PHL’s ODA projects portfolio revised By Cai U. Ordinario
ects encountered problems during implementation, prompting the eight agency-implementors to seek restructuring. “[The projects are] expected to be restructured in CY 2020, covering extension of loan validity and/ or implementation period, changes in scope, cost, implementation arrangements and loan reallocation. Agency requests for restructuring will require ICC [Investment Coordination Committee] review, approval, and/or Neda Board confirmation,” the Neda said. The list included 19 projects funded by the Japan International Cooperation Agency (Jica), the largest source of the country’s
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VEN before the pandemic, several Official Development Assistance (ODA) projects needed to be restructured due to changes in project design and cost, according to the National Economic and Development Authority (Neda). In its 2019 ODA Portfolio Review, the total ODA portfolio as of December 2019 amounted to $21.62 billion. This consisted of 84 loans worth $19.98 billion or 92 percent of the total portfolio; and 268 grants worth $1.64 billion or 8 percent. Neda said 32 of the total proj-
RESIDENTS present their quarantine passes to policemen guarding the entrance to Dagonoy Market in San Andres, Manila. President Duterte announced late Monday that Metro Manila will revert to the more relaxed general community quarantine from August 19 to 31, 2020. ROY DOMINGO
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ODA loans; four projects each funded by the Korean Economic Development Cooperation Fund (KEDCF) and International Fund for Agricultural Development (Ifad); and two projects funded by the Chinese government. One project each is funded by the Ifad and the Asian Development Bank (ADB); the Italian government; and World Bank and the Agence Française de Développement (AFD), or the French Development Agency. The projects funded by Jica include the Flood Risk Management Project-Cagayan de Oro River, which is set to be restructured next Continued on A2
BusinessMirror A broader look at today’s business
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BAYANIHAN 2 FUNDING www.businessmirror.com.ph
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Wednesday, August 19, 2020 Vol. 15 No. 314
P25.00 nationwide | 2 sections 16 pages | 7 DAYS A WEEK
NOW AT P166.5B IN BICAM
TOP view of the Sta. Monica-Lawton Bridge Project, which is set to open in 2021, according to the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH). Secretary Mark A. Villar said final pouring activities are ongoing at the midspan of the bridge, a key component of the BGC-Ortigas Road Link Project, one of 22 modes for decongesting Edsa and C5. The 210-meter main superstructure will connect across Pasig River the Lawton Avenue in Makati City and Sta. Monica Street in Pasig City. Despite constraints posed by the Covid-19 pandemic, the DPWH targets to fully finish the Sta. Monica-Lawton Bridge this December. PHOTO COURTESY OF DPWH
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By Jovee Marie N. Dela Cruz
EMBERS of the bicameral conference committee deliberating the proposed Bayanihan to Recover as One Act or the Bayanihan 2 have reached an agreement to further increase the stimulus fund to P166.5 billion.
This P166.5-billion proposal of the bicameral panel is higher than the proposed P162 billion of the House of Representatives and P140 billion of the Senate. Under the highlights of the bicameral committee meeting received by reporters on Tuesday, the increases in allocation were given to the Department of Health for the employment of emergency human resource for health and to Department of Labor and Employment’s (DOLE) cash-for-work program.
The bicameral committee also decided to increase the capital infusion to government banks; support to the agricultural sector; and credit assistance to local government units. However, the committee agreed that the budget allocated for the Department of Tourism (DOT) was shelved and was distributed in the allocations for the DOLE, government banks and the Department of Public Works and Highways for tourism infrastructure.
P10-B TOURISM INFRA FUND SPREAD OUT AMID BUDGET ROW
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Continued on A2
By Bernadette D. Nicolas
T
HE Philippine Health Insurance Corporation (PhilHealth) started suffering major financial losses way back in 2004 after its then president and now Health Secretary Francisco Duque launched the program dis-
tributing free 5 million PhilHealth cards allegedly to shore up the campaign of then President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo (GMA). This was one of the claims made by PhilHealth Regional Vice President Dennis Adre as the Senate Committee of the Whole continued hearings on Tuesday on the
PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 48.6870
alleged irregularities in the state health insurer. Duque strongly denied Adre’s claim that he gave explicit instructions to PhilHealth officials to give the cards on the basis of a supposed vote-mapped distribution list. Continued on A2
DUQUE
AP/AARON FAVILA
PhilHealth losses traced to 2004 card drive
HE bicameral conference committee on the Bayanihan to Recover as One Act or Bayanihan 2 has shelved the budget allocated for the Department of Tourism’s infrastructure arm, amid a heated debate between lawmakers and stakeholders—backed by Tourism Secretary Berna Romulo Puyat—over priorities amid the pandemic. The fund was distributed in the allocations for the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE), government banks and the Department of Public Works and Highways for tourism infrastructure. A BusinessMirror source confirmed this shelved DOT budget was the P10 billion allocated by the House for the Tourism Infrastructure and Enterprise Zone Authority (Tieza), and which the DOT chief and 17 stakeholder groups had described as unnecessary. Working capital, not more construction projects, is what pandemic-lashed tourism enterprises badly need to recover, they told congressmen. Despite the shelving of the P10-billion budget, House Committee on Cooperative Development Chairman and COOP-Natcco party-list Rep. Sabiniano Canama urged Tourism Secretary Romulo-Puyat not to abandon the workers in the tourism industry. Earlier, lawmakers said the House had allocated P10 billion for Tieza for its infrastructure projects and another P51 billion in additional capital to government financial institutions (GFIs) to lend out to the tourism and transportation sectors,
Continued on A2
n JAPAN 0.4592 n UK 63.8433 n HK 6.2821 n CHINA 7.0237 n SINGAPORE 35.5951 n AUSTRALIA 35.1131 n EU 57.8255 n SAUDI ARABIA 12.9825
Source: BSP (August 18, 2020)