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Thursday, October 31, 2019 Vol. 15 No. 21
P25.00 nationwide | 11 sections 84 pages |
Parallel probes ongoing on rice import players
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By Jasper Emmanuel Y. Arcalas @jearcalas & Cai U. Ordinario @caiordinario
HE government is now scrutinizing rice importation players, including farmers’ cooperatives, as authorities seek to fully realize the benefits of the rice trade liberalization (RTL) law. High-ranking officials interviewed by the BusinessMirror disclosed that parallel investigations have been launched by different agencies to ensure the proper implementation of the RTL law. Finance Assistant Secretary
PHL, China panel on oil, gas devt in 1st meeting By Recto Mercene
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@rectomercene
HE Philippines and China convened in Beijing the 1st meeting of the PhilippinesChina Inter-Governmental Joint Steering Committee on Cooperation on Oil and Gas Development, with both sides expressing hopes of moving forward discussions on possible joint exploration activities as the need for new energy sources intensifies. The Department of Foreign Affairs said the Philippine delegation that went to Beijing for the October 28 meeting was led by See “1st meeting,” A2
PESO EXCHANGE RATES n
Antonio Joselito Lambino II said the Department of Finance (DOF) is closely monitoring revenue collections from rice-related transactions, particularly importation. This, Lambino noted, includes income taxes and tariff collections.
The finance department is doing this to ensure that rice tariffs are properly collected, especially since they are vital to bankroll t he go v e r n me nt ’s i nt e r v e n tions to improve local farmers’ productivity.
“The tax registration of the warehouse was the primary motivation for the raid. But because [the warehouses] contained rice, we checked the import status, [this being] imported rice. As of a few days ago...they were unable to present import documents.” —Lambino
Upskilling the nation’s saviors
Under the RTL law, tariffs in excess of P10 billion will be given directly to farmers. On the aspect of income taxes, the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR), an attached agency of the DOF, recently padlocked 11 warehouses in Guiguinto, Bulacan, for various tax violations, including non-registration and failure to pay See “Rice import,” A2
IN MEMORIAM A woman who makes a living cleaning tombs at the Manila South Cemetery in Makati paints one such grave on Wednesday (October 30), as the nation prepares for the 2019 observance of All Saints’ Day and All Souls’ Day. The Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines Vice President and Caloocan Bishop Pablo Virgilio David and environmental groups have urged the public to make it a “prayerful” and not “wasteful” occasion. NONIE REYES
Rene E. Ofreneo
LABOREM EXERCENS
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HE Information Technology and Business Process Association of the Philippines (IBPAP) recently announced a massive reskilling and upskilling program for the country’s 1 million ICT workers, with an initial target of 100,000 trainees per year. Continued on A19
‘Plan to regulate shipping fees faces legal challenge’ By Elijah Felice E. Rosales
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@alyasjah
HE gover nment ’s plan to regulate shipping fees through a joint administrative order (JAO) will only face legal challenge and eventually fail, as no single agency right now has the mandate to implement such policy, experts warned on Wednesday. In a study commissioned by the Wallace Business Forum, economist Epictetus E. Patalinghug of the University of the Philippines (UP) said the government should rethink its
plan of regulating shipping fees under a draft JAO. Such move, he argued, could work against the Philippines in a period when “the regulatory trend in international shipping is to promote deregulation and pro-competitive policies.” “The proposal to regulate shipping fees and charges of international shipping lines rests on the assumption that some shipping lines plying the intra-Asia routes impose excessive and questionable destination charges to the consignees,” Patalinghug said. See “Shipping fees,” A2
US 51.0440 n JAPAN 0.4688 n UK 65.6885 n HK 6.5114 n CHINA 7.2243 n SINGAPORE 37.4745 n AUSTRALIA 35.0366 n EU 56.7303 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.6106
Source: BSP (30 October 2019 )