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New SHS curriculum eyed

PHILIPPINESTAR/ MIGUEL DE GUZMAN

THE DEPARTMENT of Education (Deped) plans to roll out its revised Senior High School (SHS) curriculum for the 2026-2027 school year.

“We will be rolling out the pilot study for this coming school year, but we would like to see the full rollout happen by the next school year,” Education Undersecretary Malcolm S. Garma told a Senate hearing on Thursday.

He said the agency would pilot the curriculum in 727 schools nationwide starting June. He added that 567 public schools and 160 private schools would participate in the program.

Senator Sherwin T. Gatchalian called on the DepEd to include more schools in rural areas in the pilot program.

“The problem of rural and urban areas are wildly different in terms of specialization and materials,” Mr. Gatchalian said.  “There are only 20 [schools from rural areas] out of the 727. That might not be a good representation of the pilot implementations. It should be 50-50.”

DepEd has reduced the educational tracks for senior high school to two — academic and technical-professional — from the previous four (academic, technical-vocational-livelihood, sports, and arts and design).

It also cut the number of core subjects to five from 15. The five subjects are Effective Communications, Life Skills, General Mathematics, General Science Study of Philippine History and Society. — Adrian H. Halili

NGCP defers maintenance work

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

THE NATIONAL Grid Corp. of the Philippines (NGCP) has suspended all maintenance activities until Monday as part of contingency measures for the May 12 midterm elections.

The suspension for maintenance and construction activities started on Monday, NGCP said in a statement on Thursday, noting that construction and noncritical maintenance activities near substations and transmission lines had been suspended from May 5 until May 16.

“NGCP is strictly following its contingency measures and coordinating with concerned groups to ensure a power interruption-free election, especially during the crucial periods prescribed by the Commission on Elections,” it added.

Maintenance works and construction activities in substations and within 300 meters of energized power lines were also suspended from May 5 to May 16. — Ashley Erika O. Jose

EU sends more poll observers

PHILIPPINE STAR/EDD GUMBAN

THE EUROPEAN UNION (EU) has sent 104 more short-term election observers to the Philippines, bringing the total to 226.

That recent deployment is the third group of observers to be sent to the Southeast Asian nation ahead of the May 12 midterm elections, Marta Temido, chief observer of the European Union Election Observation Mission to the Philippines, told a news briefing.

They are joining the group of analysts deployed in March and the 72 long-term observers sent in mid-April, she said.

“The 104 short-term observers will be deployed across all regions of the Philippines, in both urban and rural areas, together with the core team and the long-term observers,” Ms. Temido said. — Edg Adrian A. Eva

Land accident deaths surge

THE site of the head-on collision in Cagayan de Oro City on Sunday, where a retired judge was killed and seven others were injured. — PHILIPPINE STAR/JOHN FELIX M. UNSON

DEATHS in land transportation accidents hit a 10-year high of 13,125 in 2023, accounting for 1.9% of 694,821 deaths in the country, according to Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA).

Young adults aged 20 to 24 accounted for most of the deaths.

PSA said the land transport-related deaths were 7.2% higher than in 2022 and 49.7% higher than in 2020 at the height of a coronavirus pandemic when there was a decline in land transport-related deaths.

The Department of Transportation has ordered shorter driving hours and regular drug testing for public utility vehicle drivers after a series of road accidents in May. — Ashley Erika O. Jose

Gov’t eyes 2,000 houses in Cavite

THE DEPARTMENT of Human Settlements and Urban Development (DHSUD) is looking to build 2,000 new housing units in Bacoor City in Cavite under the government’s flagship housing program.

“Located on a 1.9-hectare land in Barangay Salinas I, Bacoor, Cavite, the project is designed to deliver around 2,000 housing units, marking a major step toward providing decent, affordable and sustainable homes for Bacooreño families,” it said in a statement on Thursday.

The Pambansang Pabahay Para sa Pilipino (4PH) housing program, the Marcos administration’s flagship housing program, seeks to provide low-cost housing units to the poor. 4PH housing units cost P1.6 million to P1.8 million.

The government aims to build 3.2 million housing units by 2028. Last year, the DHSUD cut its original six-million target houses amid delays in construction and processing of bank loans. — Beatriz Marie D. Cruz

Delivery workers offered amnesty

REUTERS

THE DEPARTMENT of Information and Communications Technology (DICT) will launch an amnesty program this year to allow illegal delivery gig workers to register.

“The program encourages unauthorized operators to register legally and join a professionalized delivery ecosystem,” the agency said a statement on Thursday. “We want to protect our people, not penalize them.”

“This amnesty is about recognition, reliability and rebuilding public trust,” DICT Secretary Henry R. Aguda said.

Private express or messengerial delivery service operators are those engaged in express or logistics services, including motorcycle riders, bikers, van operators, foot messengers and app-based delivery providers. — Ashley Erika O. Jose

Pinoys asked to vote for pro-WPS bets

PHOTO FROM ARMED FORCES OF THE PHILIPPINES

A PHILIPPINE COAST GUARD (PCG) official on Wednesday urged voters to vote for candidates who will defend the country’s rights in the West Philippine Sea (WPS).

“They need to be discerning,” PCG spokesman Commodore Jay Tristan Tarriela told reporters on the sidelines of a security forum on Thursday. “They need to make sure that the leaders they elect won’t deceive them, and that the track record of those politicians shows they are truly sincere in fighting for our rights in the West Philippine Sea.”

A Stratbase ADR Institute survey in April found that 75% of Filipinos would vote for candidates who will champion Philippine claims in the South China Sea.

Mr. Tarriela said it is time to stop appeasing China by being friendly with it, which he said happened under former President Rodrigo R. Duterte.

“His approach, some would say, was because of diplomacy,” he said. “It’s because he believes that diplomacy is the only way we can counter China’s oppression. But some security scholars are saying it’s not just diplomacy, but rather appeasement.”

The government, he added, should not let China do what it wants in the disputed waterway. — Edg Adrian A. Eva

Marcos urged to drop water deals

PHILIPPINE STAR/EDD GUMBAN

BAYAN MUNA party-list on Thursday asked President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. to cancel the joint venture agreements between PrimeWater Infrastructure Corp. and local water districts, citing legal infirmities, poor service quality and alleged profiteering.

“Bayan Muna Party-List demands the cancellation of all joint venture agreements between PrimeWater and local water districts and for an immediate provision of clean and affordable water for affected residents nationwide,” according to a copy of its four-page letter dated May 7 to the President.

The group cited complaints about substandard services of the water company to its customers, especially in San Jose del Monte in Bulacan, Bacolod City, Quezon, Cavite and Bukidnon provinces.

Mavic Chavez Ching, head of public relations at PrimeWater parent company Prime Asset Ventures, Inc., did not immediately reply to a Viber message seeking comment. — Chloe Mari A. Hufana

NG debt jumps to 62% at end of Q1

BW FILE PHOTO

NATIONAL GOVERNMENT (NG) debt as a share of gross domestic product (GDP) rose to 62% at the end of the first quarter, the highest in 20 years.

The first-quarter reading represented a significant jump from the 60.7% posted at the end of 2024, indicating a setback to the Medium-Term Fiscal Framework. The government had been seeking to bring the ratio down to 60.4% by the end of 2025, and to 56.9% by 2028.

According to the Treasury, NG outstanding debt was at a record P16.68 trillion at the end of March, against P16.63 trillion a month earlier.

 

Pantheon Macroeconomics Chief Emerging Asia Economist Miguel Chanco said he suspects “some fiscal slippage” in the debt consolidation process due to the US trade war.

He said the government could be anticipating “a bit less revenue than planned and having to spend more to cushion the impact on growth. Ultimately… this will mean the authorities having to borrow more than previously expected.”

Mr. Chanco had forecast that the deficit will shrink only modestly to 5.5% of GDP, compared to the government’s expectation of 5.3%.

Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said this is “not a good signal” as it moved away from the 60% ceiling deemed suitable for developing countries. He noted that “soft GDP data led to a lower denominator and (produced) a higher NG debt-to-GDP ratio.”

He also said that in the coming months, the outstanding NG debt could hit new records as the NG resorts to borrowing in response to the Trump tariffs.

He said it was critical to keep the sovereign credit rating at 1-3 notches above investment grade “to lower borrowing costs and obtain favorable terms for the National Government.”

GlobalSource Partners Country Analyst and former Bangko Sentral Deputy Governor Diwa C. Guinigundo said sees no connection to US tariff policy as the Philippines benefits from a lower tariff of 17% compared to many of its neighbor.

He said debt stock is likely to further increase, noting that the debt was P16 trillion at the end of December.

“Of course, it’s not straightforward to add P600 million every month for three months. I’m sure there will be quarters when the additional debt will be lower and then higher, lower, higher,” Mr. Guinigundo said.

Mr. Guinigundo also said in the absence of any additional tax or non-tax revenue, the government will really need to raise funds through borrowing.

Finance Secretary Ralph G. Recto remained firm in his “no new taxes” position for the rest of the Marcos administration. — Aubrey Rose A. Inosante

DA bats for restoration of NFA’s power to intervene in rice market

PHILIPPINE STAR/MIGUEL DE GUZMAN

THE Department of Agriculture (DA) is pressing Congress to restore the National Food Authority’s (NFA) regulatory powers over the grain market.

In a statement, the DA said the NFA needs to have sufficient powers to effectively influence the rice market, instead of its current role as maintainer of the national rice reserve.

“We need to restore some of NFA’s powers to help it manage the country’s rice situation more effectively,” according to Agriculture Secretary Francisco Tiu Laurel, Jr., who also chairs the policymaking NFA Council.

The Rice Tariffication Law of 2019 stripped the NFA of its power to import, allowing private traders to bring in rice with no restrictions, though they were made to pay import tariffs initially set at 35% on Southeast Asian grain.

The DA said the law severely weakened the NFA’s ability to stabilize rice prices and supply, even removing its power to intervene in the market by selling rice directly to the public.

“Once a crucial player in controlling market prices through timely imports and public sales, the NFA is now reduced to a buffer-stocking agency, limited to buying rice from farmers for emergency use,” it added.

A House of Representatives version of the now revised Rice Tariffication Law had sought to restore that power, but “unfortunately, the Senate Committee on Agriculture rejected it.”

The revised law increased the annual tariff collection going into a rice industry modernization fund to P30 billion from P10 billion originally.

Farmer groups have raised concerns that P30-billion funding requirement will not be met following the reduction of rice import tariff to 15% from 35% in June 2024.

Earlier this year they asked the Tariff Commission to restore rice import tariffs to 35% for Southeast Asian grain and to 50% for all other countries of origin.

The revised law also authorized the DA to declare an emergency that would trigger the release of rice from government warehouses.

NFA Administrator Larry Lacson said the NFA may only dispose of rice stocks through auction during a food security emergency declaration, or in the event of a calamity.

The risk of failed auctions is ageing stocks, the DA said. In palay form, ageing takes twice as long — about six months.

In a first-in first-out system of inventory management, it takes at least nine months from palay purchase before rice needs to be auctioned, Mr. Lacson said.

“That means, inferior quality stocks and higher cost due to stock maintenance just to keep it from being infested by insects. Allowing the NFA to directly release stocks to the market ensures better quality rice at more affordable prices,” he said.

“Before the law took effect in 2019, the NFA could import rice to augment supply, allowing it to maintain a healthier buffer stock and intervene when prices surged,” the DA said.

Mr. Laurel said the NFA’s inability to directly sell rice to the public has hindered its ability to optimize financial resources — “funds that could have been allocated to increase rice procurement and strategic market interventions benefiting both farmers and consumers.”

The NFA currently holds the equivalent of over 7.7 million 50-kilo bags of rice, sufficient for 10 days’ consumption.

With warehouses nearing capacity, the NFA must soon unload stock to make room for more palay (unmilled rice), which it buys at P18-P19 per kilo for fresh grain and P23-P24 for dry, the DA said.

“Without reforms, however, the NFA’s hands remain tied, unable to act swiftly in a volatile market that directly affects millions.” — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Small minority of PHL organizations have ‘mature’ cybersecurity systems

FREEPIK

ONLY 6% of organizations in the Philippines have “mature” cybersecurity systems that are up to the task of handling threats, Cisco Systems said.

Citing the findings of a study, it said hyper connectivity and artificial intelligence (AI) have increased the complexity of cybersecurity.

“While there have been significant advancements in AI, its deployment in cybersecurity defenses appears to have stalled, suggesting that companies are still grappling with concerns around trust, effectiveness, and integration,” Cisco said in its 2025 Cybersecurity Readiness Index report.

According to Cisco, about 40% of Philippine organizations are considered “progressive” in their cybersecurity readiness. Meanwhile, 52% were at the formative level, and 2% at the beginner level.

It also noted that 75% of Philippine respondents anticipate business disruptions from cyber incidents within the next one to two years.

“As AI transforms the enterprise, we are dealing with an entirely new class of risks at unprecedented scale — putting even more pressure on our infrastructure and those who defend it,” Cisco Chief Product Officer Jeetu Patel said in a statement.

Some 93% of organizations use AI to understand threats better, Cisco said. Others use AI for threat detection (84%), as well as response and recovery (84%).

While 57% of Philippine organizations use approved third-party GenAI tools, 92% face increased security risks as employees access unapproved GenAI tools in unmanaged devices.

Cisco also reported that 57% lack confidence in detecting unregulated AI deployments, or shadow AI. Furthermore, 82% said their complex security infrastructures impede their ability to quickly respond to threats.

The 2025 Cisco Cybersecurity Readiness Index was based on a double-blind survey of 8,000 business leaders with cybersecurity functions in their companies. These covered 30 territories in North and Latin America, Asia-Pacific, and Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. — Beatriz Marie D. Cruz

PHL road to digitalization to be costly, ADB says

STARLINK.COM

PHILIPPINE EFFORTS to digitalize its economy will be expensive, but it must keep pace with its neighbors to further its inclusion and sustainability agenda, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) said.

“For the Philippines, due to geographical features, deploying stable and universal connections, especially in hard-to-connect remote areas, could be expensive,” ADB Principal Economist Shu Tian said in an e-mail.

“In some places this might be commercially less attractive to the private sector. This calls for initiatives to promote quality and coverage of connectivity.”

In the ADB’s Asian Development Policy Report on digital transformation, the Philippines was classified as a low-digitalization country alongside Bangladesh, Cambodia, Laos, Mongolia, Nepal, and Sri Lanka.

High-digitalization, high-inclusion countries pursuing sustainable policies were South Korea and Singapore, while high-digitalization but low-inclusion and sustainability countries included Indonesia, India, Thailand, and Vietnam.

“When factoring in income levels and rising data requirements, mobile data costs in the Kyrgyz Republic, Mongolia, the Philippines, and Sri Lanka were unaffordable for the three to four poorest income deciles,” according to the report.

“Moreover, digital literacy remains low across the region, even in upper middle-income economies,” it added.

The Philippines slumped to 61st out of 67 economies in the World Digital Competitiveness Ranking compiled by the International Institute for Management Development.

The ADB said low-digitalization countries must “accelerate digital transformation to boost growth and income levels, which will, in turn, improve inclusion and sustainability.”

“The Philippines has an opportunity to continue to improve connectivity in terms of coverage and quality, enhance digital skills, and address digital divides for inclusive development in the digital era,” Ms. Tian said.

The bank noted that the Philippines is among a category of economies with low emissions while being vulnerable to extreme weather events and disasters.

“Governments can use incentives and regulations to promote low-carbon business practices, such as infrastructure-sharing, to reduce emissions associated with duplicating digital infrastructure,” it said.

“Some regional economies, such as Bangladesh and the Philippines, have introduced policies to enable digital infrastructure sharing.”

It cited the Philippines’ Common Tower Policy, which promotes shared telecommunication infrastructure to save on costs.

The report also noted remote sensing as a key technology being employed in the Philippines.

“Remote sensing combined with social economic information can be useful to enhance disaster risk management; and remote sensing and big data analytics can provide advisory and predictive analytics to help improve adaptation to extreme weather,” Ms. Tian said.

“There are different types of green technologies, but the adoption and choice of technologies depend on actual needs,” she added.

Data from remote sensing is used to assess the impact of tropical cyclones on fishing activity in the Philippines.

“By combining this real-time information with socioeconomic data, digital-based analysis can assess how changes in translation, wind speed, and distance from the typhoon track disrupt fishing activities in various grounds,” the ADB said.

“Such analysis can enhance resilience and mitigate disruptions caused by natural hazards.”

The ADB also flagged the impact of emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence on jobs.

“In Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam, enhanced productivity from automation has created jobs for skilled workers engaged in nonroutine manual and cognitive tasks, while formal workers employed in routine manual work have simultaneously been displaced.”

“Although a stable, balanced path between the two effects is possible, inequality may increase if the displacement effect outpaces the reinstatement effect. Therefore, interventions are needed to build new skills to accelerate the reinstatement effects.” — Luisa Maria Jacinta C. Jocson