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Singapore Q2 GDP plunges by 13.2% in worst quarter on record
Annabeth Leow
SINGAPORE’S second-quarter economic performance was its worst on record, while the full-year outlook was cut again, policymakers announced on Tuesday morning.
Forecasters from the Ministry of Trade and Industry (MTI) have once more tightened their projection for the pandemic-driven full-year recession. They now expect a contraction of between 5 per cent and 7 per cent, compared with 4 per cent to 7 per cent before.
Quarterly gross domestic product (GDP) declined by 13.2 per cent in April through June as the Covid-19 pandemic forced widespread business closures and muted external demand.
The decline, which worsened sharply from a 0.3 per cent decrease in the first quarter, marked a downgrade from the preliminary figure of 12.6 per cent in advance data. It also fell slightly short of private economists’ prediction of a downward revision to a 12.9 per cent drop.
The MTI warned that "the outlook for the Singapore economy has weakened slightly since May", on uncertainties such as a global economic downturn and pandemic-related developments.
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"Notwithstanding the narrowing of the forecast range, there continues to be significant uncertainty over how the Covid-19 situation will evolve in the coming quarters, and correspondingly, the trajectory of the economic recovery in both the global and domestic economies," it added in its statement.
Construction and marine and offshore engineering could see a "deeper and more protracted" downturn than earlier expected, the MTI noted - no thanks to slower-than-expected resumption of activity in industries that rely on foreign workers living in virus-stricken dormitories.
It said: "A sharper slowdown in these sectors is also expected to have negative spillover effects on firms in supporting industries, such as professional services firms providing architectural and engineering services for construction projects."
Manufacturing - which had been the only sector to register year-on-year growth in the advance estimates - fell into negative territory on updated data as it shrank by 0.7 per cent. The contraction reversed factories' 7.9 per cent growth in the quarter before.
As earlier disclosed by the MTI, the chemicals, transport engineering and general manufacturing clusters were weighed down by weak external demand and the disruption of the "circuit breaker".
Still, the biomedical manufacturing, electronics and precision engineering clusters notched expansions, helped by a better-than-expected rebound in demand for semiconductors.
Meanwhile, the decline in the services sector was revised up a tad to 13.4 per cent, from an earlier estimate of 13.6 per cent, with finance and insurance the only segment in the black.
Construction, which has been badly affected by the wildfire spread of the virus among migrant labourers, plunged 59.3 per cent in the quarter, against an earlier estimate of 54.7 per cent.
On a seasonally adjusted, quarterly basis, the economy lost 13.1 per cent, against a decline of 0.8 per cent in the first quarter.
Annabeth Leow

SINGAPORE’S second-quarter economic performance was its worst on record, while the full-year outlook was cut again, policymakers announced on Tuesday morning.
Forecasters from the Ministry of Trade and Industry (MTI) have once more tightened their projection for the pandemic-driven full-year recession. They now expect a contraction of between 5 per cent and 7 per cent, compared with 4 per cent to 7 per cent before.
Quarterly gross domestic product (GDP) declined by 13.2 per cent in April through June as the Covid-19 pandemic forced widespread business closures and muted external demand.
The decline, which worsened sharply from a 0.3 per cent decrease in the first quarter, marked a downgrade from the preliminary figure of 12.6 per cent in advance data. It also fell slightly short of private economists’ prediction of a downward revision to a 12.9 per cent drop.
The MTI warned that "the outlook for the Singapore economy has weakened slightly since May", on uncertainties such as a global economic downturn and pandemic-related developments.
Stay updated with BT newsletters
"Notwithstanding the narrowing of the forecast range, there continues to be significant uncertainty over how the Covid-19 situation will evolve in the coming quarters, and correspondingly, the trajectory of the economic recovery in both the global and domestic economies," it added in its statement.
Construction and marine and offshore engineering could see a "deeper and more protracted" downturn than earlier expected, the MTI noted - no thanks to slower-than-expected resumption of activity in industries that rely on foreign workers living in virus-stricken dormitories.
It said: "A sharper slowdown in these sectors is also expected to have negative spillover effects on firms in supporting industries, such as professional services firms providing architectural and engineering services for construction projects."
Manufacturing - which had been the only sector to register year-on-year growth in the advance estimates - fell into negative territory on updated data as it shrank by 0.7 per cent. The contraction reversed factories' 7.9 per cent growth in the quarter before.
As earlier disclosed by the MTI, the chemicals, transport engineering and general manufacturing clusters were weighed down by weak external demand and the disruption of the "circuit breaker".
Still, the biomedical manufacturing, electronics and precision engineering clusters notched expansions, helped by a better-than-expected rebound in demand for semiconductors.
Meanwhile, the decline in the services sector was revised up a tad to 13.4 per cent, from an earlier estimate of 13.6 per cent, with finance and insurance the only segment in the black.
Construction, which has been badly affected by the wildfire spread of the virus among migrant labourers, plunged 59.3 per cent in the quarter, against an earlier estimate of 54.7 per cent.
On a seasonally adjusted, quarterly basis, the economy lost 13.1 per cent, against a decline of 0.8 per cent in the first quarter.