<p><em>By Cynthia Li</em></p>.<p>Economists upgraded the first-quarter growth forecast for <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tags/singapore">Singapore’s</a> economy, with some attributing the gains in part to <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tags/taylor-swift">Taylor Swift</a>’s Eras tour concerts.</p>.<p>Gross domestic product probably expanded 2.9% in the three months ending March 31, the quickest pace in six quarters, according to the median estimate in a <em>Bloomberg</em> survey. They also raised the annual growth expectation to 2.5 per cent from 2.3 per cent seen previously — toward the upper end of the government’s 1 per cent-3 per cent forecast for 2024.</p>.Taylor Swift's 'The Eras Tour' set to gross more than $1 billion.<p>The Singapore leg of the Eras tour involves the singer performing six concerts through March 9. That carries benefits to Singapore’s hospitality, food & beverage, and retail activities, according to DBS Bank Ltd. Economist Han Teng Chua.</p>.<p>“These would be mainly supported by higher foreign tourist spending, with a large number of overseas fans attending the Singapore concerts,” said Chua, who estimates the shows to add around S$300 million-S$400 million, or 0.2 per cent points of GDP, to the city-state’s economy in the first quarter.</p>.Singapore's exclusive deal with Taylor Swift not a hostile act towards neighbours, PM Lee Hsien Loong says.<p>Still, the outlook remains fragile for the trade-reliant economy, amid tight global interest rates, China’s uneven recovery and lingering geopolitical risks.</p>.<p>“We expect renewed weakness in the first half as slower global growth curtails activity in Singapore’s export-oriented economy,” said Shivaan Tandon, economist at Capital Economics. “But growth should pick up more sustainably from the second half of the year.”</p>
<p><em>By Cynthia Li</em></p>.<p>Economists upgraded the first-quarter growth forecast for <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tags/singapore">Singapore’s</a> economy, with some attributing the gains in part to <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tags/taylor-swift">Taylor Swift</a>’s Eras tour concerts.</p>.<p>Gross domestic product probably expanded 2.9% in the three months ending March 31, the quickest pace in six quarters, according to the median estimate in a <em>Bloomberg</em> survey. They also raised the annual growth expectation to 2.5 per cent from 2.3 per cent seen previously — toward the upper end of the government’s 1 per cent-3 per cent forecast for 2024.</p>.Taylor Swift's 'The Eras Tour' set to gross more than $1 billion.<p>The Singapore leg of the Eras tour involves the singer performing six concerts through March 9. That carries benefits to Singapore’s hospitality, food & beverage, and retail activities, according to DBS Bank Ltd. Economist Han Teng Chua.</p>.<p>“These would be mainly supported by higher foreign tourist spending, with a large number of overseas fans attending the Singapore concerts,” said Chua, who estimates the shows to add around S$300 million-S$400 million, or 0.2 per cent points of GDP, to the city-state’s economy in the first quarter.</p>.Singapore's exclusive deal with Taylor Swift not a hostile act towards neighbours, PM Lee Hsien Loong says.<p>Still, the outlook remains fragile for the trade-reliant economy, amid tight global interest rates, China’s uneven recovery and lingering geopolitical risks.</p>.<p>“We expect renewed weakness in the first half as slower global growth curtails activity in Singapore’s export-oriented economy,” said Shivaan Tandon, economist at Capital Economics. “But growth should pick up more sustainably from the second half of the year.”</p>