TAIPEI (Reuters) – Taiwan’s economy is likely to grow at a slower pace this year that initially forecast, the statistics office said on Friday, downgrading its outlook due to global inflation and COVID-19 dampening consumer demand at home and abroad.
The revision came as the statistics office raised its export growth forecast for this year, with continued strong global demand for the island’s technology products buoyed by 5G, electric vehicles and high end computing.
Gross domestic product (GDP) is expected to rise 3.91% this year, the Directorate General of Budget, Accounting and Statistics said, down from 4.42% growth forecast in February.
That will be a slower pace than the 6.45% logged for 2021, which was the fastest rate in over a decade since it expanded 10.25% in 2010.
The directorate said Taiwan’s surge in COVID-19 infections and inflation driven by the war in Ukraine were affecting consumers at home and abroad, even as demand for semiconductors, the main plank of Taiwan’s economy, remained strong.
It now sees exports rising 14.62% this year, from 9.69% predicted earlier.
Taiwan’s exports are a bellwether of demand for global tech giants such as Apple Inc, as the island is a major producer of semiconductors, a global shortage of which has rattled firms like auto makers and boosted Taiwanese corporate profits.
In the first quarter, GDP expanded by a revised 3.14% from a year earlier, slightly up from a preliminary reading of 3.06%, the agency added.
Another risk is the slowdown in the economy of China, Taiwan’s top trading partner, where strict measures to control COVID outbreaks have led to the prolonged lockdown of economic hub Shanghai and movement curbs in numerous cities including Beijing.
The statistics office said lockdowns in China and their impact on global supply chain bottlenecks are among uncertainties for Taiwan’s economic growth this year.
Taiwan’s export orders fell for the first time in more than two years in April, taking a larger-than-expected hit from China’s strict anti-virus measures and broader global supply chain disruptions.
(Reporting by Yimou Lee and Jeanny Kao; Editing by Kim Coghill)