Economic Growth Outlook For ASEAN-5: Facing Headwinds

 | Jan 02, 2022 12:35AM ET

Since the outbreak of the pandemic, the majority of countries in emerging Asia had been able to overcome its effects better than the rest of the world in 2020, thanks to effective social distancing, contact tracing, and border control measures. Nevertheless, due to the slow start and progress of the vaccination roll out, this region was more vulnerable to new virus variants in 2021.

After the development of effective vaccines in late 2020, the pace of vaccination was remarkably rapid in advanced economies (AE), while the vaccine rollout was much slower in Asia. This, together with less monetary and fiscal policy space to stimulate their economies, caused headwinds to economic growth in ASEAN-5 countries to build during 2021.

The Association of Southeast Asian Nations Five (ASEAN-5) includes Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, the Philippines, and Vietnam, representing the major emerging economies in Southeast Asia.

The emergence of the Delta variant caused a surge in new cases of COVID-19 within the ASEAN-5 countries. Fortunately, this forced ASEAN-5 countries to significantly ramp-up their vaccination campaigns. This, combined with lockdown measures and social distancing has reduced new cases in ASEAN-5 countries from a peak of 153 per million people in August to less than 40 now (Chart 1).

Chart 1: ASEAN-5 new cases of COVID-19 (7-day moving average per million people)