Economic growth in Southeast Asia will be faster than in the United  States and Europe, two regions that face challenges because of a slow  recovery from recession and high debt levels, a top executive at the  Boston Consulting Group says.
“The fundamentals [point to] a  prolonged period of slow growth in Europe. We’re not going to return to  high growth in the US,” said David Rhodes, chairman of global practices,  in an interview with the Jakarta Globe last week.
The  International Monetary Fund last week raised its forecasts on global  economic growth, citing an improvement in financial conditions worldwide  and easing concerns about the debt crisis in the euro zone. It predicts  the world economy expanding 3.5 percent this year, up from a previous  3.3 percent estimate. Next year’s growth is predicted at 4.1 percent,  compared to an earlier forecast of 4.0 percent.
Rhodes, though,  dismissed the latest prognostications, saying that the IMF has been  inconsistent in its forecasts and since the time of the 2008 crisis its  economists have been changing their estimates, “so they’re better off as  historians.”
In Europe, he said, some countries face high levels  of debt and are not competitive because the use of the euro as a single  currency has a knock-on effect on the balance of trade that makes them  become net exporters, which is unrealistic.
International  investors were worried last week that Spain might be the latest European  nation to require a financial bailout as its borrowing costs rose. But  favorable demand for its bond auctions helped to alleviate those  concerns.
In the United States, economic indicators on a monthly basis suggest improvement but in reality are distorted, Rhodes said.
“Retail  sales are back at the level they were in 2007, so in five years we’ve  stood still,” said London-based Rhodes, who focuses on issues involving  major strategy and organizational change. The same case applies to data  on sales of cars and homes, he said.
The US unemployment rate has  fallen to a three-year low at 8.2 percent in March partly due to some  Americans who have been out of the workforce for a long time and have  stopped looking for jobs.
Emerging from the recession is taking  twice as long as historical norms, said Rhodes, a co-author of  “Accelerating Out of the Great Recession: How to Win in a Slow-Growth  Economy.”
“We’re in a very different world this time. History  would say we should be back to where we started, but we’re nowhere  near,” he said.
As growth slows in Europe and the United States, he said, the focus is on Asia, and Southeast Asia in particular.
In  2000, “old world” economies, including the United States, Japan, Europe  and Canada, contributed 70 percent of global gross domestic product, he  said, and last year they accounted for 58 percent. 
“There’s a  seismic shift occurring, and it’s occurring faster than ever,” Rhodes  said. “It’s not because Asia, South America and Africa are growing fast,  but because Europe and America are treading water.”
“But the  thing to be careful about is that around 80 percent of all trade still  touches the old world. So, the old world still matters.”
Developed  nations are trying to grow their economies by breaking into emerging  markets, he said, as exemplified by British Prime Minister David Cameron  traveling to Indonesia and other parts of Asia to secure trade  recently.
“Your home markets are still big, but they’re not growing,” Rhodes said. 
“People  are now fighting for these new markets. There has been and there will  be increasing attention on new markets because in the old markets things  are flat and it’s much harder to gain share — that’s a tough battle —  than to move into growing markets. It’s much nicer to grow with a  market.”
Tariffs within the Association of Southeast Asian  Nations will disappear, and that will make trade more competitive  globally, Rhodes said. Asean’s combined population of 600 million is  almost three times that of Brazil, twice that of Russia and half that of  either India or China, he said.
“Asean has been something of  Asia’s best-kept secret,” he said. “People, they think less of Asean and  more of Indonesia, which if you’re Indonesian is a good thing.”
Indonesia’s  economy, the biggest in Southeast Asia, last year grew 6.5 percent, the  fastest pace since 1996. That has helped to boost average per capita  income to $3,500 from $3,000 in 2010.
In Indonesia, “public finances are in good shape,” Rhodes said. 
“The  economy is growing robustly on the back of domestic demand, the young  population aspiring for a better life. These are very positive steps. 
“But it has the same problem India’s got — the infrastructure sucks. At some point that’s a disadvantage.”
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Southeast Asia Surging as US, Europe Tread Water: Consultant
Written By Ariearmend on Sunday, April 22, 2012 | 5:34 PM
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