Duterte to get Bayanihan 2 for signing next week By Butch Fernandez & Jovee Marie N. Dela Cruz
T
HE Senate was poised to ratify late Thursday the P165-billion funding bill endorsed by a bicameral panel to bankroll the Bayanihan To Recover as One Act, also known as Bayanihan 2. The House of Representatives will ratify the bicameral version on Monday, according to the chamber’s leaders. Sen. Juan Edgardo Angara, Senate Finance Committee chairman, said the final version was agreed upon in an earlier meeting of senators and congressmen sitting in a bicameral conference panel that wrapped up the Bayanihan bill for timely approval by Congress, so it could be submitted to President Duterte for signing into law. Angara said P140 billion will be drawn
WORKERS put finishing touches to the new molecular laboratory in Barangay Teachers Village East, Quezon City, on Thursday. The local government is set to open the laboratory, which can process 500 tests per day, by the end of August. NONOY LACZA
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from regular appropriation allocations, while the balance of P25 billion will be funded from government savings or fresh revenues. The senator noted that just like Bayanihan 1, Bayanihan 2 can be deemed part of an extra power for the President given the emergency situation in the country with the Covid-19 pandemic. The Bayanihan packages effectively provide the Executive spending authority to respond to the pandemic by realigning the 2020 budget and legislating outlays for the response. While the bulk of Bayanihan 1 went to emergency doles for millions of Filipinos impacted by crippling lockdowns imposed to curb transmission of the deadly coronavirus, Bayanihan 2 is meant to help badly hit sectors recover, while allotting also funds for other vital pandemic measures like contact tracing and quarantine facilities.
As approved, Angara said Bayanihan 2 was crafted for the “survival and recovery” of the country from the Covid-19 pandemic, with 25 percent of the budget or over P40 billion allotted for the health sector. Tucked into the budget proposal is funding to buy medical supplies to contain Covid-19, including Covid test kits and personal protective equipment for health personnel assigned to Covid areas. Angara said it also included budget for contact tracers as well as the purchase of vaccines against Covid 19 and setting up isolation and quarantine facilities. In addition, it will fund the P10,000 a month “special risk allowance” for public and private health workers, apart from P15,000 for treatment of health workers afflicted with mild or moderate Covid 19 infection. Continued on A2
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Friday, August 21, 2020 Vol. 15 No. 316
P25.00 nationwide | 2 sections 16 pages | 7 DAYS A WEEK
KEY RATES UNTOUCHED F
OR the first time this year, the Monetary Board (MB) decided to take a breather from cutting interest rates to pump the local economy in four consecutive rate cuts for the first eight months of 2020.
The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) kept its main monetary policy rate unchanged on Thursday at 2.25 percent. Interest rates on the overnight deposit and lending facilities were likewise kept at 1.75 percent and 2.75 percent, respectively. The decision was based primarily on the MB’s assessment of a benign inflation in the economy, and that a “prudent pause” is deemed necessary for the time being. “The Monetary Board is of the view that monetary policy settings remain appropriate for the time being. A prudent pause will enable
the cumulative 175-basis-point reduction in the policy rate, as well as other monetary and regulatory relief measures by the BSP, to fully work their way through the economy, even as the national government continues to implement interventions to bolster economic activity and protect human lives and livelihoods,” the BSP said.
Inflation
THE board, meanwhile, raised inflation projections for 2020, 2021 and 2022. Continued on A2
‘LARGER STIMULUS NO GUARANTEE FOR MILDER RECESSION’ By Bernadette D. Nicolas
F
INANCE Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III said rolling out a larger stimulus package during the Covid-19 pandemic does not guarantee that a country will undergo a milder recession. Addressing local business chambers in North Luzon on Thursday, Dominguez argued that at least three countries experienced significant economic downturn despite having massive stimulus packages. “This is not the usual economic crisis, where a larger stimulus package translates into a milder recession. For instance, we have seen that there doesn’t seem to be a direct correlation between the size of one’s stimulus package and the drop in GDP,” he said in a videotaped message to participants of the 29th North Luzon Area Business Conference, which was organized online via Zoom by the Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry (PCCI). The country’s finance chief, who also heads the government’s Economic Development Cluster, noted that the economies of Malaysia, the United Kingdom and Sweden “retreated significantly despite massive stimulus packages.” See “Stimulus,” A2
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BUSINESSES at the Bonifacio Global City are still trying to recover from two weeks of reverting to modified enhanced community quarantine, as the government tries to balance the health of the people and the economy in its efforts to stem the coronavirus pandemic. According to one expert, though, this “either-or” equation is misleading. Read, “Good health outcomes vs. good economic outcomes: A false choice,” on page A7. NONIE REYES
Hotels cut room discounts to cover safety rules By Ma. Stella F. Arnaldo Special to the BusinessMirror
H
OTELS in Metro Manila have had to cut their average daily rate (ADR) on rooms by as much as 28 percent during the extreme community quarantines imposed by government to contain the spread of the novel coronavirus. This was among the findings of realestate services firm Santos Frank Knight in its Hospitality Sector Update for the second quarter 2020. But the hotels trimmed
their ADR discount to an average of 25 percent under general community quarantine (GCQ), “to compensate for the additional costs incurred in complying with the health and safety protocols by the DOT [Department of Tourism].” Other hotels, which reopened only during the GCQ, offered smaller room rate discounts to recover lost revenues. The company also projects a drop in new hotel rooms to 1,500 by the end of the year, from the original forecast of 2,700 rooms prior to the imposition of commu-
nity quarantines. In an e-mailed message, Kash Salvador, the company’s associate director for investment and capital markets, said, “Hospitality and tourism are among the hardest hit sectors in the real-estate industry. Occupancy has dropped drastically over the last couple of months that slumped hotel revenues, and the global tourism market is still far from going back to pre-Covid-19 levels. At this point, some investors are on the lookout for distressed hotels to acquire. It is very important now more than ever
that hotel owners and operators adapt and innovate to make use of their real estate in the changing times of today.” She added, “Local tourism will be the best bet in the industry’s start of recovery. Many of the country’s world-renowned tourist spots are just waiting to be rediscovered and enjoyed by the Filipinos.” Under the enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) and modified ECQ from March 16 to May 31, overall hotel occupancy plunged by 25 percent, with those
See “Hotels,” A2
n JAPAN 0.4580 n UK 63.6878 n HK 6.2659 n CHINA 7.0182 n SINGAPORE 35.4356 n AUSTRALIA 34.8765 n EU 57.5205 n SAUDI ARABIA 12.9482
Source: BSP (August 20, 2020)