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PSBank to decide on home loans in a day

PHILIPPINE SAVINGS Bank (PSBank) said decisions on home loan applications will now take just one day for the purchase of condominium units and properties from selected developers.
In a statement on Tuesday, the savings banking arm of Metropolitan Bank & Trust Co. said it will only take a day for the bank to grant loans for brand new condominium units and properties from accredited developers.
PSBank Senior Vice-President Noel Tuazon said the process of providing a credit decision within a day comes after the bank’s streamlining of internal evaluation processes.
“[This allows] the bank to offer the fastest possible credit decision on home loan applications for condominiums available in the country,” Mr. Tuazon was quoted as saying in the statement.
He added that the new approval process is available to clients who wish to buy units from accredited developers such as SM Development Corp., DMCI Holdings, Inc., Megaworld Corp., Eton Properties Philippines, Inc., Rockwell Land Corp. and Ayala Land Premier, among others.
On the other hand, its current approval process on condominium units and properties from non-accredited developers shall go through the standard credit decision of five days through text message. This will be applied as well for loan applications to acquire a house and lot, vacant lot and townhouse or duplex among others.
PSBank said its decisions on car loans are already available within a day for more than two years now.
In the first quarter, PSBank’s net profit stood at P641.1 million, up 25% from P511.1 million in the same period last year, supported by its retail business. — KANV

How PSEi member stocks performed — August 7, 2018

Here’s a quick glance at how PSEi stocks fared on Tuesday, August 7, 2018.

Philippine Stock Exchange’s most active stocks by volume turnover — August 7, 2018

Nayong Pilipino officials sacked over onerous casino lease deal

PRESIDENT Rodrigo R. Duterte on Tuesday fired the entire board of the Nayong Pilipino Foundation (NPF) for approving a “grossly disadvantageous deal,” on the same day a Chinese firm broke ground on a $1.5-billion integrated resort and casino on the foundation’s property.
Nayong Pilipino logoPresidential Spokesperson Herminio L. Roque, Jr. said the president announced the sacking of the NPF officials at the Cabinet meeting on Monday, with official papers for their termination to be issued “in due course by the Executive Secretary.”
“He cited the case of Nayong Pilipino which leased government property for a ridiculously long period of time of 70 years, beyond the lifetime of anyone. And he considered this a contract which was grossly disadvantageous to government,” Mr. Roque said in a briefing on Tuesday.
Mr. Roque said the president “will have the (lease agreement) canceled as being grossly disadvantageous to government.” The government’s preferred period is 25 years.
The sacking of the NPF officials coincided with the groundbreaking ceremony held by Chinese casino operator Landing International Development Ltd. on an integrated resort and casino project called NayonLanding. The development will rise on a 95,700 square meter (sq.m.) site leased from the NPF for 25 years, which can be extended for another 25.
Asked whether Mr. Duterte was referring to Landing International’s project when he called the deal “disadvantageous,” Mr. Roque said the president has yet to provide details.
Reuters reported that the Chinese casino deal will be canceled, though Mr. Roque was quoted as saying by the news agency that the proposed rental arrangement is “unconscionable.”
In a statement, NPF Chairperson Patricia Ocampo rejected accusations that the board and management were involved in a graft-ridden deal with Landing International. She, however, accepted the president’s termination of her leadership.
“I strongly deny that there was graft and corruption. On the contrary, the lease contract with Landing International is above-board, and is highly advantageous to the Filipino people,” Ms. Ocampo said.
NPF clarified that monthly rental for the 9.5-hectare property was P360 per sq.m., with an advance rental of P827.05 million. The foundation will also be collecting an additional monthly rental equivalent to 10% of net profit from the operations on the site.
“We negotiated what we believed then, and believe now, are most advantageous terms and conditions for the government and the people,” Ms. Ocampo said.
Landing International said it will continue to pursue the project, which will consist of an indoor cultural theme park and waterpark, including plans for what it claims is the first and largest indoor movie-based theme park in Asia. It will also offer around 1,500 luxury hotel rooms, a convention center with a ballroom that can seat 4,000 guests, a shopping mall, and a casino.
Landing International said two-thirds of the site will be dedicated to gaming, while one-third will be for the non-gaming component, with an intended market of visitors from China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, South Korea, and Southeast Asia.
In a media briefing before the project’s groundbreaking ceremony, Landing International Chief Operating Officer Jay Lee said the company’s chairman met with the president during one of his overseas trips.
“I think we started looking at this investment more than a year ago. In one of the visits of the president overseas… our chairman was able to meet up with the president. That was a year ago, and he said he welcomed foreign investors,” Mr. Lee said.
In a separate statement on Tuesday afternoon, Landing International said the removal of the NPF officials will not affect its project.
“From the group’s viewpoint, the recent decision of the Philippine government to replace members of the NPF board of trustees did not affect the validity of the subject contract of lease,” the company said.
“Unless the lease contract is canceled or nullified on legal grounds by the courts, Landing has reason to believe that it is a valid leaseholder and can legally proceed with its project,” it added.
Landing International further noted that it has a provisional license from the Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp. that allows the company to operate a casino in 2022, provided that it complies with all requirements set by the law. The company is scheduled to commence operations on the casino component of NayonLanding that year. — Arra B. Francia

Barangay Ginebra Kings go for PBA title clincher

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo
Senior Reporter
SEIZING control of their best-of-seven Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) Commissioner’s Cup finals series after winning back-to-back games, the Barangay Ginebra San Miguel Kings now try to complete the dethronement of defending champions San Miguel Beermen in Game Six today at the Mall of Asia Arena in Pasay City.
Winners in Games Four and Five, the Kings go for the clincher in the scheduled 7 p.m. game that would hand them their third PBA title in six conferences and 11th championship overall while frustrating the Beermen, also the Philippine Cup champions, in their repeat aspirations and Grand Slam hopes.
Barangay Ginebra overtook San Miguel in the series when it was able to dig deep in the end and pull a huge win in Game Five, 87-83, on Sunday.
Down by three points, 83-80, with two minutes remaining in the game, the Kings went on a 7-0 run the rest of the way to carve the path to victory.
Do-it-all guard Scottie Thompson stepped up for Barangay Ginebra down the stretch, scoring six of the final seven points of the Kings to make the win possible.
Barangay Ginebra also held it down on defense, making it hard for San Miguel to execute its offense as it tried to salvage the victory.
The slim Game Five victory of Barangay Ginebra was a complete change in the series that saw blowouts in the first four games.
Mr. Thompson led the Kings with 20 points and 11 rebounds in Game Five with import Justin Brownlee adding 18 points.
For San Miguel it was import Renaldo Balkman who led with 34 points and 20 rebounds while big man June Mar Fajardo finished with 23 points and 11 boards.
For winning coach Tim Cone, defense played a huge part in the victory even as he gave credit to Mr. Thompson for stepping up in the end.
“It’s about defense. It’s about making stops. It’s a tough defensive battle and that’s what I like. It’s 40-all at the half, and that’s the kind of game we wanted to play. We pulled it off,” Mr. Cone said.
“Scottie played great for us. He was doing everything. He reminded me of Russell Westbrook [of the Oklahoma City Thunder]. He is becoming a complete player,” he added.
NOT GIVING UP
While they are down in the series, the Beermen are not about to give up and vowed to come back better in Game Six.
“Though we lost, I’m proud of the way my team played. I thought we would win the game but we didn’t get the breaks in the end,” San Miguel coach Leo Austria said.
“We’re not losing hope. I expect the players to bounce back on Wednesday. There is no room to be down at this point. We have to be positive, be focused and give our all to extend the series,” he added.

Batang Gilas holds off China to advance outright to quarterfinals

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo
Senior Reporter
THE Philippine national youth team got the better of China in their clash of top Group B teams in the FIBA U18 Asian Championship in Thailand, winning, 73-63, on Tuesday to go undefeated in the group stage and book a direct pass to the quarterfinals of the tournament.
Displaying the steadiness and balance that have marked its campaign so far in the tournament, Batang Gilas kept the Chinese at bay to solidify its standing as one of the teams to beat in the U18 Asian Championship.
The match was tight right from the start with the two teams battling hard to establish control of the contest.
The Philippines topped the opening quarter, 18-15, and ditto the second frame to carry a 31-27 advantage midway into the key ball game.
In the third, led by Sean Ildefonso, Batang Gilas pulled away to hold a double-digit lead, 54-39, heading into the final 10 minutes.
While everybody thought China was ready to concede, it mounted a ferocious comeback in the fourth quarter, coming to within six points, 68-62, with 39 ticks to go,
But the Philippines was not to be denied of the win as it put the finishing touches on the game from the free-throw line.
Ildefonso led Batang Gilas with 18 points and seven boards while AJ Edu had 13 points, 14 rebounds and five blocks.
Guard Dalph Panopio had 12 points and eight rebounds with Kai Sotto chipping in 11 points and 10 boards. Miguel Oczon was the other Batang Gilas in double-digits in scoring with 11.
China, meanwhile, was paced by Haowen Guo with 24 markers.
For winning the group, Batang Gilas earned a one-day rest, joining other group winners Iran (Group A), Australia(Group C) and either South Korea or Chinese Taipei (Group D), which are still playing as of this writing.
The second- and third-place teams in the group stage battle it out in a playoff today to determine which of them get to join the early quarterfinal qualifiers.
Batang Gilas is to face the winner between Bahrain and the loser between the ongoing game of South Korea and Chinese Taipei in the quarterfinals on Thursday.

DoF doubts revenue potential of tax bill approved by committee

THE HOUSE ways and means committee approved the second tax reform package on Tuesday in a form that left the Department of Finance (DoF) “not confident” about its revenue prospects.
The unnumbered substitute bill, which has been rebranded as the Tax Reform for Attracting Better and High-quality Opportunities (TRABAHO), is going up for plenary debate at the House of Representatives after the legislation hurdled the committee yesterday following six public hearings.
The bill proposes to cut the corporate income tax rate gradually to 20% from 30%, via a 2 percentage-point reduction every other year beginning 2021.
It also proposed to limit investment incentives to a single menu and restricted availment of the perks to five years. It also limited the incentives to industries listed in the annual Strategic Investments Priority Plan (SIPP) and beneficiaries also need to meet performance targets as determined by the Board of Investments. The bill also included a sunset period of two to five years depending on the time they have enjoyed incentives under their current contracts with investment-promotion agencies (IPAs).
Finance Undersecretary Karl Kendrick T. Chua said that each 2 percentage-point reduction in the corporate income tax rate will cost the government about P62 billion, and added he was uncertain that the government can generate enough savings to offset the foregone revenue.
The substitute bill did not incorporate the DoF’s proposal to make the corporate income tax cuts conditional on the savings generated by rationalizing the tax incentives.
“I’m not confident. (Each cut is) a loss of P62 billion. We hope to (offset lost revenue) from the rationalization of fiscal incentives beginning with those industries that are considered sunset where incentives are unnecessary. That’s why originally we introduced conditions so that we are fully confident that we will not have any losses. We will do our best to offset it somehow,” Mr. Chua told reporters after the hearing, noting that the DoF will ensure a robust mechanism for identifying those who need incentives.
“By that time we hope that we can recover by having more competitive incentives, and only sectors that are targeted will benefit from them, not almost everyone,” he added.
Nevertheless, Mr. Chua claimed some wins because the substitute bill “achieved the most important points,” which include making incentives time-bound, targeted, performance-based, and transparent.
The proposed incentives in the bill include: a three-year income tax holiday; an 18% preferential rate on net taxable income with 15% paid to the national government, and the balance paid to local governments at the provincial, municipal, or city level where the enterprise is located, in lieu of local business tax.
The current incentive scheme provides for a 5% tax on gross income in lieu of all other national and local taxes granted by various Investment Promotion Agencies, enjoyed in perpetuity.
The bill “sends the signal now that the government is not driving away investments given the fact that we will allow reapplication for incentives, the investors, as long as they want to expand their business, can continue to enjoy their incentives longer than the transition period,” Rep. Dakila Carlo E. Cua (Quirino), who chairs the ways and means committee, said after the hearing.
“That’s a big change that (companies) can and will survive and I hope those who are really performing and creating jobs will expand and therefore enjoy incentives for longer,” he added.
The bill proposes the establishment of a Fiscal Incentives Review Board with oversight functions over IPAs. The board will be headed by the DoF.
Asked whether the change in House leadership affected the deliberations, Mr. Cua said: “(Speaker Gloria M. Arroyo) was very determined… and ensured that we made this our top priority.”
Julian H. Payne of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce said that he was “disappointed” by the timetable of the corporate income tax reduction.
“We would have liked it to come into effect more quickly like the personal income tax. In fact we thought it’s going to be in 2019,” he said during the hearing.
He noted that he was “pleased” with the general direction of lower corporate taxes to 20% from the original proposal of 25%, but added that reductions every two years “reduce its attractiveness to business.”
“If it was done more quickly, that would be a big message to businesses. It would stimulate more investment and therefore increase the total tax take. We’re afraid that this is a little bit too late and a little bit too slow,” said Mr. Payne.
Mr. Cua, meanwhile, noted that the measure allows the President to accelerate the pace of tax reductions when adequate savings are realized from the rationalization of tax incentives.
The DoF”s Mr. Chua, however, said that instant implementation of rate cuts would “very badly” affect the country’s fiscal position.
Rey E. Untal of the Information Technology and Business Process Association of the Philippines, meanwhile, sought a longer transition period of 10 years for weaning companies off incentives.
“It is still our position that our global competitiveness is at risk given the fact that we will transition to a model that we will be more expensive right now compared to India,” he said.
Finance Undersecretary Chua replied to this concern that the funds have been allocated to help with the upskilling of the industry.
Albay Representative Jose Ma. Clemente S. Salceda also noted that the industry can tap upskilling programs offered by the Technical Education and Skills Development Authority, which has only disbursed P1.3 billion of the P7 billion set aside for the program.
Semiconductor and Electronics Industries in the Philippines President Dan C. Lachica, meanwhile, asked the panel to retain preferential corporate tax rates in lieu of local business and property taxes. He added that he prefers that industry be insulated from bureaucratic process at the local government unit (LGU) level.
“The concern is not so much in the money, but having to deal with LGUs,” he said. — Elijah Joseph C. Tubayan

Rice tariff bill hurdles House on second reading

THE House of Representatives, voting viva voce, passed on second reading the rice tariff bill, which hopes to broaden rice imports and use the tariffs to fund measures to improve competitiveness in the rice industry.
House Bill 7735, the Revised Agricultural Tariffication Act, proposes the creation the Rice Competitiveness Enhancement Fund (RCEF) as the government expands the role of private traders in importing rice.
The fund will help support upgrades to farming equipment and provide financing for crop loans and insurance, among others.
The fund will also be used for post-harvest, logistical projects and rice marketing, rice scholarships and vocational education and research extension services.
Albay Representative Edcel C. Lagman, prior to voting, moved to introduce a provision to automatically appropriate funds for RCEF.
“The proceeds from the rice fund shall automatically be appropriated and periodically released by the DBM (Department of Budget and Management) to the DA (Department of Agriculture) in order to sustain the program on rice sufficiency and enhance the small farmers self-reliance,” Mr. Lagman said. The proposal was accepted by bill sponsor Representative Jose T. Panganiban.
The measure also proposes to restore the minimum access volume (MAV) on rice to its 2012 level of 350,000 metric tons (MT).
It also proposed that the bound rate for rice imported from non-ASEAN World Trade Organization members be set at the 40% Most Favored Nation (MFN) rate within the 350,000 MT MAV. Beyond the quota, the rate rises to 180% for MFNs.
Imports from ASEAN will follow import duty rates set out by the ASEAN Trade in Goods Agreement.
The measure will also allow the President to make adjustments in the applied rate, or regulate rice exports as well as imports, and enter into trade negotiations, relating to bound or maximum rates on rice trade. The president, however, can intervene for not more than two months.
The “Revised Agricultural Tariffication Act,” is among the priority bills listed by the Legislative-Executive Development Advisory Council.
Its counterpart measure, Senate Bill 1839, authored by Senator Sherwin T. Gatchalian, remains pending at the committee level. — Charmaine A. Tadalan

DA seeking to tap tariffs to boost livestock competitiveness

AGRICULTURE Secretary Emmanuel F. Piñol said he may establish a separate fund for livestock growers, to emulate the proposed Rice Competitiveness Enhancement Fund (RCEF).
Mr. Piñol on Tuesday told reporters that the livestock subsector does not “get enough support from the government.”
“It’s only now that livestock and dairy had an increase in funding. We have programs that, although they haven’t been implemented yet. There are funds for it,” though he added he would like the industry to be “more vibrant.”
The RCEF is a proposal under Rice Tariffication Act currently pending in Congress. Tariffs collected from rice imports are to finance measures to make the domestic rice industry more competitive.
When asked if the livestock fund clashes with the current Agricultural Competitiveness Enhancement Fund, Mr. Piñol said that the P5-billion ACEF does not represent the potential funding that can be collected from agricultural import tariffs.
“If we have a similar fund for livestock (funded by import tariffs) then the stakeholders can say that the tariffs go to them to improve their production,” he added.
Aside from livestock, similar funds could be set up for other crops such as corn.
Mr. Piñol is pressing for tariff-based funding after the Department of Agriculture’s (DA) budget was cut for 2019. — Anna Gabriela A. Mogato

June factory output growth eases to 18%

By Jochebed B. Gonzales
Senior Researcher
INDUSTRIAL OUTPUT continued to expand in the double digits in June but slowed to 18% compared to a month earlier, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) reported.
According to preliminary results from the PSA’s Monthly Integrated Survey of Selected Industries, factory output, as measured by the Volume of Production Index (VoPI), rose by 18% year on year, against the revised 21% growth in output for May. The June result was a reversal from the 0.1% contraction in June 2017.
In the six months to June, factory output growth averaged 20.6%, significantly higher than the 6.1% posted a year earlier.
The printing industry’s output growth topped the table in June at 116.3%, followed by petroleum products (60.7%) and textiles (36.7%).
Other segments with notable gains were: miscellaneous manufactures (21%), rubber and plastic products (20.7%), machinery except electrical (20.3%), electrical machinery (17.1%), food manufacturing (14.7%) and beverages (10.1%).
Capacity utilization in June averaged 84.3%, with 12 of the 20 sectors tracked registering utilization rates of at least 80%.
Monthly Integrated Survey of Selected Industries
“Robust domestic and higher external demand, increased investments and OFW (overseas Filipino worker) remittances, improved consumer confidence, and stable business confidence backed this growth in manufacturing,” Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia was quoted as saying in a statement issued by the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA).
NEDA noted that despite growth easing in the production of construction-related manufactures, net sales of cement, glass products and basic metals also rose in the double digits in June, at 10.1%, 15.8% and 29.8%, respectively.
“The increased production of construction-related manufactures was in response to the continued demand for non-residential buildings such as industrial, commercial and institutional buildings,” NEDA added.
Asked for comment, Union Bank of the Philippines chief economist Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion attributed the expansion in manufacturing activity to robust household and government spending.
“I really think that increasing domestic demand from increasing government spending and domestic consumption has greatly contributed to this sustained six-month double-digit growth,” he said.
“If the planned government spending continues to roll out and be absorbed by the economy, the Philippine manufacturing sector will continue to develop at its current double-digit pace,” he said, adding that infrastructure expenditure contribute to the expansion in manufacturing production.

Security of tenure bill introduced to Senate plenary

SENATOR Joel J. Villanueva presented to the plenary on Tuesday the security of tenure bill, which President Rodrigo R. Duterte urged Congress to pass in his third State of the Nation Address (SONA) in July.
In his sponsorship speech, Mr. Villanueva, who chairs the Senate committee on labor, employment and human resources development, said Senate Bill 1826 or the proposed Security of Tenure and End of Endo Act provides the Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE) and employers clearly defined labor policies.
“Senate Bill 1826 is clear enough to meet the interests of the labor sector and the interests of the business sector… (The bill) is pro-labor, pro-business and pro-Filipino,” he said.
Mr. Villanueva added that the recent protests of contractual workers against certain corporations were rooted in the ambiguity of the Labor Code of the Philippines.
He said the bill only allows independent, licensed and specialized job contracting. It also simplifies classification of workers and tightens the rules over probationary employees. Meanwhile, the proposed measure prohibits labor-only contracting and provides penalties for companies found to be in violation.
Mr. Villanueva said the bill defines labor-only contracting as: (1) where a job contractor, whether licensed or not, merely recruits or places workers to a contractee, regardless of whether or not he or she has substantial capital, (2) the workers of the job contractor are performing activities which are directly related to the principal business of such employer, and (3) if the workers of the job contractor are under the control and supervision of the contractee.
It also provides for workers under a labor-contracting scheme to be deemed regular employees of the contractee.
Compliance orders affirmed by the DoLE Secretary shall be immediately executory unless restrained by an appropriate court. In case the order involves a regularization directive, the employment of the workers shall not be terminated pending appeal of the order.
Any termination of workers pending appeal renders the compliance order involving the regularization of workers executory.
A penalty of P5 million is imposed to violators engaging in labor-only contracting on top of the preventive or permanent closure of operations of any labor-only contractor.
The bill also classifies workers into regular and probationary employees and treats project and seasonal employees as regular employees.
It also provides for licensing and regulation of job contractors for specialized work, jobs or services. To be licensed, a contractor must show proof of an independent business with a paid-up capital of at least P5 million and proof of payment or compliance of payment of social welfare contributions.
It also requires the contractor to be an expert or specialist in the job, work or service being contracted out and to be an employer exercising control over the work performed by his or her employees.
The bill also establishes a Transition Support program providing cash assistance for workers while they are not at work or transitioning in between jobs. Workers may only avail of the program once a year.
It also authorizes DoLE to manage the program and to make reports to the National Tripartite Industrial Peace Council. Funding for such operations will be generated by the registration of contractors, fines collected under Article 106 of the Labor Code, and funds from the DoLE adjustment program.
“We are proposing a law that is predictable and reliable… We expect this to reduce the cost of doing business and compliance with the law,” Mr. Villanueva said.
“Guaranteeing the right to security of tenure gives our workers certainty and social protection. It makes them more efficient and more productive which is the primary concern of every business,” he added. — Camille A. Aguinaldo

Disruptive private sector investments in rice production

There is a great deal of rahrahrah these days for the magic of rice tariffication as the latest bright idea to bring down the price of rice and end the constant threat of rice-shortages from the decades of rice importation control through quota restrictions by the National Food Authority. Rice tariffication is also proposed as a magic wand to help improve the incomes of our beleaguered and aging (average age is 57) rice farmers.
I am wary about this idea as it could be just another simplistic proposal to the highly complex rice productivity problem of our country. Well-meaning legislators are proposing the use of the government’s projected rice tariff incomes (ranging from 40% to 100%) as support to farmers in terms of irrigation, free or subsidized certified seedlings, fertilizers, equipment, milling and warehousing facilities, etc. As we should know by now, whenever government goes into subsidies like this, the lengthy logistical chain gets hindered, complicated, or corrupted along the way, thus depleting the resources that actually reach if at all, the intended beneficiaries. Keep in mind the billions of pesos lost out of the PDAF. Besides, have we considered how the foreign rice suppliers will respond to radical increases in tariffs? They have other markets where tariffs might be lower! We could end up with tragic rice shortages!
The modest pay scales of our bureaucrats and their lifestyle aspirations are too far apart; and, in many cases, politicians and bureaucrats separately or together tend to supplement their incomes by using their access to resources for their own benefit. Some of the money actually gets invested in laudable things like better education and high tech equipment for their children; but it does not, alas, reach the intended beneficiaries.
Having spent much of my earlier years in the private sector, including multinationals, I can’t help thinking that we certainly could use the disciplines of efficiency, effectiveness, and accountability, all of which are measurable in the private sector, if our huge corporations were to risk a little of their billions of pesos in constantly growing easy profits into agribusiness ventures in partnership with producers. Tax incentives could be provided for initiatives into the business.
I have read about an impressive model in Vietnam, a communist country, where a private entrepreneur successfully invested in rice as an agribusiness with a little help from the government. Huyn van Thorn, a dynamic entrepreneur managed to persuade the government to invest in an agribusiness joint venture with him starting with provision of land for research. The An Giang Plant Protection Joint Stock Company started out as a supplier of rice production inputs (chemicals, seeds and fertilizers) supplied on generous credit terms by Syngenta, (a merger between Swiss firms Ciba Geigy and Novartis).
Eventually, An Giang went into backward and forward integration following support from the Vietnamese government’s Agriculture and Rural Development Department. It began to supply technical services by hiring agricultural technicians to provide technical, organization, and environmentally healthy orientation to farmers who produced rice. An Giang also acquired combine harvesters (for efficient mechanized harvesting and threshing) and trained young people to operate them thus providing new jobs to the children of the aging farmers. An Giang also provided milling and warehousing services payable upon sale of the rice outputs, which up to that point still belonged to the rice farmers. Because An Giang offered competitive buying prices, the farmers, who still had the option to sell in the open market, chose to sell their milled rice to An Giang which began to open markets in Asia and all the way to Africa. The success of An Giang so attracted the interest of Standard Chartered Bank of England that it actually invested $90 million in exchange for 34% share in the company.
farmer
The Philippines abounds with business management graduates locally and abroad. If the huge corporations were to invest in agribusiness as a service to the country, as well as for profit, they should be willing invest in some feasibility studies to begin with, including learning trips to neighboring Vietnam and the United States (home of the global brands Sunkist and Ocean Spray cooperatives, as well as US Wheat Associates, Inc.) which is supported to facilitate global marketing by US government policies such as PL480 which enables wheat buyers to buy at subsidized credit rates. There are also countries worth learning from like the Netherlands where a flower farmers’ cooperative owns Rabobank, one of the largest infrastructure financing banks in the world.
We seem to keep repeating our mistakes, or tweaking agricultural policies and programs a little here and there. It has been said that doing the same things over and over again and getting the same lousy results is a form of idiocy.
We need to find answers to fundamental questions such as: can we expect our dwindling farms to continue producing rice? Should we consider shifting from cheap rice to high ends like red, brown and black, or glutinous rice? Why are we importing vegetables? Can’t we massively and rapidly train our farmers to intercrop vegetables on their rice and coconut farms?
We are still thinking agriculture, and therefore production. Why don’t we think agribusiness? Why don’t we consider shifting from trying to get farmers to produce more; but rather how to make them prosperous?
When Carlos Dominguez was Secretary of Agriculture, I heard that he had defined his department’s objective as: “To make the Filipino farmer prosperous.” Perhaps he can now help push this kind of thinking by sharing some insights on why it didn’t happen.
 
Teresa S. Abesamis is a former professor at the Asian Institute of Management and an independent development management consultant.
tsabesamis0114@yahoo.com

Casting doubts on the integrity of a successful elections

Our nation had taken great strides towards the improvement of our elections by shifting to automation. Arguably, traditional modes of electoral cheating and electoral violence have been prevented and minimized since its implementation. This time, Philippine democracy has been given importance through the delivery of faster election results. We have reached the stage wherein we have finally adjusted from the horrors of manual counting, tallying, and canvassing that will only resurface the evils that our society relates too well — electoral cheating and violence, where transitions of leaders will cause instability and questionable legitimacy.
We are aware that the voter participation in the Philippines have been improved with more than forty-four million Filipinos trooping to their polling precincts during the 2016 elections. This is a testament to the vigor of our democracy.
In less than a few hours after the close of the polls, results of the 2016 elections were accepted by the people and a new administration was elected. We also witnessed the Comelec’s improvement in the past years, and its efforts to oversee and protect the integrity and credibility of the whole electoral process. They were able to proclaim 99% of the elective positions ten days after the elections. Interestingly, the automation of our elections has also brought a new era to Philippine politics — the act of conceding by losing candidates immediately after the elections. Gone were the days of multitudes of election protests when every other loser claimed to be cheated attesting to the trust and belief in the integrity of the elections. The system was widely accepted and perceived to be credible not only locally, but also in the international arena. Foreign observers and members of the foreign dignitaries and governments all around the world were also impressed with the fast transmission of election results, which resulted to lesser political instability, and higher confidence in the process.
However, despite these gains, critics and some groups still sought to cast doubt on the integrity of the improved electoral exercise by questioning the whole process itself. They air their various concerns and trust issues, with allegations that question the credibility and integrity of the previous elections. One cannot understand their motivations.
While they do not question the election results in most of the positions voted upon during the 2016 elections, some critics refuse to accept the results on one single elective position and are casting doubt on the whole electoral process. Critics have yet to produce valid and verifiable facts to their allegations despite producing or presenting documents and their so-called pieces of expositions that are so far just selected snapshots and samples and are more conjectures and innuendos.
We should all remember that even before Automated Election System Law was passed, it has undergone vigorous hurdles and challenges precisely to stop the history of massive cheating of manual elections and that the only way to change it is through an amendment. There is always a bidding process where multiple interested vendors can participate. It is a matter of knowing which is more qualified, has the capacity, track record, and within budget. We call on all who have alternatives and join the bidding process. It is for the nation’s interest that the best automated election solution is deployed.
Ultimately, the automated election system has served its purpose, tabulating results correctly and efficiently without human intervention. The automated election system has been widely accepted and perceived to be credible. There has been a tremendous decline in election-related violence since automated elections were implemented in the Philippines.
Let us now focus on the upcoming 2019 National Elections.
We call on the Comelec for its early preparations to give it time to institute protocols to ensure the integrity of the electoral process in 2019. With this, stakeholders will be given an ample opportunity to conduct a review of the source code and allow parties to use software tools to test the system.
By doing so, Comelec should get a head start in making an inventory and assessing the technical and logistical requirements needed for an orderly, efficient, and credible elections.
All these issues should translate toward a renewed citizenry who are exercising their right to vote for their leaders freely.
 
Claudette Guevara is the Secretary General, Democracy Watch Philippines, Deputy Executive Director for Programs, Stratbase ADR Institute