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Singapore GDP to Shrink 8.5% as Restrictions Extended, Citi Says

Published 04/21/2020, 11:11 PM
Updated 04/21/2020, 11:54 PM
© Bloomberg. A housing construction in the Punggol area of Singapore on April 20. Photographer: Wei Leng Tay/Bloomberg
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(Bloomberg) -- Singapore will witness a deeper recession this year after the nation extended and tightened its partial lockdown, Citigroup Inc (NYSE:C). warned, widening its forecast for an economic contraction.

The city-state’s economy will contract by 8.5% in 2020, down from an earlier estimate of a 6% fall, economists Wei Zheng Kit and Kai Wei Ang wrote Tuesday after Singapore extended “circuit breaker” measures until June 1 to “decisively” bring down coronavirus cases within the community.

“The circuit breaker would cause close to 25%-30% of GDP to come to a standstill, with every month of extension further reducing 2020 GDP by 2% to 2.5%,” the economists wrote. “The technical rebound after the lifting of the circuit breaker on 1st Jun will be capped by continued social distancing and only gradual recovery in exports.”

Initially seen as a global model for how to contain the pandemic, Singapore now has the most cases in Southeast Asia as Covid-19 spreads quickly in densely packed dormitories housing foreign laborers. The economists warned of further downside risks to their outlook, given that the steps announced Tuesday will bring most construction activities to a standstill and more services will be restricted or suspended.

READ: How Singapore Flipped From Virus Hero to Cautionary Tale

Any further cut to GDP forecasts for this year or next raises the odds that the Monetary Authority of Singapore will again ease policy by lowering the currency’s trading range at its October meeting, the economists wrote. The de facto central bank, which uses the exchange rate as its main policy tool, took unprecedented easing steps in March by allowing for a weaker exchange rate to support the export-reliant economy.

The government also pledged S$3.8 billion ($2.7 billion) in additional fiscal stimulus Tuesday, bringing the total stimulus offered to more than S$60 billion.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.

© Bloomberg. A housing construction in the Punggol area of Singapore on April 20. Photographer: Wei Leng Tay/Bloomberg

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