BusinessMirror January 5, 2016

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Tuesday, January 5, 2016 Vol. 11 No. 89

90% of ₧3-T budget effectively released in first week of 2016

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INSIDE

‘Victorious youth’ detour

Art

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udget officials boasted on Monday of having effectively released the bulk, or 90 percent, of this year’s P3.003-trillion budget in only the first working week of 2016, saying this should have far-reaching impact on the country’s much-delayed infrastructure buildup program.

This development contrasted sharply against last year’s disbursement program, in which the release of the equivalent amount of the nation’s monies happened well into the budget year last September. Budget Secretary Florencio B. Abad said front-loading the release of government funds was the result of a new policy at the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) recognizing the General Appropriations Act (GAA) as already the release document, vice the old practice of requiring a special allotment release order (Saro) before actual cash may be released to a government agency.

ready. set. roll

See “P3-T budget,” A4

sports

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supreme court

2nd front page

PSEi falls on first-day jitters S

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Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE) President Hans B. Sicat, PSE Director Alejandro T. Yu, PSE Chairman Jose T. Pardo, PSE COO Roel A. Refran and Capital Markets Integrity Corp. President Cornelio S. Gison lead the bell-ringing ceremony in celebration of the first day of trading at the PSE Plaza in Makati City. ALYSA SALEN

HARE prices ended lower during the first trading day of 2016, fanned by weak Chinese markets and New Year jitters that spread to other markets in the region. The benchmark Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) tumbled 118.66 points, or 1.71 percent, to close at 6,833.42 points. “Along with achieving business targets, I hope that this year, we will be able to help more and more Filipinos become financially educated. I hope that the initiatives of the Exchange will encourage our

PARDO: “I hope that the initiatives of the Exchange will encourage our countrymen to take advantage of investing in the stock market.”

countrymen to take advantage of investing in the stock market,” PSE Chairman Jose T. Pardo said in his wel-come remarks during the open-

ing cere-monies at the trading floor. The market opened strong at 6,954.27, but deteriorated all day. as news on China’s stock market tumbled at its opening on weak factory activity and the possible fall of the yuan. The Chinese market was suspended for the first time, after it fell by 5 percent, which activated the so-called circuit breakers. Latest manufacturing data from China suggest the sector may be stabilizing, but still not growing. The December Purchasing Managers’ Index reading improved marginally to 49.7, from 49.6 the previous month. Figures See “PSEi,” A2

Cristobal to prioritize MSMEs, consumer protection By Catherine N. Pillas

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P25.00 nationwide | 5 sections 32 pages | 7 days a week

he new chief of the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) on Monday vowed to focus on consumer protection and help micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) in the remaining months of the Aquino administration. Newly appointed ad interim Trade Secretary Adrian S. Cristobal Jr. made

the pronouncement in a turnover ceremony held in Makati City on Monday morning. “We’ll go full speed ahead [at the DTI]. The programs we now have, such as the Shared Services Facility, programs for MSMEs, trade promotions and negotiations, will continue at a faster pace now,” Cristobal told reporters in an interview. In his speech, Cristobal said the

PESO exchange rates n US 47.1180

DTI will ensure that MSMEs will be at the core of all its policies, programs and activities. “Unless we do this, the majority of our people will not fully benefit in the growth,” Cristobal said. Former Trade Secretary Gregory L. Domingo tendered his resignation to President Aquino’s Cabinet last September, citing “fatigue”. Domingo, however, heeded the President’s

request to stay in the Cabinet until December 31. Domingo earlier said he will return to the private sector after the mandated one-year prohibition for former government officials. Another DTI official—Trade Undersecretary for Trade Promotions Ponciano C. Manalo Jr.—has also resigned from his post, effective

BMReports

Optimism abounds as expansion drivers seen more than headwinds By Mia Rosienna Mallari & Rea Cu

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Second of three parts

ased on the poll conducted by the BusinessMirror, economists and businessmen are banking on at least eight factors that will fuel economic growth this year—the May elections, infrastructure spending, tourism, remittances, consumer spending, foreign direct investments (FDI), exports and manufacturing. Dr. Bernardo M. Villegas, a member of the University of Asia and the Pacific (UA&P) Board of Trustees, said these drivers will be enough to push 2016 GDP growth to 7 percent. The drivers, he said, “will outweigh the challenges, because the main drivers are already on automatic pilot.” Villegas’s forecast is way above t he 6. 35 - percent

average growth forecast that came out in the BusinessMirror poll among heads of business chambers, economists and businessmen for 2016.

Election spending

Election spending is the w idely accepted g row t h driver this year, although the conduct of the polls in May was also mentioned as a challenge, because of the uncertainties that a change in administration creates. “You have a period during the elections when a lot of money is passed in the economy at the local level. And if you’re s pending it on television ads, it’s going to go to the owners and shareholders of the media companies who are so rich already,” American Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines Legislative Committee Chairman John D. Forbes pointed out. Continued on A2

See “Cristobal,” A2

n japan 0.3917 n UK 69.5132 n HK 6.0797 n CHINA 7.2561 n singapore 33.2355 n australia 34.4002 n EU 51.1796 n SAUDI arabia 12.5581

Source: BSP (4 January 2016 )


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