The Philippines grapples with debt.
by MEDIA CONTACT RESOURCES, INC.
Much of Philippine news coverage focuses on dramatic warnings that
the country may elect to default on its US$70-billion in debt. According
to an April 15, 2005 Bloomberg News report the country spends about one
third of its annual government budget on interest payments.
On April 25, 2005, The Daily Telegraph (London) reported that the
Philippines was contemplating various austerity measures to combat the
twin pressures of higher oil prices and rising interest rates in the
world capital markets.
Philippine domestic interest rates also were on the rise. On April
8, 2005, the Central Bank of the Philippines (BSP) raised two key
overnight interest rates. The BSP said that the move was preemptive.
When the BSP's first quarter inflation report was released
three weeks later (April 29, 2005) the rationale behind the interest
rate hike became apparent.
In the first quarter inflation did rise compared with the previous
quarter due to pressure from oil prices and non-food products. The rise
in food prices was somewhat less than in the previous quarter.
Core inflation - that is inflation minus the volatile energy and
food sectors - also increased in the first quarter. The bank remarked
that the upward trend for core inflation was continuing, and while it
did not specifically link core inflation to the April 8, 2005 interest
rate hikes, it did say that price pressures were beginning to feed into
other commodities.
So where does this leave Philippine consumers? Unemployment is high
remaining in double digits. But consumer spending for Christmas was
strong, most likely a result of increased remittances from workers
overseas. In short, the signals are mixed.
Phlippine consumers would be devastated economically by an
Argentine-style default. The comparable default almost eradicated the
Argentine middle class.
Nearly everyone in the Philippine government realizes how
destructive default would be. Proposals in the legislature to authorize
default were defeated quickly.
Circumstances clearly favor prudence over austerity with a good
chance for success given the overall historically low international
interest rates. The country's President is an economist, and is
able to provide strong leadership at this time.
UNEMPLOYMENT CONTINUES TO BE A SERIOUS PROBLEM
The population growth rate for the Philippines is above the
regional average, due in part to a birth rate of 26 per thousand
inhabitants, more than the average of 22 per thousand for Southeast
Asia. Job creation has not kept up with growth of the labor force in
recent years, and it is unlikely that the situation will improve further
in 2005. Unemployment is running about 11.7 percent, and this continues
to dampen consumer confidence.
The Philippines's population reached 84-million mid-2004,
which amounted to just over 15 percent of Southeast Asia's
548-million inhabitants. According to data released by the Population
Reference Bureau (PRB), the Philippines's population will reach
118-million by 2025. Also, according to that source, the Philippines is
going to have a population of 147- million people in 2050.
The PRB data revealed that a moderate 48 percent of the
Philippines's population lived in urban areas during 2004, and that
the country's population density is a high 722 people per square
mile. This makes the Philippines the most densely populated country in
the region (excluding Singapore). In area, the Philippines is almost the
same size as Italy. Another source, the CIA's World Factbook,
indicates that 37 percent of the Philippines's population was birth
to 14 years old in 2004, while 59 percent was 15 to 64 years old, and 4
percent were 65 years of age and over.
The CIA estimated that the country's population growth rate
will be 1.84 percent in 2005 and the net migration rate will be -1.49
per 1,000 inhabitants.
According to the United Nations Population Division, in the year
2050, 20 percent of the Philippines's population will be birth to
14 years old, while 60 percent will be aged 15 to 59, and 20 percent of
the populace will be 60 years of age and over.
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