Channelnewsasia.com
Thursday, October 16, 2008
   
 
  blogs  
 
yournews
   
Video Finance Features Weather Travel Discussion TV Shows
CNA Live    | About Us 
 
  Home ›
 
Business News

 
 

Emerging Asia 'highly vulnerable' to oil surge: says ADB
Posted: 04 July 2008 1541 hrs

 
 
Photos  of

   
 

TOKYO : Asia's emerging economies are "highly vulnerable" to skyrocketing oil prices, making inflation the number one concern for policymakers, the head of the Asian Development Bank said Friday.

But emerging Asia looks set to avoid a sharp slowdown given strong economic growth in China and should easily avoid a repeat of the financial crisis that rocked the region a decade ago, said ADB president Haruhiko Kuroda.

"Emerging Asian economies are highly vulnerable to surging oil prices, given their high dependence on oil imports and low energy efficiency," he told a press conference at the Foreign Correspondents' Club of Japan.

"With the global economy slowing and oil subsidies being phased out, high oil prices could have a more visible impact on domestic consumption and growth in the region this year and in 2009," he warned.

Oil prices have soared five-fold since 2003 amid rising demand in emerging economies such as China and India and fears of supply shortages. World oil prices shot above 146 dollars a barrel Thursday for the first time ever.

Central banks in emerging Asia face a dilemma about how to contain inflation through higher borrowing costs while avoiding snuffing out economic growth, Kuroda noted.

While rate rises may put the brakes on growth, "the risk would be even greater if prices spiral out of control," he said.

Despite inflation worries, the ADB chief expressed optimism about prospects for the region's economies.

"On the whole economic growth in Asia is quite robust. A sharp slowdown is still unlikely in emerging Asian countries," said Kuroda, who is in his native Japan for next week's summit of leaders from the Group of Eight rich nations.

"I'm reasonably confident that nothing like the Asian currency crisis 10 years ago would happen in the region," he added, noting that countries had built up large foreign currency reserves.

The East Asian financial crisis began in 1997 when Thailand floated the baht after a series of speculative attacks, leading to a plunge in its value.

Other regional currencies also came under pressure and countries including Indonesia, Thailand and South Korea were forced to turn to the International Monetary Fund for emergency funds to try to stabilise their currencies.

- AFP/yb

 

 



Other business News
Wall Street plunges as recession fears grip markets
ECB unveils major measures to boost market liquidity
Beige Book cites broad US economic weakness
US retail sales slide 1.2% in September
US wholesale prices drop 0.4%; core rate jumps 0.4%
G8 vows unity on crisis, sees summit soon
eBay profits up, but outlook weak
Coca-Cola profit sparkles, lifted by international sales
Wells Fargo profit drops 24%
Yen, US dollar ride safe-haven allure amid recession fears
Oil prices slide on recession fears
Global stock markets tumble on recession worries
Asian stocks fall as recession fears set in
Eurozone inflation eases to 3.6% in September
Bank of Japan veteran nominated as deputy chief
Tata Steel says no danger to Corus pension fund
Economic turbulence forces India's Jet Airways to lay off crew
ECB pumps more than US$100b into money markets
German economy heading for slowdown, says Merkel
China pension fund to buy into China Development Bank
Samsung plans foray into crowded US laptop computer market
IRRI says rice market tight next year despite big harvest
Mazda not building second plant in North America
Hong Kong chief executive aims for steady path in economic storm
ASEAN, China, World Bank discuss 'standby fund'
Asian stocks retreat as euphoria fades
Bank of Japan drains funds from money market, market drops
US economy appears to be in recession
Asia markets down, tracking Wall Street's losses
Asia shares open lower on Wall Street's fall
French lower house of parliament approves bank rescue plan
Infrastructure spending, more regulations in HK to weather slowdown
South Korean president proposes new international body to deal with financial crisis
European leaders press for overhaul of global credit structures

 


Advertisements

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions