BusinessMirror May 19, 2020

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SAP, part 2, to cover 17M poor families–DSWD

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BOUT 17 million poor families are expected to benefit from the second tranche of the Social Amelioration Program (SAP) of the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD). This is lower compared to 18,046,093 poor families who benefited from the first round of SAP implementation, which started in April and ended earlier this month. In his online press briefing on Monday, Presidential Spokesperson Harry Roque quoted the DSWD as saying the bulk or 12 million of the SAP beneficiaries will come from the areas still under enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) and modified enhanced community quarantine (MECQ). Currently, only Cebu City and Mandaue City remain under ECQ, while those declared under MECQ include the National Capital Region; municipality of Pateros;

WEARING a face mask that reflects her current disposition, a factory worker at CCE All About Shoes in Marikina City says she’s happy to be back at work, two months after the factory temporarily closed due to the coronavirus pandemic. The company provides shuttle service for its workers, and advises them to wear a face mask and observe physical distancing. NONIE REYES

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SAP is a P200-billion government program that provides a cash aid ranging between P5,000 and P8,000, for poor families nationwide. as well as the provinces of Bulacan; Nueva Ecija; Pampanga; Zambales and Laguna; and Angeles City. The remaining 4.9 million beneficiaries in the second tranche of SAP implementation are the so-called left-out beneficiaries who were not included in the first tranche of the SAP distribution but were

qualified for aid. The DSWD is still waiting for Malacañang’s approval before it could implement the second tranche of SAP. SAP is a P200-billion government program that provides a cash aid ranging between P5,000 and P8,000, for poor families nationwide. Last week Roque said President Duterte is considering requesting an additional budget from the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) for the second tranche of SAP, which at that time was expected to cover 23 million beneficiaries. Aside from SAP, Roque also reported that 1.3 million people affected by Covid-19 lockdowns benefited from the programs of the Department of Labor and Employment and the Department of Agriculture.

Samuel P. Medenilla

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DOLE ADVICE TO TWEAK WAGES ‘DOUBLE-EDGED’ www.businessmirror.com.ph

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Tuesday, May 19, 2020 Vol. 15 No. 222

P25.00 nationwide | 2 sections 16 pages | 7 DAYS A WEEK

I.C. DEFERS IFRS 17 IMPLEMENTATION ON VIRUS’S IMPACT

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A TRAM service ferries employees at the Mall of Asia in Pasay City on Monday. Under the modified quarantine rules, to allow the public to access essential goods and other items, nonleisure malls may reopen with 50 percent of their workforce. NONIE REYES

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By Samuel P. Medenilla

HE Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) on Monday urged companies to consider a temporary adjustment of wages and employment benefits as a job preservation option during the novel coronavirus disease (Covid-19) pandemic.

The recommendation, however, drew mixed reactions from labor groups, some of whom worried it could lead to rampant abuse of labor rights. On Monday, the DOLE re-

leased Labor Advisory (LA) No. 17 containing its guidelines on employment preservation during the Covid-19 crisis. Among its salient provisions was advising employers and work-

ers to adjust “wage and wage-related benefits” stipulated by their other collective bargaining agreement (CBA), employment contract and company policy. The adjustment must be voluntary for both parties and should not exceed six months or the period agreed upon in the CBA. “After such period, employers and employees shall review their agreement and may renew the same,” Labor and Employment Secretary Silvestre H. Bello III said in the two-paged LA 17.

Available option

PARTIDO Manggagawa chairman Renato Magtubo welcomed the additional option to help companies and workers cope with the business

disruptions caused by the Covidrelated community quarantines. He, however, noted that workers would unlikely agree to any pay cut now, especially since they have also been badly hit by the Covid-19 crisis lockdowns that paralyzed most business operations. Meanwhile, the Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) said it will defer commenting on the matter until it gets feedback from its members. “We have submitted this advisory to our regional offices for feedback. Maybe tomorrow [May 19] we will already have their reactions,” TUCP Spokesperson Alan Tanjusay told the BusinessMirror in an SMS.

By Bernadette D. Nicolas

IVEN the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic, the Insurance Commission (IC) further deferred the implementation of the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) 17, two years after its effective date as decided by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB). With the IASB deferring the effective date of IFRS 17 to 2023, IC Deputy Commissioner Ferdinand George Florendo told the BusinessMirror that they are now looking to implement the new accounting standards “as early as 2025” unless the IASB defers the effective date of implementation once more. Despite the IASB mandate, “insurance companies may opt to and are not prohibited” from implementing the IFRS 17 on the schedule set by the IASB i.e. 2023, Florendo said. Moreover, Florendo said those who will implement the new accounting standards following the IC schedule—which could be as early as 2025—will have to provide the Securities and Exchange Commission Notes to their Financial Statements showing the impact of IFRS 17 had they implemented on the original schedule and other disclosures as required in the earlier IC circulars on IFRS 17. The IFRS is a set of accounting standards recognized by at least 166 countries, including the Philippines, and provides a guide on how particular types of transactions and other events should be reported in the financial statements. The new system supersedes IFRS 4 Insurance Contracts, which sets principles for the recognition, measurement, presentation and disclosure of insurance contracts issued. The IFRS 17 is expected to help the insurance industry comply with global standards, although compliance would require substantial investments in accounting systems, among others. In a circular letter to all insurance and professional reinsurance companies authorized to do business in the country, IC said it “recognizes that the insurance industry will realign its priority programs and focus on modifying its business operations under a ‘new normal.’” The commission said it saw the need to support the insurance industry and further defer IFRS implementation, “and delaying its full implementation for the industry two years after the IASB implemented it,” read the Circular Letter No. 2020-62 dated May 18 signed by IC Commissioner Dennis B. Funa. In March the IASB decided to further defer the effective date of IFRS 17 standard to annual reporting periods beginning on or after 1 January 2023. In the same circular letter, the IC said the financial performance of insurance companies was affected by the economic impact of the health crisis as well as the restricted business operations from the extended quarantine. “With the challenges brought by the pandemic, the insurance sector will likewise have to deal with the implementation of IFRS 17, which requires substantial investments in accounting systems, IT-related infrastructure and capacity building

See “IC,” A2

See “DOLE,” A2

PHL, 7th-largest ADB borrower, has loans of $10.2B ADB President Masatsugu ASAKAWA: “We will build on these achievements to ensure we remain relevant and responsive to our members’ needs as they take action to combat and recover from the Covid-19 pandemic.” ADB

By Cai U. Ordinario

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HE Philippines is still one of the largest borrowers of the Asian Development Bank (ADB), according to the Manilabased multilateral development bank’s 2019 annual report. The country’s total loans as

PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 50.5880

of 2019 reached $10.2 billion, a 23.32-percent increase from the $8.27 billion posted in 2018, the report said. This has placed the country as the 7th largest borrower of the ADB and the third largest borrower in Southeast Asia. The top borrower for 2019 was India with $27.624 billion, followed

by China with $27.179 billion. In Southeast Asia, Indonesia emerged as the top ADB borrower in the region with $13.82 billion, followed by Vietnam with $12.246 billion. In the past decade, the growth of the country’s loans from ADB has been significant. In 2010, Continued on A4

TRAFFIC is backed up at the South Luzon Expressway approaching Filinvest in Alabang, Muntinlupa City, as the country resumes economic activity with the easing of quarantine restrictions in the National Capital Region. ROY DOMINGO

n JAPAN 0.4722 n UK 61.1356 n HK 6.5269 n CHINA 7.1239 n SINGAPORE 35.4580 n AUSTRALIA 32.4370 n EU 54.7210 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.4704

Source: BSP (May 18, 2020)


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