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ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL SURVEY OF ASIA AND THE PACIFIC 213 Forward-looking Macroeconomic Policies for Inclusive and Sustainable Development 1 Survey launch in 37 locations 2 28 Locations in Asia-Pacific New York, Geneva, 3 Regional Commissions, Rome Helsinki, Paris, and Brasilia 1

A win-win development agenda for the region Asia-Pacific growth to remain subdued in 213; challenged by uncertainty in the euro zone & US + structural impediments Survey offers a blueprint for economic, social and environmental resilience Grow first, distribute & clean up later no longer viable and acceptable Investing in people and planet is also good economics Affordable, doable and economically sustainable Forward-looking macroeconomic policies for inclusive and sustainable development 3 213: Subdued regional growth Growth is forecast to increase to 6% in 213 from 5.6% in China to grow at 8%, up from 7.8% in India to grow at 6.4%, up from 5% in Inflation likely to remain at 5.1% in 213 Risk of oil and food price increase Lower growth could be new normal as region shows signs of strain from developed world uncertainty; estimated output loss of $1.3 trillion by end-217 Pre-crisis (2-27 ): 8% Projected growth (213-217): 6.5% 8 6 4 2 GDP growth 29 2 211 213 Developing Asia-Pacific Asia-Pacific Asia-Pacific Africa Latin America and the Caribbean Arab Europe 213 2 4 6 8 4 2

East / North-East South-East South / South-West North / Central Pacific Outlook: Regional and country groups Subregions GDP growth 213 LDCs LLDCs SIDSs LDCs, LLDCs and SIDSs GDP growth 213 2 4 6 8 12 2 4 6 8 12 South / South-West North / Central Inflation LDCs Inflation Pacific South-East East / North-East 213 LLDCs SIDSs 213 5 2 4 6 8 12 2 4 6 8 12 Outlook: Timor-Leste economy 6 Growth remains high (%) Inflation expected to decline From 12% in to 8% in 213 Macroeconomic policies supportive of the national development plan Oil revenues allowing for policy space Investing heavily in infrastructure (electrification and road upgrades). Current account surplus From 55% of GDP in 211 to 43,5% of GDP in Lower petroleum revenue and rising imports 14 12 8 6 4 2 15 5 GDP growth 29 2 211 213 Timor-Leste South-East Asia Inflation 29 2 211 213 Timor-Leste South-East Asia 3

7 Policy challenge 1: Uncertain global environment Fiscal crisis in the euro zone + Policy uncertainty in US Impact on Asia-Pacific Decreased economic activity through the trade and finance channel Estimated regional GDP loss of 3% since the onset of the global crisis five years ago - $87 billion Loose monetary policies, quantitative easing (QE), of the developed world including in US Impact on Asia-Pacific Short-term capital flows volatility Rapid short-term currency appreciation Food and fuel price volatility Impact on Asia-Pacific Poverty and inflation (year-on-year) 5 4 3 2-2Q1 2Q2 China Russian Federation Kazakhstan Thailand Philippines India Indonesia Malaysia Republic of Korea 2Q3 Export growth 2Q4 211Q1 211Q2 World 211Q3 Vulnerability Yardstick 211Q4 Asia-Pacific Q1 Q2 Q3 Least vulnerable Most vulnerable 2 3 Policy challenge 2: Regional slowdown China growth slowdown affects the region China is currently the largest individual export market for the rest of the region About 5% of imports of intermediate goods to China are sourced from developing Asia- Pacific economies and Japan China export growth decelerated significantly After mid-,.5% in the second quarter to 4.5% in the subsequent quarter India growth and exports still subdued 15 5-5 - Jan- Apr- China: Monthly import growth Jul- Oct- Jan-11 Apr-11 Jul-11 Oct-11 Jan-12 Apr-12 Jul-12 Oct-12 Imports: Ordinary Trade Imports: Processing and Assembling Imports: Equipment Imported for Processing and Assembling 8 4

Structural impediment 1: Growing inequality Income inequality (Gini index) increased from 33.5 in the 199s to 37.5 in the latest available year Actual purchasing power in societies with income highly skewed towards the rich are lower than that in a more equal societies Increases in inequality reduce social development gains 9 Structural impediment 2: Inadequate tax revenue + progressivity Many economies in the region have failed to raise sufficient tax revenue despite rapid growth Region has lowest tax burden of any developing region in the world The low tax revenue restricts governments fiscal space China Thailand Korea Rep Indonesia Pakistan Bangladesh India Tax (% of GDP) 211 2 5 15 2 5

Structural impediments 3: Infrastructure deficit Impediment to growth, especially in South Asia and the Pacific islands LDCs of the region, such as Afghanistan, Cambodia and Myanmar have the largest infrastructure deficits Power is the most critical bottleneck and then transportation Economic cost of traffic congestion: Indonesia: 1.2% of GDP Thailand: 2.1% of GDP Republic of Korea: 2.6% of GDP Financing requirement in the region $6 billion to $8 billion per year Population without electricity access Papua New Guinea Myanmar Solomon Island Afghanistan Vanuatu Timor-Leste Cambodia Korea, Dem Rep Bangladesh Nepal Lao PDR Pakistan Indonesia Mongolia Bhutan India Sri Lanka Fiji Philippines Samoa Viet Nam Iran, Islamic Rep Thailand Malaysia China Brunei Darussalam Maldives Korea, Rep 11 2 4 6 8 Structural impediment 4: Unsustainable resource use The Asia-Pacific economy is requiring more resources to produce one dollar of GDP as the economy grows, although there are differences across subregions Future growth of resource use in several countries holds significant implications for overall resource demand Vulnerability to natural disasters 42% of the global economic losses due to natural disasters Disaster losses since 198 have increased by 16 times in Asia while GDP per capita has grown by only 13 times 12 6

13 Forward-looking macroeconomic policies Rio+2+ 2 MDGs Summit recognized forward-looking macroeconomic policies should include: Safeguard the sustainability of public investment strategies Not focus narrowly on debt stabilization and curbing inflation Often necessary to relax unnecessarily stringent fiscal and monetary restrictions Use countercyclical fiscal and monetary policies Strengthen mobilization of domestic resources Enhanced international cooperation to strengthen tax revenue collection Objective: Supportive of growth of real output and employment. Minimize the impact of external and other shocks on poverty Buttress the fiscal capacities of all Governments Developmental macro policies Gini coefficient 7 65 6 55 5 45 4 35 3 25 Social expenditures and inequality 2 15 25 35 45 55 65 75 General government social expenditures over total government outlays (per cent) Greater emphasis on the quality and composition of public expenditure Rather than on aggregate budget deficits, public debts and targeting inflation at a very low level Higher investment in health, education, social security and environment Inclusive finance SMEs and agriculture development 14 7

15 Examples of win-win policies China s economic rebalancing to make growth more inclusive; good for region and beyond Increase exports to China by other Asia-Pacific countries by $13 billion during 213-215 Minimum wage policy also good for employers and the economy Thailand s minimum wage adjustment to boost job growth by.6% and GDP growth by.7% by 215 National rural jobs scheme in India 48 million households provided employment in over 6 districts in -13 Inclusive finance in Bangladesh million new bank accounts for smallholder farmers New Zealand Singapore Viet Nam Philippines Japan Republic of Afghanistan Russian Kazakhstan Armenia Cambodia Fiji India Indonesia Nepal Iran, Islamic Pakistan Thailand T urkey percentage point Impact of China rebalancing: Export growth..1.2.3.4.5.6 point Estimated impact of minimum wage hikes in Thailand 2 1-1 -2 211 213 214 215 216 217 GDP growth Employment growth Illustrative policy package Forward-looking Macroeconomic Policies for Inclusive and Sustainable Development A job guarantee programme days per year for participants A universal, non-contributory pension For all aged 65 or older Benefits to all persons with disabilities Ages of 15 and 65 Increasing the share of public health expenditures 5% of GDP by 23 Universal enrolment in primary and secondary education Primary by 22 and Secondary by 23 Energy access to all Modern energy services by 23 Illustrative package of policies to promote inclusive and sustainable development in Asia-Pacific countries 16 8

Investing in inclusive and sustainable development Overall public expenditure and investment requirements to implement such a policy package vary across countries The cost of the package by 23 is less than % of the GDP in 8 out of countries The cost ranges from 4.7% of the GDP in the Russian Federation to 9.8% of the GDP in the Philippines The cost exceeds % of the GDP only in Fiji and Bangladesh 17 Package is affordable, doable and sustainable Forward-looking Macroeconomic Policies for Inclusive and Sustainable Development Most countries can self-finance it broadening tax bases making tax regimes more progressive making tax administration more efficient imposing tighter regulations to ensure tax compliance fighting corruption reducing non-development expenditures Countries with special needs (LDCs, SIDs) will need significant external assistance from development partners to complement their domestic resource mobilisation efforts ESCAP analysis shows that such investment would not jeopardize macroeconomic stability 18 9

Need for macroeconomic course correction New development paradigm Grow now, distribute + clean up later is dead end Investing in social and environment pillars fortifies economic pillar Leads to sustained, inclusive and equitable economic growth Leaders in the Asia-Pacific should pledged to adopt forward-looking macroeconomic policies to promote inclusive and sustainable development 19 Thank you Economic and Social Survey of Asia and the Pacific 213 is downloadable on: www.unescap.org/survey213/ email: escap-mpdd@un.org 2