Amid a disaster, here comes some good news.
This, as an expert
claims Philippines is now the strongest-performing economy in Asia,
thanks to improved exports even in a weak global environment.
"The
strongest-performing economy in the Asia today is the Philippines,"
Michael Spencer, chief economist for Asia at Deutsche Bank AG, said in
an interview with Bloomberg on Thursday.
Spencer notes the
country has historically been identified as dependent on the economies
of the United States and Europe, which both continue to face
uncertainties.
The Philippine economy grew by 6.4 percent in the
first quarter, with economists noting that this signaled a recovery from
the sluggish 3.7 percent growth in 2011.
This made the Philippines the second fastest-growing Asian economy, topped only by China at 8.1 percent.
"what's driving growth [in the Philippines] today is exports, surprisingly enough for them," Spencer said.
National
Statistics Office (NSO) data show that total exports reach $26.8
million in the first half, up 7.68 percent from $24.8 million in the
same period in 2011.
The country's export performance has been
insulated from weak external demand, particularly from US and Europe, by
increasing outbound shipments to Japan, Spencer said.
"I suspect that this has something to do with Japan outsourcing to the Philippines after the earthquake," he added.
Outbound shipments to Japan also grew by 11 percent to $4.77 billion in the first half from $4.29 billion a year ago.
Japan thus remained the Philippines' top market during the period, accounting for 17.8 percent of total exports.
Last
year, Japan was also the Philippines' top product destination with
$8.86 billion worth of exports or 18.5 percent of total exports.
It was followed by the US, with a 14.8 percent share; China, 12.7 percent; Hong Kong, 7.71 percent; and Singapore, 8.92 percent.
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