcy petitions) have been approved in parliament. The Commercial Court was 2 another important innovation, set up as a special chamber of the existing district courts to help deal with the 0 complex issues raised in the implementation of the Indonesia Korea Malaysia Philippines Thailand USA bankruptcy law. Delays in issuing and implementing regulations designed to insulate the commercial court from the major problems affecting the judiciary have meant that it too has acquired some of the same problems Continued efforts to resolve the situation of as the wider judiciary, including weaknesses in weak firms and deal with the remaining stock of administration, and transparency and accountability, and distressed assets can make a significant contribution to inadequate funding. However, an updated version of the sustaining the present economic recovery and the rebound Commercial Court Blueprint and action plan for reform in investment. From the perspective of firms, were published in early 2004, covering administration, uncertainties about the conditions for resolution of their transparency, funding and enforcement of court decisions, distressed debt cast a pall over prospects for new and a number of these reforms have recently been investment and financing. From the perspective of banks, initiated. a relatively high continued level of Non Performing Loans (NPLs) is costly and reduces bank profits. It can In China a new draft Bankruptcy Law covering also contribute to risk aversion, reducing banks' private enterprises had its first reading in the National willingness to lend even if they are adequately People's Congress in June. Creditors or debtors would be provisioned, restricting the scope for real sector growth17. empowered to petition for bankruptcy without having to Since the special debt workout frameworks that were seek government approval. In contrast to existing established in the aftermath of the crisis have mostly been arrangements, the new draft law gives priority to secured wound down, progress on corporate restructuring will creditors over workers. While the draft law's requirement increasingly depend on the effective functioning of the that any reorganization plan achieve majority approval by legal and judicial system18. Indeed, most countries in the each group of claimants (i.e. secured creditors, workers region are taking measures to strengthen the legal and unsecured creditors) could leave reorganization plans hostage to worker demands, the draft includes a provision for the court to approve ("cram down") a disputed plan as long as specified absolute priorities are met. While 17Some analysis done on banks in Thailand for example, representing a major step forward, the draft law warrants suggests a negative relationship between banks' NPLs further review. One clear implication is that the new and credit growth, even after controlling for banks' Bankruptcy Law will require large increases in the capital positions. number and quality of insolvency judges, administrators 18In Thailand, the CDRAC voluntary debt workout framework and other insolvency professionals. closed in mid-2003, in Malaysia, the CDRC was wound down in 2003, and in Indonesia, the JITF closed in December 2003. East Asia Update 31 Financial Sector led them to reduce consumption, which has fallen in every one of the five quarters from the second quarter of 2003 Banks have also benefited from the acceleration through the second quarter of 2004, sharply slowing GDP of economic activity over the past one and a half years. growth. The profitability of commercial banks--as measured by the rates of return to assets and equity--has improved Exhibit 32 sizably in Indonesia and Thailand, and marginally in the Philippines and Korea, and remains comfortable in Commercial Banks - Return on Assets Malaysia. (Exhibit 32) Average risk-weighted Capital (%) Adequacy Ratios (CAR) have also been above the 8 3 percent BIS norm in all five countries for several years 2000 now, while NPL ratios have continued to decline, 2.5 reflecting, to varying degrees, continued restructuring 2002 efforts, improved capacity of borrowers to repay, and new 2003 loan growth (Exhibit 33 and Appendix Tables 9). 2 2004 Two caveats should be noted however. First, 1.5 despite progress, NPL ratios remain in double digits in Thailand and the Philippines. The BOT has taken several measures to expedite NPL resolution by Thai banks, 1 including tightening provisioning requirements on long- standing NPLs and amending laws to allow the 0.5 government assessment management company (AMC) to acquire NPLs from private banks and AMCs. However, 0 the amendments have not yet been reviewed by Korea Indonesia Malaysia Philippines Thailand Parliament. In the Philippines the SPV Law provides tax breaks and other incentives to encourage financial -0.5 institutions to clear their books of bad assets, but progress in disposing of these assets has been minimal. So far, only Exhibit 33 a handful of SPVs have been registered. There remains a Commercial Banks - Capital Adequacy large gap between the valuations placed on these assets by Ratios (%) banks and investors, making banks reluctant to sell the 25 assets. Strengthening the effectiveness of the SPV Act with supporting legislation such as the Corporate 2000 Recovery Bill and the Securitization Bill is also essential 20 2002 to provide the necessary environment for distressed asset 2003 resolution. 2004 Second, these aggregate numbers mask 15 considerable differences across groups of banks, and some segments remain vulnerable. In Indonesia for instance, the financial position of state banks remains 10 considerably weaker. In Thailand, private banks continue to be riddled with high NPLs. Rising household debt 5 One trend and potential vulnerability across countries in the region has been rising household debt and 0 with it, increases in the share of NPLs from household Korea Indonesia Malaysia Philippines Thailand lending. Household debt has grown the fastest in Korea, especially between 2000 and 2002. Since 2002, the Government policies aimed at stimulating number of people in default on their debt has risen sharply domestic demand by providing tax deductions and to reach 3.7 million. Delinquencies on credit cards are the lotteries were a factor contributing to the growth in credit main factor, following a more than 5 fold expansion in card use. And weakness in supervision allowed credit credit card debts during 2000-2002. While delinquencies card companies to issue cards without requiring basic on bank loans remain below 2 percent, delinquencies on information needed to assess credit risk, such as the credit card debt amounted to 14 percent. Efforts by borrower's income. Household credit extended by indebted households to repair their balance sheets have commercial banks amounted to 35.8 percent of GDP at East Asia Update 32 the end of 2003, under 60 percent of the total credit requiring that credit cards which are in arrears for more extended to households. The financial institutions and the than three months be revoked. government have established a number of channels for resolving household debts, including establishing Strengthening financial supervision and regulation Hanmaeum Finance (the bad bank) to restructure Countries are also making progress in individual debts, the Credit Counseling and Recovery strengthening the financial system in terms of regulation service (CCRS) to run an individual workout program for and supervision. In Indonesia, the central bank and the personal delinquents, private workouts, a personal debtor ministry of finance have signed a memorandum of recovery system, where the court system will implement a understanding on how to handle banks in financial new rehabilitation procedure, and personal bankruptcies. difficulties, covering decision-making and coordination Nine percent of the total number of delinquent borrowers between the two bodies, the provision of a financing have been resolved so far. facility; and the source of financing through the issue of Household debt has also grown in Malaysia and government securities. The Parliament passed a Thailand, without, so far running into serious difficulties. milestone law on deposit insurance in August 2003. The Starting from a relatively low base, Malaysian bank loans new deposit insurance program replaced the existing to households in the form of mortgages and consumer blanket guarantee on all banks' liabilities, and provided loans almost doubled between 1998 and 2003, while for creating the Indonesian deposit guarantee corporation credit card use rose sharply. With the recent emergence (LPS), to insure deposits up to Rp 100 million. The MOU of alternative corporate financing instruments, and the and the establishment of the LPS mean that the main corresponding reduction in the corporate sector's reliance elements of a financial safety net are now in place. on bank financing, banking institutions have increasingly Finally Bank Indonesia (BI) also announced a new focused their lending on the household sector, especially regulation to improve the assessment of commercial bank through the expansion of their credit card business. health. BI will require each bank to conduct a self- Whereas the total stock of banking system NPLs has assessment every quarter and submit it to BI for review. declined in recent years, to RM 58.3 billion at end-2003, Should the bank score unsatisfactorily, BI will require reflecting the successful asset recovery efforts of bank management to provide action plans for corrective Danaharta and corporate restructuring, NPLs to action. households have risen throughout the period, to RM 19.3 In the Philippines, legislative amendments to the billion. In particular, while NPLs on consumer loans have charter of PDIC � the deposit insurance agency - were declined from their peak of RM 11.2 billion in 2001 to recently approved, which among other things, restored the RM 8.4 billion in 2003, mortgage-related NPLs have risen power of the PDIC to examine the books of member by 46 percent since 2001, to RM 10.1 billion. Credit card- banks and also improved the legal protection for PDIC related NPLs have also risen sharply, but their share in staff to some degree. It is also important that the BSP total household NPLs still remains small (3 percent). charter amendments recently filed with Congress should In Thailand the share of household loans to total be enacted and put into effect promptly. The amendments credit rose to 34 percent in 2003 or by 10 percent over the enhance the central bank BSP's capacity to deal with past three years, due both to strong growth in household problem banks and facilitate a fast transition to lending and low credit growth to corporates. This shift consolidated risk based supervision and international towards household lending has taken place across all supervision standards. The amendments are also expected institutions' growth, although it has been particularly to provide better protection against lawsuits for bank strong for finance companies. Housing loans continue to regulators. A MOU was also signed by the BSP, PDIC, be the major component of household credit and SEC and Insurance Commission (IC), creating a Financial mortgages have the highest NPL ratio--with inflows into Sector Forum (FSF), which is expected to provide an the pool of NPLs in the personal consumption sector institutionalized regulatory framework for core amounting to B 34 billion in 2003, despite strong supervision and regulation of the financial system. economic growth. Credit card NPLs however, have Another positive development is the progress made remained around 3 percent of credit card loans--much towards establishing a centralized credit bureau, which lower than Korea (14 percent). The Bank of Thailand has the BSP is currently studying in consultation with implemented a series of measures to curb excessive stakeholders. The new bureau would maintain borrowing by individuals. Banks are now required to information on both positive and negative aspects of disclose on a consolidated basis all penalty fees charged individual and corporate borrowers' credit history, unlike on missed payments on personal loans. Credit card the existing data sharing facilities which records only regulation was tightened again in April 2004 to require negative information. that the credit be limited to five times the card holder's In Thailand, the BOT has adopted a number income, increasing the minimum monthly debt servicing of measures in line with the New Basel Capital Accord, on a credit card balance from 5 percent to 10 percent, and the full implementation of which is planned for late 2008. The supervision and examination process has shifted from East Asia Update 33 transaction testing to reviewing a bank's risk management system and process. A policy statement on good governance was issued in 2002, which requires greater disclosure from banks, particularly with regard to their risk profile. East Asia Update 34 COUNTRYSECTIONS Major Economies19 inflows. At the same time, underlying inflation pressures remain manageable, which provides support for the authorities usage of measures that seemed targeted at China preventing future over-supply in certain sectors rather than at further significantly tightening overall Policy measures to cool down the economy macroeconomic policies. Against this background, the appear to have had some success, but it is too early to call modest increase in interest rates effective October 29 the end of the investment boom that has become known as (around 25 basis points) serves mainly as a signal that the "overheating". GDP growth eased to 9.7 percent year-on- authorities would be ready to use the interest rate year (y-o-y) in the first half of 2004, slightly down from instrument more forcefully if required on the basis of the 9.9 percent recorded in the last quarter of 2004. developments on inflation or deposits. Growth has still been mainly driven by investment, although retail sales have also remained buoyant. Looking Nonetheless, looking ahead, with underlying ahead, we expect GDP growth to ease further, to 9.2 inflationary pressures projected to remain limited, drastic percent for 2004 as a whole, and 7.8 percent in 2005. macroeconomic measures to cool down the economy are unlikely to be imminent, and if the economy lands at all, Debates continue on the extent and form of it is likely to be a soft landing this time around. The rapid "overheating", the success of the measures to slow down deceleration in credit in recent months, if continued, could investment, as well as on the appropriateness of relying already cause a larger than expected slowdown, although on administrative measures instead of more market- it is too early to tell whether the credit growth decline is oriented tools. After peaking in the first quarter, largely due to lower demand because of the impact of the investment growth slowed down following administrative administrative measures, or whether banks have become measures that seemed targeted at limiting investments in more reluctant to lend. Nonetheless, fears of a hard specific sectors where the authorities saw excess capacity landing remain limited in light of continued strong to be building up. Fiscal policy has also contributed to demand indicators in recent months. limiting demand pressures, but monetary policy has shown an ambiguous stance. Growth in monetary Growth in agricultural production has picked up aggregates and credit has slowed down considerably, in and rural incomes increased significantly--due to grain part induced by "window guidance" of the central bank price increases and, to some extent, the government's and further tightening of reserve requirements. This "pro-rural" policies. Plans announced to expand the social despite continued capital inflows, which the authorities security system more fully to rural areas may help to largely sterilized. On the other hand, real interest rates reduce the remaining large gap between rural and urban have until recently continued to decline as a result of living standards, although the feasibility of the plans at increases in inflation. Indeed, low interest rates and the this stage of China's development remains to be seen. strong incentives for local governments to boost growth in their region, combined with their reliance on revenues External developments remained favorable. from real estate developments, continue to fuel Production capacity has expanded significantly due to the investment. Moreover, low or negative real deposits rates recent investment boom, and this allowed exports (in have started to show their effects on households, who are US$) to grow by 35 percent (y-o-y) in the first 9 months increasingly seeking alternative investments for deposits of 2004. Driven by the buoyant domestic demand, imports in banks. grew 38 percent in this period. With a small current account surplus and a significant surplus on the capital The new investment policy announced in July account, China continued to increase its foreign exchange aims to increase the role of the market in investment reserves--by US$ 80 billion to US$ 483 billion in end- decisions, but the key tool for this--the interest rate--is July 2004. yet to play its proper role. Banks are not yet using the recently granted (moderate degree of) flexibility in setting interest rates. In addition, the authorities have been Indonesia reluctant to increase interest rates significantly because of The successful and peaceful election and concerns about the impact on financial fragility in the political transition represent an important step in the corporate sector, banks' balance sheets, and capital consolidation of Indonesia's democracy. In the run-off election September 20th, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono (SBY), former coordinating minister for security and 19More detailed individual Country Briefs for the major political affairs, was elected as the next president, with his economies can be found at the World Bank website: term extending to 2009. The next few months are crucial http://www.worldbank.org/eapupdate/ to Indonesia's medium-term economic picture. A new East Asia Update 35 economic policy package and early implementation steps increase from a budgeted Rp.15 trillion (0.7 percent of by the new government would draw attention from GDP) to Rp.59 trillion (3 percent of GDP) at $36/bbl. At investors and markets. Currently there are signs of this level of expenditure the fuel subsidy is close to total investment recovery and the external economic development expenditures (Rp.72 trillion or 3.2 percent of environment is supportive. Together with high capacity GDP). While increased revenues will hold the overall utilization � serving as a proxy for investment demand - a deficit almost unchanged (up from 1.2 to 1.3 percent of credible economic policy package and its implementation GDP) from an efficiency point of view, reducing the fuel are likely to be rewarded by an acceleration in investment. subsidy is among the most important challenges for the The World Bank's forecast for GDP growth is now 4.9 new government. percent in 2004 and 5.4 percent in 200520. The White Paper package of policy measures During the first half of 2004, the economy grew announced in September 2003 combined with an adequate by 4.7 percent (yoy). The good news is that investment implementation record and monitoring mechanism grew by 8.3 percent, much higher than 0.4 percent in the contributed to bridging the "policy credibility gap" at the second half of 2003. Other indicators also signal a end of the IMF program. As of September 2004, the recovery in investment. Capital goods imports for the government successfully completed most of its period January-September increased by 35.3 percent commitments under the White Paper though performance (yoy) and the number of investment approvals is also on varies by area. In particular progress on `increasing the rise in 2004. However, these numbers start from a investment, exports and employment' lagged behind low base in 2003 and sustained increase in investment macroeconomic stability and financial sector will require continued improvement in the investment restructuring. The investment, export and employment climate. Employment also rebounded. Recent quarterly section included structural issues in legal reform and data indicate that the open unemployment rate declined employment that have proved difficult. However there from 8.5 percent in August 2003 to 7.4 percent in May are a number of policy successes including: the enactment 2005, although a high 65 percent of the employed are in of the State Audit Law and the amendment of the the informal sector21. Market sentiment is strong. The Bankruptcy Law, Law No.22/1999 on decentralization bombing at the Australian embassy in September had very and No.25/1999 on fiscal decentralization. The new little impact on markets. The stock and foreign exchange government will need a new economic policy package markets recovered to the pre-bombing level on the that should focus on consolidating the achievements to following day but renewed concerns about security. date, and especially on improving the investment climate. Fiscal and external risk indicators continued to improve. The government debt to GDP ratio declined from 81 percent at end-2000 to 53 percent in June 2004. The Korea external debt ratio also declined from 86 percent at end- Buoyed by strong export demand, Korea's 2000 to 53 percent by June 2004. These positive political economy grew 5.3 percent year-on-year in the first and economic developments were reflected in rating quarter and 5.5 percent in the second quarter of 2004. upgrades and Fitch recently upgraded their rating outlook The economy is clearly on a rebound from last year's from `stable' to `positive'. underperformance and is expected to grow 4.9 percent Despite these signs of investment recovery, this year and 4.4 percent next year. Exports has been Indonesia's investment climate remains weak, especially exceptionally strong, rising 23-27 percent in real terms in as compared to regional competitors. The World Bank's each of the past three quarters. High-tech and IT-related Doing Business Survey 2005 shows, for example, that it products, which now account for a third of the country's takes 151 days in Indonesia to start a business, much export receipts, have generated much of the trade surplus higher than regional competitors such as Thailand (33 with cell phones and flat-panel displays gaining in days) and Malaysia (30 days). importance ahead of semiconductors. Equally strong were shipments of steel, metals and chemicals, On the fiscal front, the revised 2004 budget particularly to China, which last year outpaced the U.S. as (using 1993 base GDP) estimates that fuel subsidies will Korea's main export market. Domestic demand however has been relatively weak and policy-makers continue to ease macroeconomic 20 Growth forecast is revised up from 4.5 percent to 4.9 policies with the aim of generating broader-based growth. percent for 2004 and 5 percent to 5.4 percent for 2005. In In August, the central bank cut interest rates by 25 basis addition to favorable recent political and economic points to a historic low of 3.5 percent in an attempt to developments, change in the GDP base year affects the encourage domestic spending. The authorities also front- revision. 21 loaded fiscal expenditures into the first half of the year, Quarterly labor statistics are drawn from a much enacting a supplemental budget amounting to about 0.5 smaller sample size than the annual labor force survey percent of GDP. For next year, the authorities are and this trend will need to be confirmed from the annual reportedly targeting a deficit of 1.25 percent of GDP, numbers from the August sample. East Asia Update 36 consisting of a package of tax cuts, including a one up segments of the services sector to increased percentage point reduction in all income tax rates and international competition. extra spending specially directed at social programs. Malaysia A recovery in domestic demand however will clearly depend on whether household spending picks up. The Malaysian economy continued to strengthen through the first half of 2004, and real GDP is on course Household spending has been depressed over the past one to grow by 7 percent in 2004, and 6 percent in 2005. Real and a half years, following a rapid expansion of credit GDP increased by 8 percent in Q2 2004, driven by card lending during 2000-2002, which in turn resulted in a sustained expansions in manufacturing output and substantial increase in household debt and household loan services, mirrored by a prolonged cyclical upswing in delinquencies. To address the household debt problems, both domestic private and external demand, and continued the authorities and financial institutions have established a prudent domestic financial management. number of channels that offer varying terms depending on the size of debts and whether the debts are to single or Domestic demand was driven by robust private multiple creditors. The Ministry of Finance and Economy consumption and a sharp pick-up in private investment, has also announced plans to step up the financial which the authorities estimate at 14_ percent. Public supervision of credit card issuers and to implement an consumption grew by 7.1 percent, while public early warning system in the credit card loan sector. investment declined by 28 percent in line with the 2_ percentage points of GDP contraction budgeted for Korea's large corporations, which have so far 2004.22 used their profits to further de-leverage their balance Foreign direct investment inflows were sustained sheets and to invest in abroad, particularly in China, now and channeled mainly to oil and gas, manufacturing, and appear to also be increasing their domestic investments. services sectors. External demand was boosted by the Investment in machinery and equipment, which declined synchronized economic recoveries in the U.S.A., Japan, for four consecutive quarters, picked up in the second and Europe, stellar growth in China, expanding intra- quarter. Overall, Korea's non-financial corporate sector regional trade, and robust international commodity prices. remains in good health on average, having lowered The overall global outlook for 2004 remains favorable, leverage ratios to international norms and strengthened but the combined effects of some moderation in China's profit margins. The exception to the general pattern of growth, higher oil prices on the global economy, and the corporate health is in the SME sector. SME finances have anticipated decline in the demand for electric and weakened after a period of strong credit growth, although electronic (E&E) products towards the end of the year so far, there has been little increase in the SME will act to moderate growth in the second half of 2004 delinquency ratio. and in 2005. Korea's banking sector remains healthy. Indeed, Strong export performance marks 2004. Exports with the recent economic rebound banks' net income rose of chemical, metal, and rubber products performed well four-fold in the first half of this year. Potential bank following higher volume sales in the region, while sales losses on SME loans remain limited, both because half of of agricultural commodities expanded strongly from the loans are collateralized and government guarantees higher earnings of palm oil and natural rubber. Crude cover one fifth of SME credits, and because most SMEs petroleum exports benefited from the rise in world prices, deal with only one or two creditors which facilitates any while sales of liquefied natural gas increased sharply from debt restructuring. Following capital infusions, the higher regional demand. Imports rose by 32 percent average CAR of credit card companies has also improved, through end-June, reflecting higher purchases of intermediate and capital goods, and remained strong from negative last year to 7 percent this year. through August, boosted by higher imports of consumer Based on our expectations of the external goods stemming from stronger private consumption. environment--including higher oil prices, a cooling of the Tourist arrivals surged by 38.4 percent in Q1, but global IT sector, and a slowdown in China's growth--we declined slightly in Q2. are projecting a lower growth rate of 4.4 percent for Korea next year. While lower than consensus forecast at The overall balance of payments remained in surplus and net international reserves rose further, to the beginning of this year, the projected growth rate is $56.9 billion by end-September, equivalent to 7_ months still higher than those of most OECD countries. Over the of retained imports and 5 times short-term external debt. longer-run, initiatives to place the SME sector into a more Total external debt rose slightly to $51 billion in Q2, competitive footing will help sustain stronger growth, as equivalent to 49 percent of GNP. will continuing efforts to improve corporate governance particularly in Korea's large corporations. Equally important will be the initiatives announced recently to enhance productivity of the Korean economy by opening 22Gross development expenditure of the Federal Government. East Asia Update 37 Consumer price inflation rose by 1.4 percent in either restructured their debts or settled them in an August, reflecting higher prices for beverages and environment of declining interest rates. Interest coverage tobacco, rent, fuel, and power, but the overall increase ratios, and returns on equity and assets, have improved, was restrained by the limited increases in Government- although not to their pre-crisis levels. However, controlled prices. Core inflation remained subdued. performance of the Malaysian stock exchange was disappointing. Though the exchange continued to deepen To bolster domestic private sector-led growth, during 2004, with the number of listed companies rising the Government is combining gradual fiscal consolidation to 946 by early October, the gains of composite index in with a prudent but accommodative monetary policy. The 2003 and early 2004 were among the lowest in the overall budget deficit for 2004 is projected to decline to region's top ten markets. Encouraged by the low interest 4_ percent of GDP, from 5_ percent of GDP the year rate environment, higher funding from private debt before, and the 2005 Budget envisages a further decline to securities more than offset the decline in equity finance. 3_ percent of GDP. The monetary stance of Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) remains accommodative but consistent With regard to Government-linked companies with the exchange rate peg to the U.S. dollar. In a further (GLC), thirty of the total 40 GLC are slated for move to liberalize lending rates, in April the BNM restructuring. Also, the Government has launched Key introduced a new overnight policy interest rate (OPR) to Performance Indicators (KPI) and Performance-Linked replace the three-month intervention rate. With ample Compensation (PLC) programs, whereby management is liquidity, financial institutions have been able to lower now fully accountable for performance and remunerated their lending rates, and this has helped fuel consumer accordingly. All GLC will be required to fully adopt KPI spending and business investment. and PLC programs by 2005, and the KPI concept is being extended to public agencies. Further governance-related The financial sector continues to be improvements are to be implemented at the corporate strengthened. Around 31 of the 119 policy level of public agencies, including reducing the size of the recommendations of the Financial Sector Master Plan individual boards, removing regulators from the boards have been fully implemented, while another 24 are being and replacing them with independent directors, and implemented on a continuous basis. Recent measures introducing new CEOs and professional management. include strengthening guidelines for corporate governance, improving the prudential framework by To guard against external vulnerabilities, the adopting new standards on asset-backed securities and Government is promoting domestic private sector-led incorporation of market risk, allowing intra-group growth, while encouraging FDI in selected strategic mergers of commercial banks and finance companies, and sectors. In addition to financial and corporate sector improving consumer awareness and protection. The 2005 reforms, and fiscal consolidation, the Government aims to Budget also includes measures to open stock brokering further bolster private sector development through fiscal activities to foreigners, and allow the entry of global fund incentives, improved governance, sequenced managers and full foreign ownership of venture capital liberalization, and strengthening tertiary education to companies. improve educational outcomes and the technological capacity of firms. The performance of commercial banks continued to improve through mid-2004. Risk-weighted capital of The Government's reform agenda is expected to include banks increased to a healthy 13.8 percent of assets, while measures to further improve the investment climate for net non-performing loans of commercial banks declined domestic and foreign investors in both manufacturing and to 7.7 percent of total loans. Returns on equity and assets services sectors. This will include reductions in the rose steadily to 18.7 percent and 1.6 percent, respectively, regulatory burden facing firms, the strengthening of while earnings per share have increased for most banks. professional and managerial skills of its workers, The provision of Islamic banking services also continued promoting innovations in firms and opening up the to expand. services sector to greater foreign investment. Greater emphasis on total factor productivity growth is sought in In the corporate sector, recent reforms under the the rationalization and simplification of fiscal incentives. Capital Markets Master Plan include the requirement that directors report on internal controls, mandatory disclosure of compliance with the Malaysian Code on Corporate Philippines Governance, and the adoption of international accounting Economic growth strengthened in the first half of standards and best practices on internal audit functions. 2004, but the pace of growth is likely to slow given the Also, the Securities Commission now has more increase in oil prices, rising domestic interest rates and the supervisory and enforcement capabilities, including prospect of higher international interest rates, large public greater power to impose civil penalties. sector deficits and external financing requirements amidst Meanwhile, leverage, cash flow, and profitability uncertain prospects for fiscal adjustment. Risks to the indicators of the corporate sector have improved overall. external environment add to the urgency of fiscal Debt-equity ratios have declined, as companies have adjustment. East Asia Update 38 Real GDP growth increased to 6.3 percent in the effective terms, falling to a low of P56.5/USD in mid- first half of 2004 from 5.3 percent in calendar 2003, October before recovering somewhat. Despite ongoing driven primarily by private consumption growth of 5.9 concerns regarding the fiscal outlook, equity prices percent. Investment grew by 9.4 percent during the first increased by an average of about 23 percent since the half, though its relatively low share in GDP (less than 20 beginning of the year, underpinned by robust earnings percent) limited its contribution to overall GDP growth. growth in the corporate sector through the first half of Inflation through September 2004 (y/y) jumped to 6.9 2004. Growth in bank lending to the corporate sector percent after averaging 3 percent in 2003 primarily remains weak, however--loans grew by less than 1 reflecting rising petroleum product prices. percent in the first half of the year. Unemployment, while still high at 11.7 percent as of July 2004, fell by about a percentage point from July 2003 as On the external front, the trade deficit narrowed 1.2 million net new jobs were generated over the period. to $700 million and the current account surplus more than Most of the new jobs created were in the farm and doubled to $1.9 billion in the first half of 2004 as export services sectors, whereas manufacturing jobs barely grew. growth of nearly 10 percent outpaced import growth. Philippine export growth however lagged the performance Weaknesses in public finances remain of serious of other major economies in the region. Notwithstanding concern as public debt has grown rapidly in recent the current account surplus and substantial foreign years--nonfinancial public sector debt exceeds 100 borrowing through bond issues (primarily to service percent of GDP and contingent liabilities are also maturing debt), gross international reserves fell by nearly significant. The fiscal program for 2004 targeted the $900 million in 2004 through September to $15.9 billion consolidated public sector deficit (CPSD) to increase in part reflecting negative net portfolio and FDI flows in from 5.5 percent of GDP in 2003 to 6.7 percent in 2004 the first half. reflecting a rising deficit within state-owned enterprises (GOCCs), and notwithstanding the targeted decline in the Preliminary data from the 2003 Family Income national government deficit to 4.2 percent of GDP from and Expenditure Survey (FIES) indicate that total real 4.6 percent in 2003. The increased GOCC deficit in turn family incomes decreased by 4.4 percent between 2000 was expected to be driven by a sharply higher deficit and 2003 while total real expenditure declined by 1.7 within the National Power Corporation (NPC). percent. Average incomes and expenditure declined by Developments to date indicate that CPSD/GDP ratio may even more. These declines occurred across the span of in fact remain relatively stable in 2004 with the national income categories, indicting that that poverty may have government deficit reduction on target thus far and the risen during this period. There are, however, GOCC deficit below target as of early 2004. inconsistencies between the income and expenditure Nevertheless, it remains vital to move expeditiously to figures from the FIES and the national account data which reduce the public sector deficit given the aforementioned indicate real GDP growth of about 11 percent during the risks to the external environment and the prospect of same period. further downgrades by international ratings agencies absent a more vigorous effort to reduce the public sector Thailand deficit. The Thai economy continues to perform robustly The Government of President Gloria Macapagal- though estimated growth of 6.4 percent this year, is lower Arroyo--who was reelected as President in May for a six than last year. Higher oil prices have reduced growth but year term beginning in July--has proposed a series of not as much as the actual rise in world prices would legislative measures to increase tax revenue, but the suggest; the domestic retail price of diesel has not been extent to which these measures will be enacted, and at raised this year. Growth of private consumption is down what pace, remains uncertain. The Energy Regulatory relative to last year due in part to higher retail prices of Commission (ERC) recently authorized power tariffs to gasoline for cars, and in part to slower growth in rural be raised by nearly one peso per kwh, which will reduce incomes. Growth of private investment has slowed too but not eliminate the operational losses of the NPC, relative to last year, especially foreign direct investment, whose debt and debt servicing burden remains excessive. probably due to volatile oil prices and pre-election Philippine sovereign bond spreads have uncertainties. Public investment, however, has risen remained relatively stable in 2004 (about 470 basis points significantly this year, in sharp contrast to the previous over ten year US Treasury bonds in mid-October); the $1 five years of continuous retrenchment in public capital billion global bond issued by the Government on formation. Receipts from tourism are up strongly after September 9 was priced at nearly 500 basis points above the slump last year due to Severe Acute Respiratory equivalent US Treasuries. Yield curves for domestic Syndrome (SARS). Export earnings are growing government paper have also risen during the strongly, though growth in export volumes is down year--though rate increases have lagged the rise in compared to 2003, and the terms of trade will improve by inflation--and one-year T-bill rates as of mid-October roughly 3.5 percent notwithstanding higher world oil stood at nearly 10 percent. The peso depreciated in real prices. East Asia Update 39 GDP growth in 2005 is projected to be around However, export volumes grew slowly at only 6 5.8 percent, slower than this year. This is in part due to percent, half the rate in 2003. Clearly negative growth in deferred adjustment of retail prices of diesel and lower volumes of agricultural and fishery exports contributed, world demand for exports. The Government has but most of it is accounted for by a slowdown in volume- announced its intention to float the retail price of diesel growth of manufactured exports. Within manufactures, early next year, which would raise diesel price by more volume growth of resource-based products (including than a third of its current price; this will affect private processed foods) and high technology products (like consumption and private investment. Also, world machinery and parts) have fallen relative to last year. demand for exports will be lower than 2004 -- including With rising capacity-utilization, supply-side constraints overall growth in import demand from China. Imports on are becoming major influences on Thailand's export the other hand, are projected to continue growing more performance. Future private investment in manufacturing rapidly given Government's plans for public investment will be a key determinant of Thailand's ability to sustain generally and infrastructure investment particularly. high export growth. The macroeconomic situation remains robust, This performance should be viewed against the though higher oil prices and rising interest rates are likely remarkable Thai export performance since 1999. Exports to take their toll. Headline inflation will rise to 3 percent have grown rapidly in every year except 2001, thereby in 2004, compared to 1.8 percent last year, largely due to raising the export share in Thailand's GDP significantly the increases in oil and electricity prices. Projections for (relative to pre-crisis years) and Thailand's export share 2005 indicate that inflation will rise further to around 4 in world market. This success has been accompanied by a percent as retail prices of diesel are adjusted fully to significant shift in the composition of exports towards reflect world prices. Real interest rates are at their lowest higher value-added items like electrical/non-electrical level. Total investment is strong as public investment is machinery and parts as well as vehicle and parts. This has increasing rapidly after five-years of retrenchment; been driven in part by higher foreign direct investment private consumption growth, while slower than last year, inflows in the post-crisis period, encouraged no doubt by continues to be an important driver of growth. the liberalization of foreign entry soon after the crisis, and by the further rationalization of the import regime. External vulnerability to shocks has fallen further. Total external debt has fallen to US$ 50 billion Private investment grew by 16 percent in last 8 by July this year (around 31 percent of GDP) � falling months, a slower rate than last year. Most of this is from $52 billion in end-2003 - as the Government probably accounted for by little or no growth in foreign continue to prepay loans, including some to the direct investment flows. This maybe due to the international financial institutions. The current account uncertainties arising from higher world oil prices, the surplus, though falling will be around 4 percent of GDP in nature of adjustment in Thai retail prices of petroleum 2004, as trade surpluses narrow further with further pick- products and of course, the impending elections. up in import demand. External reserves now exceed However, two positive aspects of this year's growth in US$40 billion, around 4 times the level of short-term private investment are worth noting. First, there is a external debt. Next year, the current account surplus is significant increase in Board of Investment (BOI) expected to decline further given the projected increases approvals of private investment applications, including in both public and private investment and the resulting FDI, suggesting that lack of FDI growth is likely to be a rise in imports. `blip" rather than a trend. Second, despite the above uncertainties, private domestic investment growth remains Exports earnings grew by 23 percent in the first particularly robust, a good sign for the future. 8 months of this year. This growth was made possible by a 16 percent increase in world prices of exports, since Nevertheless, some private investment export volumes grew by only 6 percent, nearly half the characteristics suggest fragility. First, while recovery rate in 2003. Three export categories � electrical continues, private investment as a share of GDP is still machinery and parts, non-electrical machinery and parts, only 17 percent, significantly lower than the annual vehicles and parts � comprised 44 percent of export average of the 1980s. Second, residential construction earnings this year. In terms of contribution to export investment continue is still contributing around a quarter growth, the developed country markets (US, Europe & of the annual increase in private investment; additions to Japan) provided most to the growth in export-earnings, manufacturing capacity supported in part by the low real followed by ASEAN; together they accounted for two- interest rates. Third, given that capacity in manufacturing thirds of this growth, with China contributing a tenth, appears to be constraining export-volume growth, even a significantly lower than last year. Exports to ASEAN temporary slowdown in private investment growth is grew by 31 percent, twice the rate of last year, while likely to slow export volumes next year. exports to China grew by 24 percent, a third of last-year's rate. Banks increased corporate lending is likely to sustain increasing private investment. There is a rise in banks lending to businesses this year relative to last year, East Asia Update 40 growing at an annualized rate of 14 percent over last year. and in technology (by 4 places), largely because other These loans appear to be going mainly to tradable sectors, countries have moved ahead. and relatively large firms. Household consumption growth slowed relative Public investment will grow this year for the first to last year, but continues to be an important growth time since the crisis. After retrenchment for the past 5 driver. Household consumption in the first half of this years, public investment grew by more than 7 percent this year grew by 5.8 percent, a slow down from 6.2 percent in year. This growth has come mainly in the form of the same period last year, and will likely slow down in the investments by local governments, and to a smaller extent second half when oil prices has rises sharply and by the center. With the Cabinet approval of large consumer confidence declines. Continued growths in infrastructure projects, growth in public investment next consumer credits and farm incomes this year and year is likely to be much higher than 2004. This supportive government measures, will support continuing rise in public investment will thus become an consumption growth, helping to cushion some of the important driver of growth in future. adverse impacts of the oil price rise. Consumption of services accounts for more than half of consumption The Government is considering a large five-year growth, at least for the first half of the year, compared to program of public infrastructure investments. The only a quarter last year. This is primarily because the financing mechanisms are still not clear. The final size of rebound of tourism-related services such as hotels and the program will depend on how the financing constraint restaurants and transportation services from their slump is addressed. Nevertheless, a large investment program last year. will have several macroeconomic implications, one of which relate to the evolution of current account balance; it While banks' exposure to households have risen is very likely that Thailand will generate a current account further, household debts look manageable. Thailand's deficit sooner than would happen on current trends. household debt to disposable income has been rising since 2002 and is close to 60 percent this year. This has been But will these investments "crowd-in" private accompanied by rising household debt for all income investment and promote sustained growth. This will groups; the lowest income group and the highest have the depend on whether public infrastructure investments will highest debt as a share of household income, making them enhance competitiveness of the Thai economy, thereby vulnerable to a rise in interest rates. raising rates of return on private investment. This can happen if the Government addresses three issues. First, Positive developments are seen in the financial public infrastructure investment program should be and corporate sector, though more remains to be done. In embedded in an overarching strategy for delivering better the financial sector, bank supervision was strengthened by quality and more cost-effective infrastructure services the Bank of Thailand (BOT) and prudential regulation on aimed at improving competitiveness. Second, these loan classification and enforcement has been tightened. investments will have to be accompanied by policy Aggressive loan expansion by a large state commercial changes that will promote inter-modal and logistics bank has slowed down following the BOT's intervention. efficiency and ensure better mix of public-private In the corporate sector, the Parliament has passed partial investments in infrastructure and logistics. This means amendments to the Bankruptcy Act, which are aimed at that current restrictions on private entry and operation will ameliorating the legal framework for individual have to be relaxed. Third, public organizational bankruptcies. Nevertheless, NPLs are still in double-digits arrangements � in Bangkok and in the provinces � will and measures to expedite NPL resolution has been have to be developed in a way that increases operational delayed and still awaits the enactment of amendment to efficiency of public infrastructure investments. AMC law. Addressing the existing restrictions on the Implementation of reforms in 2004 continue, but at a services sector will be important in this context. In relatively slow pace. There has been further particular this relates to the regulatory framework for rationalization of import tariffs and signing of FTAs that telecommunication, ports, air-travel, financial services, are increasing competition for producers and opening up logistics services and so on. Modifications in these better export opportunities. Similarly, changes in public regulatory frameworks that help to increase competition sector governance in respect of public financial and improve efficiency, but also promote growth in these management and public administration streamlining sectors and enhance competitiveness of Thailand. continue. There have been fewer changes in respect of private investment regulations while the changes in legal The 2004 Global Competitiveness Report shows framework formulated for the financial sector, secured that other countries are moving ahead in competitiveness. transactions, collateral and so on, still remain to be Thailand's rank in overall "Growth Competitiveness" has slipped from 32 in 2003 to 34 in 2004. This is enacted and implemented. notwithstanding the significant improvement in ranking on macroeconomic environment. The largest declines in ranking are in respect of public institutions (by 7 places) East Asia Update 41 Vietnam into the EU and Japanese markets with some initial success. This trend will be aided by garment quota GDP growth in the third quarter, at 8.0 percent, increases in the EU market and improved food safety lifted the growth rate for the first nine months of 2004 to standards adopted by Vietnamese exporters. 7.4 percent year on year (y-o-y). Growth is expected to be maintained at 7-7.5 percent for the rest of the year. The With the expiration of the MFA in 2005, main macroeconomic development in the last 9 months Vietnam will likely face tougher competition in has been the sharp rise in prices, generating considerable international markets. This is because Vietnam, not debate among policy makers on response strategies. The currently a WTO member, will continue to face import high international price of oil, which on the one hand has quotas. As a counter, the government is seeking to been an important factor in the recent upsurge in inflation, negotiate garment quota increases in EU and US markets has on the other hand boosted export receipts and while producers are starting to focus on non-quota government revenue. products. Another area where the government would need to act relates to reducing the transaction costs in quota The industrial sector grew by 10.6 percent in the allocation as exporters face stiffer competition from first 9 months of 2004 with manufacturing rising by 9.3 quota-free countries. On the positive side, buyers appear percent. The construction sector recorded a growth of 8.1 keen to have diversified sources of supply and would percent in the first nine months with a pick up in the retain Vietnam as an established source. A key factor second and third quarters helped by demand injections would be the signals on WTO membership: if these from the government's investment program. Growth in remain strong then it will be a solid incentive for buyers this sector has however been dampened by the high price to not re-source away from Vietnam. of steel. Agricultural growth stood at 2.3 percent in the first 9 months of 2004, representing a recovery in later Import growth at 21 percent in the first nine months. The poultry and livestock sub-sector, which months equaled the pace in the same period last year. The represents around 7 percent of GDP, was impacted by the trade deficit in the first nine months is estimated at 4.3 avian influenza outbreak and witnessed a reduction in percent of GDP compared with 6.6 percent in the same value added of 6.1 percent y-o-y in the first quarter, and period of 2003. With a continuation of recent trends, the 2.2 percent y-o-y in the first six months. This represents current account deficit which stood at 4.7 of GDP in 2003 the net effect of a sharp reduction in poultry output being will likely narrow this year as remittances have remained compensated to some extent by an increase in substitute strong. On the financing side ODA disbursements will livestock products. The impact on the tourism sector, continue to be the main source. FDI disbursements, other than in the month of March, has not been according to official data which employ a definition significant. Tourist arrivals have increased by 45 percent different from the balance-of-payments one, have risen 16 in 2004 compared with the first 9 months of 2003, partly a percent y-o-y in the first half of 2004. Gross foreign rebound from the effects of SARS. In recent months there exchange reserves stood at $6.3 billion (2.6 months of have been some new but isolated outbreaks of avian imports of goods and services). During 2003 reserves influenza. While these have been marginal, this is an area were boosted as commercial banks moved funds from off- that would require a high level of vigilance by the shore deposits on-shore. This trend has slowed in 2004. authorities. Budgetary revenues remained robust in the first Domestic consumption and investment have 9 months of 2004 fulfilling 79 percent of the annual plan been strong. The retail sales index rose by 18.3 percent y- and expenditures remained on target. Government o-y in the first 9 months of 2004. Investment, in current revenues have benefited from higher non-tax sources such prices, rose 19 percent in the first 9 months of 2004 as the profits of oil-producing state owned enterprises. representing 36.2 percent of GDP. On the external front, However, import-export revenues are reported to have exports grew by 27 percent y-o-y in value terms during been lower than targeted. The lower than expected the first 9 months of the year. Crude oil exports, collections from trade taxes can be explained in terms of benefiting largely from high international prices, rose 43 removal of tariffs on items such as oil products and steel percent in value terms. Garment exports slowed in order to cushion the price impact on consumers; considerably to under 18 percent (compared to 53 percent sharply lower imports of high tariff items such as in the same period of 2003) being constrained by quota motorcars and their component parts; and only in part due limits in the US market. Exports of shrimp were adversely to the ongoing tariff reductions under the ASEAN Free impacted by anti-dumping proceedings by the US. As a Trade Area (AFTA). The government's target deficit of result, in the first nine months, exports of sea products 2.2 percent of GDP for 2004 remains attainable. remained flat overall, but declined by over 20 percent to By September, 2004 the CPI had increased by 10 the US. An emerging export this year has been wood percent y-o-y, a significant rise compared with the furniture. These exports may in effect be substituting January, 2004 figure of 3.4 percent. The price of food, exports from China which have been slapped with anti- which accounts for nearly half the consumption basket dumping proceedings. Faced with an uncertain market had risen by 19 percent y-o-y. The rise in the price of situation in the US, exporters have looked to diversify East Asia Update 42 non-food items was lower, at 4 percent. This rise in weaknesses constrain non-agricultural growth. Next year, prices has been mainly supply-driven stemming from the the termination of the Multi-Fiber Agreement (MFA) is avian influenza outbreak, and higher international prices expected to lead to negative growth in the garments of key commodities such as oil, fertilizer and steel. The sector; given the importance of garments to the avian influenza outbreak resulted in a rise in prices of manufacturing sector, this decline will reduce real GDP poultry products, with knock-on effects on prices of growth to around 2.4 percent in 2005. Growth in services substitute meat products. Meanwhile, the price of and construction are also expected to slow, but the impact fertilizer, a major input, has risen 46 percent. However, will likely be somewhat offset by the tourism sector, there are signs that a deceleration in inflation is already which is expected to grow by 15 percent. Reductions in underway. The average month-on-month rise in CPI overall incidence of poverty remain limited. during June-September was 0.6 percent compared with over 1.5 percent in earlier months. Inflation is expected to rise somewhat relative to the low rate of 0.5 percent in 2003, but it is projected to Credit growth rose sharply from 25 percent in remain well below 5 percent in 2004 and 2005 if current 2003 to around 35 percent y-o-y in June 2004, but this monetary and fiscal policies are maintained. Monetary should not be seen as the factor behind inflation as the and fiscal policies have been broadly stable. Prudent major rise in credit occurred after inflation had shown fiscal policy has been key to ensuring price stability in signs of abating. The State Bank of Vietnam (SBV) Cambodia's highly dollarized economy. Fiscal revenue is expects credit growth to slow in the coming months and expected to recover in 2004 after falling in 2003. The anticipates meeting its target of 25 percent for 2004. In revenue-to-GDP ratio is expected to rise to 11.9 percent in order to control credit growth SBV has increased the 2004 from 10.4 percent in 2003, reflecting increases in reserve requirement for banks from 2 to 5 percent both tax and non-tax revenues. However, Cambodia's (effective from July 1, 2004). Slowing credit growth at revenue effort is one of the lowest in the region and this stage is better viewed as an attempt to control the compares quite unfavorably to other low income quality of lending rather than reducing aggregate demand. agricultural economies. With implementation of tax The credit growth from commercial banks has been policy and administration reform in the Tax and Customs somewhat offset by slower disbursements by the and Excise Departments, Cambodia's medium term fiscal Development Assistance Fund (DAF) which, in the first position looks to be favorable. Expenditure will be limited six months, is reported to have met only 20 percent of its to 18.0 percent of GDP in 2004, and is projected to rise disbursement target for 2004. This is likely related to the very slowly thereafter. The projected overall budget new government decree regulating policy lending which deficit of 6.1 percent of GDP in 2004 is expected to introduced stricter criteria for loan approvals. decline steadily over the medium term, with the deficit continuing to be offset by external financing. External GDP growth is expected to remain around 7-7.5 developments have been on track with continued percent in 2005, with domestic demand playing a more expansion of trade, a stable exchange rate, and rising important role than in 2004. Export growth is likely to gross official reverses (equivalent to 3.0 months of slow as oil prices are expected to soften, and quota limits imports in 2004). constrain garment exports. Export growth would thus depend on Vietnam's success in negotiating quota The ratification of membership to the World increases for garment exports. Investment from all Trade Organization (WTO) membership was a major sources, state, non-state, and the foreign invested sector is achievement for Cambodia, though overall progress on expected to remain strong. The current account deficit is structural reform--in particular governance reform-- anticipated to be around 4.6 percent of GDP. Inflation is remained lackluster in 2003 and in 2004, in part because expected to decline to 5-6 percent by the middle of next of the elections and the difficulty of forming a year. government. The new government � formed in July 2004 � has announced a "Rectangular Strategy," which puts governance at the core and highlights the need for Smaller Economies creating a more favorable private sector environment. This promising announcement has also been accompanied by a process for formulating a comprehensive public Cambodia financial management reform program and a private sector action plan. It is hoped that these will translate into Cambodia's economic growth has been slowing the implementation of reform measures soon, that will starting last year. Real GDP grew by 5.2 percent in 2003, help to increase economic confidence and begin reversing compared to the annual average of around 7 percent in the the decline in economic growth. 1999-2002 period, largely due to a jump in agricultural Fiji growth resulting from favorable weather conditions. Real GDP growth is projected to slow to 4.3 percent in 2004 as Political tensions have persisted in Fiji with agricultural slows relative to 2003 and structural ongoing discussions between the government and East Asia Update 43 opposition about the composition of the Cabinet. In mid- GDP in 2003, higher than the government's medium-term 2003 the Fiji Supreme Court ordered the Prime Minister target of 40 per cent by 2005. to include the Fiji Labour Party (FLP) in his Cabinet under the power sharing provisions of the Constitution. Lao PDR In response, the Prime Minister announced that Cabinet Real GDP grew by 5.3 percent in 2003, slightly would simply be expanded to accommodate the required lower than in 2001 and 2002, but is expected to reach number of FLP representatives. However, disputes have nearly 6 percent in 2004. This strengthening of growth arisen as to the precise number of FLP representatives performance is due to higher private and public required under the Constitution, whether the leader of the investment, some recovery in tourism, and robust export FLP is entitled to a position in Cabinet, and whether there performance fuelled by growth in China, Thailand and is any restriction on the significance of Cabinet posts Vietnam. Though world growth and regional growth is offered to members of the FLP. This issue may not be fully resolved until the next election due in September projected to slow down in 2005 relative to 2004, GDP 2006. growth in Lao PDR is likely to exceed that of 2004, mainly due to a projected jump in foreign investments in Court cases in 2004 relating to the 2000 coup mining and hydro-power, with continued good export resulted in Fiji's Vice President, Ratu Jope Seniloli, along performance and stable agricultural and manufacturing with four other prominent Fijians, being found guilty of growth. Poverty reduction is projected to continue. taking an unlawful oath at the height of the May 2000 Inflation is expected to fall from the high of 12.6 percent political uprising and sentenced to four years jail. at end-2003 to below 10 percent in 2004 and 2005, as Agitation for pardons began almost immediately. long as fiscal consolidation is continued. Despite these tensions, the economy is estimated The fiscal situation, though improving, remains to have grown by 4.8 per cent in 2003; the 2004 forecast fragile. This is largely because the share of government of 4.7 per cent growth is due to continuing strength in revenue in GDP has been stagnating for several years, building and construction, wholesale and retail trade, restaurant and hotel sectors. However, the severe floods while the pressure for increased spending continues. in April and June will have reduced output of sugar cane These are manifest in the pressures to increase the modest and food crops. Inflation has risen marginally to 2.9 per salaries and benefits of public servants, as well as to raise cent in the year to August 2004, and the year-end 2004 non-wage recurrent expenditures. The Government has forecast for inflation is 3.5 per cent. held the line on spending increases for the last three quarters and achieved the higher tax-collection targets. Tourism, Fiji's main foreign exchange earner, As a result inflation has continued to fall in 2004. The continues to grow. Visitor arrivals rose by 17 per cent in challenge is to sustain fiscal prudence and maintain the year to August 2004. The garment industry, the inflation at single-digit levels. second biggest foreign-exchange earner, has seen a marginal decline in the past five months, although on a Since 2001, the Government has been positive note Australia has extended its preferential trade implementing a program of structural reform, together agreement for another seven years. Sugar production with relatively successful macro-stabilization. The latter through August increased by 7 per cent in 2004 over the has focused mainly in the areas of public expenditures, comparable period last season. However, problems of state owned enterprises (SOEs), the financial sector, expiring land leases, poor mill performance, incidences of private sector development and regional trade. These cane burning and cane transportation problems will need efforts were sustained in 2004, though at an uneven pace. to be resolved to prevent expected declines in future On trade, annual reductions in AFTA tariffs and in years. Moreover, the government-owned Fiji Sugar expansion of inclusion list have also continued. On SOE Corporation is alarmed about the possible ramifications of reform, detailed time-bound programs of restructuring- a WTO ruling in August on the preferential treatment actions for Lao Airlines, Nam Papa Lao, Pharmaceutical given by the EU to Fiji and some other sugarcane Factory No. 3 and Phudoi were adopted by the Prime producing countries, but as yet it is unclear whether this Minister in April 2004, and their implementation is will affect Fiji's preferential access to the EU sugar underway, albeit at a slower pace than planned. On market. financial sector reform, amendments to the commercial banking law and issuance of new regulations in respect of The fiscal deficit is estimated to be 6.4 per cent of GDP concentration and foreign exchange exposure are in for 2003, almost 1 percentage point higher than budgeted, process. The restructuring efforts for BCEL (the Foreign partly as a result of unanticipated spending pressures that Trade Bank) and the Lao Development Bank (latter arose during the year from Cyclone Ami. The failure of formed from merger of two state commercial banks) have privatization receipts to materialize added to the also been continuing in 2004 with the help of budgetary pressures. As a result of recent budget deficits, international banking advisors, but non-performing loans total public sector debt increased to almost 50 per cent of in these two banks are coming down more slowly than envisaged, largely due to provincial government's East Asia Update 44 continuing arrears to private contractors working on 129 millions, a drop from the 2002 figure of US$ 225.8 government projects. On private sector development, millions, reflecting the use of part of the reserves for the incentives were recently rationalized and the process for settlement of the Russian debt. The floating exchange rate integrating the laws on foreign and on domestic remained stable at the end of June 2004, at 1174 togrog investment is being discussed. per US dollar. Mongolia In 2003, total budget revenue amounted 40.7 percent of GDP, a 4,8 percent increase from 2002, partly due to In 2003, GDP growth in Mongolia was 5.6 strong increase in corporate income tax collection (5,1 percent, an increase of 1.7 percent from the 3.9 percent percent in 2003 versus 3.7 percent of GDP in 2002). In growth rate in 2002. This good record resulted partly from 2003, total budget expenditure and net lending increased the strong expansion in the mining sector, and a favorable to 45.4 percent of GDP from 44.2 percent of GDP in external environment. For the first half year of 2004, the 2002. Government overall deficit decreased in 2003 to 4.7 real gross industrial output grew at 5,8 percent. This percent of GDP from 6 percent in 2002 and is projected to robust growth originates mainly from the mining sector be 4 percent in 2004. In end June 2004, total budget expansion (8.8 percent growth over the first semester) revenue collection reported an increase of 43.4 percent following the increase in copper and gold world market compared to June 2003, as a result of a good tax effort. prices and the start of mining exploitation by new foreign The corporate income tax rate was reduced by 25 percent investors. Given this favorable environment, GDP is (from 40 percent in 2003 to 30 percent in 2004) as a step projected to reach 6 percent this year. to reduce the tax burden on private sector activities and During the first semester, signs of inflationary toward a single income tax system. As of June, pressure were perceived. As of June 2004, CPI increased government expenditure had increased by an extra 20.1 by 5.3 percent from the corresponding period of previous percent compared to the corresponding period of previous year, and by 7 percent from the beginning of the year, year. Overall, there are indications of a loosening of respectively. This significant increase in inflation is policies in the run-up of the 2004 elections, including a mainly caused by the increase in the domestic oil price sharp increase in wages (up to 25 percent) and pensions (by 23 percent since the beginning of July) which in turn (up to 30 percent). The implementation of the public is due to the increase of prices on the world market and to expenditure management reform program has shown the Yukos oil company financial crisis, Mongolia's main progress this year, with for instance the adoption in March oil supplier. In addition, an accommodating monetary 2004 of a resolution on the budget planning process in policy has accompanied the increase in prices. As of June order to make it more explicit and enforceable. However, 2004, M1 and M2 increased respectively by 21.9 percent the impact of the settlement of Russian debt were and 45.6 percent, a marked acceleration from the June incorporated in the Medium-Term Budget Framework in 2003 figures (11.3 percent and 39 percent respectively). Spring 2004, but remains to be reflected in an amended At the end of 2003, public sector debt had reached 118.7 budget for 2004 in the Fall. Finally, the June 2004 percent of GDP while external public debt was 103 elections led to the unexpected result of no clear percent of GDP. Most foreign loans (more than 98 parliamentary majority, opening the stage to a prolonged percent) are concessional lending, implying a low risk and period of uncertainty regarding the continuity of the cost on these liabilities for the Government. Overall, reform program, in particular in the domain of social Mongolia's public debt remains manageable, despite a policies and the overall macroeconomic framework. significant increase following the settlement of the Transferable Rubble Russian debt at the end of 2003. Papua New Guinea During the first semester, export earnings Political Developments. The government increased by 40 percent and imports by 33 percent, led by continued to face challenges in the first half of 2004, a sustained external demand for copper, gold and textile. through opposition efforts to bring about a motion of no- Mongolia signed a trade and investment framework confidence. In apparent response and to ward off further agreement with the United States earlier this year, as a challenges there have been a number of Cabinet first step toward a free-trade agreement. This reflects the reshuffles. At mid-year, Parliament was adjourned until concern among countries that have built thriving textile early November 2004. export trade regimes upon a U.S. quota system that will Implementation of the Enhanced Cooperation expire at the end of this year. The U.S. is Mongolia's third Program between Papua New Guinea and Australia biggest export market, the bulk of that trade being commenced in the second half of 2004, following textiles, and textile exports contribute to 10 percent of Parliamentary ratification of the underlying treaty. Under annual Mongolia's GDP. Private remittances have this package Australia will support PNG to respond to the increased significantly over the last three years reaching long term deterioration in the law and order situation and in 2003 10.8 percent of GDP. On the capital account side, to strengthen economic management through deployment FDI and foreign aid and loan remained sustained. Overall, of about three dozen Australian public servants mainly net international reserves in the end of 2003 were US$ into line positions in the PNG public service and over 200 East Asia Update 45 police and other legal/judicial personnel to underpin Solomon Islands improvements in law and order as well as in areas such as border control. Australia will provide new financing for The restoration of law and order, underpinned by the police related portion of the program while the other the intervention of the Regional Assistance Mission to components will be financed out of the existing bilateral Solomon Islands in July 2003 has been effectively aid program. maintained and permitted the scaling back of the military component. Technical support continues, however, Economic Developments. The nascent through advisors and placement in-line positions, in economic recovery of 2003, when real GDP expanded an economic and central agencies and the legal and judicial estimated 2.7 percent, is continuing in 2004 and GDP system. Improvements in security have boosted public growth is expected to be around 3 percent. A key factor confidence and reinvigorated formal business activity, which has contributed to the continued improvement is a particularly in Honiara. tight fiscal stance which has underpinned the restoration of macroeconomic stability. Buoyant global commodity The government is considering adoption of a prices, particularly for a number of PNG's key new constitution based on a federal system of exports--including oil, gold and some agricultural government, with a significant number of political, commodities--have also contributed to increases in financial and legal powers transferred to state production as has an improvement in business confidence. governments. Although a bill may be ready to be tabled The coffee season has commenced early but it is expected in Parliament by end-2004 or early 2005, there are that the bumper harvest of 2003 will not be matched in concerns regarding the high costs of establishing such a 2004. The economic recovery remains fragile not the structure, even as central government finances remain least because of supply constraints and resource depletion fragile. As well, effective systems to monitor the fiscal in the mineral sector. and economic performance of provinces are absent, risking the sought after improvement in public service Expenditure control efforts have been intensified delivery. in 2004, while an agenda for improved budget management is being rolled out. As a result a budgetary After four years of contraction, which saw a surplus estimated at 1.5 percent of GDP was achieved cumulative decline in real GDP of 16.5 percent, the over the first half of 2004. While the tight controls are economy expanded in the second half of 2003 due to expected to be maintained it is expected that the overall growth in primary production, construction and services. outcome for the year will be a deficit of around Consequently GDP increased by an estimated 5.1 percent 1.5 percent of GDP, in line with the budget plan. This is in 2003, and is projected to expand by 4 percent in 2004. on account of seasonality in the PNG economy. In Inflation declined substantially in 2003, to 3.8 percent on addition to the improved expenditure controls, the budget a year-end basis compared to 15.4 percent in 2002, position has also been supported by sharply higher although it has picked up slightly to almost 7 percent in revenues from the mineral sector--principally oil and the year to July 2004. gold--combined with a sharp reduction in debt servicing The restoration of fiscal discipline was reflected costs. Government has taken advantage of the in the budget deficit of 1.4 percent of GDP in 2003, and a opportunity offered by improved macroeconomic surplus of 4 percent of GDP is projected for 2004. conditions to restructure its domestic debt obligations. Despite the recommencement of debt service payments, In line with these developments the current total government debt, both domestic and external, has account is expected to shift to surplus by year end. The only fallen marginally reflecting the large build up of currency has remained stable in 2004, appreciating arrears. Significantly, the Government reached an slightly relative to the U.S. dollar over the first nine important settlement with its major domestic months of the year. bondholders--mainly the commercial banks and the National Provident Fund--in the first half of 2004. Under The easing of the monetary stance which the terms of this, 60 percent of interest arrears due to the commenced during the third quarter of 2003, has bondholders were written-off, and the restructured bonds continued through 2004 and has facilitated a reduction in were replaced with a 14 year amortizing bond, carrying an Treasury bill yields from 16 percent in January 2004 to a interest rate of 21/4 percent, compared to about 9 percent little under 5 percent in September 2004. These on the previous bonds. Overall the Government saved developments have facilitated an easing of inflation, about SI$11.8 million on the interest arrears and an which was running at an annualized rate of 2 percent at estimated SI$130 million in interest costs through the mid year. External reserves have continued to accumulate reduction in interest rates. during 2003, with gross external reserves increasing by about US$200 million during the year to September when The balance of payments strengthened in 2003 as they stood at just over US$600 million, equivalent to a current account surplus of almost 1.5 percent of GDP more than 6 months of non-mineral imports. was recorded fuelled in part by timber exports with reserves continuing to be rebuilt, buoyed by inflows of foreign assistance. The level of reserves has almost East Asia Update 46 doubled in the past year, reaching SI$538.1 million in September 2004. As a result the Central Bank of the Solomon Islands lifted the foreign exchange controls that had been in place since 2000. Although the economic recovery is encouraging, the structural reform agenda remains critical to sustaining that recovery. This includes the cost, efficiency, reliability and coverage of telecommunications and power service to underpin private sector development and business activities, as well as the resumption in inter-island shipping services which are so important to rural agricultural production. East Asia Update 47 APPENDIX TABLES Appendix Table 1. Quarterly Real GDP Growth - % Change Year Ago China Hong Indonesia Korea Malaysia Philippines Singapore Taiwan Thailand East Asia Kong (China) Q1 1999 8.3 -2.7 -6.1 5.9 -1.0 0.7 2.1 4.1 -0.2 4.1 Q2 1999 7.0 1.9 1.8 9.7 4.8 3.8 6.6 6.4 3.4 6.3 Q3 1999 7.0 4.6 2.8 11.1 9.1 3.8 8.4 4.7 8.4 7.1 Q4 1999 6.5 9.3 5.4 10.9 11.7 5.1 8.6 6.4 6.4 7.6 Q1 2000 8.1 13.6 4.1 13.1 11.7 5.3 9.6 7.9 6.5 9.1 Q2 2000 8.3 10.1 4.5 9.4 8.5 6.1 8.2 5.1 6.2 7.7 Q3 2000 8.2 10.3 5.3 8.2 8.4 7.2 10.0 6.7 2.4 7.6 Q4 2000 7.6 7.2 7.5 4.3 7.1 5.3 9.7 3.8 4.0 6.2 Q1 2001 8.4 2.2 4.4 3.5 2.9 1.3 4.1 0.6 1.6 4.8 Q2 2001 8.0 1.4 6.1 3.7 0.2 2.0 -1.3 -3.3 2.1 4.1 Q3 2001 7.1 -0.5 3.9 3.4 -1.2 1.4 -5.6 -4.4 2.1 3.0 Q4 2001 6.9 -1.1 1.0 4.6 -0.5 2.3 -6.1 -1.6 2.6 3.3 Q1 2002 8.0 -1.0 2.7 6.5 1.0 4.0 -0.4 0.9 4.4 4.9 Q2 2002 8.4 0.4 4.0 7.0 4.1 4.2 5.0 3.7 5.5 6.1 Q3 2002 8.5 3.0 5.4 6.8 5.8 3.3 4.7 5.2 5.8 6.6 Q4 2002 8.3 4.8 4.9 7.5 5.6 5.6 4.0 4.5 6.0 6.7 Q1 2003 9.9 4.4 5.5 3.7 4.6 4.8 1.7 3.5 6.7 6.4 Q2 2003 7.9 -0.6 4.8 2.2 4.6 4.2 -3.9 -0.2 5.8 4.2 Q3 2003 9.6 4.0 3.7 2.4 5.3 4.8 1.7 4.0 6.6 5.9 Q4 2003 9.9 4.9 4.1 3.9 6.6 5.0 4.9 5.7 7.8 6.9 Q1 2004 9.8 7.0 5.0 5.3 7.6 6.5 7.5 6.7 6.6 7.5 Q2 2004 9.6 12.1 4.3 5.5 8.0 6.2 12.5 7.7 6.3 8.1 Source: Haver Analytics and national sources Appendix Table 2: East Asia: Merchandise Export Growth (US $; % change form a year ago) 2002 2003 Q3 2003 Q4 2003 Q1 2004 Q2 2004 Q3 2004 Apr-04 May-04 Jun-04 Jul-04 Aug-04 Sep-04 East Asia (9) 9.6 19.1 15.2 23.4 23.7 28.7 27.0 26.4 28.0 31.5 27.2 28.4 25.4 SE Asia 5.1 11.3 6.7 13.0 12.2 17.1 23.0 16.5 16.2 18.6 19.9 23.3 25.7 Indonesia 1.5 6.6 1.9 3.6 -0.9 7.1 24.7 2.9 10.8 7.5 7.7 25.6 41.4 Malaysia 5.9 12.7 7.9 15.2 17.3 22.0 26.9 23.1 20.3 22.6 28.1 23.7 28.8 Philippines 9.5 2.3 -0.8 4.8 6.3 10.8 8.4 8.9 15.3 8.2 3.2 13.7 8.4 Thailand 4.8 17.9 13.1 21.7 18.8 21.5 23.4 22.1 15.4 27.2 26.7 25.2 18.8 China 22.4 34.6 29.7 40.5 34.0 37.3 34.8 32.4 32.8 46.7 33.9 37.5 33.1 NIEs 5.7 14.2 10.6 18.0 22.9 28.0 23.5 26.4 30.0 27.7 25.8 24.7 20.2 Hong Kong 5.4 11.8 7.1 11.9 13.3 17.7 17.0 19.3 15.7 18.2 16.5 20.9 13.8 Korea 8.0 19.3 15.9 25.6 37.7 38.8 29.3 36.7 41.9 38.0 36.2 28.8 23.5 Singapore 2.8 15.2 10.9 18.9 18.7 29.0 28.5 26.6 28.5 31.9 28.2 30.5 27.0 Taiwan (China) 6.3 10.4 9.6 16.8 22.3 28.8 21.6 22.8 39.4 24.4 26.0 20.0 19.2 East Asia Update 48 Appendix Table 3. East Asia and the Pacific: GDP Growth Projections Actual Forecast Forecast 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 East Asia 6.4 -0.1 6.3 7.6 3.8 6.0 5.9 7.1 5.9 Developing East Asia 6.9 1.7 5.7 7.2 5.7 6.9 7.8 7.9 7.0 South East Asia 3.4 -9.3 3.3 5.9 2.5 4.6 5.3 5.8 5.5 Indonesia 4.7 -13.1 0.8 5.4 3.8 4.3 4.5 4.9 5.4 Malaysia 7.3 -7.4 6.1 8.9 0.3 4.1 5.3 7.0 6.0 Philippines 5.2 -0.6 3.4 6.0 3.0 4.4 4.7 5.4 4.5 Thailand -1.4 -10.5 4.4 4.8 2.1 5.4 6.8 6.5 5.8 Transition China 8.8 7.8 7.1 8.0 7.5 8.3 9.3 9.2 7.8 Vietnam 8.2 5.8 4.8 6.8 6.9 7.0 7.2 7.2 7.5 Small Economies 1.8 0.4 8.1 2.6 1.7 2.6 4.2 4.1 3.4 Cambodia 6.8 3.7 10.8 7.0 5.7 5.5 5.2 4.3 2.4 East Timor -35.0 15.0 15.0 3.0 -3.0 1.0 Lao PDR 6.9 4.0 7.3 5.8 5.8 5.8 5.3 6.0 7.0 Mongolia 4.0 3.5 3.3 1.1 1.1 3.9 5.6 6.0 6.0 Fiji -0.9 1.5 9.6 -2.8 2.7 4.3 4.8 4.7 3.0 Kiribati 5.7 12.6 9.5 1.6 1.8 1.0 2.5 .. .. Marshall Islands -9.4 2.5 0.6 0.9 -1.3 4.0 2.0 1.5 .. Micronesia, Fed. Sts. -4.6 -2.8 0.2 4.4 1.1 0.8 2.4 2.0 .. Palau 2.3 2.0 -5.4 0.3 4.5 1.1 1.5 2.0 .. Papua New Guinea -3.9 -3.8 7.5 -1.2 -2.3 -0.8 2.7 2.8 2.1 Samoa 0.8 2.4 2.6 6.9 6.2 1.5 3.5 3.2 3.2 Solomon Islands -1.4 1.8 -0.5 -14.3 -9.0 -1.6 5.1 4.2 4.4 Tonga 0.1 2.4 3.1 6.6 0.3 1.6 2.5 1.0 2.0 Vanuatu 2.4 3.0 -2.1 2.5 -1.9 -0.3 2.0 2.8 3.3 East Asia NIEs 5.7 -2.7 7.1 8.1 1.0 4.7 3.0 5.9 4.4 Hong Kong (SAR) 5.1 -5.0 3.4 10.2 0.5 1.9 3.2 7.4 4.6 Korea 4.7 -6.9 9.5 8.5 3.8 7.0 3.1 4.9 4.4 Singapore 8.5 -0.9 6.8 9.7 -1.9 2.2 1.1 8.3 4.5 Taiwan (China) 6.7 4.6 5.4 5.9 -2.2 3.6 3.3 5.8 4.3 Japan 1.8 -1.2 0.2 2.8 0.4 -0.3 2.7 4.3 1.8 Sources: World Bank data and staff estimates. East Asia is sum of Developing East Asia and Newly Industrialized Economies. Indonesia National Accounts use base your 1993 for 1997-2000 data and base year 2000 for 2001-05 data East Asia Update 49 Appendix Table 4: Primary Commodity Prices (US Dollars - % change from a year ago) Actual Projections 1980- 1991- Commodity 90 98 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 Crude oil average 0.0 -5.7 38.3 56.2 -13.7 2.4 15.9 34.9 -7.7 Non-Energy Commodities -0.8 0.4 -11.2 -1.3 -9.1 5.1 10.0 17.2 -3.1 Agriculture -1.9 0.8 -13.9 -5.5 -9.1 8.4 9.3 10.2 -3.5 Cocoa -7.3 4.0 -32.3 -20.2 18.0 66.4 -1.5 -11.5 4.5 Coffee, arabica -3.6 12.6 -23.2 20.2 18.0 66.4 -1.5 20.1 -6.6 Coconut oil -1.4 10.6 12.0 -38.9 -29.3 32.4 11.0 41.2 -9.1 Palm oil -3.0 12.3 -35.0 -28.9 -7.8 36.6 13.6 8.3 -6.3 Rice, Thai, 5% 0.8 2.1 -18.3 -18.5 -14.6 11.0 3.0 16.4 -4.3 Sugar, world 16.4 -2.8 -29.8 30.6 5.5 -20.3 3.0 -0.8 0.0 Logs, Malaysia 1.9 3.4 15.2 1.5 -16.3 2.7 14.5 6.9 2.5 Sawnwood, Malaysia 4.1 -0.1 24.1 -0.7 -19.3 9.4 4.6 4.4 4.3 Rubber, RSS1, Singapore -1.7 0.5 -12.9 6.2 -13.8 33.0 41.5 18.1 -10.3 Metals and minerals 2.9 -2.6 -2.3 12.6 -9.6 -3.1 12.7 36.8 -2.0 Tin -6.7 -0.7 -2.5 0.6 -17.5 -9.5 20.5 75.7 -12.8 Copper 4.3 -4.1 -4.9 15.3 -13.0 -1.2 14.1 58.8 -6.2 Source: World Bank DEC Prospects Group. Projections as of 10/26/04. Appendix Table 5: East Asia: Exchange Rates (LCU/$) Taiwan, China Indonesia Korea Malaysia Philippines Singapore China Thailand Yen Oct-2003 827.67 8495.00 1177.30 3.80 55.25 1.74 33.98 39.92 108.76 Nov-2003 827.72 8537.00 1202.60 3.80 55.77 1.73 34.21 39.92 109.50 Dec-2003 827.67 8465.00 1197.80 3.80 55.57 1.70 33.98 39.73 107.10 Jan-2004 827.68 8441.00 1173.60 3.80 56.09 1.70 33.39 39.26 105.97 Feb-2004 827.69 8447.00 1174.50 3.80 56.28 1.70 33.37 39.31 109.00 Mar-2004 827.70 8587.00 1153.60 3.80 56.36 1.68 33.02 39.42 104.30 Apr-2004 827.71 8661.00 1167.70 3.80 55.86 1.70 33.37 40.01 110.20 May-2004 827.68 9210.00 1165.70 3.80 55.84 1.70 33.39 40.51 110.50 Jun-2004 827.66 9415.00 1152.50 3.80 56.18 1.72 33.78 40.94 108.38 Jul-2004 827.69 9168.00 1168.30 3.80 56.01 1.72 34.14 41.35 112.08 Aug-2004 827.67 9328.00 1153.80 3.80 56.22 1.71 34.05 41.64 109.86 Sep-2004 827.66 9170.00 1147.90 3.80 56.34 1.69 33.98 41.50 110.92 Appendix Table 6: East Asia: Foreign Reserves Minus Gold (US$ Billion) Taiwan, China Indonesia Malaysia Philippines Korea China Singapore Thailand Total Dec-1997 142.8 16.6 20.8 7.3 20.4 83.5 71.3 26.2 388.7 Dec-1998 149.2 22.7 25.6 9.2 52.0 90.3 74.9 28.8 452.8 Dec-1999 157.7 26.4 30.6 13.2 74.0 106.2 76.8 34.1 519.1 Dec-2000 168.3 28.5 29.5 13.0 96.1 106.7 80.1 32.0 554.4 Dec-2001 215.6 27.2 30.5 13.4 102.8 122.2 75.4 32.4 619.4 Dec-2002 291.1 31.0 34.2 13.1 121.3 161.7 82.0 38.0 772.5 Dec-2003 408.2 35.0 44.5 13.5 155.3 206.6 95.7 41.1 999.8 Aug-2004 500.6 34.8 54.2 12.6 170.4 231.6 99.9 42.8 1147.0 East Asia Update 50 Appendix Table 7: Regional Aggregates for Poverty Measures in East Asia $1 �a-day $2-a-day Mean Consumption (1993 Headcount Number of Headcount Number of Population PPP$/month) Index (%) Poor (mill.) Index (%) Poor (mill.) (mill.) EAP 1990 67.95 28.9 457.9 67.0 1,059.9 1582.7 1996 99.80 14.8 253.0 49.6 850.4 1713.1 1999 101.89 15.6 276.9 50.0 885.6 1771.9 2000 113.41 14.0 250.1 45.9 820.6 1788.9 2001 121.55 13.1 235.9 43.3 781.1 1805.0 2002 134.02 11.8 214.4 39.8 725.5 1820.7 2003 143.76 10.5 193.6 36.8 676.1 1836.0 2004 154.37 9.6 178.4 34.4 636.3 1851.3 2005 164.05 8.8 164.7 32.2 601.4 1866.7 EAP less China 1990 96.33 22.1 97.3 59.3 260.3 439.4 1996 136.33 10.7 52.2 44.7 218.9 489.2 1999 123.48 11.4 58.5 51.0 262.0 514.0 2000 132.20 10.6 55.3 48.6 253.2 521.5 2001 135.79 10.0 52.9 47.6 251.5 528.7 2002 142.99 9.1 48.6 44.6 239.1 536.2 2003 145.92 7.9 43.0 41.7 226.8 543.7 2004 151.99 7.2 39.7 39.6 218.5 551.3 2005 157.72 6.6 37.0 37.6 210.3 558.8 S.E.Asia 4 1990 82.29 17.8 55.7 60.3 188.8 313.1 1996 111.29 7.8 27.2 43.6 151.6 348.0 1999 97.26 10.1 36.9 52.8 193.6 366.5 2000 102.90 9.2 34.4 49.9 185.5 372.0 2001 104.41 8.5 32.2 48.8 184.0 377.2 2002 109.82 7.3 28.0 45.3 173.5 382.8 2003 114.75 6.4 24.9 42.1 163.6 388.3 2004 119.92 5.7 22.5 39.8 156.7 393.9 2005 124.79 5.2 20.9 37.7 150.4 399.5 Lower Income EA (Cambodia, Laos, PNG, Vietnam) 1990 43.79 49.9 41.6 85.7 71.5 83.4 1996 63.62 26.1 24.9 70.3 67.2 95.7 1999 66.93 21.5 21.6 68.0 68.4 100.6 2000 70.04 20.4 20.9 66.2 67.7 102.2 2001 72.70 19.9 20.7 65.0 67.5 103.9 2002 74.17 19.5 20.6 62.2 65.6 105.5 2003 78.65 16.9 18.1 59.0 63.2 107.2 2004 81.75 15.8 17.2 56.7 61.8 108.9 2005 85.06 14.6 16.2 54.1 59.9 110.6 East Asia Update 51 Appendix Table 8: Poverty in East Asia - Country Estimates $1 �a-day $2-a-day Mean Consumption Headcount Number Headcount Number Gini Population (1993 Index of Poor Index (%) of Poor Coefficient (mill.) PPP$/month) (%) (mill.) (mill.) Cambodia 1990 48.29 48.3 4.4 83.7 7.7 41.6 9.1 1996 57.77 36.7 4.0 76.9 8.4 41.6 10.5 1997 56.95 38.4 4.2 78.0 8.5 41.6 10.9 1998 55.97 39.4 4.4 78.6 8.8 41.4 11.2 1999 55.48 41.5 4.8 79.3 9.1 42.3 11.5 2000 55.72 43.4 5.1 79.4 9.3 43.9 11.8 2001 57.01 43.0 5.2 78.6 9.5 44.6 12.1 2002 56.68 45.5 5.6 79.0 9.8 46.2 12.4 2003 58.80 42.2 5.3 77.9 9.9 45.4 12.7 2004 59.37 42.6 5.5 77.6 10.1 46.3 13.0 2005 59.46 42.2 5.6 77.5 10.3 46.0 13.3 China 1990 57.05 31.5 360.6 69.9 799.6 36.0 1,143 1996 85.20 16.4 200.8 51.6 631.6 39.3 1,224 1998 91.32 16.1 201.2 49.8 620.8 41.0 1,248 1999 93.07 17.4 218.4 49.6 623.6 42.6 1,258 2000 105.69 15.4 194.8 44.8 567.4 43.9 1,267 2001 115.65 14.3 183.0 41.5 529.6 44.9 1,276 2002 130.27 12.9 165.9 37.9 486.3 46.1 1,285 2003 142.85 11.7 150.6 34.8 449.3 46.7 1,292 2004 155.37 10.7 138.7 32.1 417.8 47.2 1,300 2005 166.76 9.8 127.7 29.9 391.1 47.4 1,308 Indonesia 1984 49.80 36.7 58.7 80.0 128.1 30.3 160.1 1990 61.58 20.6 36.7 71.1 126.7 28.9 178.2 1996 86.62 7.8 15.4 50.5 99.4 36.5 196.8 1999 66.80 12.0 24.9 65.1 135.0 31.0 207.4 2000 72.53 9.9 20.9 59.5 125.3 32.2 210.5 2001 73.44 9.2 19.7 58.7 125.2 32.1 213.2 2002 81.72 7.2 15.5 53.5 115.6 34.3 216.2 2003 87.26 5.7 12.5 48.8 107.1 34.8 219.4 2004 91.24 5.1 11.4 46.1 102.8 35.4 222.7 2005 95.12 4.7 10.6 43.8 99.1 36.1 226.1 Laos 1990 39.16 53.0 2.2 89.6 3.7 32.7 4.2 1996 48.27 41.3 2.0 83.1 4.1 36.5 4.9 1997 50.35 38.4 1.9 81.3 4.1 36.5 5.0 1998 49.45 39.8 2.0 81.9 4.2 36.5 5.1 1999 51.55 36.6 1.9 80.5 4.2 36.5 5.3 2000 53.30 33.9 1.8 79.4 4.3 36.5 5.4 2001 55.47 31.3 1.7 77.4 4.3 36.5 5.5 2002 57.35 29.0 1.6 76.1 4.3 36.5 5.7 2003 59.01 26.9 1.6 74.9 4.3 36.5 5.8 2004 61.16 24.5 1.5 73.1 4.3 36.5 5.9 2005 63.96 21.7 1.3 70.7 4.3 36.5 6.1 East Asia Update 52 Appendix Table 8: Poverty in East Asia (Continued) $1 �a-day $2-a-day Mean Consumption Headcount Number Headcount Number Gini Population (1993 Index of Poor Index of Poor Coefficient (mill.) PPP$/month) (%) (mill.) (%) (mill.) Malaysia 1984 172.09 8.9 1.4 29.5 4.5 50.5 15.3 1987 170.88 4.8 0.8 25.0 4.2 47.0 16.6 1989 176.21 3.2 0.6 22.4 4.0 46.2 17.7 1990 195.32 2.0 0.4 18.5 3.4 46.2 18.2 1992 219.48 1.5 0.3 17.6 3.4 47.7 19.1 1995 253.64 1.0 0.2 14.0 2.9 48.5 20.6 1996 261.87 0.8 0.2 13.1 2.8 48.5 21.1 1997 315.95 < 0.5 -- 8.8 1.9 49.1 21.7 1998 269.00 < 0.5 -- 12.9 2.9 49.1 22.2 1999 271.54 < 0.5 -- 12.6 2.9 49.1 22.7 2000 304.47 < 0.5 -- 9.7 2.3 49.1 23.3 2001 303.83 < 0.5 -- 9.7 2.3 49.1 23.8 2002 301.26 < 0.5 -- 9.9 2.4 49.1 24.3 2003 315.69 < 0.5 -- 8.8 2.2 49.1 24.7 2004 332.61 < 0.5 -- 7.6 1.9 49.1 25.1 2005 347.64 < 0.5 -- 6.6 1.7 49.1 25.5 PNG 1990 72.95 35.4 1.4 64.3 2.5 48.4 3.9 1996 93.15 24.6 1.1 54.4 2.5 48.4 4.6 1997 88.62 25.6 1.2 56.0 2.7 47.5 4.7 1998 83.15 27.8 1.4 59.0 2.9 47.7 4.9 1999 78.37 30.7 1.5 61.6 3.1 47.8 5.0 2000 71.89 35.3 1.8 65.0 3.3 47.6 5.1 2001 66.41 38.0 2.0 69.2 3.6 47.8 5.3 2002 63.41 39.2 2.1 70.4 3.8 47.5 5.4 2003 63.36 39.4 2.2 70.3 3.9 47.5 5.6 2004 63.39 40.0 2.3 70.5 4.0 47.5 5.7 2005 62.99 40.4 2.4 70.6 4.1 47.5 5.9 Philippines (* See Footnotes) 1985 74.92 22.8 12.4 61.3 33.3 41.0 54.2 1988 82.77 18.3 10.7 55.6 32.4 40.7 58.3 1990 90.32 19.1 11.7 53.5 32.6 43.8 61.0 1991 87.75 19.8 12.3 55.0 34.3 43.8 62.4 1994 89.10 18.4 12.3 53.1 35.5 42.9 66.8 1996 107.15 14.8 10.4 46.5 32.5 46.2 69.9 1997 110.21 12.1 8.6 45.2 32.3 46.0 71.5 1998 108.77 13.7 10.0 46.6 34.1 46.7 73.1 1999 107.20 13.5 10.1 46.9 35.0 46.2 74.7 2000 106.93 13.5 10.3 47.2 36.0 46.2 76.3 2001 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 2002 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 2003 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 2004 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 2005 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A East Asia Update 53 Appendix Table 8: Poverty in East Asia (Continued) $1 �a-day $2-a-day Mean ConsumptionHeadcount Number Headcount Number Gini Population (1993 Index of Poor Index of Poor Coefficient (mill.) PPP$/month) (%) (mill.) (%) (mill.) Korea 1990 301.09 < 0.5 -- < 0.5 -- 29.88 42.87 1991 330.38 < 0.5 -- < 0.5 -- 29.85 43.27 1992 362.09 < 0.5 -- < 0.5 -- 29.85 43.66 1993 383.03 < 0.5 -- < 0.5 -- 29.36 44.06 1994 411.09 < 0.5 -- < 0.5 -- 29.36 44.45 1995 440.03 < 0.5 -- < 0.5 -- 29.11 45.00 1996 480.46 < 0.5 -- < 0.5 -- 29.71 45.55 1997 483.84 < 0.5 -- < 0.5 -- 28.97 45.99 1998 400.86 < 0.5 -- < 0.5 -- 29.42 46.43 1999 450.06 < 0.5 -- < 0.5 -- 30.00 46.86 2000 497.15 < 0.5 -- < 0.5 -- 30.00 47.28 2001 521.82 < 0.5 -- < 0.5 -- 30.00 47.64 2002 559.06 < 0.5 -- < 0.5 -- 30.00 47.97 2003 546.35 < 0.5 -- < 0.5 -- 30.00 48.24 2004 570.39 < 0.5 -- < 0.5 -- 30.00 48.48 2005 592.64 < 0.5 -- < 0.5 -- 30.00 48.72 Thailand 1988 90.42 17.9 9.6 54.1 29.0 43.8 53.7 1990 102.88 12.5 7.0 47.0 26.1 43.8 55.6 1992 129.75 6.0 3.5 37.5 21.7 46.2 57.8 1996 143.92 2.2 1.3 28.2 17.0 43.4 60.1 1998 121.73 3.3 2.0 34.1 21.0 40.6 61.5 1999 123.50 3.1 1.9 33.6 20.7 40.7 61.7 2000 125.42 5.2 3.2 35.6 22.0 43.2 61.9 2001 131.21 3.6 2.2 32.0 19.9 42.4 62.3 2002 139.40 2.4 1.5 27.7 17.4 42.2 62.8 2003 146.80 1.6 1.0 23.8 15.0 41.4 63.1 2004 153.87 1.3 0.8 21.4 13.6 41.4 63.4 2005 161.43 1.0 0.6 18.2 11.6 40.9 63.7 Vietnam 1990 41.73 50.8 33.6 87.0 57.6 35.0 66.2 1993 48.85 39.9 28.3 80.5 57.2 35.0 71.0 1996 63.66 23.6 17.7 69.4 52.2 36.3 75.2 1998 68.54 16.4 12.8 65.4 50.9 35.4 77.7 1999 68.90 16.9 13.4 65.9 52.0 35.4 78.9 2000 73.16 15.2 12.1 63.5 50.7 35.9 79.9 2001 76.62 14.6 11.8 61.8 50.1 36.8 81.0 2002 78.67 13.6 11.2 58.2 47.8 37.5 82.1 2003 84.06 10.9 9.0 54.3 45.1 37.5 83.2 2004 87.89 9.4 7.9 51.4 43.3 37.6 84.3 2005 92.06 8.0 6.9 48.2 41.1 37.7 85.4 East Asia Update 54 Notes for Tables 7 and 8 ______________________________________________________________________________________ (1) The poverty lines in Tables 8 and 9 are set at $1.08 and $2.15 per person per day (in 1993 PPP$) for all countries. For most countries, 1993 World Bank PPP estimates are used. The PPP for the Philippines is from the Penn World Tables, while that for PNG is the 1996 World Bank PPP. PPPs for Vietnam, Lao PDR and Cambodia have been further adjusted using a calorie price ratio between Indonesia and Vietnam. Projections are based on World Bank growth rate forecasts for 2003- 2004. Wherever possible, the projections utilize information on sectoral GDP growth rates, changes in the food CPI relative to the general CPI, changes in the GDP deflator relative to the CPI, and changes in the consumption-income ratio. The projections assume that there is no change in relative inequalities within sectors. For China, the projections are done separately for rural and urban China, and then aggregated using population shares. Estimates for all countries except Malaysia and China are based on surveys of household consumption. The estimates for Malaysia and China use income surveys. For China, a survey-based estimate of mean consumption is used in conjunction with the income Lorenz curves to derive poverty estimates. These poverty estimates differ from those commonly found in national poverty assessments for two main reasons. First, country assessments use national poverty lines that differ from the uniform international poverty lines used here. Second, national poverty lines also typically allow for spatial cost of living differentials within countries, but such adjustments are omitted here to maintain a consistent methodology across countries. For instance, in the case of Thailand, these differences explain why the above estimates indicate a small increase in poverty between 1998 and 2000 (in spite of adjusting the CPI by the change in the national poverty lines over this period), while national poverty line-based estimates indicate a decline. Also for Thailand, the 2002 estimate is based on a longer consumption module, which could lead to a small overestimation of consumption relative to 2000. * Pending. Poverty estimates for Philippines are to be released shortly by Government of the Philippines. ______________________________________________________________________________________ Appendix Table 9. NPLs in the commercial banking system of the crisis-affected countries (percent of total loans) 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 Dec Dec Dec Dec Dec Mar Jun Sept Dec Mar Jun Sep Dec Mar Jun Indonesia (a) -- -- 64.0 57.1 48.8 50.3 48.5 40.7 31.1 30.3 27.7 24.4 18.1 18.9 17.9 excl. IBRA 7.2 48.6 32.9 18.8 12.1 12.8 11.8 10.5 7.5 7.6 7.1 6.7 6.8 6.3 6.2 Korea (b) 8.0 17.2 23.2 14.0 7.4 6.6 5.0 4.8 4.1 4.2 4.7 4.9 4.4 excl. KAMCO & KDIC 6.0 7.3 13.6 8.8 3.3 2.9 2.5 2.5 2.4 2.6 2.6 2.6 2.7 3.1 2.6 Malaysia - 21.1 23.4 22.5 24.4 24.6 23.7 23.1 22.4 22.1 21.9 21.1 21.2 21.0 20.1 excl. Danaharta -- 16.7 16.7 13.4 16.3 16.7 15.7 15.3 14.7 14.6 13.9 13.3 13.1 13.0 12.3 Philippines (c) 4.7 10.4 12.3 15.1 17.3 18.0 18.1 16.5 15.0 15.5 15.2 14.5 14.1 14.0 13.8 Thailand (d) -- 45.0 41.5 29.7 29.6 29.7 29.9 29.6 34.2 34.1 34.1 33.5 30.6 29.6 29.6 excl. AMCs -- 45.0 39.9 19.5 11.5 11.4 11.3 11.7 18.1 17.8 17.6 16.8 13.9 13.0 13.0 Memo: Malaysia (e) - excl. Danaharta - 10.6 10.6 8.3 10.5 10.6 10.0 9.6 9.3 9.1 8.7 8.3 8.3 8.3 7.7 a) Only includes IBRA's AMC; b) The NPL ratio increased in 1999 due to the introduction of stricter asset classification criteria (forward looking criteria) ; c) From September 2002 onwards, the NPLs ratios are based on the new definition of NPLs (as per BSP Circular 351) which allows banks to deduct bad loans with 100 percent provisioning from the NPL computations; d) Includes transfers to AMCs but excludes write-offs. (Note that the jump in headline NPLs in December 2002 was a one-off increase, reflecting a change in definition and did not affect provisioning requirements). The June 2003 figure is preliminary and was estimated using transfers to AMCs and lending to AMCs as of March 2003; e) NPL series used by Bank Negara Malaysia, which is net of provisions and excludes interest in suspense. Special Focus: Strengthening the Investment Climate in the East Asia and Pacific Region Reviving private investment is a critical challenge facing high investment rates suggest that capital intensity has countries in the East Asia and Pacific region. Growth in grown rapidly there as well. . physical capital per worker (capital intensity) contributed a large part of East Asia's extraordinary output growth performance in the first part of the 1990s and before.23. Figure 1: Growth in Physical Capital Per Since the 1997-98 East Asian financial crisis, however, capital per worker growth has fallen in many countries of Worker (% per year) the region, although not in China or Vietnam (Figure 1), 12.0 running at only 1-2 percent a year in several. Private 1990-97 investment has been depressed, averaging 14 percent of GDP in 2003 as compared to its pre-crisis average level of 1997-2003 25 percent. 9.0 This special focus paper looks at the investment climate in East Asia, focusing in particular on those determinants of %6.0 private investment that are amenable to policy change. The determinants of investment are wide-ranging, and a good summary of international experience is given in the World Bank's World Development Report (WDR) 2005 "A Better 3.0 Investment Climate for Everyone". This special focus illustrates some of the global messages of the WDR with information from Investment Climate Assessments (ICAs) 0.0 undertaken by the World Bank in five East Asian Indonesia Thailand Korea Malaysia China Philippines economies, using data from over 6500 registered firms. 24 It looks in particular at policies and institutional changes that Source: Bosworth and Collins (2003); World Bank calculations. can affect the investment climate by (i) reducing policy- related risks and uncertainties, (ii) reducing policy-related costs of doing business, and (iii) raising investment returns. Aggregate investment patterns are mirrored by Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) trends. FDI has played a II. Recent trends in Investment in East Asia significant role in several East Asian economies, providing resources and technology, both in the host industry and Growth in physical capital per worker has slowed through linkages with the rest of the domestic private sector. dramatically since the 1997 financial crisis in the five However, FDI has declined substantially in most countries crisis-hit countries, Indonesia, Korea, Malaysia, Philippines, since 1997, except in China, following global trends. (Table Thailand (Figure 1). In the Philippines, investment has been 1). Excluding China, FDI inflows to the six largest weak since the early 1990s and capital per worker has developing economies have been cut in half from an average grown at barely 1 percent per year. In the four other middle- of around $16.5 billion a year in 1998-2000 to the recent income countries of Southeast Asia, capital intensity growth trend of around $7.5 billion in 2001-2003. Indonesia and has fallen from 4-7 percent per year to less than half that the Solomon Islands have even witnessed a consistent rate. One exception is Korea, where investment has outflow of FDI since 1997. One exception to this trend has recovered somewhat more robustly after the crisis. The been in resource rich economies, where FDI in mining, oil third category of countries includes China and Vietnam, and other natural resources has followed improvements in legislation in Mongolia, PNG, and Vietnam. which did not have crises and where physical capital per worker has continued increasing very rapidly, in the case of China averaging around 10 percent since 1990. While a China of course has continued to be a magnet for FDI. detailed capital stock figure is not available for Vietnam, Indeed, China's accession to the WTO, large domestic market, strong growth, skilled workforce and the innovative potential of its economy make it very attractive to FDI. 23 China received 85 percent of total FDI flows to the East Bosworth and Collins, 2003. 24 Asia region in 2003, and became the world's largest Investment Climate Assessments have been completed for Cambodia (2003), China (2002, 2003), Indonesia (2004), recipient, attracting around US$54 billion worth of FDI. Malaysia (2003) and the Philippines (2003). They are in progress in Mongolia and Thailand and will soon be launched in Lao PDR and Vietnam. Special Focus: Strengthening the Investment Climate in East Asia 56 Table 1: Recent Trends in FDI in EAP: FDI Inflows as III. Improving the Investment Climate in East Asia % of GDP 1994-1997 1997-2001 2002-2003 The East Asia and Pacific region generally fares well in Cambodia 5.4 5.7 2.8 international comparisons of investment climate. China 5.3 4.2 4.0 According to the A.T. Kearny 2003 ranking, 9 of the 25 Fiji 2.0 1.9 1.2 most preferred destinations for FDI in the world were in Indonesia 2.1 -1.7 -0.1 East Asia. Besides China, the front-runner since 2002, Japan Korea, Rep. 0.4 1.5 0.6 (15), Thailand (16), South Korea (18), Vietnam (21), and Lao PDR 5.7 2.6 1.2 Malaysia (24) appear in the top 25 lists. However, results Malaysia 6.5 3.4 2.9 from the five investment climate surveys completed in the Mongolia 1.7 3.7 9.0 region suggest that serious impediments to private sector-led Papua New Guinea 3.1 4.1 1.9 growth still exist. These surveys summarize the views of Philippines 2.0 2.2 1.3 firm managers about constraints to investment and firm Solomon Islands 3.6 -2.3 -0.6 performance, classified in terms of whether an issue is Tonga 1.2 1.6 1.6 Thailand 1.4 4.4 1.1 considered to be "serious" or "very serious". Figure 2 Vietnam 9.1 4.9 3.6 shows the most binding constraints reported in the five countries. While the ranking is relative and may not be comparable across countries, it does offer policymakers a Services are a new engine of FDI in East Asia. One new practical quantitative approach to prioritizing and phenomenon is the growing importance of services in FDI sequencing reform across a broad range of possible problem in the region. The share of services has increased from 43 areas. One clear result is that a single, one-size-fits-all percent of the region's total inward FDI stock in 1995 to 50 approach would not be sensible for the region. The range of percent in 2002. Growth was more pronounced in countries critical issues is as diverse as the countries themselves. like Thailand, Hong Kong (China) and Singapore, but even in Malaysia, Philippines and Korea the share of services in FDI is substantial (Table 2). Fig. 2 Major investment climate constraints Table 2: Share of services in total inward FDI (Stock) 60 Macro Instability 1990-2002 (Percentage) Policy uncertainty Corruption Economy 1990 2000 2002 50 Finance Cambodiaa .. 39.7 36.4 Electricity Skills China .. .. 31.4a Regulation & tax admin. Hong Kong, China .. 92.0 93.0 40 Indonesia .. .. .. Lao PDR .. .. .. 30 Malaysia 35.4 .. .. Percent Mongoliaa 100.0 37.0 41.3 20 Myanmara 23.0 35.1 34.7 Papua New Guineaa 3.4 .. .. Philippinesb 10 23.5 45.2 43.9 Republic of Korea 37.8 34.9 42.0 Singaporec 58.5 63.3 .. 0 Thailand 47.6 62.2 56.8 Cambodia China Indonesia Malaysia Philippines Vanuatu .. .. .. Viet Nama Source: Investment Climate Assessments, World Bank. 20.6 .. .. Source: UNCTAD, FDI database Macroeconomic instability continues to be a concern for a (www.unctad.org/fdistatistics). large proportion of firms in Cambodia, Indonesia and the a Approval data. Philippines. Uncertainty about government policies or b Data refer only to equity. regulations is also a concern for a substantial number of c Data for 1990-1996 refer only to equity while data for 1997-2000 refer to total direct investment. Special Focus: Strengthening the Investment Climate in East Asia 57 firms in these economies, as it is in China.25. Corruption is economies). Firms' reluctance to invest under uncertainty also an important concern in Cambodia, Indonesia and the stems from irreversibility effects. Once an investment is Philippines.. Corruption can often increase the uncertainty made, firms may get stuck with excess capital or low returns of the business environment, it also has a major impact on if they misjudge demand, or if their very success makes inflating the cost of doing business. Finally, firms in them a target for rent-seekers � i.e. for corrupt bureaucrats Malaysia and, to a certain extent, China identified skills and politicians. Drilling down, policy uncertainty is often shortages as an obstacle to their operations. Skills shortages correlated with firms' views about stable property rights and are a key barrier to higher innovation and investment about stable interpretation of government regulations. returns. Effective property rights will tend to increase productive a. Reducing Policy Uncertainty and Other Policy- investment, as investors will anticipate being able to Related Risks. appropriate the returns of their activity. Poorly defined or ill-protected property rights, judicial manipulation or Policy-related risks are risks stemming from policy outright crime amplify risks and dampen investment. As uncertainty, macroeconomic instability and capital markets, shown in figure 3, countries with the lowest confidence in and insecure property rights and arbitrary regulation. the legal system are also those in which the investment rates Perhaps the most basic requirement for a strong investment are lowest. Less than 60 percent of firms in Indonesia are climate is to ensure a stable macroeconomic confident that their property rights can be protected. Foreign environment. Even though macroeconomic conditions investment has been particularly adversely affected by well- have steadily improved since the shock of the 1997-98 publicized cases of highly arbitrary rulings in commercial financial crisis, 50 percent of firms in Indonesia still report cases before the courts. The rate is even lower in Cambodia concerns about macroeconomic instability as a major or where less than 40 percent are. Importantly, even though severe constraint, partly because of some further volatility in they report concerns about policy uncertainty in general, in inflation, interest rates and the exchange rate during the this specific area fewer Chinese firms lack confidence about post-crisis period. For example, the exchange rate fell quite the protection of their property rights in practice. Property sharply and inflation rose in 2000 and early 2001, when the rights, often used as proxy for institutions, have been shown credibility of the administration was damaged by financial to be a "fundamental cause of long-run growth"(Acemoglu, scandals and growing political tensions between the Johnson, and Robinson, 2004). legislature and the President. There is a growing body of evidence documenting the powerful negative effects on private investment and growth of high political and economic instability26. In a sample of 79 countries over the Fig. 3: Confidence that courts will uphold period 1960-2000 Hnatkovska and Loayza (2004) find that a property rights one standard deviation increase in volatility reduced annual (% of firms) per-capita GDP growth by 0.7 percentage points. When the fiscal or/and external balance is unsustainable, investors Philippines anticipate higher implicit taxation or expropriation through seignorage, default or banking crisis and adopt a "wait and see" attitude. In addition, the country's risk and interest Malaysia rates rise, further depressing private investment. The firm level surveys report uncertainty about the Indonesia content and implementation of policies as one of the leading investment climate constraints in several economies, China including Indonesia, China, Cambodia and Philippines. In Indonesia, 48 percent of firms are particularly concerned about it, and in China one third of firms report the same Cambodia (although, as will be seen, they report fewer problems in some specific areas that generate uncertainty in other 0 20 40 60 80 100 25While the definition of policy-related risk does not Source: Investment Climate Assessments, World Bank include political risk, it is important to note that political stability is a pre-condition to a predictable policymaking. Consistent implementation of government regulations is 26Economic instability is generally proxied by volatility in another source of policy uncertainty. In some countries, the various macroeconomic variables. gap between formal policies and what happens in practice is Special Focus: Strengthening the Investment Climate in East Asia 58 perceived to be large. As shown in figure 4, around 56 percent of firms surveyed in Indonesia do not believe the Figure 5: Share of Management's time interpretation of rules is predictable. This may to some spent dealing with officials (%) extent be an inevitable reflection of the great political changes Indonesia has undergone in the last five years. Policy making is now taking place in a brand new political and institutional context, with powerful new players such as Philippines the elected legislature and regional governments contesting the previously almost unchecked power of the executive Malaysia over economic policy, with all players now also competing for the favors of the electorate. The sooner policy making and implementation settle down to predictable rules and Indonesia procedures, the better for business activity. In the Philippines, another country where firms report high China concerns, studies often attribute policy uncertainty to sudden changes in policies or regulations designed to advantage a favored firm at the expense of its competitors, Cambodia as different branches or agencies of government vie for access to bribes or to push the interests of different patrons, 0 5 10 15 20 or as firms seek special privileges and favors with respect to large one-off concessions, infrastructure contracts or sales of public assets.27 Firms are more likely to start ma king Source: Investment Climate Assessments, World Bank long-term investments when they are convinced that government policy actions will follow predictable rules of In China, implementation effectiveness and predictability is the game. less of a problem, and the main source of policy uncertainty stems from the heavy regulatory burden. As shown in figure 5, the representative manager spends nearly 19 percent of his/her total time dealing with red tape in China. Figure 4: Firms that believe interpretation of However, the burden does not appear to be shared equally regulations is unpredictable (%) across regions. Firms in more advanced regions appear to have lower regulatory burdens than less advanced ones. This might create further divergence between rich and poor Philippines provinces, and encourage the flow of capital to regions where there is less red tape. In Cambodia, where this ratio is 14 percent, the regulatory burden on firms is so heavy that it Indonesia overwhelms other visible deficiencies such as finance, infrastructure, and human capital/skills. Countries can mitigate some risks over the medium China term. Provisions to use foreign arbitration and special commercial courts in case of conflict, for example, may reassure a reluctant foreign investor to settle in a country even if the efficiency of its overall judicial system is in Cambodia question. Also, developing better capital markets (bond markets, leasing, credit rating agencies) could help diffuse financial crisis risks. In high profile investments, such as in 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 infrastructure or mining, very detailed concession contracts are one avenue to specify and allocate risk to the party best Source: Investment Climate Assessments, World Bank able to mitigate it. But recent experience has shown that even these types of contracts have their shortcomings and are subject to re-contracting when conditions change radically. New public-private approaches may be needed for these types of projects. 27See, for example, Balisacan and Hill (2003) and references therein. Special Focus: Strengthening the Investment Climate in East Asia 59 b. Reducing the cost of doing business In Cambodia, firms report paying up to 6 percent of their sales in bribes, over twice that of Bangladesh and by far the Costs associated with weak contract enforcement, highest among all Asian comparators28. Indonesia and the corruption, crime, unreliable infrastructure, and Philippines also report rates higher that 4 percent. Given the burdensome regulations are powerful deterrents to fact that the average operating income is only 5-10 percent investment. The World Development Report 2005 in most competitive environments, the impact of bribes can estimates that these costs can amount to over 25 percent of a be very substantial. One consequence of pervasive typical firm's sales ---or more than three times what it pays corruption in Cambodia is little long-term investment in in taxes. For example, the cost of dispute resolution in the productive assets outside of protected sectors. Ultimately, Philippines is one of the highest in the world. In such legally firms prefer to remain small and informal, denying the costly environments, firms prefer contracting and government revenues, and reinforcing low civil service partnership arrangements that restrict exposure and lower salaries and poor public sector regulatory performance, the cost of exit. As a consequence there are lower levels of technology transfer, lower supply of capital, and slower which in turn contributes to weaknesses in the investment integration into production networks. climate. There is a growing body of evidence documenting the powerful negative effects of corruption on private Reducing the cost of starting and operating businesses. investment and growth. For example, Taduran (2000) The cost of registering a business is prohibitive for some estimates that a reduction in corruption in the Philippines to countries, coming close to 500 percent of per capita income the low levels prevailing in Singapore would raise the ratio in Cambodia or close to 150 percent in Indonesia. Also, as of investment of GDP by 6.6 percent and the rate of annual shown in figure 6, the cost of registering a property can per-capita GDP growth by 1.65 percent. Also, results exceed 5 percent of the value of the property in the obtained on firm-level data suggest that Chinese firms that Philippines and Indonesia. report having to offer informal payments to obtain loans had significantly lower productivity levels and labor growth Curbing Corruption is also likely to be an important rates, see World Bank (2002, China ICA). element in improving the investment climate. While on a world scale the region may not be the most corrupt ---East Fig. 7: Bribe as Share of firm's sales (%) Asian countries rank in the bottom half (least corrupt) of the distribution across all countries studied by the World Bank, the issue is serious enough to warrant analysis and scrutiny. Philippines In Cambodia, around 55 percent of firms find corruption a key problem, 41 percent in Indonesia, 35 percent in the Philippines. Corruption is bad for investment and growth because of the direct cost of bribes (Figure 7) and also Indonesia because of the corrosive impact of corruption on discriminatory rules and other forms of rent-seeking and state capture. China Figure 6: Cost of registering a property as % of property value AVERAGE Cambodia Vietnam Thailand Philippines 0 2 4 6 PNG Mongolia Source: Investment Climate Assessments, World Bank Malaysia Lao PDR Korea, Rep Better infrastructure, especially reliable power supply, is Indonesia perceived as a major issue in the Philippines and, to a lesser China degree in China and Indonesia. In the Philippines the costs Cambodia 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 28Of all countries surveyed by the World Bank, bribes average more than six percent of sales only in Algeria and Source: Doing Business Database, World Bank Nicaragua. Special Focus: Strengthening the Investment Climate in East Asia 60 associated with unreliable electricity supply alone amount to Three main reasons might explain the high lending rates in around 10 percent of a typical firm's sales (figure 8). This is Mongolia. First, the real funding cost is high. Compared comparable to India and Kenya. Public investment in with other East/Southeast Asian countries, Mongolia's infrastructure has been declining in the Philippines, and at national savings rate is low (18 percent), and so is its less than 3 percent of GNP is one of the lowest in the financial intermediation (financial sector assets total about region. The country ranks low for most infrastructure 57 percent of GDP). In addition, the liberalization of the indicators. The World Economic Forum ranked it 68 out of banking system has resulted in a large number of financial 75 countries in the overall quality and sufficiency of institutions (16 commercial banks, more than 100 NBFIs, infrastructure. With respect to its Asian neighbors, the and numerous credit cooperatives, etc.), fiercely competing country's rank in terms of service delivery is 8 out of 11 in for the very limited pool of savings. Financial the quality of electric supply, 6 out of 12 in telephone intermediation is not efficient. The real level of non- subscribers per 100 people, and 6 out of 12 in total road performing loans (NPLs) may be much higher than what is network. Problems arising from exercise of monopoly reported, and operating expenses are rising rapidly. Weak power also contribute to the high cost of inter-island banks need a large margin to survive and cover their costs. shipping. Increasing investments in the physical Lending remains a high-risk business. The society's credit infrastructure by revamping and rethinking Private culture is weak, and so is the legal and regulatory Participation in Infrastructure (PPI) should be considered. framework that is supposed to encourage a strong credit culture. Penalties for defaulting are low and not systematically applied. Banks' risk management capacity is also weak, and the usual practice is to keep high liquidity. Figure 8: Losses from electricity outage as a % of sales In the Philippines, high public sector debt and deficits may be generating some crowding out of the private sector. Access to external private finance is limited by country risk Philippines factors. High spreads on sovereign bonds--the highest in the region--make external borrowing difficult for all but a handful of private firms. Domestic capital markets and Malaysia nonbank financial institutions are underdeveloped and concerns about corporate governance and sanctity of contracts inhibit risk capital and joint ventures. Indonesia China Fig.9:RealInterestRate(LendingRate,%) Cambodia 25.0 Average 2001-2004 20.0 0 2 4 6 8 10 Source: Investment Climate Assessments, World Bank 15.0 High interest rates are a major concern in some of the smaller countries in the region. There is ample empirical 10.0 evidence suggesting that inadequate access to finance, and high real interest rates, are harmful for investment and 5.0 growth (Beck et al. 2004). In East Asia, Mongolia, Lao PDR and Cambodia have the least buoyant private sectors and the highest real domestic interest rates29 (Figure 9). Mongolia 0.0 still has the highest rate in the region, despite a noticeable Fiji decline from 27.4 percent in 2002 to 18.4 percent in the first China PDR Rep PNG Tonga seven months of 2004. Samoa Cambodia IndonesiaLao Malaysia Mongolia Thailand Vietnam Korea, Philippines Solomons Source: IFS (2004), IMF. 29The interest rate is calculated from IFS (2004) as the lending rate - CPI (inflation). The interest rate for 2004 is an average of the first seven months of the year. Special Focus: Strengthening the Investment Climate in East Asia 61 c. Reducing barriers to innovation and higher returns to Malaysia, it could raise the sales of most industries by an investing average of 11 percent. In some cases, low investment rates can be explained by Fostering a country's innovative capacity can boost policy distortions that limit the supply of complementary returns on investment. An alternative way to increase production factors such as human capital or access to returns is to encourage innovation. There are three key technology and innovation, thereby driving down private ingredients that drive a nation's innovative capacity: ideas, rates of returns on capital. clusters and networking, and national innovation systems. In Malaysia, while firms are technologically active in terms of Ensuring the appropriate supply of skills that match an adopting and adapting new technologies, they are weak in employer's desire to upgrade technology is critical to technology creation and innovation. Indeed, few firms increasing investment returns. In Malaysia one out of four report activities to facilitate innovation. Only 20 percent of firms surveyed identify the skills and education level of manufacturing firms and 12 percent of services firms report workers as a major obstacle to their activity. The ratio is any R&D activity. Only 11 percent of manufacturing firms even higher at one in every three in China (Figure 10). The file patents or copyright materials. An alternative way to complaints of firms about skills shortage are consistent with boost innovation is to encourage competition. High analyses of the return to education, return to training, and competitive pressure on firms' benefits consumers helps trends on unemployment (World Bank, 2003). Results drive productivity improvements, and can increase the provide strong evidence that fast growing economies face likelihood of innovation. The WDR 2005 estimates the tensions at the high end of their labor markets, resulting in change in the likelihood of innovating at more than 50 high wage premiums to workers with tertiary education and percent. Given the complementarities between skills and to those who have received firm-specific training, leading technology, further improving the quality of the educational correspondingly to lower returns to capital. In Malaysia, the output in EAP countries could help reducing skills shortage return for tertiary education is nearly 18 percent versus 9.5 and, to a large extent, weak innovative capacity. percent for secondary education and only 4.5 percent for primary education. This reflects the extent of skills shortages and the high value managers' place on skilled IV. Conclusions workers. This paper asks what governments in the EAP region can do to accelerate private investment growth. Results of the investment climate assessments conducted in the region Fig. 10: Managers ranking labor regulation suggest that in Indonesia and Philippines, policy-related and skills as major constraint (%) risks seem to be the most binding constraint to investment. Upholding property rights, reducing the regulatory burden, keeping the commitment to the current rules of the game Philippines and reducing macroeconomic instability would help. In countries such as Philippines and Cambodia, the high cost of doing business stemming from poor governance and Malaysia corruption, and poor physical and financial infrastructure Labor appear to be holding back investment. Revamping regulation investment growth would require curbing corruption, Indonesia Skills ensuring a reliable supply of power, and better access to finance. In Malaysia and, to a certain extent, in China, skills China shortages appear to be a key impediment to higher innovation and investment returns. Further improving the quality of the educational output could be critical in Cambodia boosting returns to investment and accelerating private investment recovery. 0 10 20 30 40 These results indicate that "investment climate" issues are diverse. Consequently, some prioritization is needed for Source: Investment Climate Assessments, World Bank each country. A quantitative survey is one instrument that can help sort out the priorities, but ultimately the quality of For fast growing economies, potential benefits from a public-private dialogue is crucial to this process, and must relaxing the skill constraints are large. Relaxing the be followed up by a determined political commitment to skills constraints can provide large benefits. In the case of reform that might cut across several different government Special Focus: Strengthening the Investment Climate in East Asia 62 agencies. Coordinating this change process to ensure impact is a further challenge for governments across the region. 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