AS Supertyphoon Rolly hit the country last weekend, the Philippine Red Cross (PRC) deployed a humanitarian caravan to Bicol Region, which suffered the brunt of the typhoon, on Monday, November 2. The caravan of rescue vehicles, equipment including generators, relief items and manpower, “will strengthen our response to the ongoing operations,” said PRC chairman and CEO, Sen. Richard Gordon. Phoenix Petroleum supported the fuel needs of the caravan. PHOTO COURTESY OF PHILIPPINE RED CROSS
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Wednesday, November 4, 2020 Vol. 16 No. 27
P25.00 nationwide | 2 sections 16 pages | 7 DAYS A WEEK
IN CONTRACTION ANEW DA: Farm loss from 2 typhoons now ₧4.5B
By Bianca Cuaresma
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EAK consumer demand nipped the manufacturing sector’s growth in the bud, as the country’s purchasing managers’ index (PMI)—the broad measure of the manufacturing sector’s performance— reverted back to contraction territory in October.
According to the report published by IHS Markit on Tuesday, the Philippines’s PMI in October hit 48.5, falling from the 50.1 index in the previous month. “The latest reading dropped marginally after indicating a broad stabilization across the sector during September, to signal a contraction in operating conditions,” the IHS Markit report said. The PMI is a composite index aimed to gauge the health of the country’s manufacturing sector. It is calculated as a weighted average of five individual subcomponents. Readings below 50 show deterioration in the industry while readings above the 50 threshold signal a growth in the manufacturing sector. The global think tank said manufacturing firms in October reported a quick decline in production volumes as domestic demand was muted during the month. “Firms reporting a downturn overwhelmingly attributed it to weaker demand conditions. That said, the rate of contraction was only marginal and much slower than the
By Jovee Marie N. Dela Cruz
T
CONSTRUCTION crew work on an unfinished portion of the Skyway Stage 3 on Tuesday, as the Department of Public Works and Highways announced that the project will open to the public before the year ends, according to Secretary Mark Villar. The P44.86-billion Skyway Stage 3 will provide a direct link between Buendia, Makati City, and the North Luzon Expressway in Balintawak, Quezon City. NONOY LACZA
HOTELS MAY STOP HOSTING OFWs ON OWWA’S P241-M ARREARS By Ma. Stella F. Arnaldo Special to the BusinessMirror
A
NUMBER of hotels in Metro Manila, Tagaytay and Cebu are now unable to pay the salaries of their employees, due to the burgeoning unpaid debt of the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration (OWWA) to them. According to Hotel Sales and Marketing Association (HSMA) President Christine Ann U. Ibar-
See “Manufacturing,” A2
PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 48.3960
reta, as of October 30, OWWA owes some P241.17 million to hotels being used as temporary quarantine establishments for returning overseas Filipino workers (OFWs). These hotels include: Sofitel Philippine Plaza at P45 million; Golden Phoenix, P36 million; Seda Residences Makati, P9.5 million; Astorias Ortigas and Makati, P11 million; Linden Suites, P19.3 million; Luxent Hotel, P12.9 million; Ace Hotels, P6 million; Quest Tagaytay, P3.2 mil-
lion; Discovery Suites, P3 million; Hotel Rembrandt, P7 million; Microtel/Tryp by Wyndham, P26.5 million; Midas Hotel, P4.1 million; Azumi Boutique Hotel, P3.5 million; One Pacific Place, P11.7 million; Quest Hotel Cebu, P15.7 million; Crimson Hotel Filinvest, P5 million; Marco Polo Cebu, P473,000; and Chateau Royale, P4 million. This is the second documented case of unpaid government See “Hotels,” A2
IBARRETA: “We will try to accommodate their needs, but at some point, we might have to do just that if OWWA continues to refuse paying our hotels. Our establishments need the income to pay our employees.”
HE combined damage and losses brought by recent Typhoon Quinta and Supertyphoon Rolly have reached P4.5 billion, the Department of Agriculture (DA) announced on Tuesday. Despite the reported damage and losses, DA Director for Operations Roy Abaya, in a virtual briefing, assured the public of enough food supplies to cover the demand until the end of the year. “[Despite this, the damages from these typhoons on our] major crops are still minimal. Our food supplies are enough, especially the rice and corn; we have supplies to provide food for the whole year. Hopefully, we can sustain this,” said Abaya, as he reiterated that farmers were able to harvest their crops earlier due to DA’s early warning advisory. According to Abaya, the combined damage and losses from the recent typhoons affected 77,958 famers and 115,148 hectares of agricultural areas in Regions 1, 2, 3, Calabarzon, Mimaropa, 5, 6, 7 and 9 as of 12 noon of Tuesday, November 3. The volume of production loss is at 262,539 metric tons (MT). The affected commodities include rice, corn, high-value crops, fisheries, livestock, irrigation and agri-fisheries, Abaya added. Of the affected farmers and fisherfolk, he said 47,864 were affected by Quinta while the 30,094, by Rolly. The DA official said Quinta damaged worth P2.5 billion of commodities, while Rolly recorded P1.9 billion as of the said date. The bulk of the losses from Rolly was incurred by rice farmers who See “Farm Loss,” A2
n JAPAN 0.4622 n UK 62.5083 n HK 6.2446 n CHINA 7.2324 n SINGAPORE 35.4679 n AUSTRALIA 34.1337 n EU 56.3523 n SAUDI ARABIA 12.9049
Source: BSP (November 3, 2020)