July 3, 2009 Friday
Updated

July 3, 2009
Asia will lead recovery
By Robin Chan

ASIA will lead the world out of the economic morass, but the journey will be long and uncertain, a business school don warned on Friday.

The worst of the global recession might be over, but a full recovery is not likely until after next year, said Professor Bernard Yeung, the dean of the National University of Singapore Business School.

And he believes a new economic order will surface, dominated by Asia with China at its centre.

'This is not over. We may have reached a bottom, but it is not a recovery,' he said at a breakfast talk on the crisis, held at the Four Seasons hotel.

'The green shoots tell us we are not dropping further. But instead of heading south, we are going east.'

He noted that no recession lasts forever and that clearer signs of a recovery would appear in Asia, probably next year. But he felt a full-fledged global recovery would not come till after next year.

Prof Yeung was more bullish about Asia, which has seen exports fall sharply but still has sound fundamentals.

Also, Asian nations have been rolling out unprecedented fiscal stimulus initiatives centred on expenditure rather than tax cuts, to build up infrastructure. These investments should help offset the fall in exports, said Prof Yeung.

Still, for now, the key to a recovery lies with the United States, he said. He believes the US must find ways to boost productivity in areas such as biotech.

In the long term, however, the world's economic centre will shift to Asia, with China growing far more significant as a global consumption market, he said. This means Asian manufacturers will be producing for consumers in Asia as well as the US and Europe.

Read the full report in Saturday's edition of The Straits Times.

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