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Risks to economic recovery still remain: analysts

APEC Economic Committee Ningbo, People's Republic of China | 25 February 2014

An unstable economic recovery in the Asia-Pacific region requires APEC member economies to implement structural reforms despite the strengthening of industrial production, higher growth forecasts and the commitment by G20 members to ensure that monetary policy settings will be carefully calibrated, advised analysts.

These recommendations were offered to the APEC Economic Committee on Monday in the port city of Ningbo by economists from APEC, the International Monetary Fund and the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development and provided context for the region’s challenges.

Exports have been the traditional engine of growth in the APEC region. However, Dr Alan Bollard, the APEC Secretariat’s Executive Director, explained that the sluggish growth in exports over the last few years has significantly dampened the pace of recovery in the APEC region.

“Changes to the composition of exports, supply chains, middle income demand and services growth will inevitably change the nature of trade flows within APEC,” Dr Bollard said. “We have observed that, increasingly, domestic demand is becoming a primary driver for growth in many APEC economies.”

There are downside risks to growth, including the possibility of portfolio reallocation, lower investment and financial disruptions stemming from a disorderly reaction to the normalization of monetary policy in some advanced economies.

While the region’s growth is expected to accelerate at a faster pace in 2014, APEC is now at a critical juncture where economic restructuring is needed to secure the region’s recovery.

“APEC growth in recent years has been driven by increased capital formation,” stated Quynh Le, an analyst with the APEC Policy Support Unit. “Despite this, a slowdown in labor productivity restrained the APEC region from reaching its full growth potential.”

“It is vital for APEC economies to take action to transform investments into higher productivity,” she added.

The region is in a better position in terms of the fundamentals but some policy frameworks remain weak. The APEC Economic Committee is considering recommendations for reform.

“There might be room in developing APEC economies for monetary tightening, improving fiscal buffers and accelerating structural reform by addressing bottlenecks in infrastructure, reform and fuel price subsidies,” acknowledged Rory McLeod, Chair of the Economic Committee. “Formulating credible macroeconomic policy priorities and frameworks will dampen the impact of financial volatility.”

“Some developed economies have expressed interest in dealing with export stagnation by enacting structural reforms that encourage imports, value-added manufacturing and innovation.”

The recent announcement from the G20 to raise collective GDP growth by 2 percent higher than the current trajectory implied by current policies over the next five years sets a target for the global effort to increase investment, lift employment and participation, enhance trade and promote competition, in addition to macroeconomic policies.

“In the near-term, achieving balanced, sustainable and inclusive growth will require APEC to enhance our innovative capacity through greater research and development and improving the business and regulatory environment and ultimately the overall productivity in the region,” concluded McLeod.

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For additional information, please contact:
David Hendrickson +65 9137 3886 at [email protected]
Michael Chapnick +65 9647 4847 at [email protected]

More details about APEC’s 2014 priorities and initiatives can be found on www.apec.org.

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