Asian Development Bank raises growth forecast but warns over trade sanctions

25 September 2024, 09:54

A man walks by a money exchange shop decorated with Chinese yuan banknotes and other countries currency banknotes in Hong Kong
Asian Economies. Picture: PA

The forecast was revised upwards slightly from the ADB’s April estimate of 4.9% growth.

Developing economies in Asia are forecast to grow at a 5.0% annual pace this year, helped by a strong US economy and surging demand for computer chips that power artificial intelligence, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) said in a report on Wednesday.

The forecast was revised upwards slightly from the ADB’s April estimate of 4.9% growth.

However, the regional lender warned of the potential threat of more protectionist measures, such as higher tariffs on exports from China, depending on the outcome of the US presidential election.

The report highlighted several positive trends, including a rebound in exports from Asia of computer chips and other advanced electronics this year because of rapid adoption of artificial intelligence.

It also noted that energy and food prices are moderating, though inflation remains painfully high in countries such as Pakistan, Laos and Myanmar.

The upturn in global demand for semiconductors and related electronics materials and components has helped drive stronger growth in Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore and South Korea, and to a lesser extent, the Philippines and Thailand, and that trend is expected to continue.

The report cited data from World Semiconductor Trade Statistics projecting that spending on memory chips, vital for AI applications, will expand 77% this year.

Other types of exports, especially vehicles from China and South Korea, also are growing quickly, it said.

The US presidential election is a major source of uncertainty.

“The election could result in higher blanket tariffs by the US on all global imports, and a broad-based and steep increase in tariffs on all US imports from the PRC (China),” the report said. “This would significantly escalate US-PRC trade tensions, with potential negative spillovers to developing Asia through real and financial channels.”

Former US president Donald Trump has pledged to stop US businesses from shipping jobs overseas and to take other countries’ jobs and factories away by relying heavily on sweeping tariffs.

Vice President Kamala Harris has criticised Mr Trump’s plan to impose large tariffs on most imported goods, which she says would severely raise the cost of goods.

Asia’s developing economies are also vulnerable to other US moves that might affect their currencies or the cost of borrowing on foreign loans, the report said.

China’s ailing property market remains a key risk and the report kept its forecasts for growth for the world’s second-largest economy at 4.8% in 2024 and 4.5% next year.

The ADB’s chief economist, Albert Park, welcomed a flurry of fresh measures announced on Tuesday by Beijing to cut borrowing costs and encourage more home purchases.

“It’s good to see. Certainly there’s room for monetary policy expansion,” he told reporters in a briefing before the report’s release. “Whether that will work remains to be seen.”

Among other positive developments, the report noted that energy inflation has returned to levels seen before the Covid-19 pandemic began in 2020. That alleviates pressures on some economies that depend heavily on imports of oil and other fuels, such as Sri Lanka, China and Japan.

Food inflation is still slightly higher, but falling. Rice prices fell by 12% to 589 dollars (£447) per metric tonne in late August after hitting a 16-year peak of 669 dollars (£500) per metric tonne in late January, the report said.

They are expected to fall further, as rice harvests are projected to hit record levels in the 2024-2025 growing year, and prices for wheat and maize have also declined.

Crops are likely to benefit from the La Nina climate phenomenon, which could bring beneficial higher rainfall to some regions though it also could cause destructive flooding in others.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

A burned car is seen among debris in the wreckage of a home destroyed by the Palisades Fire in Malibu

Fresh warnings as death toll from wildfires rises to 25

South Korean President Yoon Suk-Yeol speaks during the declaration of emergency martial law at the Presidential Office on December 03

Impeached South Korean president finally arrested for trying to impose martial law

Politicians from the ruling People Power Party speak to media outside of the gate of the presidential residence in Seoul

South Korea’s impeached president detained in martial law investigation

Elon Musk is being sued for failing to disclose his purchase of Twitter stocks before buying the company in 2022, which ‘allowed him to underpay’ by at least $150m (£123m).

US sues Musk for failing to disclose Twitter stock holdings to buy platform at ‘artificially low prices’

Musk-Neuralink Explainer

Elon Musk sued over failure to disclose stocks before buying Twitter

Police officers stand in front of the gate of the presidential residence of impeached South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol in Seoul

South Korean law enforcement officials enter presidential compound

The Les Arcs resort in the Savoie region in France.

British woman, 62, dies on mountain slope after ‘violent collision’ with another UK tourist

A VW van sits among burned-out homes in Malibu, California

‘It should have been toasted’: Retro blue VW van survives deadly LA wildfire

South Korean President Yoon Suk-Yeol speaks during the declaration of emergency martial law at the Presidential Office on December 03

South Korean standoff as police move in to arrest impeached president Yoon Suk Yeol for second time

Pete Hegseth, President-elect Donald Trump’s choice to be defence secretary, appears before the Senate Armed Services Committee for his confirmation hearing, at the Capitol in Washington

Senators grill Pete Hegseth, Donald Trump’s choice for Pentagon chief

Search and rescue workers dig through the rubble left behind by the Eaton Fire in Altadena, California

Southern California faces new wildfire warnings as winds regain strength

A new species of funnel-web spider has been discovered in Newcastle, Australia - even larger and more venomous than common Sydney funnel-web spiders.

New bigger and more venomous species of world’s deadliest spider found in Australia

Police and private security officers near an opening to a gold mine in Stilfontein, South Africa, where hundreds of illegal miners are trapped

Rescuers bid to bring out survivors among hundreds trapped in South African mine

Sevilla footballer Kike Salas has been detained by police

Spanish football star arrested over 'match fixing scam'

A red model house created by artist Mikael Genberg and scheduled to launch into space on a Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral in Florida on Wednesday

Swedish artist’s model house could soon find permanent home on Moon

Nato chief Mark Rutte said the mission, named “Baltic Sentry”, will involve increased surveillance of ships

Nato launches mission to protect undersea cables amid heightened fears of Russian sabotage