Instant Alert: Rodrigo Duterte has delegated the Philippine economy to a sweet spot, but his hot-headedness is causing worry

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Rodrigo Duterte has delegated the Philippine economy to a sweet spot, but his hot-headedness is causing worry

by on Dec 30, 2016, 8:57 AM

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MANILA, Dec 30 (Reuters) — After six months at the helm in the Philippines, Rodrigo Duterte has been touting just two achievements of his presidency - a vicious war on drugs and a surprise alliance with his country's bitter rival, China.

Yet behind the curse-laden bluster and populist demagoguery that has defined Duterte's rule, he presides over one of the world's fastest growing economies, and has put cabinet colleagues to work on drafting reforms and legislation to tackle the economy's most stubborn structural problems.

Advisers say Duterte's economic successes come from using a strategy he honed as the long-time mayor of Davao City at a national level.

He concentrates on busting crime and deliberately delegates the handling of the economy to others. By his own admission, Duterte says he is no expert on the economy and leaves it to "the bright guys" in his cabinet.

Economic Planning Secretary Ernesto Pernia sees the president only twice monthly and rarely hears feedback. He said Duterte was focused almost entirely on crime and drugs.

Philippines economy vendors sales market highway traffic cars

"That has been his obsession," he told Reuters. "He essentially leaves other issues and concerns to the cabinet."

The strategy seems to have worked so far although economists are beginning to question how long it can last.

"That's what we're hoping for, that his core economic team can prevail," said Bank of the Philippine Islands (BPI) economist Emilio S. Neri.

"The fundamentals are there but we are leaning towards deficit spending and stimulus-driven growth and some unsustainable populist policies are worrisome."

At the national level, Duterte's signature campaigns have included his tilt toward China while turning his back on long-term ally the United States in addition to the war on drugs.

Rodrigo Duterte

He rarely mentions it, but the economy has boomed under his watch, although some of the gains have been ascribed to the previous administration's policies and Duterte's decision to retain them.

Growth reached an annual 7.1 percent in the third quarter of the year, Asia's second highest and the country's strongest quarter in three years.

The government expects full-year growth around 7 percent.

The economy is expected to grow 6.5-7.5 percent in 2017, but there are worries that Duterte's erratic behaviour could impact policy, with political risk over his drugs crackdown and foul-mouthed outbursts at some big donors and investors.

Markets have signalled their concern. In the six months since Duterte took over, the main stock index has lost nearly 20 percent in dollar terms and is among the worst performers in Asia.

Over the same period, the peso currency is down around 5 percent to the dollar, but other currencies in the region are also depressed.

Decisive leadership

But Duterte has plenty of supporters, who say his decisive leadership and intolerance of bad governance will be a long-term boon for the economy. In Davao City, he helped lure investors, dramatically cut red tape and fired inept officials. In 2014, Davao saw growth of a 9.3 percent, compared to 6.1 percent nationwide.

Analaysts at Nomura have said his populist, development-centred approach suggests he is "strongly motivated" to address the Philippines' biggest weakness - infrastructure.

Philippines fish market vendors economy sales

Expenditure on infrastructure, including on flood management schemes, ports, a rapid-transit bus system and a rail line, makes up a quarter of next year's record $67 billion budget.

Consumer spending is strong, helped by $22 billion of remittances in the first 10 months from Filipinos overseas, a 4 percent rise. Unemployment was a record low 4.7 percent in the third quarter, from 5.7 percent a year earlier.

"He should deserve credit," Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez told Reuters.

"Unfortunately, people are always looking at the controversial statements. But if you judge it, he has done an excellent job ...the important thing is the trust and confidence of businesses in him is very high."

Jitters

Rodrigo Duterte Xi Jinping

Duterte's volatility and seemingly unilateral foreign policy has caused jitters and confusion, especially when he turned hostile towards the United States and then started cosying up to China, with which the Philippines has a history of mistrust over the South China Sea.

Duterte announced his "separation" from the United States in Beijing in October, shocking even his own ministers, who scrambled to assure investors — without his consent — that his policy was to diversify, not sever ties.

It's a gambit that could pay off, with an intractable dispute with Beijing now on the back burner and China pledging to provide the Philippines with billions of dollars in infrastructure loans and ramp up farm and fisheries imports.

Nevertheless, economists warn that hot-headedness and willingness to take big risks could be a problem if it spills into policymaking, especially if it impacts U.S. firms, which account for three-quarters of the country's $23 billion business-processing outsourcing (BPO) sector.

Some big U.S. firms have delayed BPO investments to undergo more due diligence.

Philippines' local BPO market

Capital Economics notes a "growing risk that Duterte makes it harder" to attract big investment. Moody's has a stable outlook, expecting "continued economic outperformance relative to peers", assuming Duterte's drugs war doesn't distract him from his economic reforms.

"There's lots of focus going into the anti-drugs programme," said BPI's Neri.

"In six months, economic policy reforms seem to have taken a back seat."

(By Neil Jerome Morales and Martin Petty; additional reporting by Karen Lema and Manolo Serapio Jr; editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

SEE ALSO: 'They are connected with the CIA': Philippine president accuses US ambassadors of being 'spies'


 
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