GOCC dividends swell coffers by ₧53.1B By Bernadette D. Nicolas @BNicolasBM
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I V IDENDS rem it ted by state-run firms to government coffers have reached P53.1 billion from January to September this year, the Department of Finance said. Finance Assistant Secretary Soledad Emilia Cruz told reporters in an interview that Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) topped the list of government-owned and -controlled corporations (GOCCs) that remitted the highest dividends, accounting for P15.9 billion. This is equivalent to almost 30 percent of the total amount of dividends remitted by all GOCCs during the period. Under Republic Act 7656 or
the Dividends Law, GOCCs are requ ired to dec lare and remit at least 50 percent of their annual net earnings as cash, stock or proper t y d iv idend s to t he national government. Trailing BSP on the list is the National Transmission Corporation with P8.32 billion in dividend remittances, followed by the Philippine Deposit Insurance Corporation (P7.1 billion), Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corporation (P6 billion), and Philippine Ports Authority (P3.76 billion). Completing the top 10 GOCCs with highest dividend remittances are Bases Conversion and Development Authority (P1.72 billion), Philippine Reclamation Authority (P1.7 billion), Subic Bay Metropolitan Au-
thority (P1.21 billion), Philippine National Oil Company Exploration Corporation (P1 billion), and National Power Corporation (P900 million). Dividends remitted by 57 GOCCs last year reached P157 billion, the highest amount ever collected since the implementation of the Dividends Law in 1994. Of t he P157 bi l l ion, t hreefourths or P119.1 billion partly funded the social amelioration prog ram t hat t he gover nment implemented to cushion the economic impact of the Cov id-19 pandemic on the country’s poorest household and other vulnerable sectors. This amount also contributed to the government’s unprogrammed revenues. In April this year, Finance Sec-
retary Carlos G. Dominguez III proposed increasing the mandated dividend remittances of GOCCs to the national treasury from the current 50 percent to at least 75 percent of their net earnings in a bid to raise funds for a possible third economic stimulus bill or Bayanihan 3. Dominguez, however, told senators in September this year that the government’s “healthy” tax collections and inflows from dividends of GOCCs are still “insufficient” to fund a deficit-neutral P175-billion Bayanihan 3 or the third stimulus package. While they have yet to find counterpart funding for Bayanihan 3, Dominguez said having the third stimulus package is still “not out of the question.”
‘INFLATION DATA WON’T SPUR RATE-HIKE MOVE’
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Monday, October 18, 2021 Vol. 17 No. 10
P25.00 nationwide | 3 sections 26 pages |
TRADE CONTROL INDEX: PHL IS ‘MOST IMPROVED’ By Tyrone Jasper C. Piad
@Tyronepiad
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WOMEN workers on wheels ride with their respective deliveries —and precious cargo—on Quirino Avenue in Manila, in this recent photo. According to a UN report, a higher prevalence of Covid-19 correlated with a higher rate of female unemployment. As jobs disappeared with lockdowns, more women were forced to support themselves and their families on meager wages. NONIE REYES
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By Bianca Cuaresma
@BcuaresmaBM
URRENT inflationary pressures will not force the Central Bank to hike monetary policy rates, as their latest assessment continues to confirm that the elevated price growth remains transitory, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Governor Benjamin Diokno said on Sunday. See “Inflation,” A2
PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 50.6090
HE Philippines is the most improved country in terms of strategic trade control implementation, jumping to 49th rank this year from 86th place in 2020 based on the 2021/2022 Peddling Peril Index (PPI). In a statement on Sunday, the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) noted that the country scored 482 points in the latest report, higher than 273 points it garnered previously. “PPI rates 200 nations based on their strategic trade control adoption and implementation, with the goal of assisting countries in strengthening their systems by examining the degree of their implementation and enforcement, as well as tracking their progress over time,” DTI Secretary Ramon Lopez said. DTI defined strategic goods as “items with civilian and military applications,” noting that many of them “can be used as materials or parts of
weapons of mass destruction [WMD].” Several nations are implementing strategic trade control laws in compliance with international pacts to prevent proliferation of WMDs. For its part, the DTI said the Philippines enacted the Strategic Trade Management Act. Among the five super criteria under the PPI, the Philippines saw the biggest improvement in ability to prevent proliferation financing. Score for this pillar rose to 113 from 29. The trade department said the better performance was due to the issuance by the Strategic Trade Management Office of guidelines to comply with the requirements of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) regarding the implementation of financing and brokering. In addition, the DTI said the Anti-Money Laundering Council also released targeted financial sanctions related to the proliferation of WMD and proliferation financing earlier this year. Continued on A10
In pandemic, govt tops people’s health spend By Cai U. Ordinario @caiordinario
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T took a pandemic for the government’s health expenses to exceed those made by households, according to data released by the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA). Data showed that Cur rent Health Expenditures (CHE) made
by the government reached P402.24 billion in 2020, half a percent higher than the P400.1 billion spent by households on health last year. Last year, the country’s Total Health Expenditures (THE) breached the P1-trillion mark at P1.004 trillion for the first time since the Philippine National Health Accounts (PNHA) was collected.
“Yes, by financing scheme, this is the first [time] that government and compulsory social schemes combined [recorded a] larger share than households,” Gerald Clarin, PSA Division Chief in charge of the health accounts, told this newspaper. The PNHA showed that government schemes and compulsory contributory health-care financing schemes accounted for 45.7
percent of the country’s CHE while Household out-of-pocket payment accounted for 44.7 percent. Data provided to BusinessMirror by PSA Assistant National Statistician Vivian R. Ilarina also showed that government health expenditures in 2020 posted double- and triple-digit growth figures last year.
n JAPAN 0.4453 n UK 69.2179 n HK 6.5057 n CHINA 7.8581 n SINGAPORE 37.5326 n AUSTRALIA 37.5266 n EU 58.7115 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.4932
See “Pandemic,” A2
Source: BSP (October 15, 2021)