Tuesday, October 28, 2025
Tuesday, October 28, 2025

WORST-EVER SLUMP: Singapore GDP plummets 41%

SINGAPORE- Singapore’s trade-reliant economy plunged into recession in the second quarter with a record contraction, signaling a rough first half globally and an equally challenging outlook as the coronavirus crisis exacts a heavy toll on business and demand.

Singapore’s economy slipped into recession in the second quarter, contracting by a record 41.2 percent from the previous three months and is facing its biggest slump ever this year as coronavirus lockdown steps hammer the trade-reliant city-state.

That was worse than economists’ expectations for a 37.4 percent decline in the quarter when Singapore was under a lockdown to curb the spread of the virus.

The first in Asia to report second-quarter GDP data, the grim numbers for the wealthy city-state – a bellwether for the global economy – underscore the sweeping worldwide impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and point to an arduous road ahead. Many major economies are already facing their steepest downturn in decades.

“If you want to read something into this, it is what is going to happen to economies that have taken a similar sort of lockdown,” said Rob Carnell, chief economist, Asia-Pacific at ING Bank.

In June, the International Monetary Fund warned of a steep contraction in global economic activity as the health crisis shut businesses, depressed consumption and paralyzed trade. It forecast 2020 world output to shrink by 4.9 percent, compared with a 3.0 percent contraction predicted in April.

The once-in-a-century pandemic has so far infected over 13 million people worldwide and killed more than 571,000. Singapore has reported 46,283 coronavirus cases with 26 deaths as of Monday.

“There is an element of global weakness in there as well, obviously the trade side is very important for Singapore and that has been absolutely clobbered,” Carnell said.

The sectoral impact was broadbased with the services and construction sector hardest hit.

Construction plummeted 95.6 percent on a quarter-on-quarter basis, grinding to a near halt as the city-state quarantined tens of thousands of migrant laborers in dormitories ravaged by the virus.

“We were expecting these numbers to look quite dismal, although this is worse than what we had expected,” said Steve Cochrane, economist at Moody’s Analytics.

On a year-on year basis, GDP dived 12.6 percent versus economists forecast for a 10.5 percent contraction.

The manufacturing sector grew 2.5 percent from a year ago, mainly due to a surge in output in biomedical sector, though that was still lower than the 8.2 percent rise in the first quarter.

The GDP slump marked the second consecutive quarter of contractions for the global finance hub – having declined a revised 0.3 percent year-on-year in the first quarter and 3.3 percent quarter-on-quarter – meeting the definition for a technical recession.

The Singapore dollar was down 0.2 percent on the day versus the US dollar.

The government expects full-year GDP to contract in the range of -7 percent to -4 percent, the biggest downturn in its history. Citi analysts see a 8.5 percent contraction and expect another downgrade to official forecasts next month when final GDP data is released.

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