Asian Development Bank exceeds inflation and Banko Sentral ng Pilipinas surprise off cycle moves!

In the Asian Development Outlook 2022 Supplement report released on Thursday, July 21, the Manila-based multilateral institution raised its gross domestic product (GDP) forecast for the country from 6.0 percent in April to 6.5 percent.
ADB expects quicker growth in 2022
Asian Development Bank (ADB) expects the Philippine economy to grow at a much faster pace this year despite accelerating consumer prices.
“The Philippine economy’s growth momentum has accelerated close to its ideal growth path,” Kelly Bird, ADB Philippines country director said in a statement.
Strong domestic demand supported by a pick-up in employment and remittance inflows, private investment expansion, and large public infrastructure projects will underpin the country’s recovery from the economic impact of the pandemic,” he added.
“This in turn spurred a resumption in expanded operations for most private businesses, with the unemployment rate falling to near pre-pandemic levels. The unemployment rate was at 6.0 percent in May 2022, down from 7.7 percent a year earlier,” ADB said.
ADB maintained its growth outlook at 6.3 percent for 2023, below the government’s 6.5 percent to 8.0 percent target range for next year until 2028 but ADB flagged some downside risks to growth, particularly in the second semester of 2022.
These include sharper-than-expected slowdowns in major industrial economies, possible sustained elevated global commodity prices, and tighter financial conditions.
ADB already lowered its 2022 economic growth forecast for developing Asia and the Pacific to 4.6 percent due to slower expansion in China, more aggressive monetary tightening in advanced economies, and fallout from the continued Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Last week, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas made a surprise off-cycle move, raising its benchmark interest rates by 75 basis points to 3.25 percent effective July 14.
Finance Secretary Benjamin E. Diokno shrugged off the impact of higher interest rates, saying “the economy continues to be robust to absorb the recent Monetary Policy rate increase given the favorable expansion of economic activity early this year.”
Meanwhile, the sustained acceleration of consumer prices prompted the ADB to raise its inflation forecast for the Philippines.
From 4.2 percent, ADB increased its inflation projection to 4.9 percent for 2022.
The bank also expects inflation to quicken to 4.3 percent next year, up from the 3.5 percent outlook last April.
ADB’s inflation forecast is above the government’s goal of 2.0 percent to 4.0 percent.

This is a huge good news in your country. It gained more than expected. :blush: