PHL RESTRICTS TOURIST TRIPS TO SOKOR By Samuel P. Medenilla @sam_medenilla
& Recto Mercene @rectomercene
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ILIPINO tourists are now banned from traveling to South Korea, including Jeju Island, amid the growing number of coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) cases in the Asian country. In a press briefing on Wednesday, Presidential spokesman Salvador S. Panelo said the Inter-Agency Task Force on Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF) made the decision to minimize the exposure of Filipinos to the dreaded virus. The task force has also resolved to
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Thursday, February 27, 2020 Vol. 15 No. 140
‘Virus may have slowed rice shipments to PHL’ T By Bernadette D. Nicolas
@BNicolasBM
HE Bureau of Customs (BOC) said the 61.8-percent year-on-year decline in the country’s rice imports as of February 14 may have been partly caused by the stringent rules implemented by exporting countries to fight the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).
BOC Assistant Commissioner Vincent Philip Maronilla told the BusinessMirror that the bureau is now looking closely into the factors that have contributed to the decline in rice shipments to the
Philippines under the rice trade liberalization (RTL) law. “I think trading of all goods, including foodstuff, have been affected by the regulations adopted by countries to avoid the spread of
COVID-19,” Maronilla said via SMS. “Also, the DA [Department of Agriculture] has been extra vigilant in the issuance of SPS [sanitary and phytosanitary permits] to ensure the health and safety of
Volume of rice imported from January 1 to February 14. This is lower than the 759,810 MT brought into the country during the same period in 2019
the domestic farm sector and the Filipino people,” he added. Aside from COVID-19, Maronilla said it is also possible that traders have stayed away from the export market for now as farmers will start harvesting rice soon. “Maybe they [traders] are anticipating that our farmers’ production would be huge [and that] they will have a hard time competing. See “Virus,” A2
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See “Sokor,” A2
P25.00 nationwide | 6 sections 58 pages |
Food security: To grow our own or copy the Singapore model? Rene E. Ofreneo
laborem exercens
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he proponents of rice tariffication have been arguing that it is better to import cheaper rice from the world market and nudge the “inefficient” rice producers at home to switch to the production of higher value-adding crops. This way the rice-consuming public is assured of cheaper rice, while the marginal rice farmers have the opportunity to earn more. The government is also spared of the difficult task of having to allocate extra resources to buoy up farm-gate prices for palay while keeping the retail prices for rice at a low level based on the old buy-high-sell-low operational guidepost of the downsized National Food Authority (NFA).
In this regard, the proponents of rice trade liberalization even cite Singapore as an example of a food-secure nation. Singapore literally imports all the food requirements needed by a population of 6 million citizens and 3 million or so guest workers. Continued on A7
Market at 15-month low on coronavirus jitters
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for those who have been identified from the countries [with high rates of infection], then that is the time we could raise the objection [to a passenger’s] entry,” Duterte said. However, he supported the task force decision to temporarily stop Filipino tourists from going to South Korea. “But me personally, if you ask, my answer now is I cannot do it. I will not allow ‘yung travel doon [travel there].” In an earlier media briefing with Health Secretary Francisco Duque III and DOH Assistant Secretary for Public Health Services Maria Rosario Vergeire, Cabinet Secretary Karlo Nograles said that they will be strictly
209,320 MT
In MNCs’ rationalizing, PHL could be at risk
HE Philippines is in peril of losing some investors as a result of multinationals rationalizing their global operations. Trade Secretary Ramon M. Lopez, who revealed this in a recent interview with reporters, admitted the country’s economy is smaller when compared to several nations. Lopez explained that multinationals are undergoing a rationalization of operations with the worldwide slowdown in merchandize trade. When companies choose which operations to shut down, those situated in the country are vulnerable due to the relatively smaller economy here, he added. “If you look at the world, we are a small player, a small country compared to the global world demand. You can expect a lot of this rationalization when global headquarters assess their resources. There’s a factor there [of] how major or big a country you are, how important your market is to that company,” Lopez explained. This is not to say that many will follow the lead of Honda in its decision to abandon its Philippine plant, he added. Lopez argued it will still depend how sensitive the multinational’s operations are, and how important the Philippine market is to them.
impose travel restrictions for passengers coming from North Gyeongsang province, South Korea, including Daegu City and Cheongdo County, effective immediately. In an ambush interview with Palace reporters on Wednesday night, however, President Duterte said the government will tread with caution on expanding the travel ban to include all travelers from South Korea. “No, I cannot do that. No country could do that. Why would you...you cannot do that. If the guy is healthy why would you...there cannot be a total travel ban...you are going to lock down the entire Philippines for that. It ain’t that way. For those who are healthy, they should come in. And
By VG Cabuag
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LENT IN THE TIME OF COVID A lay minister sprinkles ash on the head of a churchgoer—instead of the forehead—in a Baclaran church on Ash Wednesday (February 26), the start of the 40-day Lenten season. The Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines gave options to priests on how to apply ash on the faithful as churches worldwide took their own precautions against unwittingly spreading Covid-19 through rituals involving large crowds. NONIE REYES
PSA: Banana pulls up farm export receipts in 2019 By Jasper Emmanuel Y. Arcalas @jearcalas
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HE country’s agricultural exports in 2019 managed to rise by 8.6 percent to nearly $5 billion, the second-highest recorded in the previous decade, as banana shipments were able to offset the decline in coconut-based
exports, preliminary government data showed. Economists said, however, that the expansion of agro-based exports is still “anemic” as the Philippines remains dependent on a few commodities, which are mostly raw farm goods, instead of value-added products. Preliminary data released by
the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) indicated that the total agro-based exports last year reached $4.98 billion, higher than the $4.584 billion recorded in 2018. This was the second-highest recorded revenue from agro-based products in the previous decade after the $5.13 billion recorded in See “PSA,” A2
@villygc
HARE prices closed at their lowest in 15 months, with the benchmark Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) dipping to the 6,900-point level, still on fears over the effects of the coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19). The PSEi shed 277.60 points, or about 4 percent, to close at 6,909.84 points. The last time the PSEi visited the said level was on November 13, 2018, when it closed at 6,843.83 points. “Philippine shares tumbled after the holiday after the CDC [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention] warned of more cases and companies indicated earnings would be affected from the spread of the virus,” Luis Limlingan, managing director at broker Regina Capital Development Corp., said. More cases of Covid-19 infections were reported in South Korea, Italy and Iran, while some smaller countries in Europe reported their first case of infection. The World Hea lth Organization ( W HO), meanwhile, said the world is not
ready for the spread of the virus, which further dampened investors’ sentiment in the region. Total value of shares traded reached P10.05 billion and foreign investors were net sellers at P3.06 billion. All sub-indices ended in the red, dropping at least 2.5 percent. The broader All Shares index fell 136.05 to 4,129.37, the Financials index dropped 44.19 to 1,649.56, the Industrial index plunged 389.36 to 8,416.22, the Holding Firms index declined 264.59 to 6,761.39, the Services index shed 55.47 to 1,370.28, the Mining and Oil index was down 162.09 to 6,770.32 and the Property index retreated 154.08 to 3,696.81. Losers edged gainers 184 to 27 and 30 shares were unchanged. Property developer Ayala Land Inc. was the day’s most actively traded and it fell P2.75 to P38.65 per share; BDO Unibank Inc. dropped P6.30 to P137; SM Prime Holdings Inc. shed P0.80 to P39.30; SM Investments Corp. gave up P25 to P985, Jollibee Foods Corp. lost P10.50 to P175.10; and ISM Communications Corp. bucked the trend to gain P0.11 to P1.70.
US 51.0140 n japan 0.4630 n UK 66.3590 n HK 6.5489 n CHINA 7.2742 n singapore 36.4777 n australia 33.6794 n EU 55.5185 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.5954
Source: BSP (26 February 2020)