Higher oil prices a challenge for Asian economies, QNB said and noted that with oil prices breaching the $80/b mark in recent weeks, markets are already taking stock of how different countries are being affected. 
QNB in an analysis yesterday focused on the effect of higher oil prices on the major Asian economies of China, India, Indonesia, South Korea, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Thailand. 
As Asia’s only net oil exporter, Malaysia is expected to benefit from oil windfalls. The country presents a surplus of nearly 140,000 barrels per day (bpd) and a positive crude oil trade balance of around 1% of GDP. 
Higher export receipts from crude oil are not a game changer for Malaysia. The country holds structural current account surpluses. However, oil revenues are key for the country’s fiscal position. 
According to Malaysia’s economic authorities, every $1/b increase in oil prices adds about $72mn to government revenue. This is an important source of fiscal support for the newly elected reformist government, especially as government finances are under pressure by the recent repeal of the Goods and Sales Tax (GST) and the outlook for higher public debt. Government action to increase transparency in the public sector resulted in a sharp upward revision of the public debt from 54% to 75% of GDP. Additional oil revenues are therefore a vital tailwind for Malaysia’s fiscal balances. 
Indonesia faces moderate challenges when it comes to oil prices. While higher oil prices boost up revenues and favour government finances, private consumption and investment are negatively affected. 
Despite domestic production of around 800,000bpd of crude oil, Indonesia became a net importer last year. The deficit of nearly 190,000bpd makes up a small negative crude oil balance of 0.4% of GDP. As such, rising and higher oil prices add up to Indonesia’s overall current account deficit and contribute to the mounting external pressure the country is facing. 
In response, QNB said the government is trying to curb rising oil import bills by announcing plans to mix domestically produced biofuels into petrol. 
Importantly, the 7.9% depreciation of the Rupiah so far in 2018 contributes to further amplify the positive effect of higher oil prices in fiscal balances and the negative effect in the private economy, as revenues in local currency increase and domestic fuel prices soar. 
China, Taiwan, Thailand and South Korea all have their oil trade balances in negative territory, ranging from 1.5% to 4.4% of GDP. 
However, sizable overall current account surpluses of close to 10% of GDP make Taiwan, Thailand and Korea extremely resilient, while China is supported by a positive current account surplus of nearly 1% of GDP and is not so vulnerable. 
A combination of current account deficits and substantially negative net oil positions are a “rising challenge” to the Philippines and India, QNB said. Higher oil bills widen current account deficits and add to external vulnerabilities such as FX pressures. 
In the Philippines, an oil trade deficit of 1.5% of GDP amounts to the total size of the country’s current account deficit. A lack of substantial subsidies limits the effect of higher oil prices in fiscal balances, concentrating the impact on the private sector. 
This negative effect of higher oil prices in private sector discretionary spending is magnified by the 6.7% year-to-date depreciation of the Philippine peso against the dollar. 
The high pass-through from international oil prices to domestic fuel prices in the Philippines is also contributing to the rising headline inflation. In September 2018, CPI inflation reached a 10-year high of 6.3% y-o-y, 330bp above the central bank target. In order to respond to that and help limit capital outflows, the Philippine Central Bank has lifted its policy rate by 150bp so far this year. 
Like in the Philippines, the oil trade deficit in India is high at 2.7% of GDP, amounting to nearly the total size of the country’s current account deficit. In India, however, high fuel subsidies make the extended public sector shoulder considerable losses. 
According to Moody’s, fuel subsidies are expected to cost between $4.6bn and $7.2bn in 2018, against an initial budget of $3.3bn. 
As subsidies are concentrated on liquefied petroleum gas and kerosene, part of the private sector is still affected by higher domestic fuel prices. 
Foreign exchange depreciation also plays an amplifying role here; the Indian rupee is down 10.3% against the dollar so far this year. This has been contributing to push headline inflation to the higher-end of the central bank target, which supports the Reserve Bank of India’s 50bp hike to contain mounting external pressure. 
“In short, higher oil prices are positive for Malaysia. Current account surpluses shelter China, Taiwan, Thailand and Korea, while Indonesia, the Philippines and India have to face more challenges associated with higher oil bills,” QNB added.
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