8-MONTH GOVT REVENUE DIPS 12% ON VIRUS WOES
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Monday, September 14, 2020 Vol. 15 No. 340
P25.00 nationwide | 2 sections 16 pages |
A RESIDENT of Baseco in Port Area, Manila, tries his luck at catching fish, oblivious to the fact that a couple of kilometers down the bay a controversial government rehabilitation of Manila Bay is in full swing, with critics citing economic, health and legal implications of its P400-million “white-sand” project in the face of a pandemic. NONIE REYES
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By Bernadette D. Nicolas
@BNicolasBM
OVERNMENT revenues are still down by 12.17 percent year-on-year from January to August despite the government’s main collecting agencies exceeding the revised combined target for the period.
Citing preliminary data, the Revenue Operations Group (ROG) of the Department of Finance (DOF) said in a statement at the weekend that the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) and the Bureau of Customs (BOC) collected a combined total of P1.637 tril-
lion, exceeding by 7.17 percent the P1.527 trillion adjusted target set by the Cabinet-level Development Budget Coordination Committee (DBCC). However, separate data from BIR and BOC showed the combined revenue take as of end-August is still
lower compared to P1.864 trillion collected in the same period last year. For the seven-month period, BIR’s tax take amounted to P1.289 trillion, dropping by 11.23 percent from P1.452 trillion a year ago. Nonetheless, it surpassed by 8.08 percent the P1.193 trillion revised target set by DBCC. Meanwhile, the BOC collected P347.55 billion, falling by 15.49 percent from the P411.25 billion it collected from January to August last year. However, BOC managed to beat its goal of P334.44 billion by 3.92 percent in the same period. For the month of August, both BIR and BOC exceeded their collection targets despite the curtailed economic activities in Metro Manila and its nearby provinces of
Bulacan, Laguna, Cavite and Rizal from August 4 to 18, when these areas were placed under a strict modified enhanced community quarantine (MECQ). Combined collections of the BIR and BOC reached P216.65 billion, lower by 16.71 percent from P260.12 billion in 2019. Of the combined revenue take for the month, BIR’s share was P172.06 billion, falling by 16.31 percent from P205.59 billion in the same month last year. BIR also surpassed its P118.2 billion target by 45.57 percent. For its part, BOC collected P44.65 billion, topping the DBCC target of P33.68 billion by 32.58 percent. However, this was 16.7 percent less than the P53.59 billion it collected in the same month a year ago. See “Revenue,” A2
Pag-IBIG may postpone hike in contributions
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HE workers’ shelter fund, Pag-IBIG, may put on hold the plan to raise the decades-old monthly contributions of its members in consideration of the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on businesses and labor. Secretary Eduardo D. del Rosario, who heads the Department of
Human Settlements and Urban Development and the 11-member PagIBIG Fund Board of Trustees, has instructed the Management of PagIBIG Fund to consult stakeholders again to discuss the possibility of delaying the January 2021 implementation of the P50-increase to the agency’s decades-old P100
PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 48.5790
monthly contributions or savings. “We recognize that a number of our members and several businesses are experiencing financial hardships brought about by Covid-19. We understand their plight and we want to help them in any way we can. That’s why we are studying the possible delay of
the P50-increase in the members’ monthly savings right now. This is our contribution to the efforts of the administration of President Duterte to alleviate the financial burden of our fellow Filipinos during these challenging times,” said del Rosario.
INVESTMENT PLEDGES SEEN TO CREATE 73K JOBS AMID PANDEMIC By Cai U. Ordinario
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@caiordinario
HE Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) still expects more jobs to be created from investment pledges made by both Filipinos and foreign investors at the height of the Covid-induced lockdowns in the first and second quarter of the year. Based on the approved foreign and Filipino investments through Investment Promotion Agencies (IPAs), investments of foreign and Filipino nationals that cleared the hurdle amounted to P691.2 billion in the first semester, higher by 81.3 percent than the P381.2 billion committed in the same period last year. T hese approved investments in the first semester of 2020 are expected to create 72,702 jobs, a 0.4-percent increase in 72,380 jobs last year.
The most number of jobs will be created in manufacturing. “Manufacturing would absorb the most number of jobs for the period, with 26,667 or 36.7 percent of the projected total for the semester,” PSA said. This will be followed by Transportation and Storage where a total of 20,776 jobs will be created or 28.6 percent of the total jobs created from investment pledges. Another area that will create jobs out of these investments is Administrative and Support Service Activities with 17,766, or a share of 24.4 percent of total jobs. For investments approved in the second quarter, PSA said around 36,572 jobs will be created. This is 21.4 percent higher than the 30,135 jobs expected from the investments approved in the same period in 2019. Continued on A2
Continued on A4
n JAPAN 0.4577 n UK 62.2200 n HK 6.2682 n CHINA 7.1086 n SINGAPORE 35.4669 n AUSTRALIA 35.2392 n EU 57.4398 n SAUDI ARABIA 12.9523
Source: BSP (September 11, 2020)