Imf gdp growth vietnam forecast 2023 2023

The country’s positive outlook is bucking the slowing trend of the region.

Imf gdp growth vietnam forecast 2023 2023

Vietnam continues to be a highlight of the regional economy as its GDP growth is expected to be the fastest in Southeast Asia at 7-7.5% in 2022, posing a stark contrast to the grim outlook of the region and the world, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and Standard Chartered Bank. 

Imf gdp growth vietnam forecast 2023 2023

 IMF's economic forecast for Asian and Pacific economies. 

The IMF, in its latest World Economic Outlook – titled “Countering the Cost-of-Living crisis”, projected the average growth of the ASEAN-5 (including Vietnam, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand) at 5.3% this year, before slowing down to 4.9% in 2023.

Such modest growth, however, remains much higher than the estimated GDP growth of Asia, at 4%, lower than the 6.5% growth in 2021. This was the fourth time the IMF downgraded the growth forecast for the region amid turbulent challenges experienced by the global economy.

In this context, global growth is forecast to slow from 6% in 2021 to 3.2% in 2022 and 2.7% in 2023.

“This is the weakest growth profile since 2001 except for the global financial crisis and the acute phase of the Covid-19 pandemic and reflects significant slowdowns for the largest economies: a US GDP contraction in the first half of 2022, a euro area contraction in the second half of 2022, and prolonged Covid-19 outbreaks and lockdowns in China with a growing property sector crisis,” stated the IMF, noting about a third of the world economy faces two consecutive quarters of negative growth.

According to the IMF, inflation was higher than seen in several decades, tightening financial conditions in most regions, the Russia-Ukraine conflict, and the lingering Covid-19 pandemic all weigh heavily on the outlook.

Normalization of monetary and fiscal policies that delivered unprecedented support during the pandemic is cooling demand as policymakers aim to lower inflation back to target. But a growing share of economies are in a growth slowdown or outright contraction

IMF suggested the global economy’s future health rests critically on the successful calibration of monetary policy, the course of the war in Ukraine, and the possibility of further pandemic-related supply-side disruptions, for example, in China.

Inflation as threat to Vietnam's recovery 

Standard Chartered Bank gave a more positive forecast for Vietnam's GDP growth in 2022 at 7.5%, and moderate to 7.2% in 2023. 

While the lender lowers its inflation forecast for this year to 3.3% from 4.2%, it expects an acceleration in Q4 to 5% from 3.3% in Q3. Inflation has been largely under control and price pressures may increase in the rest of 2022 and in 2023. In addition to supply-side factors, demand-side factors might kick in more strongly.

Tim Leelahaphan, Economist for Thailand and Vietnam at Standard Chartered Bank, said: “We maintain our average 2023 inflation forecast at 5.5%, expecting it to rise throughout next year, reaching around 6% late next year. We see inflation as a threat to Vietnam’s continued recovery.” 

Standard Chartered’s economists expected the State Bank of Vietnam (SBV) to continue tightening monetary policy and forecast a 50bps [basis points] hike in the refinancing rate each in Q4 2022 and Q1 2023, taking the rate to 6%, following a 100bps hike to 5% on September 22.

Leelahaphan added: “We see a risk of SBV raising rates more than we expect if inflation accelerates and the Vietnamese dong (VND) weakening more than we forecast as the Fed maintains a relatively hawkish stance. We expect SBV to stay vigilant against inflation and financial instability besides helping businesses recover from the Covid-19 impact.”

The UK-based lender said the VND is likely to face several headwinds in the short term - a hawkish Fed, strong USD, higher commodity prices, and slowing external demand. The VND continues to significantly outperform its peers across emerging markets in Asia, despite recent depreciation. 

The bank expects the pace of VND depreciation to slow in the coming months. USD-VND’s correlation with USD-CNY remains extremely strong. As such, a peak in USD-CNY will likely coincide with a peak in USD-VND. 

The lender forecasts USD-VND at 24,200 by end-2022 and at 24,000 for end-Q1-2023 and declining towards 23,400 by end-2023.

This week’s IMF World Economic Outlook painted a bleak picture of slowing global growth and elevated risks of crises, but also highlighted a few areas of resilience for emerging markets

1 Downward revisions point to a worsening global growth outlook, but EM growth set to be more resilient

In this week’s World Economic Outlook, the IMF downgraded its forecast for global GDP growth in 2023 to 2.7%, from 2.9% expected in July and 3.6% in April. While a downward revision was largely expected by the market, the latest report does add to the generally gloomy picture on global activity and stagflationary concerns. Excluding Covid and the Global Financial Crisis (2020 and 2009), next year is set to be the weakest for global growth since 2001. When combined with elevated inflation, tightening financial conditions and geopolitical risks, there appears to be little on the surface to get excited about in terms of the backdrop for risk assets.

The downward revision of growth forecasts for advanced economies is the clear driver of the weaker outlook for 2023, in particular for the eurozone. The impacts of the European energy crunch are already starting to be felt across the continent. As a group, advanced economy growth for next year is now forecast at 1.1%, the weakest since 1982, (again excluding the GFC and Covid years).

Global GDP growth over time

Source: IMF WEO October 22, Macrobond, ING IMF WEO October 22, Macrobond, ING

However, emerging market growth, while weak and well below the ‘boom’ years of the mid-2000s and early 2010s, is forecast to be more resilient at 3.7%, above the level seen in 2019. This is also stronger than a number of EM crisis years in the 1990s and early 2000s. As a result, the growth ‘advantage’ for EM over developed markets is set to pick up in both 2023 and 2024 to levels last seen in 2016. This should offer at least some optimism for EM investors, although the spillover effects on growth and external accounts for countries with close ties to the eurozone, in particular, will have to be monitored.

2 Europe under pressure but plenty of regional dispersion across EM

Unsurprisingly, EM Europe is the region with the weakest growth outlook, given the well-documented dependence on Russian energy flows. The IMF’s forecast for EM Europe has also weakened further since July (in orange below), despite a slight upgrade in the growth outlook for Russia. In contrast, the growth forecast for the largely commodity-exporting Middle East and Central Asia has actually improved since July. Asia remains a key driver of EM growth, although somewhat unusually is expected to be driven less by China and more by the likes of India and the ASEAN-5 (Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Thailand, Vietnam) in both 2022 and 2023.

IMF's 2023 growth forecasts

Source: IMF WEO, Macrobond, ING IMF WEO, Macrobond, ING

When breaking down the more granular data by country, which is released in the April and October WEO updates, the deterioration in outlook over the past six months is clear. The few bright spots where the growth forecast has improved (above the diagonal line below) include energy exporters such as Oman and Trinidad & Tobago. The effect of financial crisis is clear on Sri Lanka, Eastern Europe’s Poland and Hungary have seen some of the biggest downgrades and even commodity-dependent Chile and Brazil have fairly dim outlooks.

April vs October IMF WEO growth forecasts by country (2023)

Source: IMF WEO, Macrobond, ING IMF WEO, Macrobond, ING

3 Further downside risks are unusually elevated

Along with forecasting a continued slowing of the global economy in 2023, the IMF was clear to highlight that “risks to the outlook remain unusually large and to the downside.” The Fund sees a 25% chance of global growth falling below 2% in 2023, while Chief Economist Pierre Olivier Gourinchas was quoted as saying there is a 15% chance of growth falling below 1%.

Potential triggers for such a downside scenario could include monetary or fiscal policy missteps, further energy and food price shocks, a Covid-19 resurgence or a worsening of China’s property sector crisis. Within these scenarios, the IMF continued to highlight concerns over the potential for further widespread emerging market debt distress on the back of tighter financial conditions. We would highlight the combination of government FX-denominated debt and large net fuel imports to GDP as specific EM sovereign vulnerabilities in the current environment, shown in the below chart.

EM sovereign FX debt & fuel imports

Source: S&P, World Bank, IMF, National Sources, Macrobond, ING S&P, World Bank, IMF, National Sources, Macrobond, ING

In response to these vulnerabilities, we expect further IMF support for EM countries will be needed. The below chart shows net IMF lending to EM by year, broken down by type of programme. 2020 saw a surge in emergency lending (Rapid Credit Facility/Rapid Financing Instrument) in response to the Covid crisis, but the focus now is likely to shift back to more traditional programmes which require policy conditionality.

Net IMF lending by year

Source: IMF, Macrobond, ING IMF, Macrobond, ING

The IMF has already announced the new Resilience and Sustainability Trust (RST), which can be used to top-up existing programmes, along with further rapid lending to help deal with food shocks. North Macedonia has recently secured a €530mn deal and we see the potential for similar deals for Morocco and Serbia in the near term, while the likes of Egypt and Ghana are high-profile sovereigns that have been in IMF talks recently. The IMF remains a key backstop and policy anchor for EM sovereigns struggling with debt distress.

Overall, the outlook remains tough for EM sovereign debt, but a lot of bad news is already priced in. Asian sovereigns such as Indonesia and the Philippines look set to remain resilient in terms of growth momentum and could surprise to the upside. Longer-term EM issuers such as South Africa and Mexico have fairly low vulnerabilities to energy imports or FX-denominated debt and could therefore be more resilient even if growth is somewhat disappointing. And energy exporters such as the Gulf nations are set to benefit in terms of growth and external accounts from current elevated fuel prices, offering EM investors something of a safe haven within the asset class. The overarching theme is that the outlook for emerging markets offers plenty of variation. 

What is the economic outlook for 2023?

Global growth is forecast to slow from 6.0 percent in 2021 to 3.2 percent in 2022 and 2.7 percent in 2023. This is the weakest growth profile since 2001 except for the global financial crisis and the acute phase of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Will Vietnam become a developed country?

The 13th Party Congress Resolution says Vietnam aims to become a developed country with high income by 2045, when it will celebrate the 100th anniversary of the country's establishment. This means that Vietnam has 24 more years to reach that goal.

What is the GDP per capita of Vietnam in 2022?

GDP per capita in Vietnam is expected to reach 2070.00 USD by the end of 2022, according to Trading Economics global macro models and analysts expectations. In the long-term, the Vietnam GDP per capita is projected to trend around 2070.00 USD in 2023, according to our econometric models.

Where does Vietnam rank in the world by GDP?

Vietnam is a member of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations and the World Trade Organization. ... Economy of Vietnam..