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Singapore, Thailand are weak to U.S. recession, economists say

Singapore is the most vulnerable and will be the first to be hit in Southeast Asia if the US goes into recession, says Maybank’s Chua Hak Bin.

Roslan Rahman | AFP | Getty Images

SINGAPORE — Asia won’t get off scot-free if the US falls into recession, but some countries in Southeast Asia will be hit harder than others, economists warn.

The tug-of-war between inflation and recession in the United States continues as the Federal Reserve maintains its hawkish stance on rate hikes.

The US has already reported back-to-back quarters of negative growth in the first two quarters of 2022 – in what some see as a “technical” recession. Still, there is little consensus on when a full-blown recession might strike.

Economists told CNBC that Singapore and Thailand will most likely be hit first if the US slips into recession.

Singapore

Singapore is “more vulnerable” to a US recession than its regional peers because it is “very, very dependent,” said Chua Hak Bin, a senior economist at Maybank.

“I guess [it] Singapore will be first,” he said when asked which economies in Southeast Asia will be hit first if the US falls into recession. The island nation is likely to be first because of its export dependency and its small and open economy, Chua said.

Selina Ling, chief economist at OCBC Bank, agreed with this analysis.

“At first glance, I would rather assume the more open and trade-dependent Asian economies [Singapore]Taiwan and South Korea and maybe Thailand would be the usual suspects,” she said.

1. Connected

The country’s GDP growth has “historically been more closely correlated with US business cycles” due to its export-oriented economy, Maybank said in a late August report.

Singapore does not have a large domestic market and relies heavily on trade services for economic growth, Chua said. These include shipping activities and cargo operations.

The country’s trade-to-GDP ratio for 2021 was 338%, according to the World Bank. The trade to GDP ratio is an indicator of how open an economy is to international trade.

Singapore’s “correlation and dependence on foreign demand is very high,” Chua said. If the US slips into recession, this “dependency and causality” will hit the more export-oriented economies, he added.

Singapore is strongly connected to the rest of the world and a “shockwave” in any one country will definitely have a ripple effect across the city, Irvin Seah, senior economist at DBS Group Research, told CNBC.

Still, he doesn’t expect Singapore to fall into recession this year or next.

The Maybank report states that if the US slides into recession, the downturn will be “shallow rather than deep.”

However, Chua said the US could potentially face a “prolonged” recession and whether or not Singapore is also headed for a protracted recession will depend on China’s Covid reopening as China is the city-state’s biggest trading partner.

2. Export-oriented economy

Singapore is a big exporter of electrical machinery and equipment, but output in its electronics cluster fell 6.4% yoy in July, data from the Economic Development Board showed.

Production in the semiconductor sector fell 4.1%, while other electronic module and component segments shrank 19.7% on “lower export orders from China and China.” [South] Korea,” said the EDB, a government agency of Singapore’s Ministry of Trade and Industry.

“China is the biggest export market for many ASEAN countries… But exports to China have been terrible,” Chua said, referring to the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations. “Because Singapore is so dependent on exports, [it] will feel it.”

3. Tourism

Seah, the economist at DBS, said he “doesn’t rule out the possibility” that Singapore will see at least a quarter of negative quarter-on-quarter growth. However, economic conditions for the country are normalizing, he added.

“We are definitely much stronger today than we were during the global financial crisis,” he said.

Thailand

Thailand will also be among the first to be hit if the US slips into recession, economists predicted, speaking to CNBC.

1. Tourism

The country relies heavily on tourism for its economic growth. Spending on tourists accounted for about 11% of Thailand’s GDP in 2019 before the pandemic. The country welcomed nearly 40 million visitors that year and generated more than $60 billion in revenue, according to the World Bank.

Only about 428,000 foreign tourists arrived in 2021 and the economy grew by just 1.5% – one of the slowest in Southeast Asia, according to Reuters.

Thailand could be next to fall into recession after Singapore, Chua said. However, a “wild card” will be the timing of China’s reopening – which could determine whether Thailand’s economy is “back to full swing,” he added.

Thailand's lifting of Covid curbs will boost travel and service industries: hospitality businesses

Chinese tourists have not returned to the Southeast Asian country, and that has left Thailand’s economy in “an even more precarious state,” said Seah of DBS Bank.

“As long as Chinese tourists don’t return, Thailand will keep fighting. Growth was weak, inflation high, [and] The Thai baht is under pressure.”

The Thai baht is currently hovering around 36 baht per US dollar, down 20% from three years ago before the pandemic.

2. Inflationary pressures

Thailand’s inflation rate hit a 14-year high of 7.66% in June, according to Refinitiv data.

The Bank of Thailand has only hiked interest rates once since 2018.

“Headline inflation is very high in Thailand, but core inflation is not that high, correlation is not that high. Of course, growth has been much weaker, so they see no urgency to tighten that aggressively,” Maybank’s Chua said.

He pointed out that Indonesia and the Philippines would likely be less affected by a possible US recession due to their “domestically focused economies”.

“Indonesia and the Philippines were better insulated from the slowdown in foreign demand and the US recession, with both economies continuing to expand even in 2008-09 during the global financial crisis,” the Maybank report said.

According to World Bank data, GDP growth in Indonesia and the Philippines was higher than in Singapore and Thailand during the 2008-2009 global financial crisis.

– CNBC’s Abigail Ng and Weizhen Tan contributed to this report.

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Health

Thailand finance minister on vaccine rollout, tourism restoration

SINGAPORE – Thailand will receive its first batch of vaccines next month and plans to produce its own vaccines, according to finance ministers.

Initially, about 100,000 cans will arrive, Arkhom Termpittayapaisith told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Asia” on Friday.

“The first vaccines will be coming to Thailand next month, the first lot,” he said, adding that Thai company Siam Bioscience will be working with Anglo-Swedish pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca to develop vaccines that will be useful for both Thailand and other countries are available.

He spoke to CNBC as part of the coverage of the World Economic Forum’s Davos agenda.

Thailand will begin rolling out vaccines on Feb. 14 and intends to vaccinate 19 million people in the first phase, its prime minister said on Wednesday, according to a Reuters report.

The Southeast Asian nation has According to the report, 26 million cans of AstraZeneca to be made by Siam Bioscience and 2 million cans of China’s Sinovac were secured. It has also reserved 35 million cans from AstraZeneca, it added.

Pandemic meets tourism

Termpittayapaisith also said tourism is expected to recover by the end of the year rather than mid-year as forecast. The Thai economy relies heavily on tourism for its growth, but the arrivals of foreign tourists almost completely stalled during the pandemic.

Tourist arrivals fell 66% to 6.69 million in the first six months of 2020 as countries around the world imposed bans and travel restrictions due to the pandemic.

By comparison, Thailand had a record 39.8 million tourists in 2019, according to Reuters. Tourist spending represented around 11% of Thailand’s GDP that year, the report said.

Commuters wearing face masks wait for a canal boat in Bangkok on March 2, 2020.

MLADEN ANTONOV | AFP | Getty Images

“We’re also focusing on domestic consumption so you can see that the economic package … encourages more spending on the basic economy,” Termpittayapaisith said, adding that it aims to offset the decline in international tourism revenue.

Thailand lowered its forecast for economic growth for this year from 4.5% to 2.8% on Thursday. According to the central bank, the economy is expected to shrink by 6.6% in 2020.

The country reported a record 959 cases on Tuesday, the highest daily increase since early January when it accelerated its testing, according to Reuters.

Thailand has one of the lowest reported cases in Southeast Asia. So far, 17,023 cases and 76 deaths have been reported, according to the Johns Hopkins University.

Categories
Health

Thailand Legalizes Early-Time period Abortions however Retains Different Restrictions

BANGKOK – The Thai parliament has decided to make abortion legal in the first trimester while maintaining penalties for women who undergo an abortion later in their pregnancy.

Senate lawmakers voted 166-7 Monday to amend a law providing prison sentences of up to three years for anyone who has an abortion and up to five years for those who perform an abortion. With the new version, every woman can terminate a pregnancy in the first 12 weeks.

Proponents say the measure doesn’t go far enough: anyone in Thailand who has an abortion after 12 weeks, except under the conditions set by the country’s Medical Council, is still facing fines and up to six months in prison.

“For us this law is not a real development,” said Matcha Phorn-in, the executive director of Sangsan Anakot Yawachon, a non-profit organization in Thailand that campaigns for women’s rights.

“In order to pass this type of law, the participation of women needs to be prioritized, especially women who have experience of abortion,” she added. “The consultation process gave roles to lawmakers and human rights advocates, but there are no women who have experienced abortion or activists in the process.”

According to the Medical Council, pregnancies can be terminated after 12 weeks by a qualified professional if they are the result of sexual assault or endanger the mother’s physical or emotional health. Abortion is also allowed if the fetus is known to have abnormalities.

Many women in Thailand have found ways to get abortions under the previous restrictions, but the country still has a high teen pregnancy rate. According to government figures from the United Nations Population Fund, about 1.5 million babies were born to teenage mothers in Thailand between 2000 and 2014, and nearly 14 percent of all pregnancies in 2016 were teenagers.

Supecha Baotip, an activist with Tamtang, an abortion advocacy group in Thailand, said she was concerned that abortions would continue underground. “I don’t want women with pregnancies older than 12 weeks to fear that they will not be able to have the procedure and therefore not look for it legally,” she said.

Ms. Supecha said she will be closely monitoring the Ministry of Health to see whether the early abortion services are expanding and doctors are pressuring to comply with the new rule.

“Any hospital can offer this service, but not because of the attitudes of the doctors,” she added.

Last February, the Thai Constitutional Court ruled that the country’s previous abortion law was unconstitutional and gave the government 360 days to change it.

Two revisions were proposed, one by the cabinet and one by the opposition Move Forward Party. The House of Representatives later rejected the Move Forward version, which would have allowed abortions for up to 24 weeks.

Some elements of the Buddhist-dominated culture of Thailand are socially conservative. However, Thailand also has relatively progressive policies on gender and LGBTQ issues.

Heather Barr, interim co-director of women’s rights at Human Rights Watch, said in an email Thursday She saw progress on abortion rights in both Thailand and South Korea, where a court two years ago ruled that an anti-abortion law was unconstitutional.

But subsequent restrictions in Thailand, Ms. Barr wrote this week, still pose health risks. “When governments restrict abortion, women still have abortions – they just have more dangerous ones,” she wrote.

Ms. Matcha, the activist, said many Thai women decide to have an abortion after 12 weeks. “Most women still face the same problems despite this law: fear, stigma and breaking the law,” she said.

Muktita Suhartono reported from Bangkok and Mike Ives from Hong Kong.