“If you are repeatedly having to say, in very strong terms, that what he has said is unacceptable, why are you still endorsing him? What does this say about your party that this is your standard-bearer?”—President Barack Obama, who challenged Republicans to withdraw their support for their party’s nominee, Donald Trump. AP
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“The ultimate objective of Japan is to cook [up] excuses for adjusting by leaps and bounds its military and security policies and accelerating its arms expansion, even rewriting the pacifist constitution.”—China’s Defense Ministry, in reaction to Japan’s annual defense report. AP
“Today, in schools they are teaching this to children—to children!—that everyone can choose their gender.”—Pope Francis, who blamed textbooks supplied by unspecified “persons and institutions who donate money.” AP
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Thursday, August 4, 2016 Vol. 11 No. 299
VP ADMITS CRAFTING HOUSING PROGRAM DIFFICULT SANS DATA
Robredo on housing mess: We’re clueless 3.9M T By Cai U. Ordinario
he Duterte administration could find it difficult to jumpstart a program to erase the housing backlog sans an inventory of available lands for mass housing and a comprehensive list of homeless Filipinos.
INSIDE
‘GUGA’ NOT LOSING HOPE
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The country’s housing backlog in 2013, according to the SHDA’s estimates
Vice President Maria Leonor G. Robredo said she wants to deal with the country’s housing problem through a Continued on A2
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health&Fitness
BEAUTIES AT RWM Organizers of the Resorts World Manila (RWM) Masters 2016 pose with Mutya ng Pilipinas 2016 winners at the press launch of the RWM Masters 2016. (From left) second runner-up Ashley Nicole Singh, first runner-up Lynette Bradford, Asian Tour Director for Tour and Player Affairs Cho Minn Thant, Miss Asia Pacific International Ganiel Akrisha Krishnan, RWM COO Stephen Reilly, Miss RWM Jannie Alipo-on, Southwoods Manila Golf and Country Club Chairman Robert John L. Sobrepeña, Miss Tourism International Justin Mae San Jose and Miss Overseas Communities Michelle Thurland. ALYSA SALEN
Unbeaten U.S. basketball teams ready for Rio Olympics
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SISTER ACT: CATE, BRONTE CHASE GOLD IN RIO
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Duterte to revise govt bidding rule By David Cagahastian
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ever before have Chinese companies had so much cash and so little to spend it on. With investment opportunities sparse amid the country’s weakest economic expansion in a quarter century, Chinese firms reported an 18-percent jump in cash holdings during their latest quarter, the biggest increase in six years. The $1.2-trillion stockpile—which excludes banks and brokerages—grew at a faster pace than in the United States, Europe and Japan, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. While there are worse problems than having too much cash, China Inc.’s unprecedented hoard is frustrating both policy-makers and
PESO exchange rates n US 47.0260
2.8% The growth in China’s private spending on fixed assets in the first semester, way slower than last year’s 10 percent
investors. Because companies lack the confidence to spend on new projects, government attempts to boost grow th by pumping money into the financial system are falling short. Stockholders, meanwhile, would rather see bigger dividends or share buybacks than a buildup of idle cash on
corporate balance sheets. “This is actually becoming a bigger and bigger issue,” said Herald van der Linde, the Hong Kong-based head of Asia-Pacific equity strategy at HSBC Holdings Plc. “Cash is becoming a point of debate.” The impulse to hoard, instead of invest, is relatively new for a country where corporate risk-taking has been rewarded for much of the past 25 years. But as economic growth moves deeper below 7 percent from double-digit levels just a few years ago, the change in mind-set has been stark. Growth in China’s private spending on fixed assets, which topped 10 percent last year, slowed to 2.8 percent in the six months through June, the weakest level on record. See “China firms,” A2
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resident Duterte said he would ignore the rules of the Commission on Audit (COA) in the procurement of equipment and medical facilities for the military, saying the lowest bids for these contracts are not necessarily the most advantageous to the government. In his impromptu speech to wounded soldiers at the V. Luna General Hospital in Quezon City on Tuesday, Mr. Duterte promised to provide new medical facilities and a new hospital building for the military by December this year. “I don’t want that it would take two years for it to be finished. Let’s give them the hospital, the appropriate building, and not delay the procurement. As for the equipment, I don’t believe in accepting the lowest bid,” Mr. Duterte told the wounded soldiers. “It will all be expedited. I don’t want it to be delayed just to accommodate some people. And I’m not the type of person who believes in whatever
the COA says. Because, even if you accept the lowest bid, the winner will shortchange you with substandard equipment. Which is why I told the COA that I will not follow them,” he said. For the planned new building at the V. Luna General Hospital, which he envisions to be a state-of-the-art medical facility for the military and their families, Mr. Duterte said he would no longer hold any bidding and will personally monitor the procurement. “The money is already there. I would require this to be monitored closely, but I don’t want any bidding, because I will be there. I’ll be the one to do it,” he said. President Duterte said he would discuss with the COA the proposal to revise procurement rules to put more premium on the quality of goods and services in considering which bidder should get the government contract. He said the policy of blindly awarding government contracts to the lowest bidder is a source of corruption, as the See “Duterte,” A2
FED, TAX REFORMS SEEN AFFECTING BSP POLICY By Bianca Cuaresma
D China firms have $1-trillion cash that they are too scared to spend
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espite the central bank’s guidance on the “appropriateness” of current monetary-policy settings, ING Bank Manila economist Joey Cuyegkeng said the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’s (BSP) setting could be at risk due to fiscal changes and developments from the US Federal Reserve (the Fed). In a recent analysis of the Philippine economy, Cuyegkeng said the risk factors to monetary policy may push the central bank’s Monetary Board to tweak its current policy settings. The economist said the first risk would arise from expected changes in taxation, as proposed by the current administration’s economic managers. “The DOF [Department of Finance] plans to submit the tax-reform package by next month for Congress to pass before the end of the year. The tax package is expected to include higher taxes for sweetened beve rages, junk foods, petroleum products and possibly reduced exemptions to VAT [value-added tax], and also higher VAT rate,” Cuyegkeng said.
“The measures would offset the revenue losses from income-tax reform and finance higher fiscal spending, despite a higher deficit spending target of 3 percent of GDP. We estimate that the inflation impact could be around 1 percentage added to the current inflation-rate expectation,” he added. “Second-round effects may push inflation even higher, which may necessitate some adjustments to monetary policy,” Cuyengkeng said. In the international scheme, Cuyegkeng said the timing of the next hike, as the Fed chairman changes her tone and guidance, will be crucial to the BSP’s monetary-policy settings. “We have accelerated the timing of the rate hike to the first quarter of 2017, which implies that such outlook could be reflected earlier —by year-end,” Cuyegkeng said. “In addition, the external payments position may not be as rosy as in the past and as earlier expected, especially with a robust domestic demand that is reflected in strong imports and a larger trade deficit,” he added. The BSP will have its next monetary-policy meeting on August 11.
n japan 0.4662 n UK 62.8267 n HK 6.0599 n CHINA 7.0930 n singapore 35.1229 n australia 35.7821 n EU 52.8102 n SAUDI arabia 12.5423
Source: BSP (3 August 2016 )