Indonesia vs. Philippines
Economy
| Indonesia | Philippines | |
|---|---|---|
| Economy - overview | Indonesia, the largest economy in Southeast Asia, has seen a slowdown in growth since 2012, mostly due to the end of the commodities export boom. During the global financial crisis, Indonesia outperformed its regional neighbors and joined China and India as the only G20 members posting growth. Indonesia's annual budget deficit is capped at 3% of GDP, and the Government of Indonesia lowered its debt-to-GDP ratio from a peak of 100% shortly after the Asian financial crisis in 1999 to 34% today. In May 2017 Standard & Poor's became the last major ratings agency to upgrade Indonesia's sovereign credit rating to investment grade. Poverty and unemployment, inadequate infrastructure, corruption, a complex regulatory environment, and unequal resource distribution among its regions are still part of Indonesia's economic landscape. President Joko WIDODO - elected in July 2014 - seeks to develop Indonesia's maritime resources and pursue other infrastructure development, including significantly increasing its electrical power generation capacity. Fuel subsidies were significantly reduced in early 2015, a move which has helped the government redirect its spending to development priorities. Indonesia, with the nine other ASEAN members, will continue to move towards participation in the ASEAN Economic Community, though full implementation of economic integration has not yet materialized. | The economy has been relatively resilient to global economic shocks due to less exposure to troubled international securities, lower dependence on exports, relatively resilient domestic consumption, large remittances from about 10 million overseas Filipino workers and migrants, and a rapidly expanding services industry. During 2017, the current account balance fell into the negative range, the first time since the 2008 global financial crisis, in part due to an ambitious new infrastructure spending program announced this year. However, international reserves remain at comfortable levels and the banking system is stable. Efforts to improve tax administration and expenditures management have helped ease the Philippines' debt burden and tight fiscal situation. The Philippines received investment-grade credit ratings on its sovereign debt under the former AQUINO administration and has had little difficulty financing its budget deficits. However, weak absorptive capacity and implementation bottlenecks have prevented the government from maximizing its expenditure plans. Although it has improved, the low tax-to-GDP ratio remains a constraint to supporting increasingly higher spending levels and sustaining high and inclusive growth over the longer term. Economic growth has accelerated, averaging over 6% per year from 2011 to 2017, compared with 4.5% under the MACAPAGAL-ARROYO government; and competitiveness rankings have improved. Although 2017 saw a new record year for net foreign direct investment inflows, FDI to the Philippines has continued to lag regional peers, in part because the Philippine constitution and other laws limit foreign investment and restrict foreign ownership in important activities/sectors - such as land ownership and public utilities. Although the economy grew at a rapid pace under the AQUINO government, challenges to achieving more inclusive growth remain. Wealth is concentrated in the hands of the rich. The unemployment rate declined from 7.3% to 5.7% between 2010 and 2017; while there has been some improvement, underemployment remains high at around 17% to 18% of the employed population. At least 40% of the employed work in the informal sector. Poverty afflicts more than a fifth of the total population but is as high as 75% in some areas of the southern Philippines. More than 60% of the poor reside in rural areas, where the incidence of poverty (about 30%) is more severe - a challenge to raising rural farm and non-farm incomes. Continued efforts are needed to improve governance, the judicial system, the regulatory environment, the infrastructure, and the overall ease of doing business. 2016 saw the election of President Rodrigo DUTERTE, who has pledged to make inclusive growth and poverty reduction his top priority. DUTERTE believes that illegal drug use, crime and corruption are key barriers to economic development. The administration wants to reduce the poverty rate to 17% and graduate the economy to upper-middle income status by the end of President DUTERTE's term in 2022. Key themes under the government's Ten-Point Socioeconomic Agenda include continuity of macroeconomic policy, tax reform, higher investments in infrastructure and human capital development, and improving competitiveness and the overall ease of doing business. The administration sees infrastructure shortcomings as a key barrier to sustained economic growth and has pledged to spend $165 billion on infrastructure by 2022. Although the final outcome has yet to be seen, the current administration is shepherding legislation for a comprehensive tax reform program to raise revenues for its ambitious infrastructure spending plan and to promote a more equitable and efficient tax system. However, the need to finance rehabilitation and reconstruction efforts in the southern region of Mindanao following the 2017 Marawi City siege may compete with other spending on infrastructure. |
| GDP (purchasing power parity) | $3,196,682,000,000 (2019 est.) $3,043,743,000,000 (2018 est.) $2,894,125,000,000 (2017 est.) note: data are in 2010 dollars | $963.121 billion (2019 est.) $908.257 billion (2018 est.) $854.095 billion (2017 est.) note: data are in 2010 dollars |
| GDP - real growth rate | 5.03% (2019 est.) 5.17% (2018 est.) 5.07% (2017 est.) | 6.04% (2019 est.) 6.34% (2018 est.) 6.94% (2017 est.) |
| GDP - per capita (PPP) | $11,812 (2019 est.) $11,372 (2018 est.) $10,936 (2017 est.) note: data are in 2010 dollars | $8,908 (2019 est.) $8,516 (2018 est.) $8,121 (2017 est.) note: data are in 2010 dollars |
| GDP - composition by sector | agriculture: 13.7% (2017 est.) industry: 41% (2017 est.) services: 45.4% (2017 est.) | agriculture: 9.6% (2017 est.) industry: 30.6% (2017 est.) services: 59.8% (2017 est.) |
| Population below poverty line | 9.4% (2019 est.) | 16.7% (2018 est.) |
| Household income or consumption by percentage share | lowest 10%: 3.4% highest 10%: 28.2% (2010) | lowest 10%: 3.2% highest 10%: 29.5% (2015 est.) |
| Inflation rate (consumer prices) | 2.8% (2019 est.) 3.2% (2018 est.) 3.8% (2017 est.) | 2.4% (2019 est.) 5.2% (2018 est.) 2.8% (2017 est.) |
| Labor force | 129.366 million (2019 est.) | 41.533 million (2020 est.) |
| Labor force - by occupation | agriculture: 32% industry: 21% services: 47% (2016 est.) | agriculture: 25.4% industry: 18.3% services: 56.3% (2017 est.) |
| Unemployment rate | 5.31% (2018 est.) 5.4% (2017 est.) | 5.11% (2019 est.) 5.29% (2018 est.) |
| Distribution of family income - Gini index | 37.8 (2018 est.) 39.4 (2005) | 44.4 (2015 est.) 46 (2012 est.) |
| Budget | revenues: 131.7 billion (2017 est.) expenditures: 159.6 billion (2017 est.) | revenues: 49.07 billion (2017 est.) expenditures: 56.02 billion (2017 est.) |
| Industries | petroleum and natural gas, textiles, automotive, electrical appliances, apparel, footwear, mining, cement, medical instruments and appliances, handicrafts, chemical fertilizers, plywood, rubber, processed food, jewelry, and tourism | semiconductors and electronics assembly, business process outsourcing, food and beverage manufacturing, construction, electric/gas/water supply, chemical products, radio/television/communications equipment and apparatus, petroleum and fuel, textile and garments, non-metallic minerals, basic metal industries, transport equipment |
| Industrial production growth rate | 4.1% (2017 est.) | 7.2% (2017 est.) |
| Agriculture - products | oil palm fruit, rice, maize, sugar cane, coconuts, cassava, bananas, eggs, poultry, rubber | sugar cane, rice, coconuts, maize, bananas, vegetables, tropical fruit, plantains, pineapples, cassava |
| Exports | $249.628 billion (2019 est.) $251.827 billion (2018 est.) $236.354 billion (2017 est.) | $131.193 billion (2019 est.) $128.138 billion (2018 est.) $114.597 billion (2017 est.) |
| Exports - commodities | coal, palm oil, natural gas, cars, gold (2019) | integrated circuits, office machinery/parts, insulated wiring, semiconductors, transformers (2019) |
| Exports - partners | China 15%, United States 10%, Japan 9%, Singapore 8%, India 7%, Malaysia 5% (2019) | China 16%, United States 15%, Japan 13%, Hong Kong 12%, Singapore 7%, Germany 5% (2019) |
| Imports | $223.44 billion (2019 est.) $242.046 billion (2018 est.) $216.342 billion (2017 est.) | $158.307 billion (2019 est.) $155.441 billion (2018 est.) $135.585 billion (2017 est.) |
| Imports - commodities | refined petroleum, crude petroleum, vehicle parts, telephones, natural gas (2019) | integrated circuits, refined petroleum, cars, crude petroleum, broadcasting equipment (2019) |
| Imports - partners | China 27%, Singapore 12%, Japan 8%, Thailand 5%, United States 5%, South Korea 5%, Malaysia 5% (2019) | China 29%, Japan 8%, South Korea 7%, United States 6%, Singapore 6%, Indonesia 6%, Thailand 5%, Taiwan 5% (2019) |
| Debt - external | $393.252 billion (2019 est.) $360.945 billion (2018 est.) | $81.995 billion (2019 est.) $75.192 billion (2018 est.) |
| Exchange rates | Indonesian rupiah (IDR) per US dollar - 14,110 (2020 est.) 14,015 (2019 est.) 14,470 (2018 est.) 13,389.4 (2014 est.) 11,865.2 (2013 est.) | Philippine pesos (PHP) per US dollar - 48.055 (2020 est.) 50.81 (2019 est.) 52.71 (2018 est.) 45.503 (2014 est.) 44.395 (2013 est.) |
| Fiscal year | calendar year | calendar year |
| Public debt | 28.8% of GDP (2017 est.) 28.3% of GDP (2016 est.) | 39.9% of GDP (2017 est.) 39% of GDP (2016 est.) |
| Reserves of foreign exchange and gold | $130.2 billion (31 December 2017 est.) | $81.57 billion (31 December 2017 est.) $80.69 billion (31 December 2016 est.) |
| Current Account Balance | -$30.359 billion (2019 est.) -$30.633 billion (2018 est.) | -$3.386 billion (2019 est.) -$8.877 billion (2018 est.) |
| GDP (official exchange rate) | $1,119,720,000,000 (2019 est.) | $377.205 billion (2019 est.) |
| Credit ratings | Fitch rating: BBB (2017) Moody's rating: Baa2 (2018) Standard & Poors rating: BBB (2019) | Fitch rating: BBB (2017) Moody's rating: Baa2 (2014) Standard & Poors rating: BBB+ (2019) |
| Ease of Doing Business Index scores | Overall score: 69.6 (2020) Starting a Business score: 81.2 (2020) Trading score: 67.5 (2020) Enforcement score: 49.1 (2020) | Overall score: 62.8 (2020) Starting a Business score: 71.3 (2020) Trading score: 68.4 (2020) Enforcement score: 46 (2020) |
| Taxes and other revenues | 13% (of GDP) (2017 est.) | 15.6% (of GDP) (2017 est.) |
| Budget surplus (+) or deficit (-) | -2.7% (of GDP) (2017 est.) | -2.2% (of GDP) (2017 est.) |
| Unemployment, youth ages 15-24 | total: 13.5% male: 13.8% female: 13.2% (2019 est.) | total: 6.8% male: 5.9% female: 8.3% (2019 est.) |
| GDP - composition, by end use | household consumption: 57.3% (2017 est.) government consumption: 9.1% (2017 est.) investment in fixed capital: 32.1% (2017 est.) investment in inventories: 0.3% (2017 est.) exports of goods and services: 20.4% (2017 est.) imports of goods and services: -19.2% (2017 est.) | household consumption: 73.5% (2017 est.) government consumption: 11.3% (2017 est.) investment in fixed capital: 25.1% (2017 est.) investment in inventories: 0.1% (2017 est.) exports of goods and services: 31% (2017 est.) imports of goods and services: -40.9% (2017 est.) |
| Gross national saving | 31% of GDP (2019 est.) 31.8% of GDP (2018 est.) 30.9% of GDP (2017 est.) | 31.6% of GDP (2019 est.) 33.8% of GDP (2018 est.) 35.5% of GDP (2017 est.) |
Source: CIA Factbook