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ADB: PHL REMITTANCES www.businessmirror.com.ph
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Tuesday, August 4, 2020 Vol. 15 No. 299
P25.00 nationwide | 2 sections 16 pages | 7 DAYS A WEEK
TO SUFFER DEEP CUTS
TEACHERS and property custodians of Navotas Elementary School deliver school supplies and self-learning modules to learners’ residences in Barangay San Jose, Navotas City, in a division-wide simulation exercise conducted by the Department of Education on Monday. NONOY LACZA
T
By Cai U. Ordinario
HE Philippines will be among the hardest hit economies in Southeast Asia when it comes to the decline in remittances this year, according to the Asian Development Bank (ADB).
In a Policy Brief, the ADB said remittances in the Philippines are expected to decline by 20.2 percent in the worst-case scenario. This will affect 8.4 percent of households receiving remittances locally. On Monday, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) reported that remittances declined 19 percent in May, as the impact of Covid-19 was hitting host countries, displacing thousands of OFWs. Story on page A2. Meanwhile, the other South-
east Asian country that will suffer a large reduction in remittances is Indonesia, with a 21.4-percent decline in remittances. However, only 3.3 percent of its households receive remittances. “The countries likely to face more severe effects from the pandemic-induced decline in remittance inflows are the ones where remittance shares to GDP and per capita remittances are high,” ADB said. Continued on A2
Close, open, now close again for businesses By Elijah Felice Rosales
A
FTER reopening this weekend, the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) has ordered business activities to shut down again in compliance with the presidential directive placing Metro Manila and nearby provinces under modified enhanced community quarantine (MECQ). Trade Secretary Ramon M. Lopez on Monday said all those recently authorized to operate in areas under general community quarantine (GCQ) will have to close again for the next 15 days.
This is due to President Duterte’s order on Sunday to revert Metro Manila and adjacent provinces to MECQ. Business activities, such as dine-in restaurants, barber shops, salons, gyms, review and testing centers, personal grooming shops and Internet cafes, will have to shut down anew, even as most of them have already invested in health equipment required for their reopening. Lopez said business owners can use the MECQ stretch as a period to streamline procedures and prepare facilities in compliance with health standards. How-
PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 49.1140
ever, this may appear impossible for a number of establishments given the ban on public transport that comes with the imposition of MECQ. “We hope that this break will allow these businesses to sufficiently prepare for better processes and facilities for compliance with the health standards when they soon reopen,” Lopez said. “We wish that this move back to MECQ will break the increasing trend of positive Covid cases and will eventually allow us to bring back the much needed livelihood and jobs of our countrymen,” he added.
Many business activities are still allowed to operate in MECQ areas, although their capacity is limited to just 50 percent of their maximum. Most of those permitted to do business are engaged in the delivery of essential goods and services, such as groceries, hardware, drug stores and commercial centers. Lopez was earlier opposed to the reimposition of stringent quarantine measures in Metro Manila. He argued that the country has to live with the virus, and a return to enhanced protocols will endanger both business operations and employment of workers.
ONLY MEDIUM CHANCE OF MEETING DEVT GOALS BY 2022–PSA Chapter/Sector Governance Justice Culture and Values Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Industry and Services Human Capital Development Social Protection Demographic Dividend Science and Technology Macroeconomy Competitiveness Infrastructure Environment Total
No. of Indicators by Likelihood of Achieving the Target High Medium Low Total 9 - 8 17 4 1 5 10 1 - - 1 20 6 34 60 6 4 8 18 7 4 12 23 4 - 5 9 2 2 3 7 2 1 - 3 8 2 3 13 10 - 3 13 18 1 8 27 5 2 2 9 96 23 91 210
Note: Indicators with submissions as of cut-off date with no pending concern for verification.
By Cai U. Ordinario
E
VEN before the pandemic, the Duterte administration’s progress in meeting its Philippine Development Plan (PDP) was not enough to meet its targets by 2022, according to the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA). Based on the Statistical Indicators on Philippine Development (StatDev), the PSA said the government only had a medium chance of meeting all its PDP targets by 2022. Of the 210 targets, the PSA said 91 targets may not be achieved and 23 had only a medium probability of being met. The PSA said 96 targets, however, have a high probability of being achieved. Continued on A2
See “Close, Open,” A2
n JAPAN 0.4641 n UK 64.2804 n HK 6.3368 n CHINA 7.0419 n SINGAPORE 35.7323 n AUSTRALIA 35.0232 n EU 57.8514 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.0960
Source: BSP (August 3, 2020)