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Thursday, August 4, 2022 Vol. 17 No. 300
P. | | 7 DAYS A WEEK
GROWTH COULD HIT 6-7%
TAIWANESE President Tsai Ing-wen (standing), speaks during a meeting with US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other members of Congress in Taipei, Taiwan, Wednesday, August 3, 2022. Pelosi, meeting top officials in Taiwan despite warnings from China, said Wednesday that she and other congressional leaders in a visiting delegation are showing they will not abandon their commitment to the self-governing island. Story in “World,” page A10. TAIWAN PRESIDENTIAL OFFICE VIA AP
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@caiordinario
ESPITE surging inflation, the Philippine economy remains on track to posting a full year growth of 6 to 7 percent this year, according to a local think tank. In its latest Market Call report, First Metro Investment Corp.University of Asia and the Pacific (FMIC-UA&P) Capital Market Research said, however, that GDP growth in the second quarter will be slower than the first quarter’s 8.3 percent. Data from the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) showed inflation was above 5 percent in the second quarter or the April to June period. Second quarter GDP, meanwhile, grew 12 percent in 2021. “Given the positive data and improved consumer sentiment, the economy will continue to recover rapidly, albeit at a slightly milder pace. We still see the economy expand by 6 percent to 7 percent for the entire year,” the report stated. FMIC-UA&P Capital Market Research said their optimism for the year stemmed from expectations that infrastructure spending is expected to accelerate in the second half of the year. The think tank said this will be
fuelled by better fiscal space as tax revenues recover during the period. Part of the improvement in tax revenues is the positive impact of the peso depreciation on sectors like the Business Process Outsourcing (BPO). The peso depreciation against the dollar, FMIC-UA&P Capital Market Research said, will also benefit Overseas Filipino Workers, who will enjoy higher remittances. It added that the country’s export sector will also benefit. “We see the peso depreciation to boost income of some 70 million Filipinos and offset likely softer consumer spending due to the elevated inflation. We expect a short-run respite for the peso with the US dollar weakening from its peak and Philippine trade deficit lower in H2 [second half of the year] from record highs in May and June,” the think tank said. FMIC-UA&P Capital Market Research said the country’s growth
THE BROADER LOOK »A6
Shift to hybrid forced BPOs to be ‘creative’ in employee benefits B A E. S J
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HE shift to a hybrid work setup has prompted business process outsourcing (BPO) companies to become “more creative” in providing benefits to their employees, says IT and Business Process Association of the Philippines (IBPAP). “In terms of these compensation, these benefits in general, we’ve had to be very creative, especially since it’s a very fierce market out there,” said Frankie Antolin, IBPAP Executive Director for Talent Attraction and Development at a forum in Makati on Wednesday. The IBPAP official emphasized that prior to shifting to the hybrid setup, BPO firms’ focus was on the soaring transportation allowance, which had to be rechanneled into “digital content, more of the internet, some subsidy in terms of power” and some that employees could use while setting up their office. Antolin noted that as these firms transition to a “new world order” in terms of hybrid work, they had to resort to creativity in terms of shifting the pieces of the pie, if
there is really no room to increase the overall amount. Meanwhile, Antolin said that IBPAP, together with its partner associations, have been “looking at something a little bit more permanent” in terms of the work set-up that the Association will be implementing. However, she stressed that it’s still an ongoing conversation. Nonetheless, the IBPAP official said they are weighing their decision according to the country’s competitors across the region and even across the globe, as IBPAP wants to ensure that the country remains a lot more competitive in that aspect. In a survey done by IBPAP, employees of a number of companies indicated that they’re more efficient and productive in a hybrid model. In addition, she said, the type of workplace model arrangement will affect their decision to stay in the company. According to the IBPAP official, post-pandemic, “about 75 percent of IT and Business Process Management [IT-BPM] organizations C A
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MECO tags evacuation sites, shelters for OFWs B M T-B @maloutalosig
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VERYTHING is very normal, very calm, especially our OFWs.” The Philippines’s top representative to Taiwan Silvestre Bello III made this assurance Wednesday when asked by BM on the situation in Taiwan following the controversial visit of US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Pelosi arrived in Taiwan Tuesday night despite dire warnings
from Beijing that it would take all “necessary measures” to defend the territorial sovereignty of China. On Wednesday, China was on high military alert; 21 of its warplanes entered the Taiwan Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ), and the Taiwan government web site was attacked. China regards Taiwan as a renegade province and has been blocking international efforts to recognize it as an independent state. S “MECO,” A
PESO EXCHANGE RATES US 55.3930 ■ JAPAN 0.4159 ■ UK 67.3856 ■ HK 7.0566 ■ SINGAPORE 40.0615 ■ AUSTRALIA 38.3264 ■ SAUDI ARABIA 14.7447 ■ EU 56.3181 ■ KOREA 0.0422 ■ CHINA 8.2064
Source: BSP (August 3, 2022)