BusinessMirror October 30, 2019

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Wednesday, October 30, 2019 Vol. 15 No. 20

Meat processors, hog raisers fight over ASF T By Jasper Emmanuel Y. Arcalas

@jearcalas

HE strife between hog raisers and meat processors has escalated after the manufacturers of processed meat products said they will boycott local pork until raisers can give their assurance that it is free from African swine fever (ASF).

The Philippine Association of Meat Processors Inc. (Pampi) said it has asked its members to temporarily stop the use of local pork as raw materials to contain the spread of the highly contagious ASF.

Howe ve r, u mbre l l a g roup Samahang Industriya ng Agrikultura (Sinag) refuted Pampi’s statements, saying backyard hog raisers would sur vive despite the boycott, as 80 percent of the

country’s meat processors are not Pampi members. Laban Konsyumer Inc. (LKI) warned that the word war between the two groups, which has been brewing since the outbreak of ASF

“[The situation] is worsening. Retail pork prices remain high even when demand is low. And consumers don’t buy public statements that contaminated pork with the virus is safe to eat.”—Dimagiba

was confirmed in the Philippines, would ultimately hurt consumers.

Rationale

PAMPI Spokesman Rex Agarrado said his group decided to boycott local pork after the results of laboratory tests on processed meat products were leaked by hog raisers to the media. See “Hog raisers,” A2

P25.00 nationwide | 5 sections 44 pages |

TRADE ROW’S IMPACT: SHIP OWNERS MAY HIRE FEWER PHL SEAFARERS By Elijah Felice E. Rosales @alyasjah

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NTERNATIONAL ship owners could end up recruiting fewer Filipino seafarers over the next years, as they absorb the impact from the global slowdown in demand for merchandise products, an industry leader said on Tuesday. Norwegian Shipowners’ Association (NSA) CEO Harald Solberg said global shippers are taking damage from the trade conflict between the world’s largest economies. The shipping industry, he explained, is “heavily related to the growth in the world economy;” therefore, any slowdown in global trade is a slowdown in the sector’s business. “Not yet,” Solberg said when asked whether the industry has been injured by the trade tensions between the United States and China. However, he added, “but the shipping industry is heavily related

MWSS revamp, Congress grant of emergency powers to solve water crisis eyed By Bernadette D. Nicolas @BNicolasBM

& Butch Fernandez

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@butchfBM

MID the looming water crisis, Malacañang said on Tuesday that President Duterte may also revamp the Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage System (MWSS) aside from the possible government takeover of the two private water concessionaires—Maynilad and Manila Water. Presidential Spokesman and Chief Presidential Legal Counsel Salvador S. Panelo described the possible government takeover of the water concessionaires as legal, but stressed that there should first be a declaration of a national emergency. The grant of emergency powers to the President for the purpose of addressing the water crisis, according to Sen. Panfilo Lacson, is feasible. “The legal basis is always when, you know, the provision of the Constitution is very clear. The President’s primary duty as head of state of the government is to serve and to protect the people. [In] any situation arising that will endanger, imperil the safety of the people, the President has to take over,” Panelo said. Article XII Section 17 of the 1987 Constitution states that: “In times of national emergency, when

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the public interest so requires, the State may, during the emergency and under reasonable terms prescribed by it, temporarily take over or direct the operation of any privately owned public utility or business affected with public interest. At the Senate, meanwhile, Lacson said on Tuesday he sees no problem in Congress, dominated by Palace allies, granting Duterte extraordinary powers to quickly address an “already existing water supply crisis.” Lacson, however, stressed that Malacañang must first “declare an emergency” for Congress to empower Duterte to “take over public utilities” providing water supply. The senator cited specific provisions of the Constitution the President may invoke to quickly and effectively address the supply shortage. “Given a looming, if not already, existing water crisis,” Lacson said Section 17, Article VII of the Constitution and existing jurisprudence (David vs Arroyo, GR 171396 on May 3, 2006) may apply. He said the President has to “declare an emergency, and if Congress delegates that power to him, the government must be ready to compensate whatever losses the private concessionaire/s would incur during the period of the government takeover.” See “MWSS,” A2

to the growth in the world economy.” In a news briefing, Solberg added, “We see a slowdown in the growth. We are concerned about the outlook and the implication of the trade war, [and] we are prepared that the slowdown of the world economy also will lead to a slowdown in the demand of shipping services.” Solberg warned this could compel international ship owners, such as NSA, to employ fewer seafarers, which would be damaging to a country like the Philippines that deployed nearly 450,000 sea-based workers in 2017. “If this is the starting point of a development into a more de-globalized world, if this trade war is the start of a reverse process, there is a possibility it could harm shipping and recruitment in the long time. In the short time, it will not influence short-time recruitment,” Solberg said. See “Seafarers,” A2

Infra spend at 5% of GDP vital to close gaps–ADB By Cai U. Ordinario @caiordinario

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anitary permits, then this will limit imports,]” Villar said. The Department of Agriculture (DA) said it will start implementing more stringent SPS measures next week. These measures involve limits on heavy metals content and pesticide residue levels in rice to ensure that staple sold in the market, both imported and locally produced, are safe for consumption.

EVELOPING Asian countries should invest more than 5 percent of GDP on infrastructure if they intend to close their infrastructure gaps, according to the Asian Development Bank (ADB). In a statement, ADB said countries continued underinvesting in infrastructure despite the Manilabased multilateral’s recommendation to spend 5 percent of GDP on infrastructure annually. “Many, if not most of the countries in the Asia and Pacific region, are currently investing less than the proposed 5 percent of GDP for infrastructure development. At this rate, financing infrastructure to maintain and sustain economic growth and development will be a tough challenge,” ADB said. Based on the Philippine Development Plan (PDP) 2017 to 2022, public spending on infrastructure was below 5 percent of GDP between 2011 and 2015. It was only in 2016 when public spending on infrastructure breached 5 percent. Actual public spending on infrastructure reached 1.81 percent of GDP in 2011; 2.06 percent in 2012;

See “Rice-import,” A2

See “Infra spend,” A2

IN TIME FOR ‘UNDAS’ Public Works Secretary Mark A. Villar is leading the opening today (Wednesday) of the first segments of the CaviteLaguna Expressway (Calax), to provide more road space for the thousands of vehicles added to the expressways during the observance of Undas, or All Souls’ Day and All Saints’ Day. The first segments to be opened—with daily access time set from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m., Sundays to Thursdays, and 6 a.m. to 10 p.m., Friday to Saturday—will cover Mamplasan Barrier onto the Santa Rosa-Tagaytay Interchange. This section will take about 10 minutes to drive, down from the 45 minutes it currently takes to travel Mamplasan to Santa Rosa-Tagaytay road. The P35-billion, 45-kilometer Calax will connect Cavitex in Kawit to South Luzon Expressway (Slex) at their Mamplasan Interchange in Biñan, Laguna. PHOTO COURTESY OF DPWH

Villar, Dar favor stricter rice-import clearance rules

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FTER pushing for the liberalization of the rice industry, Sen. Cynthia A. Villar said the government should limit the country’s imports to just 1 million metric tons (MMT), the average shortfall in local production. Villar, who chairs the Senate Committee on Agriculture and Food, said the government could limit imports by implementing more stringent guidelines on the issuance of sanitary and

phytosanitary import clearance (SPSIC) to traders. “[The Philippines] produces only 93 percent so the country imports 7 percent, which is about 1 MMT,” Villar told reporters in an interview on Tuesday. “Pahirapin ang phytosanitar y permit.... Kapag pinahirap nila ‘yun, then mali-limit ang importation, [If government would implement stringent rules in issuing phytos-

US 51.1430 n JAPAN 0.4694 n UK 65.8057 n HK 6.5237 n CHINA 7.2367 n SINGAPORE 37.5527 n AUSTRALIA 34.9716 n EU 56.7790 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.6370

Source: BSP (29 October 2019 )


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BusinessMirror October 30, 2019 by BusinessMirror - Issuu