BusinessMirror March 04, 2019

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PHILHEALTH TOP ‘18 N.G. SUBSIDY RECIPIENT By Rea Cu

@ReaCuBM

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UBSIDIES made by the national government for 2018 amounted to P136.652 billion, with the Philippine Health Insurance Corp. (PhilHealth) taking the biggest share at P52.950 billion, data from the Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) showed. The subsidies for 2018 represented an increase of 4.24 percent over the P131.088 billion made in 2017. Biggest subsidy recipient PhilHealth’s share of P52.950 billion was 12.20 percent higher than the P47.190 billion recorded in 2017. The National Irrigation Administration (NIA) received the second highest amount of subsidy with P28.427 billion, contracting by 5.75 percent from the P30.163 billion

‘PANAGBENGA!’ Wearing colorful costumes symbolizing the creativity of the Cordillerans in showcasing blooms and other products, street dancers from the different schools of Baguio City participate in events highlighting the “Panagbenga Flower Festival” a day before the float parade. SUZANNE JUNE G. PERANTE

DEPT. OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

PHILIPPINE STATISTICS AUTHORITY

2018 BANTOG DATA MEDIA AWARDS CHAMPION

it received for 2017. The third highest recipient for the year was the Land Bank of the Philippines (LandBank) with P25.622 billion. The government did not provide a subsidy to LandBank in 2017. Total subsidies made to governmentowned and -controlled corporations (GOCCs) for the year amounted to P70.392 billion; major nonfinancial government corporations received P39.240 billion; and government financial institutions, P27.020 billion. For December alone, total subsidies made by the government amounted to P2.181 billion, or a drop of 93.01 percent from P31.227 billion made in December 2017. For that month, the highest recipient was LandBank with P486 billion, and the

Development Bank of the Philippines (DBP) with P484 billion. NIA came in third with a subsidy of P464 billion. A subsidy given by the government to GOCCs aims to help them reduce their costs and support the growth of different sectors, among others. It was reported earlier that the Duterte administration aims to complete its 10-point socioeconomic agenda, which aims to alleviate poverty in the country and improve the social welfare of the Filipinos. The agenda includes investing in human capital development, including health and education systems, and improving social protection programs, including the government’s Conditional Cash Transfer program, to protect the poor against instability and economic shocks.

BusinessMirror A broader look at today’s business

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Monday, March 4, 2019 Vol. 14 No. 145

Overseas demand for construction labor dips 2M M By Samuel P. Medenilla

@sam_medenilla

ORE Filipinos with constructionrelated skills may have to stay in the country to find work, after all. This comes as overseas demand for them suffered its biggest decline in recent years due to prevailing international market trends and government initiatives.

At the same time, however, Labor Secretary Silvestre H. Bello III also acknowledged there is a policy decision to minimize the deployment of construction workers abroad to meet the urgent need of the private sector for workers in the Philippines, as the government and the private

sector ramp up dozens of key infrastructure projects. The Bureau of Local Employment (BLE) earlier estimated that the country will need to maintain a steady pool of 200,000 available workers to keep up with the 380,000 average additional net employment generated by the

construction sector. Based on the latest available complete data from the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA), the number of hired civil engineering laborers abroad in 2017 declined by 31.3 percent to 5,295, from 7,718 in the previous year.

The number of OFW deployed abroad per latest POEA data, down by 3 percent from 2.1 million, owing to the big decline in the number of total new hires, for the first time in the last decade. All the top destinations for new hires—five Mideast countries, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Japan, Singapore, Malaysia—saw a reduction in OFW deployment

A similar trend was observed for deployed welders and flame cutters, demand for whom declined by 31 percent in 2017 to 5,141, from 7,437 in the 2016.

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Initial damage to farms from El Niño hits P150M By Jasper Emmanuel Y. Arcalas @jearcalas

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T least 5,400 Filipino farmers have already incurred losses of more than P150 million due to hotter weather caused by El Niño, an initial damage assessment report of the Department of Agriculture (DA) obtained by the BusinessMirror showed. The damage report indicated that El Niño has affected 6,600 hectares of rice and corn farms in Mimaropa and Region 12 with an estimated total production loss of 6,300 metric tons. Around 70 percent of the total affected farms of 4,600 hectares were planted with palay and the remaining area of 2,000, with corn. The brunt of the damage from El Niño was suffered by 3,090 rice farmers, who lost 5,000 metric tons in produce valued at nearly P130 million. Some 2,300 corn farmers incurred losses amounting to about P24 million. Total corn output dam-

PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 51.7690

See “El Niño,” A2

Inflation’s slowing not enough to cut RRR By Bianca Cuaresma @BcuaresmaBM

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F. Villafuerte Jr. said the 14 government agencies tasked to draft the IRR should finish their job to avoid the mistake committed by bureaucrats who he said had bungled the implementation of the Ease of Doing Business (EODB) Act.

ESPITE the continued deceleration in the country’s inflation in the early months of 2019, global bank HSBC believes it is still not enough for the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) to shift its gears to accommodation early this year. In a research note, HSBC economists said the expected 4 percent inf lation print for February is still within the upper end of the BSP’s 2 percent to 4 percent target range for the year. “We expect headline inf lation to continue its downward trend in February to 4 percent year-on-year from 4.4 percent in January,” HSBC said. The global bank further said that, due to the continuous moderation of rice prices, upward pressures to the country’s inflation path are now limited, even as oil prices rose recently. “That said, at 4 percent, headline inflation remains elevated and is in the upper band of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’s [BSP] 2 to 4 percent inflation target.

See “Rice trade,” A8

See “Inlflation,” A2

Avian flu in Orissa

See “PHL,” A8

aged by El Niño was estimated at around 1,300 metric tons. The damage report indicated that 2,900 farmers with production losses of about P123 million were located in Mimaropa while the remaining almost 2,500 farmers were in Region 12. Farmers in Region 12 lost P30 million worth of output. The damage report showed that 96 percent of the El Niño-affected areas or about 6,400 hectares still have a chance of recovery. Of these, about 3,700 hectares are in Mimaropa and some 2,600 hectares in Region 12. At least 200 hectares in Mimaropa have no chance of recovery, according to DA’s initial assessment. The damage report is still being validated by the DA as of press time. Last week, Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel F. Piñol said the DA has set aside funds to indemnify insured farmers and extend production loans to those affected by El Niño.

See “Construction,” A2

P200-billion local hog industry. “The ASF outbreak has already reached Vietnam, making the country more susceptible to the ASF pandemic,” Sinag Chairman Rosendo So said.

AS for the avian flu, the outbreaks of H5N1 Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI) virus were found in Puri, Orissa, India. Birds in these areas were affected by the outbreaks, as confirmed by the National Institute of High Security Animal Diseases in Bhopal, an OIE reference laboratory. Piñol said the entry of poultry products from India must be banned so as to prevent the entry of the HPAI virus to the Philippines, and protect the health of the local poultry population. Under Memorandum Order 03, Piñol banned the importation of domestic and wild birds and their products, including poultry meat, day-old chicks, eggs and semen, from India. The processing, evaluation of the application and issuance of sanitary and phytosanitary import clearance to the listed commodities were also immediately suspended.

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PHL bans AI-hit India’s poultry; farm group seeks Senate hearing on ASF

HE Philippines has temporarily banned the importation of poultry products from India due to reported outbreaks of avian influenza (AI) in the South Asian country. Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel F. Piñol issued a temporary ban on the importation of domestic and wild birds, including their products, originating from India, after Tarun Shridhar, an Indian agriculture official, reported to the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) outbreaks of avian influenza. In a separate development, Samahang Industriya ng Agrikultura (Sinag) Chairman Rosendo So is seeking the Senate’s intervention on the dreaded African swine fever (ASF), saying that efforts from the Depar tment of Agriculture (DA) remain inadequate. In a letter sent to Sens. Cynthia A. Villar and Grace Poe, who chair the Committees on Agriculture and on Public Services, respectively, Sinag sought the urgent holding of a public hearing on ASF and the continued decrease in farm gate prices. This, after latest reports showed the ASF has crossed the Asean region, leading the Philippines to ban pork imports from neighboring Vietnam in a bid to protect the

2017 EJAP JOURNALISM AWARDS

LABORERS work at a construction site for a call-center building along Diosdado Macapagal Avenue in Pasay City, one of many areas where the boom in construction is manifest, as the government ramps up the “Build, Build, Build” infrastructure program. ROY DOMINGO

Rice trade lib author: Speed up IRR crafting By Jovee Marie N. dela Cruz

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@joveemarie

HILE one of the most i m p o r t a nt a s p e c t s of the Republic Act 1120—the opening of the domestic rice market to private traders— will already come into effect by

March 5, a member of the House Committee on Economic Affairs on Sunday urged the government agencies to work double time and finish crafting the implementing rules and regulations (IRR) of the Rice Tariffication Act within the 45-day deadline. Camarines Sur Rep. Luis Raymund

n JAPAN 0.4645 n UK 68.6612 n HK 6.5950 n CHINA 7.7342 n SINGAPORE 38.2907 n AUSTRALIA 36.7198 n EU 58.8924 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.8051

Source: BSP (1 March 2019 )


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