World Bank cuts 2022 East Asia growth outlook, cites China slowdown

Published Tue, Sep 27, 2022 · 02:19 PM
    • The weaker forecast was due mainly to a sharp slowdown in China, caused by its strict zero-Covid rules that have disrupted industrial production, domestic sales and exports.
    • The weaker forecast was due mainly to a sharp slowdown in China, caused by its strict zero-Covid rules that have disrupted industrial production, domestic sales and exports. PHOTO: REUTERS

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    ECONOMIC growth in East Asia and the Pacific will weaken sharply in 2022 due to China’s slowdown, but the pace of expansion will pick up next year, the World Bank said on Tuesday (Sep 27).

    The Washington-based lender said in a report it expected 2022 growth in the East Asia and Pacific region, which includes China, to slow to 3.2 per cent, down from its 5.0 per cent forecast in April, and the previous year’s growth of 7.2 per cent.

    The weaker forecast was due mainly to a sharp slowdown in China, caused by its strict zero-Covid rules that have disrupted industrial production, domestic sales and exports, the World Bank said.

    China, which constitutes 86 per cent of the 23-country region’s economic output, was projected to grow 2.8 per cent this year, a significant deceleration from the bank’s previous forecast of 5.0 per cent. In 2021, China’s economy expanded by 8.1 per cent, its best growth in a decade.

    For 2023, the world’s second-largest economy was seen growing at 4.5 per cent.

    “As they prepare for slowing global growth, countries should address domestic policy distortions that are an impediment to longer term development,” World Bank East Asia and Pacific vice-president Manuela Ferro in a statement.

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    Another risk to the region’s outlook was aggressive interest rate hikes that central banks across the world are undertaking to combat soaring inflation. These have caused capital outflows and currency depreciations, the World Bank said.

    The multilateral aid agency cautioned policymakers on imposing price controls by way of subsidies, warning these measures would only benefit the wealthy and draw government spending away from infrastructure, health and education.

    “Controls and subsidies muddy price signals and hurt productivity,” World Bank East Asia and Pacific Economist Aaditya Mattoo, said in a statement. REUTERS

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