New Delhi:
Asia-Pacific economies will see subdued
growth in 2013 after last year’s sharp slowdown caused by external factors, the
United Nations said on Friday, adding that efforts to stimulate demand must go
hand in hand with macroeconomic course correction to promote broad-based and
sustainable development.
Noting that the region’s economic
progress has been marked by widening income inequalities and severe natural
resources depletion, the Economic and
Social Survey of Asia and the Pacific 2013: Forward-looking macroeconomic
policies for inclusive and sustainable development argues that
macroeconomic policies can play a vital role in reorienting the region towards
a more inclusive and sustainable growth path – a high priority of its post-2015
development agenda.
Inclusive and environment-friendly
growth is key to creating new sources of economic dynamism amidst the
persisting global uncertainty, says the flagship publication of the Bangkok,
Thailand-based United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the
Pacific (ESCAP) which estimates that economic policy uncertainty in the
eurozone and the United States since the onset of the global crisis has shaved
3 per cent off regional GDP – a loss of $870 billion in output.
“The 2013 Survey reminds us that this is no time for complacency, as the need
for a more inclusive and sustainable pattern of economic and social development
continues to be critical,” United Nations Under-Secretary-General and Executive
Secretary of ESCAP, Dr Noeleen Heyzer said in her preface to the Survey.
“In the light of the region’s high
degree of economic insecurity, large development and infrastructure gaps and
heightened environmental fragility along with extreme exposure to climate
change-related risks, it is necessary to better balance the stabilization and
the developmental roles of macroeconomic policies,” Executive Secretary Heyzer
added.
Limited pick up in growth
The expected improvement in global
demand arising from steady growth in the United States and the limited rebound
in major emerging economies is projected to help raise developing Asia-Pacific
growth to 6.0 per cent in 2013 from 5.6 per cent last year.
China is estimated to
record a moderate increase in growth from 7.8 per cent in 2012 to 8 per cent
while India is projected to recover
somewhat from last year’s low of 5 per cent to 6.4 per cent in 2013.
Oil and gas exporting North and Central Asia will continue to
benefit from high global energy prices, maintaining steady growth. In South and South-West Asia, the
economies of Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan and Sri Lanka are
projected to grow 6 per cent or more in 2013.
At the launch in New Delhi of the Survey organized by the UN Information
Centre for India and Bhutan, Dr. Nagesh Kumar, Chief Economist of ESCAP and
Director, ESCAP South and South-West Asia Office highlighted key findings from
the Survey and cautioned that “much
lower growth compared to recent years could become a new normal for many
regional economies if present economic trends were to continue”. “This could
cause an estimated economic output loss of about $1.3 trillion by end-2017”, he
said.
Long-term structural issues, such as
rising inequality, energy and infrastructure shortages are compounding the
regional slowdown and the Survey says
the “structural solution to invigorating the domestic drivers of growth…will
lie in making the development process more inclusive and sustainable”.
Addressing the event in New Delhi as
Chief Guest, Dr. C. Rangarajan, Chairman, Economic Advisory Council to the
Prime Minister of India, urged policy-makers in the ESCAP region to resist
meekly accepting the “new normal” and to push for higher growth rates which
could lead to an accelerated pace for achieving the Millennium Development
Goals.”
With the region
home to nearly two-third of the world’s poor and having more than a billion
people with insecure livelihoods, the Survey
highlights the economic benefits of social protection. It makes a
first-time estimation of the public investment requirement of a package of
social protection and sustainable development policies comprising a job
guarantee programme, a universal pension scheme, disability benefits, increased
public health spending, universal school enrolment and universal access to
modern sources of efficient energy.
Requiring
between 5 and 8 per cent of GDP in many Asia-Pacific countries surveyed, this
can be self-financed by most countries, although least developed countries,
some geographically disadvantaged nations and small island developing states
would also require external support.
Moreover, these
investments do not carry any risk of macroeconomic destabilization.
Thailand and China show the way
Among measures
to support inclusive development, the Survey makes a case for a minimum wage
policy which can also benefit employers and the economy. It estimates that the
recent minimum wage hikes in Thailand could increase job growth by up to 0.6
per cent and real GDP growth by 0.7 per cent by 2015.
Another model of
a pro-inclusive growth policy is the ongoing rebalancing of China’s economy
which aims to reduce reliance on exports and boost domestic consumption-driven
demand by promoting inclusive and sustainable growth. ESCAP estimates this will
also benefit intraregional trade, triggering an additional $13 billion worth of
exports by other Asia-Pacific countries to China during 2013-2015 and cause
regional export growth to pick up by up to 0.5 percentage points above the
level it would otherwise have been.
The Survey advocates an illustrative policy
package consisting of a job guarantee programme, a universal pension scheme,
disability benefits, increased public spending on health, universal school
enrolment and universal access to modern energy.
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