KUALA LUMPUR: OCBC Bank has revised its growth outlook for the Malaysian economy from 4.2 per cent to 4.8 per cent for this year, saying its outlook looks conservative after the strong 5.6 per cent growth print in the first quarter.
This was due to a baseline expectation that global trade will still proceed apace in the second half looks to be a rational one at this point.
Initially, it expected 2017 to be a tough year for export dependent Malaysia due to the protectionist politics in the developed world would impede global trade flows.
“Fortunately, as it turns out, such dejected despair has not been warranted,”the research house said, in a report on its second half outlook for 2017.
“While there remains some risks that whatever fears of protectionism that we had earlier this year may yet pop up as an unpleasant surprise, a baseline expectation that global trade will still proceed apace in the second half looks to be a rational one at this point.”
Despite the new US government’s protectionism messages, global trade flows actually picked up rather encouragingly.
Against this backdrop, instead of being dragged down by a massive global trade slowdown, Malaysia’s economy was in fact boosted by the pleasant surprise of robust trade flows.
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