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Wednesday, August 5, 2020 Vol. 15 No. 300
P25.00 nationwide | 2 sections 16 pages | 7 DAYS A WEEK
FIRST day of MECQ in Cainta, Rizal, on Tuesday finds people putting on face shields on top of face masks. Aside from shields for backriding motorcyclists, the government now adds face shields to the list of health protocols people must follow when going out in public. The Department of Transportation, in its Memorandum Circular 2020-014, has required all passengers in areas where public transportation is allowed to wear face shields starting August 15. BERNARD TESTA
By Bernadette D. Nicolas & Butch Fernandez
W
ITH operating losses of P90 billion and counting, state-run Philippine Health Insurance Corporation (PhilHealth) admitted on Tuesday it may collapse in 2022 without additional funding from the government as the Covid-19 pandemic forces it to increase benefit payouts despite declining collections.
Briefing senators, PhilHealth Acting Senior Vice President Nerissa R. Santiago revealed that the Covid-19 impact slashed the agency’s actuarial life to just one year from more than 10 years before the pandemic hit the country. “Before the pandemic occurred, the actuarial life was more than 10 years. However because of the pandemic, there is a double impact on the program because of the decreased collections, as well as the expected increase in benefit
payouts,” Santiago said in response to Minority Leader Senator Franklin Drilon’s question. Senators convened as a Committee of the Whole on Tuesday, opening an inquiry into fresh allegations of corruption and mismanagement at the state health insurer. The revelations of PhilHealth’s problems—characterized by the agency’s President and Chief Executive Officer Ricardo Morales as apparently part of a serial “bash-PhilContinued on A2
‘POGOs, BPOs will still drive office segment’ By VG Cabuag
L
EECHIU Property Consultants Inc. said Philippine online gaming operators (POGOs), composed of mostly Chinese players, and the traditional business-process outsourcing (BPO) firms will continue to drive the of-
fice market this year despite a series of scaling down of operations during the lockdown. David Leechiu, the company’s president, said POGOs and other companies have cut back their operations in the first half of the year, resulting in a higher 8-percent vacancy rate. A total of 89,000 square me-
PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 49.1040
ters were vacated, with POGOs accounting for half of the spaces vacated, followed by the BPOs at 12 percent. The rest was accounted for by other companies. “Tax regulations and movement restrictions curtailed POGO growth and, in some instances, led to contraction,” he said.
The company said there were a total of 234,000 square meters of new leases, and 89,000 square meters of vacated spaces, resulting in a net absorption of 145,000 square meters. “The Philippine office segment has not yet entered a point See “POGOs,” A2
U.N. CRAFTS P6-B PHL COVID PLAN, LARGEST SINCE ‘YOLANDA’ By Cai U. Ordinario
T
HE United Nations has crafted the largest international humanitarian response plan in the Philippines since Supertyphoon Yolanda struck in 2013. In a statement, the UN said it crafted a P6-billion Humanitarian Country Team (HCT) coronavirus 2019 (Covid-19) Response Plan for the Philippines. The plan aims to provide critical health interventions and multisectoral humanitarian assistance to the 5.4 million poorest and most marginalized Filipinos living in poor, densely populated urban areas. It also prioritizes the safety and well-being of women and girls. “The pandemic is challenging the capacity of response of any single country in the world. Our role is to make best use of our global knowledge and resources to join government’s efforts to contribute to the safety and well-being of the Filipino people,” said Gustavo Gonzalez, UN Resident Coordinator and Humanitarian Coordinator in the Philippines. See “UN,” A2
n JAPAN 0.4634 n UK 64.2231 n HK 6.3358 n CHINA 7.0330 n SINGAPORE 35.6705 n AUSTRALIA 34.9620 n EU 57.7610 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.0958
Source: BSP (August 4, 2020)