Posted on 11 Jul 2008
Statistics released by the Trade and Industry Ministry on
Thursday showed that the slowdown reflected a sharp contraction in the
biomedical manufacturing output.
But some economists remain positive about the sector.
"We should see some rebound in biomedicals, a repeat of
what happened in Q4 when the economy contracted - similar to today - due to
biomedicals, then it rebounded strongly... in Q1," said David Cohen,
Director of Asian Economic Forecasting.
Fluctuations in biomedicals are due more to production
schedules than global demand, so economists are less worried by the volatility
than the softening in other sectors, such as construction.
Excluding the biomedical sciences (BMS) cluster, industrial
production grew moderately.
The government's advance estimate showed that gross domestic
product contracted 6.6 per cent on a quarter-on-quarter seasonally-adjusted
basis, following an increase of 15.6 per cent in the previous quarter.
The manufacturing sector is estimated to have contracted by
5.6 per cent in the second quarter, compared with a 12.7 per cent growth in the
first quarter.
The electronics cluster also registered some decline due to
weakening foreign demand. However, the transport, engineering and chemicals
industries continued to grow.
The construction sector is estimated to have grown by a
robust 15.2 per cent in the second quarter, following a 16.9 per cent expansion
in the previous quarter.
"Construction growth has been propping up GDP growth,
leaving the economy vulnerable to downward shift in construction. Also
concerned about FDI coming into
Meanwhile, the services producing industries are estimated
to have grown by 6.9 per cent in the second quarter, compared to 7.6 per cent
in the preceding quarter. Growth was led by the financial services and business
sectors.
Sectors such as wholesale and retail trade and transport and
storage also posted healthy growth during the quarter.
The advance estimate, based largely on data in the first two
months of the second quarter, gives an early indication of the economy's
performance in the April-to-June period.
Some economists said the weak second quarter numbers mean
that there may be little room to allow the Singapore dollar to strengthen to
help rein in inflation, which now stands at a 26-year high.
They also noted that the main threat to
"The main threat is that higher oil prices will drag
down the world economy which so far has dodged the bullet surrounding the
Going forward, economists said they expect slow growth to
bottom out in the third quarter, assuming that the
Most economists have revised downwards their full year
growth forecast for