S&P: Asia Pacific faces $211bn hit

S&P: Asia Pacific faces $211bn hit

Japan, Australia, HK flirt with recession

The coronavirus outbreak could wipe more than $200 billion off Asia-Pacific economies this year, S&P Global Ratings warned yesterday, sending growth to its lowest level in more than a decade, as governments struggle to combat the epidemic.

In a worst-case scenario, China could see growth of less than 3%, while Japan, Australia and Hong Kong could "flirt with recession", it said in a report.

Fears about the impact of the outbreak, which has spread to at least 85 countries, have hammered world markets as investors fret over its economic impact.

S&P said it expected the region to grow 4% this year as supply and demand shocks blow a $211 billion hole in the economy. That compares with a 4.8% estimate given in December and would be the worst performance since a contraction in 2008 caused by the global financial crisis.

"Asia-Pacific's outlook has darkened due to the global spread of the coronavirus," it said. "This will exert domestic supply-and-demand shocks in Japan and Korea. It will mean weaker external demand from the US and Europe"

The report said economies were suffering from the double-whammy of weak demand as consumers stay home for fear of catching the disease, and falling supplies as industries are rocked by shutdowns.

It saw China's economy -- which was already stuttering before the crisis struck -- expanding 4.8% this year, which would be the worst in three decades.

However, it added that in the worst case, which "assumes localised reinfections as people return to work and the re-imposition of some restrictions on activity" growth could crash to just 2.9%.

Hong Kong, which suffered its first recession last year since 2008, was tipped to shrink further.

The city, along with Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam would be the hardest hit, with tourism -- which has been battered globally -- accounting for around 10% of growth on average.

Still, S&P did say that economies would likely see healthy rebounds.

"A U-shaped recovery is likely to be delayed until the third quarter if signs emerge by the second quarter that the virus is globally contained," the report said.

"We assume that the coronavirus will not permanently impair the labour force, the capital stock, or productivity -- hence, the region's economies should be employing as many people and producing as much output by the end of 2021 as it would have done in the absence of the virus."

Also yesterday, the Asian Development Bank said it saw China taking a $103 billion hit, or 0.8 percentage point hit to GDP, while losses could hit $22 billion -- or 0.2 percentage points -- for other developing economies in the region.

"The magnitude of the economic losses will depend on how the outbreak evolves, which remains highly uncertain," the bank said in a statement.

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