BusinessMirror November 01, 2021

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Saudis to pay ₧4.6-B wages of 9K OFWs By Samuel P. Medenilla sam_medenilla

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OME 9,000 overseas Filipino workers (OFW) displaced in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) are expected to finally get P4.6 billion worth of unpaid salaries before the end of the year, according to the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE). Labor and Employment Secretary Silvestre H. Bello III said Saudi Labor Minister Ahmed alRajhi made the commitment to him in their meeting last week at the sidelines of the Abu Dhabi Dialogue in the United Arab Emir-

w

ates (UAE). “So the unpaid salaries of our OFWs can be settled just in time for Christmas,” Bello said in a statement on Sunday. “Our gover nment is rea lly thankful that the meeting with the KSA labor minister was fruitful,” he added. In exchange for the payment of the claims, Bello said he will remove the suspension on Arab m e g a r e c r u i t m e nt a g e n c i e s which were responsible for the deployment of the concerned OFWs. The agencies were unable to settle the claims of their OFWs despite the Saudi Court ordering them to

“So the unpaid salaries of our OFWs can be settled just in time for Christmas.”

BM

SILVESTRE BELLO III SECRETARY OF DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND EMPLOYMENT

do so. The 9,000 OFWs, who were retrenched due to the economic slowdown in KSA, were repatriated by

Monday, November 1, 2021 Vol. 17 No. 24

the government in 2016 and are still waiting for the settlement of their unpaid claims from their Saudi employers.

NG GROSS BORROWINGS HIT P2.6T FROM JAN-SEPT n

P25.00 nationwide | 2 sections 20 pages |

UNHEALTHY CITIES WERE COVID-19 ‘INCUBATORS’ By Cai U. Ordinario @caiordinario

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RESIDENTS of San Dionisio in Parañaque City ready their containers as they await water supply in their barangay. Fire trucks criss-crossed several cities in Metro Manila at the weekend to supply water to residents affected by a massive disruption of water services to make way for a major public works project in Manila. NONIE REYES

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By Bernadette D. Nicolas

@BNicolasBM

ROSS borrowings of the national government from January to September this year have reached P2.6 trillion, posting a double-digit growth compared to a year ago.

Latest data from the Bureau of the Treasury showed gross borrowings in the nine-month period surged by 15.1 percent year-on-year from P2.26 trillion in the same period in 2020. The latest figure is already equivalent to 84.7 percent of the P3.07-trillion programmed gross

borrowings for this year. Gross domestic borrowings as of end-September soared by 22.56 percent year-on-year to P2.096 trillion from P1.71 trillion. More than half of the gross domestic borrowings were sourced from Fixed Rate Treasury Bonds (P1.099 trillion). See “NG gross borrowings,” A2

Peza asks FIRB: reconsider WFH threshold By Tyrone Jasper C. Piad

@Tyronepiad

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HE Philippine Economic Zone Authority (Peza) is asking the Fiscal Incentives Review Board (FIRB) to revisit the implementation of the work-fromhome (WFH) threshold on the basis of gross revenues for the information technology-business process management (IT-BPM) firms, after denying their earlier request. “Peza is guiding the IT-BPM [sector] to comply with the FIRB’s WFH [arrangement] based on the number of workers while we send a reconsideration for the gross revenues as basis of WFH,” Peza Direc-

tor General Charito Plaza told the BusinessMirror. The Peza proposal, which seeks to base the threshold on gross revenues, means the locators will be allowed to have 100-percent WFH arrangement for the workforce but it also means that only 90 percent of the revenues of the activity will be subject to incentives. Plaza said the proposal is also for the interim while the national state of calamity is in effect. Last month, however, Finance Assistant Secretary and FIRB Secretariat Head Juvy C. Danofrata said that Peza’s plea was denied because it is “not consistent with the economic strategy of the government to gradually and safely reopen the

PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 50.7700

economy.” Danofrata claimed that the FIRB resolution regarding the WFH scheme was already “reasonable,” given that activities should be held in the economic zones in the first place. The FIRB has approved the extension until March 31, 2022, of WFH arrangements for up to 90 percent of employees in the IT-BPM sector.

Safety seals “Peza is guiding the IT-BPM [sector] to comply with the FIRB’s WFH [arrangement] based on the number of workers while we send a reconsideration for the gross revenues as basis of WFH.”—Peza Director General Charito Plaza

FOR now, the regulator of economic zones said they are yet to be oriented about the policies set in the Safety Seals program, as 10 percent of the workforce is expected to return to the offices. See “Peza,” A2

NHEALTHY and overcrowded cities pre-pandemic have made urban areas “incubators” for Covid-19, according to an Asian Development Bank (ADB) official. In an Asian Development Blog, ADB Vice President for Knowledge Management and Sustainable Development Bambang Susantono said this has caused suffering for millions of poor and informal workers. This warrants finding ways, for countries in developing Asia, to help cities build back better and “build forward better” to adapt to the new normal, Susantono said. “Today’s cities face many challenges. They include rapid urbanization, aging societies, infrastructure deficits, climate change and disaster risk. Well before Covid-19, many urban areas were already overcrowded, unsafe, and unhealthy,” Susantono said. “They provided the virus with a natural incubator. The poor and informal workers were particularly vulnerable, without financial means or access to formal social protection systems, such as those related to unemployment,” he added. Susantono said cities must use risk-sensitive land-use management, nature-based solutions, the circular economy, and low-carbon practices in order to “build forward better” in a postpandemic era. Ultimately, Susantono said cities in the region must become “greener, more inclusive, more competitive, and more resilient” after the pandemic. “Urban infrastructure and services have struggled to keep up with Asia’s transformation over the past 50 years. But in today’s world—and to deliver a better world for future generations—falling behind is no longer an option,” Susantono said. He offered six recommendations on how cities can achieve this. The first is to focus on inclusion by strengthening social protection and standardizing

urban services for all. Susantono said cities have become a home for all kinds of people including women, the elderly, the poor, and persons with disabilities. This means their special needs must also be addressed in urban areas. Another recommendation, Susantono said, is for cities to provide urban services and infrastructure that employ the best available technologies as well as digital solutions. This means turning to technological solutions to provide services such as water; boost land-related tax collection, value-capture, and planning; and employ urban planning when building infrastructure. Relatedly, Susantono said, urban planning systems should incorporate the lessons of the pandemic. This is his third recommendation for urban areas. “This helps cities plan for better resilience against future shocks by providing open public spaces and green corridors, and by creating affordable housing, especially for the poor, vulnerable, and returning migrant workers,” Susantono said. “Reviving sustainable tourism and risk-informed urban planning for low-carbon development, environmental protection, and disaster risk management are also priorities for most cities in the region,” he added. Susantono said his fourth recommendation is on financial sustainability and building governance capacity. Cities, he said, must maximize their revenues—one of the lessons of the pandemic, he pointed out. Covid-19 exposed the financial weaknesses of cities and, Susantono said, they must remedy this by adopting transparent, accountable, consistent and coherent responses to shocks and stresses. Another recommendation is for cities to build healthy and environmentally sustainable urban areas. Cities must conduct health impact assessments; prepare age-friendly plans; and implement efforts that promote health and sustainable environments.

n JAPAN 0.4471 n UK 70.0626 n HK 6.5278 n CHINA 7.9430 n SINGAPORE 37.7613 n AUSTRALIA 38.2857 n EU 59.3197 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.5358

Source: BSP (October 29, 2021)


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