Most
Southeast Asian economies to fall into recession, rebound in 2021: report
01:42
Vietnam will emerge from the pandemic the least
affected of all countries in Southeast Asia, though it is not immune to the
sharp slowdown in trade flows,
according to a report by the
Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales and Oxford Economics.
The
Coronavirus global outlook: After the Outbreak report says most regional
economies will fall into recession in the first half of 2020 due to the
severe impact of the outbreak.
However,
growth is expected to spring back to an average of 8 per cent in 2021,
supported by fiscal stimulus packages and monetary easing.
An enduring
COVID-19 outbreak will see world GDP shrink by 4.7 per cent in 2020, more
than double the impact of the global financial crisis in 2008 and the biggest
recession in post-war history.
Similarly,
most Southeast Asian economies will fall into recession in the first half of
2020 and record a 1.9 per cent contraction for the year.
Measures to
lock down countries and cities in the region to varying degrees have
substantially cut domestic demand, with many countries bringing in
restrictions on exports of food produce to safeguard domestic food supplies,
further dampening export growth. Thailand is forecast to be one of the worst
hit, because tourism and travel, which have particularly suffered because of
the pandemic, account for 20 per cent of its GDP.
The adverse
impact on Southeast Asia will ease in the second half of 2020 as Chinese
import demand and global trade recover at a consistent pace, while a slower
pace of normalisation will continue to weigh on tourism-dependent economies.
Co-ordinated
fiscal stimulus packages and monetary easing by authorities across the region
will support the recovery in economic growth.
Mark
Billington, ICAEW regional director, Greater China and South-East Asia, said:
“Beyond a global health and economic crisis, the pandemic is also an
important chapter of an unfolding bigger inter-connected catastrophe of
climate emergency, massive bio-diversity loss and increasing inequality.
“Our
recovery will need to include sustainable solutions that benefit nature,
society and economy. As countries in the region gradually ease lockdown
restrictions and start to open their economies, organisations and businesses
will have to adapt to a ‘new normal’ for sustained growth and performance in
the post-outbreak world.”
At the
regional Virtual Economic Forum hosted by ICAEW on June 4, industry leaders
discussed the impact of COVID-19 on businesses in the ASEAN region, and
panellists shared their viewpoints on the impact of the pandemic on Southeast
Asian economies and the recovery outlook.
Viet Nam is
poised to benefit from a manufacturing shift by multinational companies
though the impact of the slowdown on global demand that would continue to
weigh on its supply chains and manufacturing sector.
VNS
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Thứ Hai, 15 tháng 6, 2020
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