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Middle East conflicts, high interest rates could dampen Singapore’s economic growth

  • The central bank said the domestic growth outlook depends on the global pivot to monetary easing and a tech upswing
  • The economy expanded just 1.1 per cent in 2023, a pace that Prime Minister-designate Lawrence Wong said spells trouble should it be sustained for a long time

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Singapore’s central business district. The city state’s economy is expected to grow 1 per cent-3 per cent this year. Photo: Bloomberg
Escalating tensions in the Middle East and risk of a delayed easing in global interest rates could threaten Singapore’s economic rebound this year, according to the central bank’s latest review.
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While the Monetary Authority of Singapore stuck to its view that the economy would grow 1 per cent-3 per cent this year, it said in its biannual Macroeconomic Review published on Friday that the outlook depends on the global pivot to monetary easing and a tech upswing.

“There are still lingering risks from higher for longer global interest rates and capital flow volatility,” the MAS said in the report. “An escalation in geopolitical conflicts could also lead to an abrupt increase in financial market stress and heightened uncertainty, dampening global and domestic growth prospects.”

The MAS expects the US Federal Reserve to start lowering borrowing costs in the third quarter, which together with a recovery in global chip sales can help power Singapore’s GDP growth to around its potential rate for the whole of 2024.

The economy expanded just 1.1 per cent in 2023, a pace that Prime Minister-designate Lawrence Wong had said spells trouble should it be sustained for a prolonged period.

Events of the past week illustrate just how quickly and drastically shocks could wreak havoc on global and domestic economies. Fears of a broader Middle East conflict and higher oil prices spurred sharp swings in currencies, reignited price pressures and a return to hawkish central banking across Asia. Investor bets of a Fed rate cut have been pushed back to later this year, if not next year.

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