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Peso strengthens after steady May inflation reading

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THE PESO strengthened against the dollar on Friday after May inflation steadied at 4.5%.

The peso closed at P47.75 against the dollar Friday after finishing Thursday at P47.825, according to the Bankers Association of the Philippines.

Week-on-week, the peso strengthened from its P47.80 close on May 28.

Since the start of 2021, the peso has appreciated by 0.6%. It closed at P48.023 on the final trading day of 2020.

The peso opened the Friday session at P47.83 and hit a low of P47.83. The intraday high was P47.73.

Dollar trading volume fell to $718.10 million Friday from the $820.06 million Thursday.

Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. (RCBC) Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said the steady inflation reading was positive for the peso.

The May reading was the third month in which consumer price growth remained steady, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) said Friday.

The 4.5% outcome for May is still elevated from the year-earlier reading of 2.1%.

A trader who asked not to be identified said May inflation remained within market expectations. The 4.5% reading is in line with the median estimate from a BusinessWorld poll of analysts conducted late last week.

Mr. Ricafort added that peso was also supported by continued net foreign buying on the stock market, running for six trading days. Foreign positions came in at a net buy of $22.3 million Friday after Thursday’s net buying level of $39.7 million.

On Monday, RCBC’s Mr. Ricafort forecast range the peso’s range at between P47.70 and P47.85. Next week, he expects a range of P47.60 to P47.90. — Isabel B. Celis

ADB backs more subsidies to avert long-term damage to PHL labor market

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The Philippines needs to support its labor market by incentivizing hiring and introducing unemployment insurance to prevent long-term damage to the work force, Asian Development Bank (ADB) officials said in a blog post.

“The pandemic could create long-lasting effects on employment. Put simply, this temporary large shock to the economy might produce a persistently lower employment rate even after the economy has started to grow again. This phenomenon is known as hysteresis in employment,” ADB country director Kelly Bird, country specialist Maria Cristina Lozano-Astray, and senior economist Teresa Mendoza said in a blog post Friday.

They said 1.7 million jobs were lost in the formal sector between January 2020 and January 2021, while employment in the informal sector increased by 435,000.

“The early evidence from other countries suggests that policies should support workers’ labor market transitions as well as enterprises,” they added.

They said granting wage subsidies is the most effective measure for saving jobs after the pandemic and lockdowns forced businesses to shut and lay off workers.

Last year, the government implemented a P46-billion wage subsidy program designed to support employers in keeping workers at their jobs. It is estimated to have benefited 3.1 million workers. It will be followed by another round this year worth P24 billion.

“As the economic recovery takes hold, governments will phase out wage subsidies and some are considering replacing them with hiring subsidies to help facilitate the reallocation of displaced workers into new jobs,” the ADB blog read.

Another program that the government can consider is unemployment insurance.

“The Philippines’ unemployment insurance scheme offers limited coverage. Adequate unemployment insurance provides workers with income stability and helps them transition to new job,” they noted, citing examples from Malaysia  and Chile.

Malaysia has a national pooled insurance fund to which employers and workers make monthly contributions, with the government stepping in if funding is insufficient or if the job loss was involuntary.

In Chile, both employers and employees also make monthly payments to the worker’s account. This complements the Solidarity Unemployment Fund, which workers can tap if they have exhausted their savings. The ADB said such a system does not create contingent fiscal liability.

Mr. Bird, Ms. Lozano and Ms. Mendoza said one of the major impacts of the pandemic on the labor market is loss of skills and declining employability for the long-term jobless.

The labor market could also see more skills mismatches over the medium to long term after tjobs were re-allocated across sectors which were affected differently by the pandemic.

“Workers in the Philippines will be facing a challenging next few years as the country rebounds from the pandemic. Further strengthening of active labor market programs will be critical for helping workers and enterprises to make this transition. — Beatrice M. Laforga

GSIS loans hit P208-B, including P108-B for financial assistance

The Government Service Insurance System headquarters in Pasay, Philippines. May 28, 2012. -- BW FILE PHOTO

THE Government Service Insurance System (GSIS) said its loan disbursements have amounted to P208 billion since 2019, including P108 billion for loans to assist members who have run into difficulty during the public health crisis.

In a statement Friday, the GSIS, the pension fund for current and retired civil servants, said the P108 billion was disbursed via the GSIS Financial Assistance Loan (GFAL) program to 292,000 members.

It handed out P17 billion in emergency loans to 902,696 members and P16 billion worth of Multipurpose Loans (MPL) to 256,537 members.

Loans to GSIS pensioners availing of the Enhanced Pension Loan and Pensioners’ Emergency Loan amounted to P3.21 billion and P980.22 million, respectively.

The pension fund removed age caps for pensioners in February and increased the maximum loanable amount to six times the monthly pension, up to P500,000.

“(The) multiplier effect of the loans in the communities has effectively pump-primed the economy in far-flung areas as banks and other financial institutions have tightened (their credit policy) and were hesitant to grant credit,” GSIS President and General Manager Rolando L. Macasaet was quoted as saying. — Isabel B. Celis

DoT pushing for reduced visitor quarantines, tourism-worker vaccine priority

The Department of Tourism (DoT) said it will propose shorter quarantine periods for visitors and lobby for the vaccination of tourism workers to further open up the tourism market in the midst of the pandemic.

In an online forum organized by the Manila Overseas Press Club on Friday, Tourism secretary Bernadette Romulo-Puyat said the “appetite for travel among Filipinos… is very strong, but we’re focusing on what travelers’ preferences are.”

Ms. Romulo-Puyat cited a survey indicating that 96% of prospective travelers want to sty in hotels with certified disinfection and health and safety protocols.

The DoT is seeking the inclusion of all tour guides and tour operators in the A1 vaccination priority category after an endorsement by the Department of Health (DoH) last month of A1 status for workers in quarantine hotels. Their previous priority classification was A4.

Ms. Romulo-Puyat also acknowledged the Crimson Hotel’s donation of about 5,000 doses of the Astrazeneca vaccine for Boracay.

The tourism department also proposed a “green lane” last month for fully-vaccinated travelers, which it is currently discussing with the Inter-Agency Task Force on Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF).

Ms. Romulo-Puyat said the green lane will effectively reduce quarantine time for fully-vaccinated travelers “to start foreign travel going,” noting the example of Hong Kong, which reduced its quarantine to seven days from 21 for travelers from New Zealand, Australia, and Singapore.

The DoT is also working with the Department of Information and Communications Technology and the DoH to consider deploying a QR code to help authentcate vaccine certificates.

Ms. Romulo-Puyat said that while the DoT was given P6 billion to lend out to Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs), she noted that the Land Bank of the Philippines (LANDBANK) expanded its I-Rescue program, available to large-scale businesses such as hotels. Borrowers can take out loans for up to 85% of what they need to stay in operation. The terms are 5% interest payable between three and 10 years.

She said under Republic Act 11469 or the Bayanihan to Heal as One Act, the DoT was given P3.1 billion to disburse as cash aid for displaced tourism workers.

As of May 26, “(payments) for 367,328 workers amounting to P1.8 billion were remitted and released to the various payment centers,” while 203,334 tourism workers have been approved for aid and are awaiting the disbursement of to P1.1 billion, Ms. Romulo-Puyat stated.

She said the funds are insufficient and will only cover 600,000 tourism workers, or 13.5% of the tourism work force. — Bianca Angelica D. Añago

DTI invites Japan pharma firms to manufacture in PHL, including vaccines

The Philippines is ready to serve as a production base for Japanese pharmaceutical companies, the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) said.

“As our country prepares the environment and standards through the implementation of ASEAN harmonization and other initiatives for good manufacturing practice, the Philippines can be a good production base for Japanese companies’ pharmaceutical exports,” Trade Undersecretary and Board of Investments (BoI) Managing Head Ceferino S. Rodolfo said in a statement Friday.

“With the developments in health insurance schemes, health systems, and increasing investment in public health, the Philippines can serve as (a major market) for pharmaceutical products,” he added.

Takashi Kunieda, director-general of the Kansai Pharmaceutical Industries Association, a trade group for companies based in south-central Honshu, said there is “great interest” from Japanese companies in the Philippine pharmaceutical market.

“We believe that your country is an attractive business destination, and we hope that more Japanese pharmaceutical companies will operate in the Philippines. We also wish to deepen our cooperation for this industry.”

Evariste M. Cagatan, the BoI’s Manufacturing Industries Service director, said: “Foremost of our priorities is investment in the manufacture of vaccines and biologicals (to attain) a certain level of security to address current and future health emergencies and pandemics. We would welcome investment in vaccine manufacturing, even starting only with fill and finish or form and finish operations before going to further processing,” she said.

“We have prospective Filipino groups which are looking for technical partners or equity partners who would be happy to be introduced to those who are seriously interested in this field. We are also encouraging investment in essential medicines especially for the most common illnesses of Filipinos which include diabetes, hypertension, kidney and heart diseases, and cancer,” she said. — Arjay L. Balinbin

DoE says grid red alerts still possible if power plant outages continue

FREEPIK

The Department of Energy (DoE) said Friday that red alerts on the Luzon grid are still possible until next week if power plants do not return to service during the period.

“Iyon pong end of this week hanggang next week, makikita natin na kung wala pong makakapasok na planta, below the red line pa rin po tayo. Kulang pa rin po ‘yung ating regulating reserves at magkakaroon pa rin po tayong red alert. (If no plants go back online between the end of this week and next week, our reserves will still remain below the red line. There will be a shortage of regulating reserves and we’ll still be on red alert),” Electric Power Industry Management Bureau (EPIMB) Director Mario C. Marasigan said during a virtual briefing at the House Committee on Energy Friday.

He was citing data from the energy department and grid operator, which forms the basis for the Luzon grid’s power outlook between June 4 and July 1.

Forced outages removed 1,372 megawatts (MW) from the grid Thursday, after unit 2 of the Pagbilao coal-fired plant, units 1 and 2 of the GNPower Mariveles Energy Center coal-fired plant, and unit 2 of the Calaca coal-fired plant were declared unavailable. Meanwhile, planned outages took out 435 MW, with three units of San Roque Power Corp.’s hydroelectric power plant still down.

During the Friday briefing, Mr. Marasigan said the grid’s available capacity between June 4 and June 10 is projected at 12,049 MW, while peak demand is estimated at 11,645 MW. During this time, gross reserves are expected to come in at 404 MW.

“Hopefully, pagpasok ng mga susunod na linggo up to July 1. Magkaroon na po tayo ng mga planta na mapasok at bababa na rin po ang ating konsumo kung kaya’t matatawid po natin ‘yung red alert, hindi na po tayo magkakaroon ng rotational brownout hopefully pero nasa yellow alert pa rin po tayo. Iyan po ‘yung outlook natin for the rest of the month of June (I hope the plants are back online in the coming weeks until July 1. The combination of returning plants and lower demand will take us out of red alert status. We won’t have rotational brownouts, I hope. But we’ll still be on yellow alert. That’s our outlook for the rest of June),” he added.

On Friday, the National Grid Corp. of the Philippines (NGCP) placed the Luzon grid on yellow alert between 1 p.m. and 4 p.m. It said the operating requirement is 11,398 MW, with available capacity at 11,547 MW, and the net operating margin at 149 MW.

On June 3, the DoE announced that the Luzon grid’s return to “normal system condition” and did not expect rotating brownouts over the near term.

It said demand fell as a result of the severe weather conditions arising from the transit of tropical storm Dante.

The DoE is looking into allegations of sabotage in the simultaneous plant outages, alongside the Energy Regulatory Commission and the Philippine Competition Commission. the outages led to three consecutive days of red alerts on the Luzon grid.

A yellow alert is issued on the grid if reserves of power fll below a certain safety margin, moving to a red alert when the safety margin is depleted. A red alert will trigger rotating power outages, or brownouts, for power consumers. – Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

Farm damage from storm Dante tops P63 million

AGRICULTURAL damage caused by Tropical Storm Dante (international name: Choi-wan) was estimated at P63.61 million Friday, the Department of Agriculture (DA) said.

The DA said in a bulletin Friday that losses were tallied at 2,309 metric tons (MT), with 1,780 farmers and 2,623 hectares of farmland affected. The storm-damaged regions were Western Visayas, Davao, SOCCSKSARGEN (South Cotabato, Cotabato, Sultan Kudarat, Sarangani, and General Santos City), and CARAGA.

“Affected commodities include rice, corn and high-value crops. These values are still subject to validation,” the DA said in the bulletin.

Losses to rice amounted to P59.4 million, with 2,172 MT of production volume lost across 2,256 hectares.

Damage to corn was P2.6 million, representing 94 MT in lost production affecting 192 hectares.

Losses to high-value crops amounted to P1.7 million on 44 MT in lost production volume and 175 hectares damaged.

According to the DA, 86,448 MT of rice was brought in early ahead of the storm, valued at P1.59 billion across 20,134 hectares in Ilocos, Cagayan Valley, Central Luzon, CALABARZON and Western Visayas. Early harvests of corn brought in 42,635 MT worth P720 million in Ilocos Region and MIMAROPA.

The DA said farmers and fisherfolk affected by Dante can avail of assistance from its regional offices, including 170,774 bags of rice seed, 34,820 bags of corn seed, and 11,227 kilograms of assorted vegetables; drugs and biologics for livestock and poultry; and indemnification funds from the Philippine Crop Insurance Corp. – Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

Farmers say Congress failed to act on rice tariffs

THE Federation of Free Farmers (FFF) said Congress failed to hold hearings on resolutions questioning Executive Order (EO) No. 135, which lowered the tariffs on imported rice.

The FFF said in a statement Friday that resolutions were filed by Senators Francis N. Pangilinan, Franklin M. Drilon, Ana Theresia N. Hontiveros-Baraquel, Leila M. de Lima, and Maria Lourdes Nancy S. Binay in the Senate, while MAGSASAKA Party-List Representative Argel Joseph T. Cabatbat filed a resolution in the House of Representatives.

The FFF said no hearings on the resolutions were conducted by the agriculture committees of the House and Senate.

“By default, the EO took effect on June 2, after the 15-day reglementary period,” FFF said.

According to the FFF, Senator Cynthia A. Villar, who chairs the Senate Committee on Agriculture and Food, and Quezon Province First District Rep. Wilfrido Mark M. Enverga, chairman of the House Committee on Agriculture and Food, did not address the issue of tariffs after the EO was issued.

FFF National Manager Raul Q. Montemayor said the EO should be publicly debated in the absence of “meaningful consultation” with farmers and other stakeholders.

“The senators went to the extent of convening several plenary meetings to scrutinize the EO that reduced tariffs on pork, for which there was an obvious crisis in terms of supply and rising prices.  We cannot understand why they have not exhibited the same concern for rice, considering that there is no apparent problem, and many more stakeholders are involved,” Mr. Montemayor said.

Asked to comment, Mr. Enverga said by phone message that his committee queried the Department of Agriculture for its position on EO 135.

“We are also waiting for similar resolutions filed by other members with regard to EO 135 to be referred to the House Committee on Agriculture and Food. These resolutions remain a priority and have been originally set for deliberation in the coming weeks during the break,” Mr. Enverga said.

“Given that we only had three weeks before sine die, we prioritized measures that we could pass on second and third reading,” he added.

Signed on May 15, EO 135 reduced the most-favored nation tariff rates of rice imports to 35% for a one-year period in an effort to diversify the country’s sources of rice, improve supply, and maintain prices. The new rate brings MFNs in line with the preferential rate accorded to ASEAN trading partners that ship rice to the Philippines.

Before the EO, rice imports within the Minimum Access Volume (MAV) quota were charged 40% tariffs while out-of-quota rice imports paid 50%.

BusinessWorld contacted Ms. Villar for comment but she had not replied at deadline time. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

Private schools ask Palace to reverse BIR tax-treament ruling

PHILSTAR/MICHAEL VARCAS

AN association of private schools petitioned Malacanang Friday seeking intervention from President R. Duterte to reverse a Bureau of Internal Revenue’s (BIR) ruling barring for-profit educational institutions from availing of a 1% tax rate.

The Coordinating Council for Private Educational Associations (COCOPEA) is seeking the recall of the BIR’s Revenue Regulation (RR) 5-2021, which excluded for-profit educational institutions from availing of the reduced rate, as authorized by the Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprises (CREATE) law. For-profit schools were initially required to use the regular corporate income tax rate of 25%.

The BIR has staked out the position that the CREATE law tax rate only applies to non-profit

proprietary schools, in line with the policy in the National Internal Revenue Code (NIRC).

“We appeal to you, Mr. President, to make our tax laws consistent with your vision and the constitutional mandate of ensuring access to education for all Filipinos. Specifically, RR 5-2021 unilaterally and illegally inserted wording inconsistent with both Section 27 (B) of the Tax Code as amended by CREATE, and the Constitution,” according to the petition, a copy of which was sent to reporters Friday.

“We appeal for your intervention because we have exhausted all other administrative avenues by requesting various government offices, including the BIR and the Department of Finance, to revisit and reverse those provisions of RR 5-2021, to no avail,” it added.

The CREATE law reduced the corporate tax rate for proprietary educational institutions to 1% from 10% for three years from July 2020 to July 2023.

COCOPEA claims the BIR improperly limited the eligibility for the lower tax rate to non-profit schools.

Separately, Senator Ralph G. Recto called on the BIR to reverse its ruling.

In a statement Friday, Mr. Recto said the BIR adopted “a flawed interpretation” of the CREATE law.

“CREATE is meant to bail out distressed private schools. The BIR order further drowns them in a sea of red ink,” Mr. Recto said.

Mr. Recto said private educational institutions have been paying a preferential tax rate of 10% since 1968 and senators agreed to bring it down to 1% until June 30, 2023 “to help them evade bankruptcy

during the pandemic.”

He said the bureau should have consulted the Senate in drafting its revenue regulation.

Senator Juan Edgardo M. Angara filed Senate Bill No. 2272 Thursday to clarify the tax treatment of private schools.

The measure will amend the Tax Code, indicating that the preferential tax rate applies to proprietary education institutions, including those that are stock and for profit, and non-profit hospitals. — Beatrice M. Laforga, Vann Marlo M. Villegas

France to offer soft loan for Metro Manila cable car line

France has declared its intention to offer a “highly concessional loan” to the Philippines to fund a cable car transport system in Metro Manila, the Department of Finance (DoF) said.

In a statement, the DoF said French Ambassador to the Philippines Michèle Boccoz told Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III of French readiness to finance the proposed $100 million cable car system.

The project, to be implemented by the Transportation department, aims to establish a 4.5-kilomoter cable car transit system in the Santolan-Eastwood-Pasig area. The proposal is still subject to approval by the Investment Coordination Committee.

The proposed format for the system is a monocable detachable gondola lift with closed cabins seating 10 each.

It will run between Light Rail Transit (LRT) Line 2’s Santolan station in Marikina City and Barangay Rosario in Pasig City, connecting Santolan Station to Ortigas Avenue.

Other sites for stations were identified as Quezon City’s Libis and Eastwood districts and the Santolan and Manggahan areas of Pasig City.

France provided the Philippines a 450,000-euro grant to conduct a feasibility study on the project in 2018.

The two officials also discussed the possibility of France helping the Philippines develop its shipbuilding industry.

Ms. Boccoz confirmed that the French Treasury can help Manila buy 40 24-meter fast patrol boats, two 84-meter offshore patrol vessels, and two coastal patrol boats for the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG). The units will be built by France’s OCEA Group.

France delivered an offshore patrol vessel to the PCG in 2019 and four fast patrol boats in 2018. — Beatrice M. Laforga

May inflation steadies at 4.5%

Photo by Michael Varcas, The Philippine Star

Consumer price increases steadied for the third straight month at 4.5% in May, matching market expectations. 

The figure was within the 4-4.8% estimate by the Philippine central bank for that month and matched the median estimate in a BusinessWorld poll last week. 

Year to date inflation was 4.4%, higher than the 2-4% target of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) and its revised inflation forecast of 3.9% for the year. May was the fifth month in a row that inflation went beyond target. 

Food, Beverages, and Transport Chip in the most to Inflation (Recreational Activities Still Negative)

“The BSP remains watchful over the evolving economic conditions and challenges brought about by the pandemic to ensure that the monetary policy stance remains consistent with its price and financial stability objectives,” central bank Governor Benjamin E. Diokno said in a statement on Friday. 

He said the latest figure is consistent with expectations that inflation would probably settle near the high end of the target this year before reverting close to midpoint in 2022. 

He said risks to the inflation outlook were broadly balanced, including those related to the arrival of pork imports at lower tariffs, the reopening of the domestic economy and the pace of the global economic recovery. 

“BSP expects inflation to decelerate to within the target range by the second half of 2021 to 2022 as domestic supply bottlenecks are addressed,” he told reporters in a Viber group message. 

Economists said monetary policy settings remained appropriate and are unlikely to be tweaked in the near term. 

“Although a host of demand pull and supply forces are currently weighing on inflation, a pullback into the target range is still likely in the coming months,” ANZ Research Chief Economist for Southeast Asia and India Sanjay Mathur and economist Rini Sen said in a report. 

This should not have any bearing on monetary policy, “which overwhelmingly remains focused on supporting growth,” ING Bank NV Manila Senior Economist Nicholas Antonio T. Mapa said in a separate note. 

He added that the central bank was constrained from cutting policy rates given the above-target inflation, more-than-expected economic decline in the first quarter and anemic bank lending. 

Inflation picked up in the indices of restaurant and miscellaneous goods and services (3.8% from 3.4% in April); health (3.2% from 3.1%); and furnishing, household equipment and routine maintenance of the house (2.5% from 2.1%), the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) reported on Friday. 

Also posting increases were housing, water, electricity, gas, and other fuels (1.9% from 1.5%); and clothing and footwear (1.7% from 1.6%). 

Offsetting these increases were annual declines in transport (16.5% from 17.9%); alcoholic beverages and tobacco (11.8% from 12%); and food and nonalcoholic beverages (4.6% from 4.8%). 

The rest of the commodity groups remained unchanged from the previous months. 

Food inflation eased to 4.9% in May from 5% a month earlier, though still faster than 2.9% last year. 

Core inflation, which is used to determine underlying price trends by removing volatile food and fuel prices, stood at 3.3% in May. This was also unchanged from the annual rate recorded in April, but was higher than 2.9% a year earlier. 

Core inflation has averaged 3.4% this year compared with 3.1% a year earlier. 

MEAT INFLATION 

Meanwhile, inflation experienced by the bottom 30% of income households stood at 4.5% in May, slower than 4.9% posted a month earlier but faster than 2.9% in May last year. 

Economists mostly traced the steady increase in prices to slower price increases in food and transport, both of which contributed 35.5% and 8.1% to the consumer price index basket. 

“Food prices continued to fall sequentially due in part to the government ramping up pork imports to meet domestic demand,” HSBC Global Research economist Noelan Arbis said in a note. “Meanwhile, all other components of the CPI basket moved largely in line, or slightly below their historical trend.” 

“Overall, today’s numbers suggest that much of the concerns regarding runaway inflation in the Philippines are behind us,” he added. 

Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Karl Kendrick T. Chua said he expects recent executive orders (EO) to help curb pork prices in the coming months. Meat inflation had been among the main drivers of overall inflation. 

“Meat inflation remained the main driver of overall inflation with a 1.4 percentage point (ppt) contribution, similar to the previous month,” he said in a statement. But month-on-month meat prices declined for the first time in eight months by 0.1%, a sign of stabilizing meat prices, he added. 

President Rodrigo R. Duterte signed Executive Order 135 to lower the tariff on rice imports to 35% from 40% for a year. He also signed EO 134 to modify the tariff rates on imported pork products. 

Earlier, he issued an order raising the minimum access volume allocation for pork imports to 254,210 metric tons (MT) from the previous ceiling of 54,210 MT. 

Philippine economic output fell by 4.2% in the first quarter from a year earlier, extending the recession to five straight quarters amid a coronavirus pandemic. 

UnionBank of the Philippines, Inc. Chief Economist Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion expects inflation to soften further toward the end of the year. The central bank was unlikely to cut benchmark interest rates despite Mr. Diokno’s earlier comments that the central bank was “open to another cut.” 

Alex Holmes, emerging Asia economist at Capital Economics, expects two 25-basis-point cuts in the second half. He also expects the reserve requirement ratio to be cut by 100 basis points. 

The central bank’s Monetary Board will hold its next policy-setting meeting on June 24. 

Philippines eyes P4.9-T infra spending

The government is expected to spend P4.855 trillion on infrastructure in the next four years, according to economic managers, in a move that could boost productivity and economic growth.

The spending is equivalent to 5% of Philippine economic output, according to the Development Budget Coordination Committee’s (DBCC) latest medium-term fiscal program posted on the Budget department’s website on Friday

The state would probably spend P1.02 trillion this year, lower than the P1.17-trillion target, DBCC said. The expenditure is equivalent to 5.1% of economic output, lower than the 5.9% goal adopted in December.

DBCC expects infrastructure spending to hit P1.251 trillion next year, which is 5.7% of economic output. This is higher than the original spending plan of P1.154 trillion, which is 5.1% of the gross domestic product (GDP).

The economic team put  infrastructure spending at P1.262 trillion in 2023 — equivalent to 5.2% of economic output — and this is expected to rise to P1.321 trillion in 2024 (5% of GDP).

The Duterte administration has planned to spend P8 trillion for its “Build, Build, Build” infrastructure program until the end of its term in mid-2022. It targets to spend an equivalent of 5% of GDP each year to drive economic growth and create jobs.

From July 2016 to May 2021, the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) board, which President Rodrigo R. Duterte heads, has approved 92 projects worth P3.87 trillion.

NEDA is reviewing 17 more projects worth P394.96 billion to be approved by the Cabinet-level Investment Coordination Committee (ICC), and 26 others that are under technical review.

Infrastructure spending rise by 41% year on year to P87.7 billion in March, bringing the first-quarter total to P195.2 billion. — Beatrice M. Laforga