Businessmirror september 08, 2015

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Thursday 18, 2014 Vol.8,102015 No. 40 Tuesday, September Vol. 10 No. 334

Govt posts deficit on better spending

By VG Cabuag

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roperty developer Megaworld Corp. said it is spending P10 billion over a 10-year period in developing its township project in the city of San Fernando in Pampanga. The company said its 19th township development, measuring about 35.6 hectares beside the provincial capitol, will have clusters of buildings both for residential and the business-process outsourcing industry. “This is the perfect time and opportunity to be present in this progressive province, where else but right at the heart of the provincial capital, which is a prime location for See “Megaworld,” A8

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PHL to adopt new development targets despite difficulties in achieving MDGs By Cai U. Ordinario Second of three parts

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By David Cagahastian

he nation’s budget as of end-July ended as a shortfall, amounting to P18.5 billion, and attributed to higher disbursement in the preceding three-month period ending in June. The government quickly announced to spend more beginning the current quarter to achieve higher economic growth. In the first half, the government’s fiscal position stood as a fiscal surplus, which quickly generated renewed speculation of another bout of underspending that could mean another period of subpar performance in terms of local output, measured as the gross domestic product (GDP), this year. However, the Department of Finance (DOF) reported that the budget surplus as of end-June was due to higher revenue collection, and that the government had been ramping up on its disbursement program beginning the April-toJune period. Officials said this was reflected in the July fiscal data, which showed a budget deficit of P18.5 billion. The DOF said that, in the first nine months, total expenditures amounted to P1.28 trillion, reflecting an increase of 11 percent from expenditures made during the same seven-

month period last year. Out of the amount, only P209.2 billion was used to pay interest on government debts. This was only 16 percent of total expenditures for the period, down from 18 percent registered in the same period in 2014, implying that more money was freed to spend for projects that have social or economic impact. “The pace of expenditure growth we are seeing has a clear positive trend since we adopted a whole-of-government approach to addressing underspending. Expenditures are on track to drive our growth for the third quarter. We will continue to unblock constraints to growth. It is encouraging to note that we are starting the quarter with a better footing on the public expenditure side,” Finance Secretary Cesar V. Purisima said. Continued on A8

he country’s struggle to address poverty and other social ills through the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) has been long and arduous. Gilbert Llanto, former National Economic and Development Authority (Neda) deputy director general-turnedPhilippine Institute for Development Studies (Pids) president, said prior to the MDGs, the Philippines’s main development thrust was on poverty reduction through a more general approach. Llanto said most of the projects and programs implemented aimed to address poverty reduction through agriculture, since it is believed that a third of the poor in the country are engaged in farming or fishery. With the introduction of the MDGs, he said the government was able to craft programs and projects that addressed specific social concerns apart from poverty. Llanto added that the common development framework of the MDGs also pushed countries, like the Philippines, to meet the goals and address its development concerns. “Because you’re now comparing yourself with peers, there is peer pressure for the Philippines to reach the targets,” Llanto said. Pids senior research fellow Celia Reyes added that the MDGs represented a “major shift” in how countries viewed development. While some countries were focused on addressing poverty or reducing their indebtedness, Reyes said the MDGs provided a framework by which these development concerns can be viewed from a wider perspective. The multidimensional approach to development presented by the MDGs helped countries give attention to other development concerns that may have been neglected through the years or may have been put aside because of globalization. Reyes said inequalities between countries were addressed by the targets that were specified in the MDGs. Most targets did not recommend absolute numbers; rather, these targets focused on percentages. Continued on A2 KEVIN DELA CRUZ

Megaworld allots P10B for Pampanga township

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Abac bares proposals for Cebu Action Plan

By Cai U. Ordinario

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EBU CITY—The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) Business Advisory Council (Abac) has made key recommendations that seek to modernize the region’s markets. The Abac is hoping that these proposals would be included by Apec finance ministers in

PESO exchange rates n US 46.7370

the Cebu Action Plan. The recommendations are divided into key areas: financing of micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) and supply chains; expansion of financial inclusion; microinsurance; disaster-risk financing; bankable infrastructure projects; expansion of the role of the insurance and pension industries in regional development; development and integration of capital markets; and the Asia Region Funds Passport. “We believe that Apec has an important role to play in addressing the causes of these uncertainties by

promoting the inclusive and broadbased growth that will transform the entire Asia-Pacific region into a strong and resilient engine of the global economy,” the Abac wrote to Finance Secretary Cesar V. Purisima, who is the chairman of the Apec Finance Ministers’ Meeting. In financing MSMEs, the Abac said it endorsed the proposal to establish a public-private Financial Infrastructure Development Network to build credit-information systems for secured transactions and the use of movable assets as collateral. Continued on A8

n japan 0.3927 n UK 70.9374 n HK 6.0306 n CHINA 7.3533 n singapore 32.8209 n australia 32.3283 n EU 52.1164 n SAUDI arabia 12.4682 Source: BSP (7 September 2015)


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