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Economy Grows Faster Than Expected in Q4, Door to Recovery 'Fully Open'

GDP expansion in December quarter beats forecasts.
by Reuters
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Photo/s: Jerome Ascaño
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The Philippine economy expanded faster than expected in the fourth quarter of 2021, buoyed by robust consumer spending, with the government optimistic that growth will accelerate this year despite a resurgence in coronavirus cases and inflation risks.

The Southeast Asian country's gross domestic product rose 7.7% in the December quarter from a year earlier, faster than a downwardly revised 6.9% expansion in the previous quarter, and beating a 6.0% forecast in a Reuters poll.

That took full-year GDP growth to 5.6%, exceeding the government's 5.0%-5.5% target and marking a sharp rebound from a record 9.6% contraction in 2020 amid prolonged COVID-19 lockdowns.

The economy grew 3.1% in the December quarter from the preceding three months.

"The door to economic recovery is now fully open," Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Karl Kendrick Chua told a briefing, as he predicted growth would accelerate this year. "We are on the correct path to a resilient recovery."

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The Philippines is aiming to achieve GDP growth rates of 7.0%-9.0% for 2022 and 6.0%-7.0% for both 2023 and 2024, banking on an accelerated vaccination drive to allow the economy to reopen further.

Household consumption rose 7.5% in the fourth quarter from a year earlier, up from a 7.1% increase in the third quarter, and the biggest contributor to overall growth.

Growth in government spending, however, slowed to 7.4% from the September quarter's 13.8%.

The three main economic sectors - agriculture, industry and services - posted positive growth rates of 1.4%, 9.5%, and 7.9%, respectively, in the fourth quarter.

The Philippine central bank, which has kept its key rate at a record low of 2.0% since November 2020, has vowed to prioritize an economic recovery, suggesting it will not raise interest rates anytime soon.

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The government has, however, reimposed coronavirus curbs in the capital region and a number of provinces since the start of the year due to a resurgence in infections driven by the more transmissible Omicron variant.

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