BusinessMirror January 21, 2020

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3 ROAD SECTIONS NEAR TAAL CLOSED W HILE all national roads are passable in Batangas and Cavite, the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) has closed three road sections as part of the 14-kilometer radius danger zone imposed by the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (Phivolcs). Anna Mae Y. Lamentillo, the chairman for the “Build, Build, Build” The Department of Public Works and Highways’ Anna Mae Lamentillo, who chairs the “Build, Build, Build” Committee, fields questions at the BusinessMirror Coffee Club on Monday. ROY DOMINGO

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(BBB) program of the administration, listed the three road sections as the Tanauan-Talisay-Tagaytay Road, the Talisay-Laurel-Agoncillo Road and the Agoncillo Section. “The entire stretch is now closed to traffic,” she said at Monday’s BusinessMirror Coffee Club, fielding questions from journalists in the ALC Media Group. “We have evacuated more than 50,000 people already and have deployed water trucks to clean national highways, deploying 100 equipment and about 600 employees.” Lamentillo noted that her group can only “rehabilitate areas outside the 14-kilometer danger zone.”

Tuesday, January 21, 2020 Vol. 15 No. 103

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PHL agri infra backlog pegged at ₧535 billion ₧330B T By Jasper Emmanuel Y. Arcalas

@jearcalas

HE country’s farm infrastructure backlog, estimated at more than half a trillion pesos, is a major stumbling block to improving farmers’ productivity, as the lack of warehouses and cold-storage facilities has made it difficult to minimize postharvest losses.

Agriculture Undersecretary for Regulations Zanzamin L. Ampatuan made this initial estimate, citing data based on the Department of Trade and Industry’s (DTI) logistics

services road map. Ampatuan said improving the country’s farm infrastructure and logistics would cut farmers’ postharvest losses and help them double

their income. This, he said, is in line with President Duterte’s marching orders to improve the performance of the farm sector. “[Improving] the performance

The estimated amount needed to build more warehouses as part of investments to improve farm infrastructure. Another P100 billion is for rural roads, P100 billion for coldstorage facilities and P5 billion for container yards directly servicing the agriculture sector

of the agriculture sector and its contribution to the economy” were stressed by the President, while Agriculture Secretary William D. Dar gave him an order “to increase the See “Agri infra,” A2

As this developed, Lamentillo’s group is currently finishing studies for road and bridge construction that are more “science-based” and disasterproof. “Since we assumed position, we commissioned a lot of studies not just in earthquakes or volcanic eruptions, even flooding. We really thought that flooding and traffic cannot be solved by politics alone. The Philippines is in a unique position because almost all our road networks are near the fault line, so we really have to build sustainably to make sure that the gaps are plugged,” she said.

P25.00 nationwide | 4 sections 42 pages |

NEDA: TAAL ERUPTION WILL BARELY HIT PHL GDP, POVERTY RATE By Cai U. Ordinario @caiordinario

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H E co u nt r y ’s e co n o m i c performance this year and poverty incidence will not be affected by the Taal Volcano eruption, according to the National Economic and Development Authority (Neda). In a briefing on Monday, Neda Regional Development Office Undersecretary Adoracion M. Navarro said the impact on Calabarzon’s economy will only be P4.3 billion, or 0.17 percent to P6.6 billion, or 0.26 percent of Gross Regional Domestic Product (GRDP). Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia also said the Philippines is still on track to reducing poverty incidence to 14 percent by 2022. “Filipinos are resilient, and it is also in our culture to help, so

Motorbike taxis are out, are in? Confusing TWG signals appall senators

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By Lorenz S. Marasigan @lorenzmarasigan & Butch Fernandez @butchfBM

HE technical working group (TWG) for the motorcycle taxi program may reverse its decision to immediately stop the pilot run—a decision it suddenly announced on Monday morning, ahead of a Senate hearing—but this will come with strings attached. Transportation Assistant Secretary Goddes Hope O. Libiran said a decision to whether extend the pilot run for two-wheel public transport options should come out on Wednesday, when the interagency working group will formally convene. This will be recommended to Transportation Secretary Arthur P. Tugade, who will ultimately decide on the extension. “The interagency TWG on motorcycle taxis is considering the sentiments raised by the members of the Senate Committee on Public Services, as well as by other stakeholders,” she said. She was referring to the Public Services panel hearing on Monday, presided over by committee chief Sen. Grace Poe, where senators surprised by the declaration of a termination of the second-phase trial, which should run until March 23, lambasted regulators. Libiran explained that Tugade is amendable to the extension of the program, but noted several prerequisites to his approval. “We are considering. But, according to Secretary Tugade, if it will be extended, it should not be in an atmosphere filled with cases. They should agree on the cap, and they should agree on the study areas,” she said. She was referring to the stay orders sought by Angkas and its riders on the supply cap provision of the amended rules for the pilot program. “Another meeting shall likewise be conducted on Friday with stakeholders, resource persons, and the three motorcycle providers participating in the study, to iron out the specifics,” she said.

Senators weigh in

The Poe committee is conducting hearings as it rushes remedial legislation to amend the decades-old national transportation and traffic code, in order to allow for motorcycle taxis. Poe said the results of the TWG studies—from its first sixmonth trial participated in by ride-hailing app Angkas, and from the second phase to run until March 23 unless canceled as announced on Monday—are crucial as basis for the amendatory law. See “Motorbike taxis,” A2

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Lorenz S. Marasigan

I think, it’s going to have a momentary or passing effect on poverty, but in the end poverty will continue to climb down,” Pernia said. The damage estimates to Calabarzon, one of the regions that account for the largest contributions to the economy, accounts for the damage to the agriculture, industry and services sector. Under the first scenario for damages within the 14-kilometer radius, foregone income in the Agriculture and Fishery sector amounted to P3.17 billion, or 2.32 percent of 2018 Gross Value Added (GVA)-Agri, Fishery and Forestry of Calabarzon. This also includes P357.3 million or 0.02 percent of the 2018 GVAIndustry of Calabarzon and P789.1 million, or 0.08 percent of 2018 GVA-Services of Calabarzon. See “Neda,” A2

Ecozones done with post-ashfall cleaning up By Elijah Felice E. Rosales @alyasjah

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The Senate’s Transportation committee chief, Sen. Grace Poe, throws a question at MMDA General Manager Jojo Garcia during Monday’s public hearing on the legalization of motorcycle taxis. ROY DOMINGO

BOP posts $7.8-B surplus, the highest since 2012

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HE country’s balance of payments (BoP) strongly recovered from being in the reds in 2018, as the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) reported a strong surplus in 2019’s end on Monday. In a statement, the BSP said the Philippines BoP—or the summary of the country’s transactions with the rest of the world—hit $7.843 billion in surplus by the end of 2019. The end-year BoP is a reversal of the $2.3-billion deficit seen in 2018. The strong 2019 BoP surplus did not come as a surprise to the economy as the Philippines has been consistently posting monthly surpluses throughout last year except in June. In December

alone, the surplus was at $1.57 billion. In contrast, the 2018 monthly BoP data set was showing consistent deficits, except for surpluses in the months of August, November and December. “Based on preliminary data, the surplus was supported by higher net receipts of trade in services, personal remittance inflows from overseas Filipinos, and sustained net inflows of foreign direct investments [FDI] and portfolio investments,” the BSP said in a statement. Just last week, the BSP reported that Filipino migrant workers sent home around $27.2 billion in the first 11 months of 2019, 4.4 percent higher than what they sent in

the same 11-month period in 2018. FDI, meanwhile, stood at 32.8 percent lower in the first 10 months of 2019 compared to the same period in 2018. The total value in January to October was at $5.8 billion. The BSP said the BoP inflows in December 2019 reflected the BSP’s net foreign-exchange purchases from its foreign-exchange operations and income from its investments abroad, and increase in the national government’s net foreign-currency deposits. These inflows were partially offset, however, by outflows representing payments made by the NG on its foreign- exchange obligations during the month.

CONOMIC zones in Southern Tagalog are expected to return to full normalcy this week, as their developers are nearly done cleaning up the residue left by the ashfall from the volcanic activities of Taal. Philippine Ecozones Association President Francisco S. Zaldarriaga said the Taal eruption had “minimal effects” on the operations of economic zones in Southern Tagalog. This was backed by reports from the ground that most are already operating 100 percent, while some are trying to return to full normalcy but circumstances hinder them. “[There are] very minimal effects on our economic zones in the area,” Zaldarriaga said in a text message to the BusinessMirror. “[I] was just cross-consulting with some of our members in the affected area [and got the] same feedback: mostly ashfall followed by intensive proper cleanup operations,” he disclosed. “Full normalcy expected this week.”

Peza report

Last week, Peza Director General See “Ecozones,” A2

US 50.8980 n japan 0.4624 n UK 66.1521 n HK 6.5522 n CHINA 7.4189 n singapore 37.7806 n australia 34.9669 n EU 56.4662 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.5663

Source: BSP (20 January 2020)


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