Azela Torrefranca Esponilla Honor
Azela Torrefranca Esponilla Honor emerges as a beacon of excellence in Philippine real estate—...
The Philippines is expected to post the second highest economic growth in Southeast Asia this year despite the downgrade in growth outlook due to external headwinds, a report released by the Asian Development Bank (ADB) showed in a report by Philippine News Agency.
In its Asian Development Outlook July 2025 report released on Wednesday, the ADB said Philippine economic growth is expected to settle at 5.6 percent this year.
The growth outlook for the Philippines is the second highest in Southeast Asia, next to Vietnam's 6.3 percent.
Indonesia is projected to grow by 5 percent, Malaysia by 4.3 percent, Singapore by 1.6 percent, and Thailand by 1.8 percent.
For 2026, growth is expected to slightly pick up to 5.8 percent.
The ADB's latest projection, however, was lower than its 6 percent for 2024 and 6.1 percent for 2025 economic growth forecast amid external headwinds.
The Philippine economy grew by 5.4 percent in the first quarter of the year.
"Domestic demand grew 6.7 percent, supported by easing inflation and monetary policy. However, net exports dragged on growth as brisk imports outpaced exports," the ADB said.
It added that manufacturing index (PMI) recovered slightly to 50.7 in June from 50.1 in May.
"Consumer sentiment was positive in the near term. Unemployment was low at 3.9 percent in May, and remittance growth of 3.0 percent helped sustain household spending," it said.
The ADB, however, said that business confidence softened amid heightened global policy uncertainties.
According to the ADB, economic forecasts for most countries in Southeast Asia have been downgraded for 2025 and 2026 due to the continuing global growth slowdown and increased trade uncertainty.
"Weaker external conditions have hurt business and consumer sentiment and threaten to disrupt investment in the subregion," it said.
"Except for Indonesia, the largest economy in the subregion, all Southeast Asian economies are expected to post weaker growth in the next two years."
The ADB, meanwhile, slashed its 2025 headline inflation projection to 2.2 percent from the previous 3 percent forecast.
For 2026, the ADB expects inflation to settle at 3 percent.
Leave a Comment