Businessmirror april 04, 2015

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PENANCE Good Friday was commemorated in Malibay, Pasay City, with processions that include devotees who self-flagellate (left photo) as expressions of penance. Far left photo shows a Pabasa station, a popular Filipino Catholic tradition that involves uninterrupted reading of the Pasyon, an epic narrative of Christ’s Life, Passion, Death and Resurrection. It lasts for several days and ends at 3 p.m. on Good Friday. nonie reyes/stephanie tumampos

three-time rotary club of manila journalism awardee 2006, 2010, 2012

U.N. Media Award 2008

BusinessMirror

www.businessmirror.com.ph

A broader look at today’s business

Tuesday, November 2014 Vol.No. 10177 No. 40 Saturday, April 4,18, 2015 Vol. 10

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P25.00 nationwide | 3 sections 16 pages | 7 days a week

exports growth to miss govt target as businessmen put expansion plans on hold

Foreign investors still wary of port mess

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he Philippine Economic Zone Authority (Peza) said further improvement is needed to ease congestion at the country’s ports, no matter that Malacañang claimed that the problem has effectively been solved. As a consequence, various investors are wary of introducing new or expanded projects.

“There have been some improvements, but [they have] been quite low. [They’re] not at the level that will give confidence to new projects, or even expansion projects, for our companies now,” Peza Promotions and Public Relations Head Elmer San Pascual said in an interview. Businesses have been wary of Malacañang’s declaration that the congestion in the country’s main gateways has been solved, given that the influx of goods into the country is at season low. The upcoming peak season, from May to June, should help validate the claim, businesssector personalities have said. Currently, export-oriented enterprises in the special zones remain hard-pressed to justify to their principals abroad slowed production and decreased exports. These developments helped extinguish any notion of further expansion plans in the Philippines for now. Efforts to optimize port use in Batangas, San Pascual said, have bettered the situation only minimally, as infrastructure at the port is unsophisticated and less able to accommodate large volumes of cargo. Considering the hesitance of foreign investors, San Pascual said Peza Director General Lilia B. de Lima anticipates single-digit export growth this year of only 8 percent, effectively a downgrade from the assumed growth of 10 percent. See “Port mess,” A2

DOTC goes full blast on developing regional airports in Visayas, Mindanao

By Lorenz S. Marasigan

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Among the salient features of the legislation is the creation of a TEA in the annual GAA, that would account for the incentives, pinning more accountability to how investment promotion agencies (IPAs) administer and grant such incentives, and providing the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) authority to impose requirements before the award of such perks, among others.

he transportation department has shifted into high gear its plans of developing several of the country’s regional airports— as the term of the current administration nears its conclusion—and wrapped up the initial terms of the auction for at least one major key infrastructure deal, set for preliminary dialogue on Tuesday. Information from the PublicPrivate Partnership (PPP) Center showed that the Department of Transportation and Communications (DOTC) has finally decided to bundle the five aviation hubs into two separate deals. The first package is composed of the Bacolod-Silay Airport, P20.26 billion; and Iloilo Airport, P30.40 billion; while the second bundle consists of the New Bohol, or Panglao Airport, P2.34 billion; Laguindingan Airport, P14.62 billion; and Davao Airport, P40.57 billion. The Bacolod Airport, also known as the Bacolod-Silay Airport, commenced operations in 2008 and is one of the recently completed airports in the Philippines with modern facilities. The airport is in Silay City, Negros Occidental, and generally caters to traffic for Negros Island—including Bacolod City—which is one of the most populous cities in the Western Visayas region. Tourism is one of the main industries in Negros Occidental and is fast growing, with domestic tourists reaching 1.33 million in 2013. The Iloilo A ir port, on the other hand, is in Cabatuan, province of Iloilo, and is among the top 5 airports in the Philippines in terms of traffic data. It started its commercial

Continued on A2

See “Airports,” A8

PREPARING FOR CHEDENG In preparation for a coming typhoon, billboards on Epifanio de los Santos Avenue have their tarpaulins taken down. Moving west-northwest at 17 kilometers per hour, with maximum sustained winds of 150 kph near the center and gustiness of up to 180 kph, Typhoon Chedeng (international code name Maysak) has weakened slightly as it moves toward the eastern coast of Central and Northern Luzon, according to the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration. Chedeng is expected to make landfall over the eastern coast of Aurora and Isabela provinces on Sunday. nonoy lacza

Lawmakers face dilemma over Timta By Recto Mercene

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he Tax Incentives Management and Transparency Act (Timta) is one measure that President Aquino had promised to enact before his term ends. Now, with a little more than a year before Mr. Aquino steps down from office, the bill remains mired in controversy. Timta seeks to promote transparency and accountability in the grant

PESO exchange rates n US 44.7250

and administration of tax incentives to business entities, and private individuals and corporations. Critics, however, pounced on Timta, or House Bill (HB) 2942, authored by Rep. Maria Leonor Gerona-Robredo of Camarines Sur, for various reasons. The Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) had also joined the opposition bandwagon. It issued a position paper, asking lawmakers to reconsider HB 2942, while the Joint Foreign

Chambers of the Philippines(JFC) made the same appeal. Their concern was contained in a letter sent in March to House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Rep. Miro S. Quimbo of the Second District of Marikina City. Other critics said HB 2942 “contains a bizarre and unique provision that would fix the amount of tax incentives for a given year by adding a ‘tax- expenditure account [TEA]’ to the General Appropriations Act [GAA].”

n japan 0.3726 n UK 66.3182 n HK 5.7687 n CHINA 7.2142 n singapore 32.6055 n australia 34.1256 n EU 48.0570 n SAUDI arabia 11.9238 Source: BSP (1 April 2015)


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