HANOI: Vietnam’s inflation is forecast to pick up to 4.9 percent in 2016, in line with a government target, while increased lending keeps the economy resilient despite a fragile global environment, the World Bank said on Monday. “Inflation is expected to come in just below the official target of 5 percent this year and then moderate next year as administrative price hikes — which were the main driver of inflation this year — moderate,” the bank said in a report. It forecast year-end inflation to slow to 3.7 percent in 2017, compared with 4.5 percent in its previous forecast in July, when it had pegged the annual inflation rate at 4 percent for this year. The bank kept unchanged its forecasts for Vietnam’s economic growth this year at 6.0 percent and 6.3 percent for 2017.
“Vietnam’s economy remains resilient, thanks to robust domestic demand and export-oriented manufacturing,” the bank said in the report. It said rapid credit growth and an accommodative fiscal stance provided short-term support to the economic growth while raising “existing medium-term financial and fiscal risks.”
The credit growth is projected at 19 percent for 2016, World Bank lead economist Sebastian Eckardt told reporters. The projection is within the expectations of the Vietnam central bank, which had said earlier that credit was expected to grow an annual 18-20 percent this year. Interbank rates have eased, suggesting good liquidity, while the central bank has built the country’s foreign exchange reserves to a level now sufficient to cover less than three months of imports, Eckardt said.