Posted on 08 Apr 2009
Economic growth in developing East Asia this year will slow to less than half its rate in 2007 amid sinking export demand from rich nations, but
Collectively, the once high-flying region - which also includes Thailand, Malaysia, Vietnam, Indonesia, the Philippines - will likely grow 5.3 percent this year, down from 8 percent last year and 11.4 percent in 2007, the bank said in its semiannual report.
Plunging exports - the region's lifeblood - are causing widespread factory closures, rising unemployment and wage cuts across the region, it said.
"A sustainable recovery will ultimately depend on developments in the advanced economies," the report said.
But the bank pointed to hopeful signs in
That recovery should take hold next year, and could help lift the entire region.
"There are signs that
"A recovery in
The bank predicts
Regional governments, led by
The overall poverty rate for the region will still decline this year, but at a slower rate than projected.
About 10 million more people will remain in poverty - defined as living on $1.25 a day - than the bank had predicted in April 2008.
"In most cases these measures will only mitigate, not overcome, the contractionary forces operating on their economies," the bank said.
The World Bank expects
Economic woes triggered by a plunge in exports were exacerbated when political protesters shut down
"Significant downside risks remain should political instability resurface and the global decline prove more protracted or steeper than now expected," the bank said.
The bank forecasts
Other countries considered part of developing East Asia include