BusinessMirror June 17, 2021

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ROTARY CLUB OF MANILA JOURNALISM AWARDS

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IMF CUTS PHL GROWTH www.businessmirror.com.ph

Thursday, June 17, 2021 Vol. 16 No. 246

P.  |     | 7 DAYS A WEEK

PROJECTION TO 5.4% INOCULATION for the A5 category or the indigent population rolled out on Wednesday (June 16, 2021) at the President Corazon C. Aquino High School in Baseco, Manila. The second jabs of Pfizer for A1, A2, A3 and A4 categories were also offered, with an estimated 1,000 individuals expected to be vaccinated. The government is urging eligible populations belonging to priority groups to register and get vaccinated, and complete the required number of doses as scheduled. NONIE REYES

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B B C

@BcuaresmaBM

HE International Monetary Fund (IMF) slashed its growth projection for the Philippines on Wednesday, citing slow recovery in the first half of the year. Following the Philippines’s annual economic check-up from the IMF via its Article IV consultation this year, the global monetary authority cut its growth projection of the Philippines from 6.9 percent to 5.4 percent for this year. What pulled the economy down in the first half of the year is largely the second wave of Covid-19 cases in the country, which likely peaked in April, IMF Article IV Consultation Mission Head Tho-

mas Helbling told reporters in a virtual briefing. The resurgence of cases during the period necessitated stricter quarantine measures which disrupted economic activity and has “weighed” on market confidence, Helbling added. While the IMF said the economy is expected to start its path to recovery toward the third quarter of the year, Helbling warned of C  A

‘Deficit level must be kept even with Bayanihan 3’ B B D. N @BNicolasBM

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INANCE Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III told senators the government’s economic team is open to supporting potential revenue-raising measures that can fund Bayanihan 3. Speaking before the Senate Committee of the Whole on Tuesday, Dominguez said they are still currently looking for funds to finance the proposed stimulus package without further increasing their estimated fiscal deficit this year. For this year, the government expects the country’s fiscal deficit to reach a new record high of P1.78 trillion or 8.9 percent of GDP, even higher than the P1.37 trillion or 7.6-percent deficit-to-GDP ratio it

recorded last year. “We are looking at additional collections over and above our budget.... If there are any potential revenue-raising measures that the House and the Senate will propose, then we are also open to that, but the principle is, we have to keep our fiscal deficit at the point that it is now, which in our estimate is 9.3 percent,” Dominguez said. The House of Representatives has already endorsed for Senate approval the proposed P401-billion Bayanihan to Arise as One Act or the Bayanihan 3. However, Dominguez told reporters on Wednesday that the Department of Finance (DOF) “has not proposed any tax hikes to in-

PESO EXCHANGE RATES ■ US 47.9620

S “D,” A

SCIENCE-DRIVEN FIXES FOR CLIMATE CHANGE, HUNGER PUSHED IN FAO B J E Y. A @jearcalas

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GRICULTURE Secretary William D. Dar called for greater international cooperation to institutionalize and advance science-driven innovations and technologies in agriculture to mitigate the adverse impacts of climate change and end hunger by 2030. “It is important that international pooling of knowledge, science and technology, and new innovations are further encouraged, and that their benefits should extend to all sectors and stakeholders across all nations,” Dar said during the June 15 virtual discussion on “Combating Climate Change and Hunger through Innovation.” The virtual discussion was part of the 42nd Session of the UN-Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) Conference. In the event, Dar emphasized that the world is now at a moment in history wherein technology and globalization are “changing the dynamics of economic progress.” With this, it is imperative, he said, that the benefits from science-driven innovation reach small-scale farms and rural families to uplift their lives, especially in the Covid-19 pandemic. “Because of the complexities brought about by climate

change and its impact on food systems, as well as the new normal brought about by the Covid-19 pandemic, we should ensure that the benefits of science-driven innovation find a place in our farms, as well as in the homes of every rural family and ultimately, in every home in all societies,” Dar said. “We believe that we have here and now an excellent opportunity to reboot and foster together hope, trust, and mutual understanding that are essential for all citizens of the world to survive and prosper,” Dar added. In response to philanthropist Bill Gates’s lecture during the virtual event, Dar said the Philippine government is “continuously encouraging stronger private sector investments and partnerships to attain sustainable agricultural modernization and industrialization, equitable prosperity, and national food security.” Dar pointed out: “Agriculture is the mainspring of rural economic progress in the Philippines, and its development is key to addressing the bigger part of our continuing problem of poverty. “We employ modern technologies and innovations in our ongoing efforts to revitalize productivity and increase incomes of Filipino farmers and fishers, and mitigate the

PSA: Worst performance for tourism, courtesy of Covid B C U. O @caiordinario

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HE wave of booking cancellations and mobility restrictions brought the tourism sector to its knees last year as it posted its worst performance on record, according to the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA). Based on the Philippine Tourism Satellite Accounts (PTSA), the Tourism Direct Gross Value Added (TDGVA) contracted 61.2 percent in 2020, the steepest decline in the data series of the PSA. The TDGVA reached P973.31 billion in 2020, significantly lower than the P2.51 trillion it recorded in 2019. The tourism sector contributed 5.4 percent to the country’s GDP in 2020, less than half

its contribution of 12.8 percent in 2019. “All forms of tourism expenditures posted downturns in 2020: inbound tourism expenditure declined by -77.9 percent, while domestic tourism expenditure by -82.3 percent, and outbound tourism expenditure by -73.2 percent. Internal tourism expenditure, comprising inbound and domestic tourism expenditure, decreased by -81.6 percent,” PSA said. Internal tourism, which is the combination of inbound tourism and domestic tourism, only reached P689.48 billion in 2020, a steep decline from the P3.74 trillion recorded in 2019. Around 80.8 percent of this C  A

C  A

■ JAPAN 0.4359 ■ UK 67.5641 ■ HK 6.1788 ■ CHINA 7.4859 ■ SINGAPORE 36.1432 ■ AUSTRALIA 36.8732 ■ EU 58.1827 ■ SAUDI ARABIA 12.7906

Source: BSP (June 16, 2021)


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