Asia-Pacific countries are set to grow by over 7% this year, although the region will face several economic challenges, primarily the management of exchange rates, the United Nations says on 18 April in its annual regional economic review.
In the report, the UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (UNESCAP), forecasts a less favourable external environment mainly due to the slowing of the
“As a whole the 2007 outlook is above 7% economic growth. The three big Asian economies –
The survey, Surging Ahead in Uncertain Times, says the region is becoming the locomotive of global growth, and notes that developing economies in the Asia-Pacific accounted for 16% of global output and one-third of world economic growth last year.
It also forecasts major currencies in the region to appreciate as a result of capital inflows and imbalances in the
It sees greater exchange rate flexibility as one sustainable solution that would take away the “one-way bet” that encourages speculative capital inflows, but warns that intervention by monetary authorities to keep currencies down are leading to inflated asset values, especially in housing and equity markets.
A special study focusing on gender inequality estimates the region is losing between US$42 billion and US$47 billion a year because of restrictions on women’s access to employment – and another US$16 billion to US$30 billion every year because of gender gaps in education. But the survey says that gender balance can be achieved at minimum cost and effort, provided there is political commitment at the highest level.
The report highlights that if