Posted on 05 Feb 2009
A top economic policy planner said yesterday called a prediction Taiwan's gross domestic product may decline a whopping 11 percent this year "quite ridiculous," referring to the recent projection by Hong Kong-based brokerage house Credit Lyonnais Securities Asia-Pacific Markets.
Hu Chung-ying, deputy chairman of the Cabinet-level Council for Economic Planning and Development (CEPD), made the remarks in response to a CLSA report published yesterday that Taiwan and Singapore may see their economies shrink this year by 11 percent and 10 percent respectively, as Asia's export-dependent nations trade less with each other.
The report also noted
Nevertheless, Hu said
Hu said he wouldn't be so pessimistic as the CLSA in predicting
While forecasting a GDP decline in the first quarter of the year, Hu said he expects a slow recovery to begin in the third quarter, or in a worst-case scenario, in the fourth quarter.
Hu said the CLSA forecast was the most pessimistic among all those made by international institutions.
For example, he said, the Global Insight forecast in late 2008 that
In
The Directorate General of Budget, Accounting and Statistics (DGBAS) has predicted the 2009 economy would grow by 2.12 percent while the CEPD set a 2.5 percent growth rate as the national goal.
Meanwhile, Asia's export-driven economies are slowing as demand for their products diminishes amid recessions in the
Also yesterday, the International Monetary Fund slashed its 2009 growth forecast for Asia to 2.7 percent from 4.9 percent, and Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said a "worse outcome cannot be ruled out."
Developing Asia, which excludes