NG Aug subsidies to GOCCs rise 8-fold By Bernadette D. Nicolas
@BNicolasBM
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UBSIDIES extended by the national government to state-run firms in August surged eight-fold to P42.35 billion, with state health insurer Philippine Health Insurance Corporation (PhilHealth) receiving the bulk of the amount. Latest data from the Bureau of the Treasury showed that the total subsidies received by governmentowned and -controlled corporations (GOCCs) in August was way higher
than the amount released in the same month last year at P4.99 billion. In August this year, PhilHealth cornered P30.61 billion or 72.3 percent of the total subsidies released for the month. In the same month in 2020, PhilHealth did not receive any amount from the national government. Next to PhilHealth, the second biggest subsidy in August was given to the National Irrigation Administration (NIA) at P6 billion, while the National Housing Authority (NHA) got P2.99 billion.
For Januar y to Aug ust, GOCCs received subsidies of P136.72 bill ion, dow n by 9.8 percent f rom P151.61 billion in the same per iod in 2020. Taking the lion’s share of the amount was also PhilHealth, which received a total of P76.06 billion in the eight-month period. This is also equivalent to more than double the subsidy it received in the same period last year at only P30.3 billion. Trailing PhilHealth are NIA (P25.61 billion), NHA (P11.78 billion), National Food Authority (P7 billion) and the
Philippine Crop Insurance Corporation (P1.75 billion). The national government provides subsidies to state-run firms to fund operations not covered by the corporate revenues or to finance specific programs or projects. Last year, the national government spent a total of P229.02 billion in subsidies to GOCCs, the highest since 1986 when the government started collecting data. PhilHealth cornered the biggest allocation, receiving P62.4 billion or 27.25 percent of the total subsidies released during the period.
P41-T COVID LOSSES CAN
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Monday, September 27, 2021 Vol. 16 No. 348
P25.00 nationwide | 2 sections 18 pages |
BE CUT—NEDA, EXPERTS PHITEX CLOSES P69-M DEALS, AS U.S. BUYERS LEAD PURCHASES
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CHILDREN are silhouetted against a golden sky after sunset at Angono Lakeside Ecopark at the weekend. The government has eased quarantine restrictions by resorting to granular lockdowns in identified hotspot areas with Covid-19 clustering. It also lifted a requirement for the use of face shields, which shall be mandatory only for indoor airconditioned places like malls and restaurants, and for public transport. BERNARD TESTA
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By Cai U. Ordinario
@caiordinario
HE pandemic losses it estimated of over P41 trillion in four decades could be the worst-case scenario for the Philippines, particularly if mistakes committed in 2020 are repeated this year and onward, the National Economic and Development Authority (Neda) said on Sunday. Continued on A2
PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 50.3720
OCAL travel agencies and tour operators were estimated to have closed some P69 million in deals with foreign buyers at the recent Philippine Travel Exchange (Phitex) 2021. Tourism Promotions Board (TPB) Chief Operating Officer Ma. Anthonette Velasco-Allones told the BusinessMirror the revenues may still increase as the agency completes its interviews with the participants. She noted there were “1,417 successful appointments for the two days of business-to-business meetings, including walk-in meetings.” The TPB is the marketing arm of the Department of Tourism (DOT) and is tasked with organizing the annual Phitex, which was held this year from September 19 to 23. There were 121 buyers from 32 countries, and 156 sellers, 33 of whom were onsite at the Acea Subic Beach Resort in Zambales, while 123 participated virtually. Orientours Co. Ltd.
President Joebert Opulencia of the US, and Mooncake Educational Travel and Tours Managing Director Antonio Esteban were awarded top buyer and seller, respectively. “The encouraging outcomes of our hybrid Phitex is a key step to building confidence in our ability to safely reopen MICE [Meetings, Incentives, Conferences and Exhibitions] as a sector of tourism,” she said. “Mundane as it may sound since we constantly repeat it, we need to learn how to live and work with the Covid-19 virus and its variants. For MICE, this requires stringent adherence to protocols and our collective agility to respond to changing situations before and during the events,” she added. “It is also evident that charting the future of MICE is a shared responsibility of government and our private sector partners and stakeholders,” said VelascoAllones. Continued on A2
Residential property prices down in Q2–BSP By Bianca Cuaresma @BcuaresmaBM
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ESIDENTIAL property prices declined for the second consecutive quarter in April to June this year, driven by the downtrend in real estate prices in the National Capital Region (NCR). Data from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’ (BSP) Residential Real Estate Price Index (RREPI) showed house prices nationwide contracted by 9.4 percent in the second quarter of 2021 from their levels in the same period last year.
The BSP attributed the decline to the “continued effects of the pandemic on the residential property demand” as well as high base effects. “The year-on-year contraction in the nationwide residential property prices was driven mainly by the downtrend of property prices in the NCR, which fell by 18.3 percent relative to the second quarter of 2020, marking four consecutive quarters of decline since the third quarter of 2020,” the BSP said in a statement. The decline emanated from the
“The year-on-year contraction in the nationwide residential property prices was driven mainly by the downtrend of property prices in the NCR.”—Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas
negative price changes of single detached, condominium and townhouse units in the NCR. In the case
of duplex housing, no bank loans were granted and reported to the BSP during the period. Property prices in areas outside NCR also decreased, albeit marginally by 0.6 percent as the drop in the prices of single detached/attached houses more than offset the growth in the prices of townhouses, duplexes, and condominium units. The average appraised value per square meter of new housing units in the country contracted by 29.1 percent from its level in the previous year.
n JAPAN 0.4567 n UK 69.1205 n HK 6.4701 n CHINA 7.7975 n SINGAPORE 37.3569 n AUSTRALIA 36.7413 n EU 59.1418 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.4307
See “Residential,” A2
Source: BSP (September 24, 2021)