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BSP, BAP working to expand GS repo market

THE BANGKO SENTRAL ng Pilipinas (BSP) and Bankers Association of the Philippines (BAP) are seeking to include fund managers and trust entities in the government securities (GS) repurchase agreement (repo) market in their bid to help deepen the country’s capital markets.

The BAP on Monday said it is working with the Money Market Association of the Philippines (MART), Fund Managers Association of the Philippines, and Trust Officers Association of the Philippines on the matter.

The BSP and BAP earlier this month announced their plans to enhance the interest rate swap market and the GS repo market to improve benchmarks for a smoother yield curve and deepen the Philippines’ capital markets.

The repo market for government securities will be expanded to boost trading and provide an alternative benchmark for short-term loan rates.

The BSP is currently working to shift the current system of “tagging” securities to banks that place cash with it via the reverse repo window to instead allow for the full delivery of these securities. Banks would then be able to trade these securities.

“We need to start developing our capital markets to work hand in hand with the banking market to be able to generate capital that is needed to support all of these endeavors,” BSP Open Market Committee Chairman Paul Raymond A. Favila said at a briefing on Monday.

“Of course, you have the more developed economies, even within Asia. Obviously, one would be Singapore. And in Singapore, they do have a capital market, relatively vibrant. They have the ability to develop their capital markets well ahead of what the countries’ needs are,” he said. “In the Philippines, it’s the other way around. We need it, we need it tremendously, but in terms of development, we are nowhere near where we want to be.”

Mari Toni Bautista, president of the National Association of Securities Broker Salesmen, Inc. (NASBI), which is organized by the BAP, said that repos will help deepen liquidity in primary and secondary bond markets.

“Repos enhance market liquidity by providing a funding source for investments in government bonds and for financing dealer inventory of securities held for trading,” she said during the same briefing.

These also help facilitate price discovery and transparency of bond prices, which allows for the development of risk mitigation tools and the broadening of the investor base, she added.

“The repo market is actually open to all government securities eligible dealers (GSEDs) and we are looking to expand the participants to include non-GSEDs,” she said.

“My estimate is that we have around seven to 10 banks who can deal now in the MART GS repos, but we have a lot of banks in the pipeline, (just) working on the GMRAs with each other,” she added.

The Global Master Repurchase Agreement (GMRA) is a legal agreement for repo transactions.

The GS repo market, which is operated by MART, was launched in 2017 and only allowed GSEDs to first “test the waters,” Ms. Bautista said.

She said the development of the market took a bit of time as the GMRAs needed to be executed. The pandemic also slowed down this process, she added.

“Currently, the trust entities are speaking with the Bureau of Internal Revenue to expand Revenue Memorandum Circular No.095-17 on the MART GS repos outlining DST (documentary stamp tax) exemption for GSEDs only.” — L.M.J.C. Jocson

IABC Philippines announces Triple P Awards panel

THE INTERNATIONAL Association of Business Communicators (IABC) Philippines, along with Deloitte and the Makati Business Club, announced on Monday the evaluators for the upcoming Triple P Awards, which recognize companies for their progress in environmental, social, and governance (ESG) areas.

The panel of evaluators comprises leaders in sustainability and corporate communications.

For corporate sustainability, the evaluators include United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) Climate Action Team Outcome Lead Floradema C. Eleazar, UNDP Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) Specialist Aljo R. Quintans, and climate education and sustainability advocate Ludwig O. Federigan.

The evaluators for the corporate communications category are IABC Philippines President Belle Tiongco and SustainablePH Acting President and sustainability communication veteran Dave Jesus T. Devilles.

The evaluation process focuses on long-term impact and uses metrics tailored to the unique challenges of each sector, IABC Philippines said in a statement.

The Triple P Awards night is scheduled on Oct. 25 at the Manila Marriott Hotel in Pasay City.

IABC Philippines is an organization that represents professionals in the field of business communication in the Philippines. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

The energy transition is powered by — wait for it — coal

FREEPIK

IN WHAT should be one of the least surprising developments, global electricity demand is soaring everywhere as the world moves to electrify everything. Out go gasoline cars, in come electric vehicles; out go gas boilers, in come heat pumps; and so on and so forth. That’s the energy transition.

There’s a catch, however. As demand for power goes up faster than renewables can supply, the world is turning to a time-tested source to produce it: coal.

The result is twofold. First, the year when coal demand is expected to peak gets pushed further out. Second, what follows the peak now resembles more an elevated plateau that’s getting higher and higher by the year. And if history is any guide, we should expect further revisions.

One barely hears about this in glossy descriptions of the energy transition. Coal only gets mentioned when some country closes its last coal-fired power station. That was the message recently in the UK, which put an end to 142 years of coal-generated power when the country closed its last coal plant in late September in Ratcliffe-on-Soar, about 100 miles north of London. Meanwhile, Asia has been busy opening new ones.

The reality for the most polluting of all fossil fuels is record consumption and stronger-than-expected demand in the future. It’s a sign of the uneven, fits-and-starts nature of the energy transition: Record solar generation and record coal demand can coexist.

Last week, the International Energy Agency (IEA) published its annual World Energy Outlook, a comprehensive review of the likely paths that supply and demand for fossil fuels and renewable sources of energy would follow up to 2050. Buried in the 398-page report was a warning: “The outlook for coal has been revised upwards particularly for the coming decade, principally as a result of updated electricity demand projections, notably from China and India.”

It wasn’t a small revision: Coal consumption in 2030 is now estimated 6% higher than only a year ago. That may sound small, but it amounts to adding the equivalent of the consumption of Japan, the world’s fourth-largest coal burner. By 2030, the IEA now believes coal consumption will remain higher than it was back in 2010.

This was an important change in what was otherwise an upbeat report. Wind and solar continue to expand faster than many thought, including the IEA. As a result, they are increasingly growing their market share. “In energy history, we’ve witnessed the Age of Coal and the Age of Oil,” IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol said. “We’re now moving at speed into the Age of Electricity.”

Birol, an economist who has gone from cheerleading the fossil fuel industry to rebranding himself as a green champion, is not wrong. Yet, he left a lot unsaid about that new electricity age. Around the world, over a third of those electrons come from burning coal. In China, that goes up to 60%; in India it rises to almost 75%.

Coal is needed because power use is accelerating faster than renewable sources can provide. It’s also dependable: It doesn’t rely on weather conditions like hydropower, wind, and solar do. Other than coal, only nuclear power plants and gas-fired stations can provide electricity around the clock. One day, perhaps, solar and wind will be able to do so in combination with batteries. But for now, battery storage is short-lived and tiny when compared with the energy needs of even medium-sized cities.

One notable statistic: Two-thirds of the total increase in energy demand in 2023 was met by fossil fuels, according to the IEA.

Yes, clean power is the future. For now, however, fossil fuels remain the present — especially when electricity demand is accelerating this fast. Between 2023 and 2030, electricity consumption is expected to grow six times faster than total energy demand, compared with two times faster in the 2010-2023 period and 1.4 times faster in 2000-2010. According to the IEA, the equivalent of the electricity use of the world’s 10 largest cities is being added to global demand each year.

The acceleration isn’t about artificial intelligence and data centers as is often lamented. If anything, they would account for a fraction of the increase in consumption. Demand for power is coming from everywhere, notably electric vehicles, air-conditioning, and even water desalination.

The epicenter of the electricity boom is Asia, so it makes sense that the world’s two largest coal consumers, China and India, not only aren’t abandoning coal, but are still building more coal-fired power stations. The result is an energy transition that is more polluting than many had hoped.

Under former US climate envoy John Kerry, America reached a sort of détente with China about the energy transition. The unwritten deal involved China giving up coal over time. With hindsight, it feels like Beijing played Kerry, who was desperate for a deal at the COP26 climate summit in 2021 in Glasgow — the first gathering for the Biden administration, when the White House wanted to burnish its green credentials after Trump.

It’s time for a new approach. The world can’t claim it’s moving in the right direction until coal consumption has dropped meaningfully, say to the levels of 2000. On current trends, that’s unlikely to happen until well beyond 2050. Policymakers should stop pretending as if the war against coal has been won. We’re still far from it.

BLOOMBERG OPINION

Talent, infrastructure boost regional offices

DAMOSA BUSINESS DISTRICT — DAMOSALAND.COM

SKILLED talent availability and infrastructure development are driving growth in the regional office market, according to real estate services firm KMC Savills, Inc.

“[It] is labor driven, driven by the graduate pools,” Joe Curran, chief executive officer of KMC Savills said during a virtual briefing on Thursday last week.

“Some clients of providers will want them to be outside Metro Manila,” he added.

Additionally, they have business continuity requirements, ensuring that if infrastructure in Manila fails, they can quickly operate in Davao or Cebu, he noted.

Mr. Curran also said the firm still sees many captive shared services centers that would like to locate in the traditional business districts within Metro Manila due to the “comfort level” of being in the capital and having access to a mature talent pool.

Likewise, Cha Carbonell, chief operating officer of KMC Savills, noted the correlation between the number of graduates produced by certain regions and the office take-up in these areas.

The information technology and business process management sector still holds the largest market share in take-ups.

She said net take-up in Metro Cebu reached 39,000 square meters (sq.m.) in the first half of 2024, Metro Clark at 19,000 sq.m., and Davao’s office market saw a “significant” upturn with net take-up totaling 12,400 sq.m.

Meanwhile, Bacolod maintained a consistent net take-up of 3,700 sq.m. during the same period.

Ms. Carbonell said the regional markets will still see demand increasing in the next quarters, which will lower the vacancies.

Iloilo had the highest vacancy rate at 28% for the first half of 2024, followed by Metro Clark at 26% and Bacolod at 23%. Meanwhile, Metro Cebu fell to 15% and Davao at 9%.

“The Visayas office market, in particular, demonstrated strong growth, led by Iloilo’s addition of 105,200 sq.m. of office space with Cebu set to surpass this by 2025,” the firm said.

KMC said while cities like Bacolod and Davao are seeing “positive momentum,” Metro Cebu and Metro Clark faced slowdowns due to limited supply.

Cebu is expected to surpass Iloilo with an additional 143,800 sq.m. of office supply by the end of 2025, it said.

Metro Cebu is anticipated to see an increase in office space transactions due to its popularity in business expansion.

In terms of rents, KMC said Iloilo and Bacolod have experienced a decline in rental rates, while Davao, Metro Clark, and Metro Cebu saw increases. — Aubrey Rose A. Inosante

Entertainment News (10/22/24)


BenildeFilm holds horror film screenings, discussions

FOR HALLOWEEN, in-depth discussions on the landscape of Philippine horror and free public screenings of thrillers and fright films will be held in a three-day festival entitled LAGIM! Organized by BenildeFilm, the event will open with a conversation on genre filmmaking with screenwriter Wanggo Gallaga (T’yanak, 2014), film director Carlo Ledesma (Outside, 2024), and film academic and horror connoisseur Ed Cabagnot. The speakers will walk the audience through the various themes and topics which make a classic Filipino horror movie. They will share their sources of inspiration and processes, as well as several tips for navigating the industry. It is scheduled for Oct. 25, 5 p.m. onwards, with a total of 14 short films shown at the 12th Floor Screening Room of the Design + Arts Campus of the De La Salle-College of Saint Benilde. For more details on the films and schedule, visit BenildeFilm’s social media pages. Interested participants may register through: forms.gle/xueovyNjRZ5Hm5rs6. 


The Pen holds musical Christmas tree lighting ceremony

THE Peninsula Manila is signaling the start of its Christmas season with the annual Christmas Tree Lighting Ceremony on Oct. 25. Aside from the lighting itself, the event will be filled with music by The Peninsula Strings and Ateneo Chamber Singers, as well as a festive merienda buffet. The hotel’s mascot, Peter Bear, will be assisted by Make-A-Wish Philippines’ Wish Kids in lighting the 45-foot-tall tree. The merienda buffet, available from 3 to 6 p.m. on that day, costs P2,888 for adults and P1,444 for children. To reserve, contact Restaurant Reservations at 8887-2888 (extension 6694) or e-mail diningpmn@peninsula.com.


Frank Ely’s new single in playable postcard format

HONG KONG-based record label Evosound has utilized the latest in sound technology to release Frank Ely’s new single, “Maisayaw,” in a playable postcard format — a first of its kind in the Philippines. The visual treat, which doubles as a vinyl single that can be spun on any record player or turntable, redefines music packaging with a blend of technology, art, and nostalgia. Inspired by the old record postcards that were sold in the 1960s and ’70s in Europe, the revived format offers a tangible music experience complete with full-colored visuals and comparatively light plastic grooves. “I thought it was cool to be the pioneering act to have my song pressed in a format that’s never been done, at least locally. It’s interesting how music packaging can change the course of the game and offer an exciting glimpse into the future of releases. The possibilities are just endless,” said Mr. Ely. His single, “Maisayaw,” expresses romantic admiration from a distance, dedicated to his now-girlfriend and inspired by the classic kundiman.


MBNel collabs with O Side Mafia for new single

FILIPINO-American rapper MBNel is showcasing the Philippines’ rap talent before a global audience through “Ashtray,” a single featuring Filipino hip-hop trio O Side Mafia. It alternates between English and Tagalog verses in a fast, edgy, catchy, Pinoy rap. “It’s dope hearing Tagalog flow on this type of song because it’s not too far from the lane they do,” says MBNel about his collaboration with the O Side trio. “Ashtray” is out now on digital streaming platforms.


Carnival Cruise Line visits PHL for the first time

CARNIVAL Cruise Line (CCL) recently celebrated its first-ever visit to the Philippines, with the Carnival Panorama arriving at the South Harbor’s Eva Macapagal Super Terminal on Oct. 18, 6 a.m. Carnival Panorama’s Captain Luca Lazzarino, Chief Engineer Stefano Gazzolo, and Hotel Director Hector Groves led the commemoration activity along with local dignitaries and representatives of Cruise Administration Services, Inc. and Open Sea Crewing Agency, Inc. The Manila visit is part of the ship’s 25-day Transpacific Carnival Journeys cruise from Singapore to Long Beach, California. Measuring 1,055 feet in length and with a capacity of 4,000 guests and 1,450 crew members, Carnival Panorama debuted in 2019 and is based in California. After Singapore, its stops were Ho Chi Minh, Vietnam, and Kota Kinabalu, Malaysia, before arriving in Manila, Philippines. The visit saw the vessel’s crew members go ashore and spend some time with their families, who were also welcome to glimpse life on board.


Phum Viphurit releases new EP

FOLLOWING the surprising singles “The Other Side” and “Balter Baby,” Phum Viphurit has presented his new project, Paul Vibhavadi Vol. 1, in its complete form. The Bangkok-born singer-songwriter took his creativity and eccentricity to new heights through the four-song EP, which tells the fictional story of Paul Vibhavadi, the “world’s fastest moving bilingual sloth who is on a quest to find inner peace.” Said Mr. Viphurit: “For the longest time I’ve been into early 2000s house music and I always knew that I wanted to incorporate my guitar playing into that type of BPM. When I had the idea of these four tracks in mind, I immediately thought of an alter-ego,” with David Bowie’s Ziggy Stardust as one such inspiration. The EP is out now on all digital streaming platforms.

How PSEi member stocks performed — October 21, 2024

Here’s a quick glance at how PSEi stocks fared on Monday, October 21, 2024.


Surfshark: Philippines 18th most breached country in Q3 2024

The Philippines placed 18th out of 250 countries and territories with a total of 1,933,072 breached accounts in the third quarter of the year, according to the latest data from Surfshark’s Global Data Breach Statistics. It jumped by more than fourfold from 405,908 leaked accounts in the second quarter of 2024. The Philippines was the fourth-most breached country/territory in the region during the period.

Surfshark: Philippines 18<sup>th</sup> most breached country in Q3 2024

OSG urged to probe land titles linked to Chinese

Police raided a suspected Philippine offshore gaming operator hub in a building in Parañaque City. — PHILIPPINE STAR/EDD GUMBAN

A HOUSE of Representatives quad committee on Monday submitted to the Solicitor General documents detailing how a Chinese national fraudulently acquired Filipino citizenship so he could own land and set up businesses in the Philippines.

“These activities are in clear violation of our laws and require immediate executive action,” the House committees on dangerous drugs, public order, human rights and public accounts said in a joint letter to Solicitor General Menardo I. Guevarra.

They urged the top government lawyer to fast-track the review of the documents and start legal action including forfeiture proceedings “given the severe national security implications and the clear violations of legal processes.”

“Several Chinese personalities” bought “thousands of hectares of land,” Surigao del Norte Rep. Robert Ace S. Barbers, who heads the dangerous drugs committee, separately told a news briefing.

Some of the documents sent to the Office of the Solicitor General (OSG) included fake birth certificates, tax declarations, corporate records and land sale deeds tied to a Chinese national.

Government lawyers would review the documents submitted by the House bodies, Assistant Solicitor General Hermes L. Ocampo told the same briefing.

He said they could start legal actions such as forfeiture cases through the Anti-Money Laundering Council, the recovery of illegally acquired real estate. The 1987 Philippine Constitution bars foreigners from owning land.

Properties transferred to Filipino dummies could still be litigated, he said, noting that they could file administrative and criminal cases against the Filipinos.

“We do not have the final figure, but if we base it on the number of titles acquired, whether transferred to the name of the Chinese national or to his registered corporation, it is about 300 to 400 titles,” he said in Filipino.

“We have to expedite all issues pertaining to the properties owned by Chinese individuals pretending to be Filipinos,” Sta. Rosa City Rep. Dan S. Fernandez told the same briefing in mixed English and Filipino.

Mr. Barbers said his committee might craft a bill making the process of acquiring a birth certificate more rigorous. “The requirements for issuing a certificate of live birth need to be strict, especially for those applying under the late registration policy.”

Meanwhile, the Department of Justice (DoJ) said more than 5,000 people employed by Philippine Offshore Gaming Operators (POGO) and internet gaming licensees (IGL) have yet to downgrade their visas to comply with President Ferdinand R. Marcos’ order of a total ban.

“There are many people who have not voluntarily downgraded their visas,” Justice Secretary Jesus Crispin C. Remulla told reporters. “This presents a dilemma for us because it shows that many of them really don’t want to leave the country.”

The visa downgrade allows foreigners to revert their status from a work visa to a temporary visitor visa. In comparison, more than 12,000 foreign workers of discontinued POGOs have applied for the downgrade, the Bureau of Immigration said earlier.

They now hold temporary tourist visas for 59 days, allowing them to stay in the country while winding down their affairs, it added. The deadline for the voluntary visa downgrade was on Oct. 15.

Mr. Remulla said they are automatically downgrading the visas of the more than 5,000 delinquent workers.

The Immigration bureau noted that if a Chinese national employed by an internet gaming licensee fails to apply for a visa downgrade, he will have an “Order to Leave” stamped on his passport, which means he must leave the country immediately.

The foreigner will have a hard time returning to the Philippines.

Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp. (PAGCOR) Assistant Vice-President Catalino B. Alano, Jr. told BusinessWorld via Viber that 38 of the 41 internet gaming licensees were still winding down their operations.

Mr. Marcos in his state of the nation address to Congress in July ordered the closure of POGOs and IGLs, which he said were linked to crimes including scams and human trafficking. — Kenneth Christiane L. Basilio and Chloe Mari A. Hufana

17 Abu Sayyaf terrorists convicted  for Sipadan resort abductions in 2000

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

A PHILIPPINE trial court has convicted 17 members of the Abu Sayyaf terror group for kidnapping 21 tourists from a Malaysian dive resort in April 2000.

In a 157-page decision dated Oct. 16, Taguig regional trial court Presiding Judge Mariam G. Bien found the accused guilty of 21 counts of kidnapping and serious illegal detention with ransom, sentencing each of them to a 40-year jail term for each count.

They were also ordered to pay each of the 21 victims P100,000 in civil indemnity, P100,000 in moral damages and P100,000 in exemplary damages, with a 6% annual interest.

The charges against 13 other Abu Sayyaf members who have since died were dismissed, including Galib Andang alias Commaner Robot.

“The kidnappers… acted in concert in kidnapping and detaining the hostages,” according to a copy of the court decision sent by the Department of Justice to reporters on Monday. The abduction was “a carefully laid out plan to execute the crimes charged,” it added.

Of the 21 victims at the Sipadan Diving Resort in Malaysia, 10 were foreign tourists  — three Germans, two Finnish, two South Africans, one Lebanese and two French. The rest — nine Malaysians and two Filipinos — were resort workers.

After kidnapping the victims, the rebels took them hostage in the southern Philippine province of Sulu.

Two victims were killed during the ordeal — one was beheaded and one died during a military encounter. The rest were released one by one after their families paid ransom money.

The last hostage, a Filipino, escaped in June 2003.

DoJ said two of the 17 Abu Sayyaf members were under the United Nations Security Council’s sanction list.

“The UN Security Council tagged them both in 2008 for their association with Al-Qaida, Usama bin Laden or the Taliban and for ‘participating in the financing, planning, facilitating, preparing, or perpetrating of acts or activities by, in conjunction with, under the name of, on behalf of, or in support of and recruiting for the Abu Sayyaf Group, Jemaah Islamiyah and the Rajah Solaiman Movement,” it said in a statement.

Many of the rebels were arrested and prosecuted after the incident, but they died during an attempted jailbreak in Taguig City in 2005.

Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi mediated the crisis, leading to the release of six hostages in mid-2000. The hostages were flown on a Libyan aircraft, first to the United Arab Emirates and then to Tripoli, the Libyan capital. — Chloe Mari A. Hufana

Marcos’ trust and satisfaction ratings up in October poll

PRESIDENT Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. during his third state of the nation address on July 22, 2024. — PHILIPPINE STAR /KJ ROSALES

PRESIDENT Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr.’s the trust and satisfaction ratings rose in an October poll by Acquisition Apps, Inc. (Tangere) amid a widening rift in the camp of his predecessor.

His trust rating rose to 59.3% in the Oct. 16-19 poll from 58.8% in September. His satisfaction score also rose to 46.9% from 46.4%.

Support for Mr. Marcos was strongest in Northern and Central Luzon. He got the highest levels of satisfaction and trust among Filipinos aged 18 to 35 years.

The President received the highest dissatisfaction and distrust scores in Mindanao and among Filipinos aged 51 years and above.

On the other hand, the trust rating of Vice-President Sara Duterte-Carpio fell to 56% from 56.8% in September, while her satisfaction rating dropped to 48% from 48.7%.

Ms. Duterte-Carpio, daughter of Mr. Marcos’ predecessor Rodrigo R. Duterte, resigned as Education secretary in June, amid the widening rift between the two dynastic families.

Mr. Marcos has veered away from key policies of Mr. Duterte, standing up to China and pursuing closer security ties with western nations including the US.

An investigation led by a quad committee at the House of Representatives found that Mr. Duterte allegedly offered police cash incentives for drug-related killings during his six-year term.

The dissatisfaction rating of Ms. Duterte rose to 35.9% from 32%, while her distrust rating rose to 25% from 22%.

Senate President Jose Francis “Chiz” G. Escudero kept his position as the highest-rated government official with 52% of Filipinos expressing satisfaction with his performance.

Speaker Martin G. Romualdez’s satisfaction rating rose to 46.8% from 46.3%, while his trust rating increased to 57% from 56.4%.

Chief Justice Alexander G. Gesmundo’s satisfaction and trust ratings remained the lowest among top government officials at 39.1% and 43%, respectively.

Tangere interviewed 2,000 Filipino adults using a mobile app for the poll, which had a margin of error of ± 2.2 points. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

House bill eyes ‘enhanced’ penalties vs espionage

STOCK IMAGE | Image by Dee from Pixabay

A BILL amending the 83-year-old anti-espionage law in the Philippines has been filed at the House of Representatives to enhance penalties and update definition of acts of espionage.

Cagayan de Oro Rep. Rufus B. Rodriguez in October filed House Bill (HB) No. 10988 to expand the coverage of espionage under the Commonwealth Act No. 616, the Anti-Espionage Law, and provide higher penalties.

He also filed HB 10983 to amend Article 117 of the Revised Penal Code by clarifying that the penalty of prision correccional will be inflicted whether the act of espionage is committed during a time of peace or war.

“There is a need to review these laws and amend the same to make them adapt to the situation in light of evolving global security threats, technological advancements and the changing nature of espionage activities,” Mr. Rodriguez said in a statement on Monday.

HB No. 10988, An Act Expanding the Coverage of Espionage, will include the act of unlawful obtaining and sharing of “classified matter or classified information affecting national defense or national security” of the Philippines. Those found committing this provision, whether during times of peace or war, will be subjected to life imprisonment or a fine of not less than P1 million, or both.

Unlawful disclosure of classified matter or information affecting national security or national defense in the time of war or during the declaration of martial law will be punished with life imprisonment and a fine of not less than P2 million.

Acts of disloyalty by “any member of the government” deemed important for national security would also be punishable under the measure.   

Mr. Rodriguez urged Congress to expedite the bills’ approval to immediately “bolster the Philippines’ ability to preserve and protect its national security interests” as the country “faces numerous threats from foreign intelligence services, terrorist organizations and cybercriminals.”

Defense Secretary Gilberto Eduardo C. Teodoro, Jr. in September urged Congress to amend Philippine anti-espionage laws even if the country is not at war after an Al Jazeera documentary alleged that dismissed Bamban Mayor Alice L. Guo is a Chinese spy.

Ms. Guo denied the allegation, calling the accusation “unfair” during a House committee hearing on illegal online casinos in September. 

“What’s important now is that we punish espionage during peacetime, because the espionage laws in the Philippines are only effective during times of war,” Mr. Teodoro told reporters on the sidelines of a forum on Sept. 30 in Filipino. — Kenneth Christiane L. Basilio

Wage board approves P33 pay hike in Ilocos Region

PNA FILE PHOTO

By Chloe Mari A. Hufana, Reporter

THE Regional Tripartite Wages and Productivity Board (RTWPB) of Region I (Ilocos Region) approved a P33 minimum daily wage increase.

In a statement on Monday, the Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE) said the new daily minimum wage in the Ilocos Region is now P468 for the non-agriculture sector employing 10 or more employees, and P435 for the non-agriculture sector employing less than ten employees and the agriculture sector.

The board also granted a P500 increase for domestic workers, with the monthly wage rate now starting at P6,000.

The wage orders were approved on Oct. 16, and will take effect on Nov. 7, a day after the anniversary of the last wage order in the region.

“The Regional Board, comprised of representatives from the government, management, and labor sectors, likewise conducted consultations and a public hearing in their region as part of the minimum wage determination process,” DoLE added in the statement.

The new rates are an 8% increase from current daily wage rates and result in a 12% increase in wage-related benefits covering 13th month pay, service incentive leave, and social security benefits such as Social Security System, Philippine Health Insurance Corp. (PhilHealth), and Home Development Mutual Fund (Pag-IBIG).

The move is expected to directly benefit 170,143 minimum wage earners and 349,112 full-time wage and salary workers earning above minimum as a result of the adjustment of wage distortion.

Over 99,000 domestic workers are expected to benefit from the new rates, about 9,000 of them are in live-in arrangements.

Under the National Wages and Productivity Commission (NWPC) Rules on Minimum Wage Determination, retail and service establishments with no more than ten regular employees, as well as enterprises impacted by natural calamities or human-induced disasters, may seek exemption from the wage increase by applying to the RTWPB.

The DoLE reminded that registered Barangay Micro Business Enterprises (BMBEs) are not covered by the minimum wage law under the Republic Act No. 9178 [2002].

The Federation of Free Workers (FFW) welcomed the recent wage adjustments even as it found it the wage increase is “not enough.”

FFW President Jose Sonny G. Matula said in a Viber message that they are still pursuing a legislated wage hike of P150.

“If not legislated by this Congress, we make wage legislation a part of our campaign agenda in the 2025 senatorial elections,” he said.

The FFW also commended Wage Order No. RB 1-DW-05, which set the new monthly wage for domestic workers at P6,000.

“This increase for kasambahay is a much-needed recognition of their hard work and contributions to our households,” said FFW Women Network Vice-President Arta Maines.

“We are pleased to see progress for domestic workers, but we also urge for continued efforts to ensure fair wages across all sectors.”