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Musical March at the mall

IT’S A musical March at the Shangri-La Plaza mall, with international singer Calum Scott and various local artists set to perform at the mall.

The Britain’s Got Talent finalist will perform new hits and classics for mall guests on March 4, 6 p.m., at the mall’s Grand Atrium. The Philippines is the Calum’s first Asian stop on his worldwide tour as he launches his debut album Only Human on March 9.

Mall guests at the East Wing can also enjoy Throwback Thursdays performances by the Bernie Pasamba Quartet, beginning on March 8 with a playlist of memorable songs from Barry Manilow, ABBA on March 15, and the Carpenters on March 22.

Meanwhile, top Pinoy band South Border will perform is R&B classics like “Rainbow” and “Kahit Kailan” at 7 p.m. on March 10 at the East Atrium.

They will be preceded by a 6:30 p.m. performance by all-girl acoustic group The Three of Us — Ivy Hermogenes, Thea Panaguiton, and Adora San Pedro — who put their own spin on popular songs.

The OPM series continues on March 24 when former Side A front man Joey Generoso performs his newest rock ballads at 7 p.m., at the Grand Atrium.

For inquiries, visit www.facebook.com/shangrilaplazaofficial.

Best Buy plans to shut 250 small US mobile phone stores

BEST BUY Co., Inc. the no. 1 US consumer electronics retailer, on Wednesday said it will shut 250 small mobile phone stores in US malls as it looks for ways to operate more profitably and turn around its business amid intense competition.

The stores, which contributed just over 1% to the company’s overall revenue and 1% to its overall square footage, will be shut effective May 31.

The mobile stores are each about 1,400 square feet (130 square meters) while a typical Best Buy store occupies about 40,000 square feet (3,716 square meters).

The Minneapolis-based retailer said it will continue to sell mobile phones through its 1,000 US big box stores and online. The decision does not impact the company’s 52 mobile stores in Canada.

Best Buy began opening these stores more than a decade ago, before Apple, Inc.’s iPhone was launched and when margins in the business were high, Best Buy Chief Executive Hubert Joly told employees in a letter, a copy of which was seen by Reuters.

“Fast forward to 2018 and the mobile phone business has matured, margins have compressed and the cost of operations in our mobile stand-alone stores is higher than in our big box stores,” Joly said.

The company declined to disclose how many employees will be affected by the decision.

The letter said Best Buy will help employees look for other jobs within the company over three months. It will offer severance to those who leave after May 31 and help them with an external job search.

About six years ago, Best Buy struggled with plunging sales and shrinking profit as consumers browsed at brick-and-mortar stores but made purchases online, a practice called showrooming.

Since then the company has tried to turn itself around by closing underperforming stores, improving customer service and competing with Amazon.com, Inc. by matching the online retailer’s low prices.

Those efforts have helped Best Buy grow comparable sales at stores open at least a year in six of the past eight quarters. The company reports fourth-quarter earnings on Thursday.

Joly said in the letter he felt confident about retaining customers and transitioning them to the company’s larger stores and Web site, adding 85% of Best Buy’s mobile stores are within three miles (4.8 kilometers) of one of its big box stores. — Reuters

Do you remember when…?

By Anthony L. Cuaycong

FROM THE OUTSET, The Longest Five Minutes presents anything and everything unlike most other Japanese role-playing games (JRPG) on the Nintendo Switch. It makes no pretensions about what makes it tick. Boasting of pixel-art visuals and matching retro-feel audio that will have you recalling the glory days of the Super Nintendo Entertainment System and the Sega Mega Drive/Genesis, it aims to provide the genre with an alternative to the graphically intensive titles that have thus far populated the hybrid system. It also highlights a unique narrative style; you are Flash Back, head of a party of four, and you start at the end, ready to take on the final boss, only to suffer from amnesia resulting from a hit during battle. You are then compelled to piece together your memory through — what else? — flashbacks, with what you get to remember incrementally allowing you and your band to stay alive and thereby defeat the Demon Lord.

And that’s not all. To truly separate The Longest Five Minutes from other similarly themed releases on the Switch, Nippon Ichi Software and SYUPRO-DX have tweaked the gameplay itself. You partake of JRPG elements as you go about reliving the events leading up to the final battle, but you find yourself relieved of the usual requirements to move the story forward. Because your recollections — and, therefore, in-game experiences — aren’t linear, you don’t have to grind or level up and strengthen yourself and your mates for the ultimate task. You don’t even need to collect items or equipment you feel may help you in your journey. Rather, each flashback represents a chapter in the story where you need to meet objectives and, along the way, earn “Re-experience” points which, in turn, arm your party with new skills and advanced spells.

In this regard, success in The Longest Five Minutes lies in the journey, not the destination. Random battles abound, but they present little to no challenge and seemingly occur just to inform you of the tools you have for that particular chapter en route to the dungeon boss fight. True, the division of labor within the party is not uncommon; one is charged with healing, another with physical attacks, another with magic, and so on. Still, most encounters are bereft of tension; unless the enemies outnumber you and until you’re in front of the bosses, you won’t need to go beyond the standard stuff. Heck, you could even go into auto-battle mode and not worry about the possibility of defeat. Add to this such modern-day conveniences as instant saves and inexpensive out-of-battle healing, and your journey to the Demon King is all but assured. Then again, you did begin from the end, so survival shouldn’t really be a point to ponder at all.

Nonetheless, The Longest Five Minutes earns every penny of its $40 price tag with its engrossing story line, surprising capacity for humor, fleshed-out characters, and polished execution. From the art to the music to the dialogue to the gameplay, long-time gamers are treated to a product that is singularly driven by a desire to recall a time when simplicity ruled, when eye candy didn’t necessarily mean cutting-edge resolutions, when worth wasn’t equated with man-hours spent buffing up characters and scavenging for every last item available. It’s perfect for the mobile you, nowhere near so rote as to lull you into ennui, nowhere near so complicated as to make you forget you’re whiling the time away between meetings or waiting for the doctor outside his office, and nowhere near so flippant as to make it inconsequential.

Admittedly, The Longest Five Minutes isn’t for everybody. Those who pine for something akin to Xenoblade Chronicles 2 would do well to look elsewhere and pick up, well, Xenoblade Chronicles 2. NIS America’s latest release isn’t designed to keep you involved for 200 or so hours; in fact, 20 hours may well be deemed on the long side. That said, the relative brevity isn’t a mistake; rather, it’s an offshoot of the developers’ vision and the tightness with which they bring it to fruition. No second is wasted, and every minute brings about an aspect to be savored. In a library full of Samuel Richardsons, it’s a Robert Frost that reminds you of the finest of what was — and the best of what is — just as well.

Creating new value in financial services

SINGAPORE — A new era has dawned on the financial services industry. With continued acceleration of the Digital Age, the industry needs to find a new growth model since the predictable path to success has been narrowing.

The creation of this new value is the focus of the 2018 Asian Financial Services Congress (AFSC) at the Sands Expo and Convention Centre here in Marina Bay Sands. Drawing industry leaders from across the continent, AFSC is organized annually by the International Data Corporation (IDC), a wholly owned subsidiary of the world’s largest data and marketing services group known as IDG.

IDC’s global research approach and rigorous methodologies for technology suppliers and IT buyers enables the premier data provider of market intelligence to cover all continents. With more than 1,000 analysts in 50 countries, its comprehensive coverage promotes understanding of multiple industries through a “glocal” model on the ground in various markets.

In the run-up to 2018, the IDC Financial Insights team of experts worked on the areas of open banking, financial technology trust, and cross-industry cooperation. The themes of platform-building, connectedness, and collaboration defined the team’s agenda in reflecting how the financial services industry has laid the foundations for a new era of explosive growth.

Topics discussed during the two-day conference ranged from the role of banks in the cashless payments ecosystem, data monetization, and intelligent automation, to the measurement of cloud success and management of cyber threats in a hyperconnected world, as well as digital transformation in the insurance industry and the rise of invisible banking.

Speakers at the plenary sessions and masterclass tracks included Alan Lim of IBM’s Blockchain Garage; Dionne Ang of Dell EMC; Alessandro Petroni of Red Hat; Amran bin Hassan of Maybank; Georgette Tan of Mastercard; Axel Grosse Axway Asia Pacific; Benito Mable of Tokio Marine Asia; Colin Dinn of Siam Commercial Bank; Demetris Booth of Cisco Security; and Deepak Ramanathan of SAS.

Among the experts from IDC Asia Pacific who shared their financial insights were Cyrus Daruwala, Michael Araneta, Anuj Agrawal, Cathy Huang, Daniel Zoe-Jimenez, Avinav Trigunait, Arpita Mitra, and Gerald Wang. They believe the financial services industry will be able to capture new opportunities in a flourishing culture of innovation through strategic alliances, partnerships with the best-of-breed fintechs, and regulators’ encouragement of disruptive services.

Participants realized it is now possible for banks, insurers, and capital market firms to create value never before seen and rarely imagined in their traditional businesses. It helped them connect the dots between the trends of today’s digital ecosystems and their organizational road maps for creating new value.

Highlighting the 2018 AFSC is the Financial Insights Innovation Awards, the winners of which will be announced at the closing ceremony tonight. This would provide a definitive review of innovation best practices in banking and insurance, while helping decode the sources, drivers, and implications of new value for the financial services industry.

 

J. Albert Gamboa is CFO of the Asian Center for Legal Excellence and Chairman of the FINEX Media Affairs Committee’s Golden Jubilee Book Project.

Art Fair Philippines by the numbers

In an extreme example of the “I can do that/Yeah, but you didn’t” dichotomy of contemporary art, Nilo Ilarde filled one booth at the ongoing Art Fair Philippines with 24,124 diecast toy cars with a little help from Hot Wheels. Read the full related story.

How PSEi member stocks performed — March 1, 2018

Here’s a quick glance at how PSEi stocks fared on Thursday, March 1, 2018.

Measuring the return on investment of training programs

Our training department organizes many important programs for our employees. But it appears to me that their main objective is to cover only as many participants as possible, without considering the return on investment (RoI) to the company. They don’t bother to do a follow-up or at least measure the training effectiveness or its implementation to the actual job. My question: Is RoI the primary responsibility of the training department or the department where the employee-participants are assigned? — Torn Between

A man bought a small farm lot and was visited by his neighbor one day. He asked him: “Can you tell me where the property line runs between our two farms?” The neighbor replied with another question: “Are you talking about owning or mowing?”

Employee training and development programs represent a highly organized and planned effort by many organizations to facilitate learning of job-related knowledge, attitude, skills and habit and make them contributory to individual work performance. And ultimately, to achieve corporate goals.

Private organizations spend millions of pesos on formal training programs to make this happen. They even maintain “corporate universities” that offers broad-based learning opportunities for employees and their management team, including their suppliers, customers, and other strategic partners. One notable corporate university program is Hamburger University, McDonald’s global training center.

According to Richard Daft in Management (12th edition, 2016), Hamburger University “is so well respected that its curriculum is recognized by the American Council on Education, so employees can actually earn college credits.” The idea of having “corporate universities” became popular that there are “numerous other companies, including FedEx, GE, Intel, Harley-Davidson, Procter & Gamble and Capital One, use corporate universities to build human capital.”

And so, who responsibility is it to ensure RoI on training programs? The answer lies in whose training budget was used to make the employee development program happen. Whose resources were used to hire the subject matter experts, renting the training venue and equipment, etc.? If the budget comes from the training department, then it follows that it should conduct an RoI measure with the help of the department that benefited.

On the other hand, if the budget comes from a certain department (other than training), then it follows that the authority and responsibility should also come from that concerned department, but with the active assistance of the training department. Regardless of where the money comes from, there’s a standard RoI measurement that you can use.

According to Louise Sickley of the Sheffield Business School, the Jack Philips at RoI Institute is one significant evaluation program that can be best applied to learning and development first within the corporate context, before being used by international development and health care organizations.

“This RoI approach to measuring training and development is highly regarded as one of the most comprehensive methods, as it draws on a number of established theories and evaluation models, including Kirkpatrick’s learning evaluation model and Phillips’ RoI methodology, theories of change and the logical framework approach.

“This model is about building a chain of impact to create a link between the specific learning/training activity and the impact or RoI, which could work equally well for coaching as it does for a more traditional staff training programs.”

Specifically, Sickley suggests five models to appreciate the RoI of training programs. These are:

One, engagement. Sickley says it’s the lowest form of seeking the participants’ feedback and needs only simple checking with the individuals on how worthwhile the program was. It can be done by asking the participants to answer a few questions about the training relevance and make them commit to its implementation.

Two, learning. It means “checking or testing” what the training participants have acquired with “new knowledge, skills, attitudes and that they have the confidence to apply it.” This approach is best done through a pre- and post-workshop audit, including the application of a scenario, coaching or simulation testing.

Three, application. Are the training participants demonstrating changes in work behavior? This can be done through a pre- and post-360 degree feedback mechanism or any evidence proving that they have already completed the planned actions from the coaching or training sessions.

Fourth, business impact. These key measures must be agreed prior to the implementation of any training program. All stakeholders from HR, finance, operations, marketing, etc. within the organization must agree. “If work-based projects are used in the learning solution, the financial impact of these can also be included at this level. The hard impacts are reported at this level where a financial figure can be applied so it can be used to calculate the RoI,” says Sickley.

Fifth is RoI formula. This requires calculating all loaded costs of the training programs, including the man-hours of people attending it, including “on-costs.” This means using the following formula: The net program benefits are calculated as follows: (benefits – costs) / costs X 100.

It is very important to measure the RoI of training programs. If you can’t measure, you can’t manage. If you can’t count, you can’t control. Therefore, ignore training people who say the impact of their programs can’t be measured. The idea has been refuted many times by the Philips RoI Institute.

In conclusion, whoever is the budget owner or the same authority who must ensure that training programs must be spent wisely to give absolute terms in return? If a sales manager doesn’t know exactly how his people sold and at what margins, would we believe he or she is the right person to manage sales?

The same principle goes to the training manager or the training budget owner. If both don’t know the how and why of training, should we invite them as part of the management team? The answer is obviously in the negative.

Bring our special management program on “Managing Problem Employees and Employees with problems to your line supervisors and managers. Contact Ricky Mendoza at (02) 846-8951 or 0915-406-3039 or e-mail inquiry@kairos.com.ph

elbonomics@gmail.com

DoF sees 2018 inflation staying within 4% range

THE Department of Finance (DoF) said inflation is expected to be contained at the high end of the target range, or 4%, for the full year, noting that a heightened January reading was the result of stores overshooting regulated prices.

“We think that it will taper off. It’s because, in January, when the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) and the Department of Energy (DoE) conducted a monitoring, and many were caught setting prices beyond the SRP [suggested retail prices],” Mr. Chua said in a briefing at Malacañang on Thursday, March 1.

He added, “So they have been warned… I think we can hit our target of no more than 4% for the full year.”

In a statement, the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) said that its officials along with those of the Department of Finance (DoF), Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), and leading economists who attended Monday’s meeting of the Senate Committee on Economic Affairs, chaired by Sen. Sherwin T. Gatchalian, “were in consensus that several factors have pushed inflation up in January, and the tax reform that has recently taken effect has little to do with it.”

Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia, who was present at the hearing, noted that “based on the agency’s calculations, only 0.7% (at most) of inflation for 2018 is attributable to the effects of the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) law.”

Mr. Chua confirmed this at the briefing, saying “if there is any higher inflation that we have seen, it’s probably due to other reasons.”

“In fact, what we see is that, in petroleum, although the inflation of petroleum products is 7.2%, none of that was caused by TRAIN because the peso’s depreciation is 1.5%, and the Dubai crude increased by 19.6%. In fact, if we look at month-on-month inflation, meaning, the change in price from December to January, we actually saw it to be slightly negative at 0.8%. So there’s no way for TRAIN to have caused the higher petroleum prices. In fact, it is due to the peso’s depreciation and the higher Dubai crude,” he said, also noting that sugar-sweetened beverage inflation of 2.8% was expected.

As for inflation in alcohol products of 4.8%, “it is expected given the scheduled 4% increase under the sin tax law,” Mr. Chua said.

“So the main message is, if these products that are affected by TRAIN hardly increased and the only reason why petroleum increased is Dubai crude, and all other products increased, there must be something else that’s driving the increase and not TRAIN. That is the key message,” he said.

At the Senate hearing, NEDA also “took note of the rise in the price of rice which accounts for around 23% of the poor consumer’s basket of goods.”

“We have to closely monitor the buffer system of rice to ensure that there is no considerable spike in the price of rice,” NEDA Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia said.

NEDA Undersecretary for Policy and Planning Rosemarie G. Edillon, for her part, attributed the increase in the prices of corn and meat “to typhoons that hit the country in December last year.”

“Part of the reason for the recent inflation is expectations that the tax reform would indeed increase prices. These inflationary expectations can be tempered by further increasing the supply of goods and services. This can be done by encouraging more investments or for existing firms to expand production. For these, the second round of tax reform, or TRAIN 2, is critical. This should be accompanied by the passage of the ease of doing business bill,” Ms. Edillon said.

Mr. Pernia noted that “it is also possible that certain merchants have taken advantage of the situation by raising the prices of their goods prematurely.”

“It is so easy to point a finger at TRAIN,” he said.

Mr. Chua said the fear that TRAIN will lead to an escalation of food prices “is not supported.”

“Overall food inflation was 4.52%, albeit at the high end and could suggest some profiteering as oil prices have not even increased due to TRAIN. In particular, rice inflation was only 1.4%. Fish inflation was higher at 12% but this likely reflects the closed season of fishing (November to February) and a recent typhoon in the Visayas,” the DoF official said.

Mr. Chua noted as well that one reason for higher inflation is better compliance on tobacco taxes.

“Tobacco inflation was 17.4% in January 2018 when the expected increase was only 8% due to the scheduled tobacco tax increase. Since profiteering is unlikely, the remaining reason is that Mighty (Corp.) under Japan Tobacco is now paying the right tax, and thus is charging higher prices for cigarettes.”

“In fact, if Mighty continued to evade tax and therefore cigarettes prices remain low, overall inflation would have gone down around 3.75%.”

Commenting on the first two months of the implementation of TRAIN package 1, Mr. Chua said: “In general, it was quite successful.”

“We gave P10 billion per month at least to working people and that’s fueling a lot of the positive consumer expectation. The revenue collections in the first two months are on target, and our inflation has remained manageable. And of course, we will continue to monitor and make sure that the fruits of TRAIN are going to be well-spent.”

Mr. Chua likewise noted that the government has not yet encountered any major challenges in the implementation of the tax reform law.

“We prepared for 18 months, it was well-consulted, everyone in government contributed. If there are challenges then, I think it would be easy to address,” he said. — Arjay L. Balinbin

Rail institute to oversee certification of train drivers, mechanics

THE Department of Transportation (DoTr) has signed an agreement with the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) for the establishment of the Philippine Railway Institute (PRI).

The DoTr said that the PRI will oversee the efficient operation and maintenance of train systems in the coming years. Training of students will start this year.

“The PRI is envisioned to become the certification and licensing body for individuals and training institutions, so that all persons that will drive trains, maintain them, up to those that will sell the tickets in our stations, have the qualifications and service-oriented mind-set that our people are entitled to expect from a fully functioning railway system,” the DoTr said in a statement.

“This is a result of our building of the subway and the Tutuban-Malolos railway. I saw that one lack in the rail system is training regarding rails,” DoTr Secretary Arthur P. Tugade told reporters. He added that training in equipment maintenance will be conducted.

Mr. Tugade also signed yesterday during the Transportation Summit 2018 (Transmit) a partnership agreement between the DoTr’s railways office and the first batch of partner academic institutions: Mapua University, National University, Polytechnic University of the Philippines, Technological Institute of the Philippines, and University of Sto. Tomas.

The partnership aims to ensure that DoTr gains the needed technical, human and knowledge resources for the construction, operations and maintenance of the railways pipeline under the Duterte administration’s Build, Build, Build Program.

Track length of rail lines in the Philippines is expected to expand to 1,900 kilometers by 2022 from 77 km. currently. — Patrizia Paola C. Marcelo

Infrastructure spending seen sustained in 2018

By Melissa Luz T. Lopez
Senior Reporter

ROBUST public spending is expected to be sustained this year following strong growth in 2017, analysts said, though they warned that the government needs to ensure the “high quality” of its investments to sustain growth.

Peter Lundgreen, founding chief executive officer of Lundgreen’s Capital, said the government’s 7-8% growth goal may be “doable” for 2018, but noted that increased spending should go into high-yielding investments in order to sustain broad-based economic growth.

“If the Philippines should meet a 7-8% growth target this year, there’s a risk that it will be made by infrastructure spending that is non-yielding. If infrastructure spending is non-yielding, it’s bad trade,” Mr. Lundgreen said in a recent interview with BusinessWorld.

“That is what many governments don’t realize; they just think that it’s growth. There’s actually need to have positive yields. It’s difficult to calibrate.”

Although remaining bullish towards the Philippine economy, the Danish consulting firm warns that not all spending is “healthy.”

State infrastructure spending surged last year to P568.8 billion, up 15.4%, to surpass the P549.4 billion programmed under the 2017 budget, according to the Department of Budget and Management (DBM).

This brought overall spending up by 11% to P2.824 trillion in 2017, and led to a P350.6-billion deficit, equivalent to 2.2% of gross domestic product. However, the fiscal gap is lower than the 3% ceiling set by economic managers due to a faster-than-expected increase in revenue collection, according to Treasury data.

Still, Mr. Lundgreen said the Philippines is poised to keep growing in 2018, with exports to provide an extra boost alongside steadily increasing private consumption and business investment.

He added that additional liquidity to be released into the financial system through the cut in bank reserves introduced by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas is growth-positive if the funds find its way to productive uses, even as he noted that the central bank is running monetary policy “too loose.”

The 1% cut in reserve requirement imposed on universal and commercial banks takes effect today, which is expected to unlock around P90 billion in loanable cash.

“Some were very fast to say it fits fine with the very ambitious infrastructure plans, though I would say it would extremely critical if this lending capacity ends up financing government infrastructure,” Mr. Lundgreen said.

“It would be good for the Philippine economy that hopefully this lending capacity would go towards small enterprises — that would be the best outcome for the economy.”

In a separate report, ING Bank N.V. Manila said it expects robust state spending to be sustained in 2018, enough to sustain another 6.7% economic expansion.

“We are confident that the government will succeed in escalating the pace of spending, helped by the January release of 80% of the budget,” ING Bank senior economist Jose Mario I. Cuyegkeng said in his commentary.

The government plans to spend P1.1 trillion on big-ticket infrastructure projects this year, forming part of the P8-9 trillion target until 2022. This is expected to sustain economic growth and cement the Philippines’ position as one of the fastest-growing economies in Asia.

WATCH: HOW LONG CAN THE BSP PUT OFF A RATE HIKE?

 

 

VAT refund system for tourists expected to be in place by 2022

THE Department of Finance (DoF) is considering establishing a system to issue value-added tax (VAT) refunds to foreign visitors.

Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III said the department is studying how to implement a VAT refund for foreign tourists buying goods in the Philippines, for launch before 2022.

“We want to be a normal country,” Mr. Dominguez told reporters during a recent briefing, noting that refunding VAT paid by foreign visitors is an international practice. “It’s the right thing to do. We are giving them what is due. I don’t know if it will entice more tourists… [but] it’s really the international practice to do it.”

The basis for refunds is the VAT-free status of exports. The 12% VAT is typically levied on goods consumed within the Philippines.

“We will not tax VAT on exports — we will tax VAT on what’s consumed here. And if you export it, you get a refund for whatever you pay,” Mr. Dominguez said.

Finance Undersecretary Karl Kendrick T. Chua said separately that the government will test the refund system with export firms, as part of changes under the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) law which took effect on Jan. 1.

The new law removes a number of exemptions to the consumption duty but provides for the creation of an “enhanced” VAT refund system for direct exporters.

Asked why the government is pursuing this change now, Mr. Chua said the Philippines is in a better position to forego these revenues compared to its “cash-strapped” position in previous years.

Mr. Dominguez added that he wants to see the tax refund for tourists in place “before the end of the administration,” noting that most Southeast Asian nations observe this practice.

Some Asian countries place dedicated VAT refund stations in international airports, where foreigners can present receipts and get a refund for purchased items. Others provide tax refund desks within stores.

Some 6.6 million foreign tourists visited the Philippines in 2017, beating the government’s 6.5-million goal for the year. The Tourism department projects 7.4 million tourist arrivals in 2018, which is expected to spur consumption and contribute to overall economic growth. — Melissa Luz T. Lopez

PEZA seeks easing of log ban ahead of agro-forestry zone creation

THE Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA) said it is preparing a position paper seeking to ease some restrictions on logging to facilitate the establishment of agro-forestry economic zones.

PEZA Director-General Charito B. Plaza told reporters the agency has briefed Environment Secretary Roy A. Cimatu on coverting managed forests regulated by the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) into special economic zones.

The zones are intended to help revive the wood and related industries.

“Right now, the wood industry [is hampered] by the log ban because of unclear policies. So now 100% of our timberlands are idle, unutilized. Which is why all of our wood industries have to import,” she added.

“We tried to convince the DENR that [we should] set up agro-forestry economic zones to revive the wood industry and permit the utilization of forest wood, so we don’t have to import.”

“We will give the import and export permit, we will give the certification if the industries in the agro-forestry [economic zones] will purchase in the local market, so everything is monitored by PEZA,” Ms. Plaza said.

President Benigno Simeon C. Aquino III issued executive order No. 23 in 2011, imposing a moratorium on cutting and harvesting lumber nationwide.

PEZA is pushing for the managed forest holdings of the defunct Paper Industries Corp. of the Philippines to be declared a special economic zone.

Ms. Plaza said PEZA is also in talks with State Universities and Colleges willing to turn their idle land into either agri-industrial economic zones or agro-forestry economic zones. — Anna Gabriela A. Mogato

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