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SUPERMARKETS' GROUP GOES ON 'PORK HOLIDAY' IN SUPPORT OF RETAILERS By Macon Ramos-Araneta TRADERS' THREAT.
Meat vendors sell pork inside the San Andres Wet Market in Leveriza, Manila on February 7, 2021. Retailers say they will not sell pork during the 60-day implementation of the price ceiling to avoid losses and penalties for violation. Agriculture officials say hog farmers could not cope with high demand for pork as a result of the onslaught of the Asian Swine Flu, thus making it necessary to import pork. Norman Cruz
MEAT dealers and retailers are set to adopt a “pork holiday” today (Monday) as the 60-day price ceiling on pork and chicken products takes effect. “It is not logical for us to carry pork or chicken. We cannot make anything, any profit out of it (price ceiling),” said Philippine Amalgamated Supermarkets Association president Steven Cua in an interview with GMA Network. “We will not carry (pork or chicken), but not as an opposition to the government directive of a price freeze,” he added. Several pork vendors were also worried about their livelihood after meat dealers were told of a possible “pork holiday” due to the implementation of the price ceiling which sets pork kasim or pigue at P270 per kilogram and liempo at P300 per kilogram. “They told us that there will totally be no sale on Monday due to transportation losses,” Arnel Penos, a meat vendor, said in an interview with state-run PTV-4. He said they cannot lower their prices due to the impact of the African Swine Fever. Next page
P420-b stimulus bill pushed Velasco-led 'Bayanihan to Arise as One' gains support of 115 solons
By Rio N. Araja
“W
ITH the Philippine economy still in recession and no end in sight for the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic,” Speaker Lord Allan Velasco has proposed a P420 billion fund to help stimulate the country’s economic recovery. Velasco, along with Marikina City Rep. Stella Luz Quimbo, recently filed House Bill No. 8628 or the proposed “Bayanihan to Arise as One Act” or the Bayanihan 3. At least 115 members of major political parties and power blocs
COVID-19 PH AT A GLANCE
(AS OF 4 PM FEB. 7)
537,310 TOTAL NUMBER OF CASES
1,790 26,333 NEW
ACTIVE
11,179
70
499,798
70
DEATHS
RECOVERIES
NEW
NEW
comprising the supermajority in the House of Representatives expressed their support and signified their intent to coauthor HB 8628. While the two previous Bayanihan laws—Bayanihan to Heal as One and Bayanihan to Recover as One —increased the government’s initial capacity to respond to the demands of the COVID-19 crisis, Velasco said these were “not sufficient for the genuine economic recovery of the country.” Citing recent data from the Philippine Statistics Authority, Velasco said the economy contracted by 9.5 percent overall in 2020, the worst performance in the nation’s post-war history. Such a contraction, he said, is significantly deeper than the predicted contraction of 4.5 to 6.6 percent drop, which became the basis for the 2021 budget. “Given that actual economic output in 2020 was far below what was assumed for budget purposes, and further losses may still be incurred as the COVID-19 pandemic is expected to prevail well into the Next page
VOL. XXXIV • NO. 335 • 3 SECTIONS 12 PAGES • P18 MONDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2021 • www.manilastandard.net • mst.daydesk@gmail.com
VACCINE STORAGE. Health Secretary Francisco Duque III (right) and Cabinet Secretary Karlo Alexei Nograles inspect one of the freezers to be used for storage of coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) vaccines at the Navotas Polytechnic College in Navotas City on Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021. Navotas City Rep. John Reynald Tiangco (left) joins the inspection. Joey O. Razon
Senator slams double standard 70m assured of getting the jab in COVID-19 control measures By Willie Casas
By Macon Ramos-Araneta and Willie Casas SENATOR Imee Marcos warned that the special treatment of government employees by the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF) will make it more difficult for local governments to control the spread of COVID-19 and discourage the
cooperation of the general public. She scored the “double standard” in enforcing pandemic control measures after state employees were allowed to skip testing and quarantines in local government units (LGUs) where they arrive on official business. “This is outrageous and dangerous. Why should anyone, least of all government employees who should be exem
LOCAL ROUNDUP
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HAPPY FARMERS.
Benguet farmers have a reason to be happy as wholesale prices of cabbage at the Benguet Agri Pinoy Trading Center now fetch 100 pesos per kilo at wholesale from 50 pesos the past weeks. BAPTC Head of Operations Violeta Salda says supply is low and demand is high as the last crop for 2020 has been harvested and the new crop season for 2021 has just started in vegetable-producing areas of Benguet. Dave Leprozo
HERD immunity to COVID-19 is possible by the end of the year, if the vaccines that the government has negotiated to obtain arrive on time, the country's vaccine czar said Sunday. In an interview with ABS-CBN's TeleRadyo, Secretary Carlito Galvez Jr. said the government can inoculate 50 million to 70 million by the end of the year, within the vicinity of its target to vaccinate 70 million to 80 million adults to achieve herd immunity. “In a best-case scenario, if we have enough supply and our negotiations are successful, by December we can inoculate 50 million to 70 million,” Galvez said in Filipino. “If there's a shortage of supply, the worst case scenario is we'll finish by
the middle of 2022.” He said so far, the country has signed term sheets with five drug companies for 108 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines. This is on top of the 44 million doses the country will get from the COVAX Facility, a program launched by the World Health Organization (WHO) aimed at the equitable distribution of the vaccine. “More or less we will have 152 million doses. If we divide it by two, we can vaccinate more than 75 million people,” he said. The Palace, meanwhile, assured medical frontliners they would receive the first batch of COVID-19 vaccines this month. Presidential spokesman Harry Roque Next page
Oil price hike looms: diesel, P1/liter By Alena Mae S. Flores CONSUMERS can expect a hefty oil price increase of as much as P1.10 per liter effective Tuesday to reflect the movement of prices in the world market. Unioil Philippines forecasts diesel will go up by P1 to P1.15 per liter and gasoline by P0.75 to P0.85 per liter. “Expect fuel prices to go up next week (February 9 to 15). Diesel should increase by P1.00 to P1.10 per liter. Gasoline should increase by P0.75 to P0.85 per liter,” the company said in its
weekly advisory. World oil prices last week were buoyed by supply curbs implemented by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies to help cut the supply surplus due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Analysts also believe global economic recovery is underway as the world oil prices have reached their bottom, supply is kept in check by the OPEC countries and their allies, while investors have remained keen on infusing funds to the US oil sector. Next page
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