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Philippines : : Staff Report for the 2014 Article IV Consultation



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Titolo: Philippines : : Staff Report for the 2014 Article IV Consultation Visualizza cluster
Pubblicazione: Washington, D.C. : , : International Monetary Fund, , 2014
Descrizione fisica: 1 online resource (84 p.)
Disciplina: 332.152
Soggetto topico: Banks and Banking
Macroeconomics
Money and Monetary Policy
Public Finance
Natural Disasters
Budgeting
Statistics
National Government Expenditures and Related Policies: General
Debt
Debt Management
Sovereign Debt
Banks
Depository Institutions
Micro Finance Institutions
Mortgages
Monetary Policy, Central Banking, and the Supply of Money and Credit: General
Climate
Natural Disasters and Their Management
Global Warming
National Budget
Budget Systems
General Aggregative Models: General
Public finance & taxation
Banking
Monetary economics
Natural disasters
Budgeting & financial management
Civil service & public sector
Public debt
Expenditure
Public financial management (PFM)
Bank credit
Environment
Budget planning and preparation
National accounts
Debts, Public
Banks and banking
Expenditures, Public
Finance, Public
Credit
Budget
Soggetto geografico: Philippines Economic policy
Philippines
Note generali: Description based upon print version of record.
Nota di contenuto: Cover; CONTENTS; CONTEXT; RECENT DEVELOPMENTS, OUTLOOK, AND RISKS; PRESERVING STABILITY AMID STRUCTURAL AND CYCLICAL FLOWS; A. External Sector Assessment; B. Monetary and Exchange Rate Policy; C. Financial Sector Issues; D. Fiscal Policy; STRUCTURAL TRANSFORMATION FOR QUALITY GROWTH; STAFF APPRAISAL; BOXES; 1. Natural Disaster Risks and Addressing Their Social and Economic Consequences; 2. What is Driving Philippines' Growth?; 3. Financial Flows; 4. What is Happening to Potential Growth?; 5. Recent Monetary and Liquidity Policy Measures; 6. Status of Public-Private Partnership Projects
7. A Cross-Country Perspective on Bank Credit Penetration 8. Conditional Cash Transfer Program; 9. Progress in Fiscal Transparency; FIGURES; 1. Macroeconomic Developments; 2. Real Sector; 3. Financial Markets; 4. Financial Market Comparisons; 5. Cross-Country Financial Market Developments; 6. Monetary and Financial Conditions; 7. External Sector; 8. Banking Sector; 9. Emerging Markets: Social Conditions and Income Distribution; TABLES; 1. Selected Economic Indicators, 2010-15; 2. National Government Cash Accounts, 2009-15 (In billions of pesos)
3. National Government Cash Accounts, 2009-15 (In percent of GDP)4. General Government Operations, 2009-15; 5. Depository Corporation Survey, 2009-13; 6. Balance of Payments, 2010-15; 7. Medium-Term Outlook, 2011-19; 8. Banking Sector Indicators, 2009-13; 9. Indicators of External Vulnerability, 2007-13; APPENDICES; 1. Risk Assessment Matrix; 2. External Sector Assessment; 3. Developments in Real Estate; 4. Debt Sustainability Analysis; CONTENTS; FUND RELATIONS; IMF-WORLD BANK COLLABORATION; RELATIONS WITH THE ASIAN DEVELOPMENT BANK; STATISTICAL ISSUES
Sommario/riassunto: KEY ISSUES Context. Growth remains rapid, but has moderated from the 7¼ percent recorded in 2013. Remittances and accommodative monetary and financial conditions remain the primary growth drivers, despite volatile capital flows, slowing activity in the region and severe natural disasters. Inflation has picked up to over 4 percent, while the current account remains in surplus. Local financial markets were moderately impacted by the Fed’s “taper talk and action,” weakening the peso and equity prices. Credit growth has quickened, especially to construction. Potential growth has risen to about 6?6¼ percent. However, persistent weakness in the business climate is a risk to sustained growth and hinders job creation. Foreign ownership restrictions, inadequate infrastructure and high doing-business costs have held back overall investment and employment. Along with frequent natural disasters, this has kept poverty elevated, thereby sustaining outward migration. Outlook and risks. Normalizing financial conditions are forecast to ease growth to 6?6½ percent over the medium term, while keeping inflation within the band and moderating the current account surplus. Abrupt changes in global financial conditions and a sharp growth slowdown in EMs are among the external growth risks. On the domestic front, excessive flow of real and financial resources to the property sector could increase volatility of asset prices and GDP growth over the longer run. Policy recommendations. A more restrictive policy stance is needed to preserve macro- financial stability, with rebalancing of the mix to allow higher public investment spending, while implementing reforms to sustain vibrant growth and make it more inclusive: • Absorbing liquidity and raising official interest rates would address second-round inflation effects and potential overheating and financial stability risks. Allowing the exchange rate to adjust more fully to structural inflows, while smoothing the effect of cyclical flows, would limit further sustained reserve buildup. • Addressing specific risks from real estate and large credit exposures requires further targeted measures and broadening the BSP’s mandate to include financial stability. This would help prevent diversion of systemic risk to shadow banking and strengthen tools to manage risks from deepening cross-border financial integration. • Raising the fiscal deficit from below 1½ percent of GDP in 2013 to 2 percent of GDP in 2014 to accommodate reconstruction spending should be accompanied by tighter monetary and financial conditions. Mobilizing sizable additional stable revenue would ensure room for structural spending priorities while preserving fiscal prudence. • Improving the investment climate by relaxing foreign ownership limits, reducing red tape, limiting tax holidays, and reducing labor and product market rigidities would enhance competition, support PPP execution and create employment opportunities within the Philippines.
Titolo autorizzato: Philippines  Visualizza cluster
ISBN: 1-4983-8524-9
1-4843-6643-3
1-4843-5058-8
Formato: Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione: Inglese
Record Nr.: 9910791157803321
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Serie: IMF Staff Country Reports; Country Report ; ; No. 2014/245