BusinessMirror November 25, 2015

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BITTERSWEET YEAR FOR PHL IN 2016–‘FENG SHUI’ EXPERT By Ma. Stella F. Arnaldo Special to the BusinessMirror

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HE fire element will dominate 2016, making it a generally “good, no problem” year for the economy. Speaking to the BusinessMirror before the launch of his book, titled Feng Shui Essentials for the Year of the Fire Monkey, at the Manila Hotel on Monday, noted feng shui expert Joseph Chau said 2016 will be lucky for industries dominated by the fire element, such as electronics, electricity, gasoline/fuel business, computers, telecommunications, restaurants and financial market. “The metal elements—machinery, banking, car sales, raw materials for medical supplies—are also lucky,” he added. The Year of the Fire Monkey swings in on February 8, 2016. See “Bittersweet,” A2

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‘P-Noy successor should aim for ₧1-T annual infra budget’ T

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he next administration needs to ramp up infrastructure spending to 7 percent to 10 percent of GDP—from the current goal of 5 percent of GDP—to really make an impact on the country’s growth and competitiveness, Public Works Secretary Rogelio L. Singson said.

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SINGSON: “We should start ramping up to 7 [percent] to 10 percent of GDP, especially if the government goes to rail projects.”

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This would mean an annual spending target of about P1 trillion for infrastructure upgrade, considering the country’s estimated $285billion GDP. This, Singson said, is possible if the capacity constraints are addressed and the rail projects are pursued. “We told the [construction industry] three years ago that we will grow in infrastructure investments by 30 percent annually, and no one was listening. Now if the next

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administration seizes this opportunity [of growing infrastructure investments], we should not only be at 5 percent of GDP. We should start ramping up to 7 [percent] to 10 percent of GDP, especially if the government goes to rail projects,” Singson said at the sidelines of the Innovation Infrastructure Congress, organized by the European Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines. Under the Aquino administration, the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) has been concentrating on cleaning up the house— streamlining procedures; improving the absorptive capacity of the agencies and local government units; and plugging fund leakages—and sees the target of infrastructure spending reaching 5 percent of GDP by 2016 as an uphill climb. See “P-Noy successor,” A2

BELMONTE FINALLY GIVES UP ON INCOME TAX-REFORM BILL By Jovee Marie N. dela Cruz

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ollowing the strong position of the Palace against the tax-reform proposals, Speaker Feliciano Belmonte Jr. on Tuesday said even the measure seeking to adjust the levels of taxable income to inflation is now considered dead in the House of Representatives. Belmonte, in an interview with reporters, said the measure can no longer be passed by the House in the 16th Congress due to lack of time. The leadership of the 16th Congress was pushing for the said proposal as a compromise to the measure lowering income and corporate tax rates, which was also strongly opposed by the Palace. “There’s no time for a real big tax reform which is needed, because adjusting the levels of taxable income to infla-

tion is a very partial reform; we should have more time for bigger reform,” he said. “You better spend your time on somethingthatwillgetapprovedrather than what will not be approved. Our time better spent on other things that are doable, desirable.” Based on the legislative calendar, Congress will adjourn on December 19 and resume on January 19, 2016. The third and last regular session of the 16th Congress is expected to be cut short, because of the 2016 national and local elections in May. President Aquino, taking the cue from the Department of Finance (DOF) and the Bureau of Internal Revenue, has repeatedly rejected the passage in Congress of a longpending bill mandating adjustments in individual and corporate income-tax rates, saying that the government “cannot put our fiscal

sustainability and credit rating at risk by doing piecemeal revenuereducing legislation.” The DOF has said the proposal may cause the government to lose revenues totaling as much as 1.5 percent of the country’s GDP, or P30 billion. President Aquino said he is still not backing income-tax reforms, until there is no compensating revenue measure on the table. The President also asked the proponents of the tax-reform proposals to first seek solid sources of funds to fill in the projected fiscal gap from foregone revenue seen to ensue from proposed adjustments. He also asked Congress leaders to first find a “balance” that would offset the P30-billion revenue loss from the proposed tax-reform measure, which the next administration could reverse by raising taxes anew.

‘Income inequality makes the rich more Scrooge-like’

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By Catherine N. Pillas

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s the annual “season of giving” dawns, a new study finds that stark income inequity— a dramatically rising trend in the United States—makes the “haves” less generous toward others. Higher-income people were less inclined to be generous both when they came from states where income inequality is high and when they were made to believe that there was a sharp divide between rich and poor, a new study found. And they were less charitable in both cases than were low-income people. Since the 1980s—the end of a 30-year period during which the middle class flourished in the US—wealth has grown increasingly concentrated at the top of the economic ladder, while low-income Americans have commanded a smaller and smaller share of the nation’s wealth.

PESO exchange rates n US 47.1470

In 2013 the top 0.1 percent of households received approximately 10 percent of the pretax income, versus approximately 3 percent to 4 percent between 1951 and 1981. The Congressional Budget Office reckoned that between 1979 and 2007, households controlling the top 1 percent of the nation’s wealth increased their incomes 275 percent, while the incomes of those in the economy’s lowest tier picked up a mere 18 percent. A study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on Monday compared the giving patterns of rich and poor two ways. Using results from a nationally representative survey that included a donation opportunity at the end, researchers looked at how patterns of giving corresponded to wealth distribution in donors’ home states. See “Income inequality,” A2

ALIW GROUNDBREAKING RITES The Aliw Broadcasting Corp. (ABC) on Tuesday held its groundbreaking ceremony for the 50,000-watt tower of dwIZ 882 radio in Obando, Bulacan. Photo shows (from left) Ryan Flores, regional operations executive of ABC; Abet Sikat, vice president for sales and marketing of ABC; Bernard Villasor, municipal administrator of Obando; Josephine Reyes, president/CEO of ABC; Randy Cabangon, vice president and general manager of ABC; Eugene Castro, network engineer of ABC; Maricel Lacsamana, president of One Mari Builders, contractor; and Ricky Alegre, senior vice president of ABC, at the groundbreaking rites. Stephanie Tumampos

n japan 0.3838 n UK 71.2721 n HK 6.0834 n CHINA 7.3787 n singapore 33.2724 n australia 33.8943 n EU 50.1173 n SAUDI arabia 12.5709

Source: BSP (24 November 2015)


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