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Friday, December 6, 2019 Vol. 15 No. 57
Nov inflation up 1.3%, snaps 5-mo slow rise
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By Bianca Cuaresma
@BcuaresmaBM
ONSUMER prices in November ended a five-month streak of slower growth as base effects dissipated during the month, and analysts said any further rate cuts this year are unlikely. The Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) reported on Thursday that inflation rose to 1.3 percent in November this year from the 0.8 percent seen in the previous month. The November number puts the
country’s 11-month inflation average at 2.5 percent— well within the government’s 2-percent to 4-percent target range for the year. According to the PSA, the inflation uptrend during the month was
Growth has returned to fast lane–experts
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HE country’s gross domestic product (GDP) is expected to make a full recovery and grow faster in the fourth quarter of the year after a dismal performance in the first half of the year, economists said in a recent assessment. Analysts at First Metro Investment Corp. (FMIC) and the University of Asia and the Pacific (UA&P) agree that growth will hit 6.5 percent in the fourth quarter of the year, up from 6.2 percent in the third quarter of the year and 5.5 percent in the first half of 2019. “ T he PH economy has re turned to the fast lane with the 6.2-percent GDP growth in Q3, and we expect this to accelerate to 6.5 percent and above by Q4, as consumer, government and investment spending get into higher gear moving forward,” economists said in the latest is-
PESO EXCHANGE RATES n
sue of the Market Call, a joint monthly research publication by FMIC and UA&P. “Low inflation, huge job gains, and low interest rates will drive more robust consumer spending, while national government [NG] continues to ramp up infrastructure spending, and private sector propels PPP and capital goods investments. The exchange rate shall see renewed pressure as the BBB gains expand trade deficits again,” the think tank added. The experts’ positive outlook stemmed mainly from the national government’s heavy spending acceleration. “NG stepped heavily on the accelerator to post a hefty spending increase of 39 percent in September. This came after a decent 8.8-percent expansion in the preceding month. This marked the fastest increase in disbursement, See “Growth,” A2
mainly brought about by higher annual increases in prices of alcoholic beverages and tobacco. The uptick in November this year also coincided with the deceleration of inflation in the same
P25.00 nationwide | 5 sections 48 pages |
medal tally as of december 5, 2019 | 5:30 p.m. contingent
gold
silver
bronze
total
philippines
60
44
26
130
The BSP will carefully consider all the latest developments here and abroad at its upcoming monetarypolicy meeting on December 12, 2019 to ensure that the monetarypolicy stance remains consistent with the BSP’s price stability objective.” —Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas
vietnam
28
33
38
99
indonesia
23
32
32
87
malaYsia
23
13
23
59
singapore
19
14
27
60
thailand
16
20
26
62
CamBodia
2
3
17
22
mYanmar
1
7
23
31
BrUnei
1
5
5
11
month last year—from its peak of 6.7 percent down to 6 percent in November 2018, indicating the
laos
0
2
10
12
timor-leste
0
0
0
0
Continued on A2
DOJ to push for scrapping water deals By Joel R. San Juan @jrsanjuan1573
J
MOBILE LEGENDS Bang Bang, Dota 2, Hearthstone, StarCraft II, Arena of Valor and Tekken 7 take center stage as eSports makes its debut in the 30th Southeast Asian Games on Thursday, with the 27-man Philippine team holding fort against the best professional gamers from the region in the six-day competition at the Filoil Flying V Centre, in San Juan City. SEA Games stories and photos on pages C1-C3. BERNARD TESTA
USTICE Secretary Menardo Guevarra said on Thursday the government will push for the scrapping of the 1997 concession agreements between the Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage System (MWSS) private firms Maynilad Water Services and Manila Water. These were onerous and disadvantageous to the government and the consuming public, he said. The government, Guevarra also said, is unlikely to enter into a compromise agreement with the concessionaires in connection with the ruling of The Permanent Court of Arbitration in Singapore last month, directing it to pay Ayalaowned Manila Water P7.39 billion
US 51.0670 n JAPAN 0.4692 n UK 66.9335 n HK 6.5233 n CHINA 7.2427 n SINGAPORE 37.4666 n AUSTRALIA 34.9911 n EU 56.5924 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.6186
See “DOJ,” A2
Source: BSP (5 December 2019 )