BusinessMirror April 19, 2021.pdf

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100 NEW MINING DEALS COULD NET P21B—MGB Feb debt

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n Monday, April 19, 2021 Vol. 16 No. 187

P25.00 nationwide | 2 sections 20 pages |

payments down 77% to ₧33.3B By Bernadette D. Nicolas @BNicolasBM

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Residents in Manila fall in line to get a few basic goods from the P. Noval community pantry, one of several such outreach projects inspired by the “Community Pantry” of a young entrepreneur on Maginhawa Street in Quezon City. The community pantry has a simple rule, written in Filipino: Take only what you need, give what you can spare. The initiative, fueled by donations from ordinary people, has helped families affected by the strict lockdowns forced by a surge in Covid 19 cases. NONIE REYES

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By Jonathan L. Mayuga

@jonlmayuga

ITH the lifting of the moratorium on new mining projects following the signing of EO 130 by President Duterte, the Mines and Geosciences Bureau (MGB) is looking at granting new mining contracts that could generate additional revenues and boost the economy within the next five years. Mines and Geosciences Bureau Director Wilfredo G. Moncano said at least 100 new mining projects currently in the pipeline can generate additional revenue

of P20 billion in the form of excise tax and another P1 billion in annual revenue in the form of royalty tax. See “Mining deals,” A2

PESO exchange rates n US 48.4790

BIZ BACKS 3 LIB BILLS BUT FRETS OVER RETAIL FLOOR By Tyrone Jasper C. Piad @Tyronepiad

& Jovee Marie N. dela Cruz

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@joveemarie

HE business sector welcomed the recent Palace certification of three economic bills as urgent, but aired reservations over a provision lowering the capitalization requirement for foreign retailers. I n d u s t r y l e a d e r s i nt e r viewed by the BusinessMir-

ror said the pend ing bi l ls have been long awaited because their enactment spells more job opportunities and economic growth. President Duterte certified as urgent last week the following bills: amendments to Public Service Act (Senate Bill 2094), amendments to Foreign Investments Act (Senate Bill 1156), a nd a mend ments to Ret a i l Trade Liberalization Act (Senate Bill 1840). “We welcome the urgency the

administration is bringing to these three reforms, which the business sector has been advocating for a long time,” Makati Business Club Executive Director Coco Alcuaz said. Alcuaz said the bills can help the country attract job-creating investments, which is much more needed at a time when the economy is still reeling from the impact of the lockdown measures amid the Covid-19 pandemic. Continued on A8

EBT payments by the national government in February this year sank to P33.3 billion, dropping by almost 77 percent from P144.64 billion in the same month last year. Latest debt service data from the Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) showed a significant year-onyear decline in amortization payments and the doubling of interest payments in February. The government only paid P2.13 billion for amortization this year, plunging by 98.4 percent from last year’s P129.28 billion. Meanwhile, its interest payments for the same month hit P31.17 billion, twice as much as P15.35 billion in February 2020. For the first two months of the year, the national government shelled out P253.09 billion, lower by 12.9 percent compared to P290.69 billion in the same period a year ago. Amortization payments from January to February this year settled to P174.9 billion, falling by 18.2 percent from last year’s P213.92 billion. Interest payments had also hit P78.19 billion, inching up by 1.85 percent from P76.77 billion recorded last year. In 2020, government’s debt payments reached a new record high of P962.47 billion as it needed to keep up with more financial obligations to fund its war chest against the Covid-19 pandemic. The national government’s outstanding debt as of end-February this year has also soared to a new record high of P10.406 trillion as the government continued to borrow more money to respond to the raging Covid-19 pandemic. Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III earlier said they expect the national government’s debt this year to reach 57 percent of GDP. The country aims to borrow P3.03 trillion this year, almost the same amount it borrowed in 2020. As of end-2020, the country’s debt-to-GDP ratio surged to 54.5 percent—a 14-yearhigh—coming from a record-low 39.6 percent in the previous year.

n japan 0.4458 n UK 66.8477 n HK 6.2417 n CHINA 7.4336 n singapore 36.3302 n australia 37.5615 n EU 58.0245 n SAUDI arabia 12.9274

Source: BSP (April 16, 2021)


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