World Bank: China Rebounding Economically
Washington, DC, November 3, 2009 -- The economic
rebound in East Asia and the Pacific has been surprisingly
swift and very welcome but take China out of the equation
and the regional picture is less rosy, says the World Bank's
half-yearly assessment of the economic health of the East
Asia and Pacific region.
The latest East Asia and
Pacific Update, titled Transforming the Rebound into
Recovery, says large and timely fiscal stimulus spending in
most East Asian and Pacific countries – led by China and
Korea – along with a powerful process of inventory
restocking now underway, have driven the rebound in the
region and contributed significantly to confidence in a
global pick-up.
Developments in the East Asia &
Pacific region remain strongly influenced by China, where
the projected increase in GDP in 2009 will offset three
quarters of the decline in the GDPs of the U.S., the
Eurozone and Japan. But despite Indonesia and Vietnam
performing well, developing East Asia Developing East Asia
includes China, Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand,
Vietnam, Cambodia, Lao PDR, Mongolia, Papua New Guinea and
the island economies of the Pacific. excluding China is
projected to grow at around 1 percent in 2009 -- more slowly
than South Asia and the Middle East and North Africa, and
only slightly stronger than Sub-Saharan Africa. Some
countries remain especially hard hit – GDP is contracting
in Cambodia, Malaysia and Thailand and is barely growing in
Mongolia and some of the Pacific Islands, the report
says
As enterprises, both formal and informal,
adjusted to weaker demand earlier in the year, workers
across the region have been impacted in different ways.
Enterprises cut workers’ hours, eliminated extra shifts,
let temporary or contract workers go, or lowered wages –
but some of these measures are now being reversed.
Relatively few full-time employees have been laid off as
companies have tried to limit recruitment and training costs
when demand picks up. Workers who have been let go have
typically found jobs in services and agriculture, often in
the informal sector at lower pay and in more challenging
working conditions. In some countries, fiscal stimulus
packages have supported the creation of temporary public
employment.
The report estimates that 14 million
people who would have emerged from $2-a-day poverty if the
region’s economies had kept growing at pre-crisis levels,
will remain in poverty in 2010.
However, with
projected growth of 8.4 percent in China this year and the
country’s domestic demand racing ahead of global demand,
countries exporting consumer durables, electronic components
and raw materials to China have felt the positive flow-on
effects. As a result, the World Bank is projecting growth of
6.7 percent in 2009 for developing East Asia and the Pacific
and 7.8 percent next year.
As officials, ministers and
heads of state from the 21 member countries of the
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum head to
Singapore later this week, the World Bank’s chief
economist for the East Asia & Pacific region, Vikram Nehru
warned that risks to a sustainable recovery remain.
“Some governments in the region will have the
fiscal space to sustain fiscal stimulus until recovery is on
a firmer footing,” he said. “The time to begin removing
monetary accommodation may come earlier however, especially
given concerns about asset price bubbles.”
He said
looking beyond 2009, countries in the region can still grow
rapidly even if growth in the advanced economies is slow. To
take advantage of the growth potential ahead, countries need
to resist protectionism, remain open and become more, not
less integrated with the regional and global economies.
“Moving up the value-added chain in global and
regional production networks should lead to further
productivity gains and strong growth, and allow for new
technologies and innovation to spread more widely through
the region’s economies,” Nehru said.
The
report’s lead author Ivailo Izvorski said the crisis has
helped governments realize that more growth can be extracted
from domestic demand if incentives that have limited
expansion in private consumption and services are tackled.
“Rebalancing growth need not be presented as a
choice between relying on global markets or on domestic
markets,” Izvorski said. “It can be about extracting
more growth from domestic demand as a complement to
increasing integration within the region and the global
economy. Facilitating the development of the service sector,
addressing infrastructure bottlenecks, and boosting the
quality of education need to be accompanied by developing
better targeted and better funded social protection systems.
“Together with education and health, improved
social protection systems will help reduce precautionary
saving, promote domestic cohesion at a time of rapid
regional and global integration, and enable countries to
reap the full benefits from agglomeration economies, all of
which are key to long-term economic success.”
The
East Asia and Pacific Update is the World Bank’s
comprehensive review of the region’s economies. It is
published twice yearly and is available for free on our
website at http://www.worldbank.org/eapupdate.
ENDS