Businessmirror july 05, 2015

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Biodiversity »B2-3

Participants in a two-day training on sustainable fisheries, held in Boracay from June 25 to 27, pose for a souvenir photo with clam and fish mascots. According to Rare, an international nature-conservation organization, with around 41 percent of coastal fishermen still living beyond the poverty line—way above the 26.5-percent poverty incidence in the Philippines— the need to address the problem besetting the fisheries sector through a different kind of approach becomes even more pressing.

three-time rotary club of manila journalism awardee 2006, 2010, 2012

U.N. Media Award 2008

BusinessMirror

www.businessmirror.com.ph

A broader look at today’s business

n Sunday, July 5, 2015 Vol. 10 No. 269

Banking in PHL still inconvenient–survey By Bianca Cuaresma

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ESPITE 10,456 bank branches nationwide and still increasing, the average Filipino will still have to travel for about half an hour and spend an average cost of P52 to access the nearest bank in his locality, the Bangko Sentral reported. Just last week, the central bank formally announced the results of the National Baseline Survey on Financial Inclusion (NBSFI)—the maiden survey to measure the financial penetration of the system into the Filipino citizenry. “The results tell us that there is really a need to scale

up the provision of financial services in the country. The results tell us that there is a need to improve access to as many people as possible,” Bangko Sentral Gov. Amando M. Tetangco Jr. said. One of the salient points in the nationwide survey was the overall access of Filipinos

to banks, automated teller machines (ATMs) and other access points. The survey results showed that going to a nearest bank is relatively more time-consuming and expensive than going to other access points—such as payment centers, money changers and remittance agents—as these alternative access points outnumber bank branches in the country. In particular, the average length of time to reach the nearest bank in the Philippines, according to the survey, is 26 minutes, and a roundtrip would cost P52. Meanwhile, the survey also showed that the average length of time to reach the nearest ATM in the Philippines is 22 minutes, and a two-way trip would cost P47. This is a bit more expensive and more time-consuming, that if a financial consumer goes to an alternative See “Banking,” A2

‘Philippines must prepare for influx of foreign retirees’ By Roderick L. Abad

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HE Philippines should prepare now for the expected surge of foreign retirees in the country, as the global population is seen to explode in the next 15 years. Jones Lang Lasalle (JLL) Regional Director Lindsay Orr said that the number of older people in less-developed countries is projected to increase by 140 percent by 2030, as those in more-developed nations will

rise by 51 percent. Orr said it will open up more growth chances not only for the local retirement industry, but also for the real-estate sector. “If you look at the areas that would need to evolve and develop—health care, financial planning and retirement communities—in the middle of it all are the opportunities that will open up in the particular [retiring] marketplace [which are] quite significant. And, I think, it’s certainly a very upcoming sector that will be going to have an impact on the overall real-estate market here in the

PESO exchange rates n US 45.1630

Philippines,” he stressed. Seeing this trend, JLL International Director David T. Leechiu encourages both the government and the private sector to make the country’s infrastructure ready as early as five to 10 years from today. “So we have to prepare by establishing these masterplanned communities that will not only cater to mallgoers [or] resortgoers, but also to the retirement market,” he said. Data from JLL as of July 2013 reveal that Asia is the region with the highest number of people aged 65 and up at 304 See “Retirees,” A2

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Papal visit puts Andes presidents’ ecology record under scrutiny

week ahead

ECONOMIC DATA PREVIEW n Previous week: The local currency continued to trade within the 45 territory in the previous week, largely on the suasion of international events—such as the crisis and eventual default of the Greek economy, which rocked markets globally. The peso started the week at 45.19 to a dollar. The peso then appreciated back to 45.09 to a dollar on Tuesday, and reverted back to 45.11 against the greenback on Wednesday. The peso then hit 45.155 on Thursday, and ended the week with a strong note on Friday at 45.02. The total traded volume is at $2.34 billion, and the average trading value of the peso for the week is at 45.113 to a dollar. n Week ahead: After the Greek drama, markets have now settled and, as such, traders in the Philppines’s foreign-exchange platform are looking to focus on the economic data within the country in next week’s trade. The most salient economic release for the week will be the June inflation rate.

Inflation (June)

Tuesday, July 7 n May inflation: The Philippine Statistics Authority announced last month that inflation hit a 20-year low at 1.6 percent. “The May inflation rate falls within our inflation forecast for the month, albeit at the low end of the target range of 1.6 percent to 2.4 percent. Inflation expectations continue to be well-anchored, and growth is still sound [solid],” Bangko Sentral Gov. Amando M. Tetancgo Jr. said earlier. “We nevertheless remain watchful of developments, particularly in oil-price movements, as these

See “Outlook,” A2

Guarani Indian men listen to a leader, as they hold a meeting in the southeastern Bolivian village of Iviyeca near a natural-gas field by French-run Total E&P Bolivie. AP/Juan Karita

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GUARAGüE NATIONAL PARK, Bolivia—In the vine-entangled forests of the Aguaragüe National Park, crude that seeped for decades out of abandoned wellheads saturates the soil and has stained the bedrock of creeks that provide water to the indigenous Guarani who live nearby.

The petroleum stench is overpowering, as David Benitez, who lives in the park and grazes his cattle among the wells, sifts tainted soil between his fingers. “The odor is much stronger in the summer, when there’s no water to wash the oil downstream,” the 47-year-old farmer says. Pope Francis is expected to raise concerns about the environmental costs of development next week, when he meets with Bolivian President Evo Morales and his counterpart in Ecuador, Rafael Correa, on the first two stops of a three-country tour. Francis’s weeklong trip follows his landmark encyclical demanding dramatic measures to halt climate change and ensure future generations aren’t living in “debris, desolation and filth.”

The Guarani for years have fought to protect their native lands in and around this narrow 70-mile-long park in the southeastern Chaco region that flanks Bolivia’s richest natural-gas fields. Francis has called on governments to better engage such indigenous peoples, calling them nature’s best caretakers, because the land, for them, is sacred. Respecting native peoples, working to alleviate the poverty and living less wasteful lives are part of Francis’s calls to action. But his critics say such prescriptions are unrealistic for developing economies, like those of Ecuador and Bolivia that rely on mining and oil and gas extraction. Morales, an environmental hero to many for demanding rich nations See “Papal Visit,” A2

n japan 0.3669 n UK 70.4949 n HK 5.8270 n CHINA 7.2786 n singapore 33.5087 n australia 34.4782 n EU 50.0677 n SAUDI arabia 12.0435 Source: BSP (3 July 2015)


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