SINGAPORE downgraded its 2020 gross domestic product (GDP) forecast for the third time yesterday, the trade ministry said, as the bellwether economy braces for its deepest ever recession. The city-state lowered its GDP forecast to a contraction range of -7 percent to -4 percent from the prior range of -1 percent to -4 percent. Singapore’s economy shrank 0.7 percent year on year in the first quarter and 4.7 percent quarter on quarter, a less severe decline than advance estimates, although officials and analysts warned of more pain ahead. “There continues to be a significant degree of uncertainty over the length and severity of the COVID-19 outbreak, as well as the trajectory of the economic recovery,” said Gabriel Lim, permanent secretary at the ministry of trade and industry. Following the news, the central bank chief economist Ed Robinson said monetary policy remains unchanged and will next be reviewed in October, as planned. Singapore also downgraded its 2020 forecast for non-oil domestic exports to -4.0 percent to -1.0 percent, from -0.5 percent to 1.5 percent previously. Exports have been a rare bright spot for the economy in recent months mainly due to a surge in demand for pharmaceuticals. Analysts expect the trade-reliant economy to see a deeper contraction in the second quarter due to a two-month lockdown, dubbed a “circuit breaker” by authorities, in which most workplaces closed to curb the spread of the novel coronavirus. The city-state said that easing of the lockdown from next month will only be done gradually. (SD-Agencies) |