PHL manufacturing slips in August
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FTER a hint of recovery in June, the performance of the country’s manufacturing sector continued to slip to another three-month low in August as travel and movement restrictions were reimposed at the beginning of the month. In a report on Tuesday, IHS Markit said the Philippines’s Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) decelerated back to 47.3 in August from July’s 48.4 and from being near the 50-point growth threshold at 49.7 in June. The PMI is a composite index aimed to gauge the health of the country’s manufacturing sector. It is calculated as a weighted
WORKERS attach window fixtures to container vans converted into isolation facilities for coronavirus patients in Pasay City. The local government says these vans will be converted into 120 air-conditioned rooms, each with their own toilet and bath. NONIE REYES
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average of five individual subcomponents. Readings below 50 show deterioration in the industry, while readings above the 50 threshold signal a growth in the manufacturing sector. Across Asean, the Philippines ranked fourth out of seven countries being monitored for their manufacturing sector. Myanmar’s headline figure was the strongest during the month with a PMI of 53.2, followed by Indonesia’s 50.8. Malaysia clocked in at 49.3, followed by the Philippines and then Vietnam’s 45.7. Singapore’s manufacturing sector remained the most affected during the month at 43. The Philippines was also below
the region’s average PMI, which was at 49 for August. IHS Markit Economist David Owen said the reimposition of movement and travel restrictions has, along with continuously rising cases, nipped the manufacturing sector’s recovery in the bud. “The recent steep increase in new Covid-19 cases led the government to impose stricter quarantine measures in Manila and the surrounding provinces in August. The new measures meant that certain groups were unable to travel and some businesses were forced to reduce operating capacity,” Owen said. See “PMI,” A2
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Wednesday, September 2, 2020 Vol. 15 No. 328
P25.00 nationwide | 2 sections 16 pages | 7 DAYS A WEEK
A BARGE crosses the Napindan Channel toward Laguna Lake, as seen from the Pasig-Taguig boundary. In background is the Bonifacio Global City (BGC) skyline. As the nation marked on Tuesday the start of the “Ber months” to herald the world’s longest Christmas season, local governments are pinning their hopes on a resumption of operations in many work places to help the pandemic-devastated economy recover in the second half. A former socioeconomic planning chief, Solita C. Monsod, isn’t counting on it, though. Story below. BERNARD TESTA
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By Tyrone Jasper C. Piad
HE Chamber of Thrift Banks (CTB) has vowed to “mobilize” the freshly injected liquidity into the financial system as its member financial institutions continue to provide micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) and consumer loans amid the pandemic.
CTB President Cecilio Paul San Pedro, at the group’s general meeting on Tuesday, welcomed the recent Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) move to reduce the reserve requirements for thrift banks by 100 basis points (bp). “We are pleased that BSP has taken cognizance of the fact that thrift banks have been continuously lending to MSMEs and consumers during the pandemic; hence, the reduction in reserve require-
ment is necessary to increase our lending capacity,” he said. The BSP said the reduction in reserve requirements is expected to boost lending capacity for MSMEs and rural community-based clients. The reserve requirement is the part of the total deposit balance that banks secure in the BSP’s vaults as reserves. Reducing it means banks have more available funds for borrowings. See “Thrift Banks,” A2
Leisure trips OK’d in playgrounds of the rich By Ma. Stella F. Arnaldo Special to the BusinessMirror
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ELEBRITY couple Sarah Geronimo and Matteo Guidicelli recently raised the hackles of netizens after they posted photos of her birthday vacation in Amanpulo, the playground of the world’s rich and famous,
when the National Capital Region (NCR) was still under general community quarantine (GCQ). More recently, a number of netizens have been noticing an increasing number of vacation photos in social media of other Metro Manila residents frolicking in destinations like El Nido, Palawan, and Balesin Island (Polillo Island),
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in Quezon. According to the Department of Tourism (DOT), however, said leisure trips are allowed, even if the NCR is still under GCQ. In an interview with the BusinessMirror, DOT Undersecretary for Tourism Regulation, Coordination and Resource Generation Arturo P. Boncato Jr. clarified,
“Point-to-point travel is allowed/ permitted by the IATF [Inter-Agency Task Force for Emerging Infectious Diseases]. These destinations have their respective hangars in Manila for a more contained processing before flights and test before travel is required.” He added, the guests to these Continued on A2
MONSOD: RESPONSE TO COVID WAS ‘TOO LITTLE, TOO LATE’ By Cai U. Ordinario
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ORGET growth projections in the second semester—former Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Solita C. Monsod only has one word for it: DOOM. In the General Membership Meeting of the Chamber of Thrift Banks on Tuesday, Prof. Monsod said the government already failed to deliver on the country’s needs with Bayanihan 1, which only accounted for 1.93 percent of GDP. Monsod said the situation is not encouraging given that Bayanihan 2 is only 0.7 percent of GDP and the law has not yet been signed by the President. “The government doesn’t learn from its mistake. Bayanihan 2 is the perfect example. How do they expect to correct the social crisis, much less the economic one, with just 0.7 percent of GDP, when they spent almost double that in the last quarter and the economy still contracted by 16.5 percent?” Monsod said. “It’s priorities are misplaced—the people [especially the poor] always are least priority, lower than the credit rating of our Continued on A2
n JAPAN 0.4580 n UK 64.8266 n HK 6.2558 n CHINA 7.0796 n SINGAPORE 35.6650 n AUSTRALIA 35.7465 n EU 57.8887 n SAUDI ARABIA 12.9277
Source: BSP (September 1, 2020)