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Rice inventory down by 26.9% as of Sept. 1

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

THE rice inventory as of Sept. 1 fell 26.9% year on year to 1.33 million metric tons (MT), according to the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA).

The PSA said in its rice and corn stock report that the rice inventory as of Sept. 1 fell 15.6% from the level reported on Aug. 1.

Rice held by households fell 24.8% year on year to 638,160 MT, while rice in commercial warehouses fell 30.6% to 543,020 MT.

Holdings maintained by the National Food Authority (NFA) fell 21.5% year on year to 151,170 MT.

Month on month, rice stocks held by households, commercial warehouses, and the NFA fell 15%, 16.3%, and 15.5%, respectively.

“Of this month’s total rice stocks, 47.9% came from households, 40.8% were from commercial warehouses/wholesalers/retailers, and 11.3% were from NFA depositories,” the PSA said.

Meanwhile, PSA said the corn inventory fell 29.7% year on year to 560,610 MT.

Month on month, the total was 20.8% lower.

Household corn stocks fell 38.6% year on year to 187,360 MT while inventories of commercial warehouses fell 24.2% to 373,250 MT.

Compared to the previous month, corn inventories in households rose 73.3% while stocks in commercial warehouses dropped 37.7%.

“The total corn inventory during the month was composed of 33.4% from households and 66.6% from commercial warehouses/wholesalers/retailers,” the PSA said. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave 

Angara expects no snags in approving CoA budget 

PHILIPPINE STAR/MICHAEL VARCAS

THE SENATE finance committee’s chairman, Senator Juan Edgardo M. Angara, said he expects no opposition to the Commission on Audit’s (CoA) proposed 2022 budget of P14.5 billion.

Mr. Angara said in a committee session, in which he was the only member present: “I am not expecting any opposition at all, and in fact I am expecting a lot of support for your budget.”

The proposed budget is 2.47% higher than this year’s P14.1 billion. The budget department’s own proposal for the CoA spending plan is P14.2 billion following reductions to the operating and capital outlay items.

Michael G. Aguinaldo, the CoA chairman, said the commission has written the committee for additional maintenance and other operating expenses.

“If the budget is flexible enough, maybe additional capital outlay for additional provincial satellite auditing offices (PSAO)” he said at the hearing Tuesday.

As of June, said Mr. Aguinaldo, 54 PSAOs have been completed. “We have an additional 14 undergoing construction, some of which may be finished soon. Some are just starting their groundbreaking.”

By next year, 67 or 68 sites are estimated to be completed, he added.

“As before, we’ll endeavor to enable you, fiscally,” Mr. Angara said. “It’s very deserving… you play an important role in our scheme of governance.”

The budget was subsequently endorsed to the Senate plenary, according to the chamber’s Public Relations and Information Bureau. — Alyssa Nicole O. Tan

Pandemic transformed service sector via digitization, APEC told

PHILSTAR

THE services sector has been transformed during the pandemic because of digitization, and will remain vital to the recovery going forward, Tomas I. Alcantara, APEC Business Advisory Council Philippines (ABAC) chairman, said.

In his welcome remarks on the first day of the virtual public-private dialogue on services Tuesday, Mr. Alcantara said that the services sector accounts for around 60% of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation’s (APEC) gross domestic product and employs more than half of the workforce in most economies.

The two-day dialogue was organized by ABAC and the Asia Pacific Services Coalition.

Mr. Alcantara said services can be used to catalyze economic activity dampened by the pandemic.

“We have seen digitalization of services from telework and financial technology to virtual restaurants and digital marketplaces, which have kept economies and the flow of goods and services running amid COVID-19-induced lockdowns,” Mr. Alcantara said.

“It is important to note that the pandemic has redefined the future of work. As such, economies and businesses must also leverage digital technology and innovation to train, re-skill and up-skill the current and future workforce,” he added. 

Mr. Alcantara said the use of digital technology is also important for the Philippines due to the composition of its workforce.

“This is particularly important for the Philippines, whose resilient economy rests on… the young, talented and world-class workforce, of course including those in the business process management industry and the Filipinos in every part of the world,” Mr. Alcantara said.

Trade Secretary Ramon M. Lopez noted in his welcome remarks the importance of a transparent and predictable regulatory environment to help services firms engage with the international market.

“I strongly believe that… good governance of our services markets is essential to creating new trade opportunities for firms. This is particularly true for our MSMEs who are often burdened by uncertain and costly requirements and procedures,” Mr. Lopez said.

“(Services) is one of our strongest and fastest growing sectors. Data show that the country’s services exports recorded a steady growth from 2009 to 2019, peaking at $41 billion worth of exports in 2019. It also accounted for 58.4% of total employment in the same year,” he added. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

Marcos rule poses risk of strongman rule — Fitch

BONGBONG MARCOS FB PAGE

THE ONLY son and namesake of the late dictator Ferdinand E. Marcos would probably continue President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s policies if he becomes President next year, posing risks of another strongman rule, according to Fitch Solutions Country Risk and Industry Research.

Ferdinand “Bongbong” R. Marcos, Jr. who was among the top three presidential candidates in an opinion poll, “appears to favor Duterte’s strongman leadership and has shown support for his father’s rule, posing risks of increased authoritarianism,” Fitch Solutions said in a report.

“Bongbong appears one of the few candidates to agree with Duterte’s policy of engagement with Beijing, potentially offering the most policy continuity out of the announced candidates,” it added.

Last month, Mr. Marcos said Mr. Duterte’s stance on the South China Sea dispute is “the right way to go.” He also parroted the administration’s views on Chinese aggression in Philippine-claimed areas in the South China Sea, saying the country could not afford to go to war with China. Mr. Marcos’s office did not immediately reply to a text message seeking comment.

“There are those who say that we should buy patrol boats and jets just in case we get to fight,” he told an online briefing. “Why would we think we will fight? That war will be over in less than a week. We’re defeated already.”

Aside from the former senator, Vice-President Maria Leonor “Leni” G. Robredo, Senator Emmanuel “Manny” D. Pacquiao, Manila Mayor Francisco “Isko” M. Domagoso and Senator Panfilo M. Lacson are also running for President.

“We expect the next president to take a more distant approach to relations with China and potentially seek international support over its disputes with Beijing in the South China Sea,” Fitch said.

The international research firm said Ms. Robredo, who has opposed the administration’s foreign policy, will “take a tougher stance on the Philippines’ dispute with China.”

It said Mr. Pacquiao had criticized the president’s cordial relations with China and would most likely seek closer ties with the United States. Mr. Lacson was expected to focus on “pro-business reforms.”

In July, Mr. Lacson asked local businessmen at a meeting whether it was “a sound concept to run the government like a private corporation,” noting that the state could adopt the private sector’s fiscal discipline.

He noted that many consider Singapore a big corporation and investments by the people come back to them in the form of social services and other forms of public service.

Last week, Ms. Robredo said any administration should prioritize anti-pandemic efforts to boost the country’s economic recovery.

“We have a false dichotomy of health versus the economy — I don’t believe that,” she told an online news briefing. “Our health and our economy are closely interconnected.” Ms. Robredo said her first economic policy would be stopping the pandemic.

Fitch Solutions said a possible shift to a “liberal” democratic presidency remained low, highlighting the potential for key Duterte policies such as his focus on infrastructure development and the war on drugs to be continued.

It said Mr. Domagoso was expected to continue with the infrastructure plans of Mr. Duterte and tackle crime but in a less aggressive way.

The Manila mayor, who said he admired the late dictator, has pledged to continue the government’s drug war but “under the blanket of existing laws and rights.”

Senator Ronald M. de la Rosa, who is also running for President, would probably focus on crime and mirror Mr. Duterte’s style, Fitch Solutions said. He enforced the state’s anti-illegal drug campaign as Mr. Duterte’s former police chief.

The International Criminal Court has ordered an investigation of Mr. Duterte’s crackdown on illegal drugs that has killed thousands, as it found “reasonable basis” that crimes against humanity might have been committed.

The court will also probe vigilante-style killings in Davao City when Mr. Duterte was still its vice mayor and mayor.

There were 1,424 vigilante-style killings in Davao City from 1998 to Dec. 2015, including 162 when Mr. de la Rosa was its police chief from 2012 to 2013, according to local human rights watchdog Coalition Against Summary Execution. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Increase commercial activity in metro, government urged

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

A STATE economic adviser on Tuesday asked the government to increase business capacities in Manila, the capital and nearby cities, as coronavirus infections continued to drop.

Jose Ma. “Joey” Concepcion III, presidential adviser for entrepreneurship, said companies should be allowed to increase their operational capacity to at least 50% from 30% to recover.

This would let them pay for debt and “hopefully carry them forward until 2022,” he told a televised news briefing.

Metro Manila was placed under Alert Level 4 until Oct. 15, the second-highest alert level equivalent to a modified enhanced community quarantine.

The Department of Health (DoH) reported 8,615 coronavirus infections on Tuesday, bringing the total to 2.68 million.

The death toll rose to 39,896 after 236 more patients died, while recoveries increased by 25,146 to 2.56 million, it said in a bulletin.

There were 82,228 active cases, 73.2% of which were mild, 14.2% did not show symptoms, 3.8% were severe, 7.28% were moderate and 1.6% were critical.

The agency said 57 duplicates had been removed from the tally, 38 of which were reclassified as recoveries, while 120 recoveries were reclassified as deaths. Three laboratories failed to submit data on Oct. 10.

Also on Tuesday, Metro Manila mayors agreed to enforce unified curfew hours from midnight to 4 a.m. The curfew hours would be enforced starting Wednesday, the Metro Manila Development Authority said in a resolution signed by the mayors.

Last week, Health Undersecretary Maria Rosario S. Vergeire said there had been fewer swab tests for the coronavirus in 14 regions including Metro Manila.

The biggest decline in RT-PCR tests was in the capital region, whose positivity rate decreased to 16.4% in the past week from 19.3% a week earlier, she said.

Swab tests in the metro fell by 37,383 or 14.1% to 266,042 leading to fewer people who tested positive for the virus.

The Philippines, which scored poorly in a global index that measured the recovery of more than 100 countries from the coronavirus pandemic, is boosting its vaccination drive to reach its target of inoculating at least 50% of its adult population by year-end.

Philippine President Rodrigo R. Duterte on Monday night took responsibility for the shortage of coronavirus vaccines in the country early this year.

“I am to blame because even if I wanted to buy vaccines there was nothing to buy,” he said in Filipino at a televised Cabinet meeting.

Mr. Duterte last month railed against rich countries for hoarding vaccines while poor countries struggled to secure shots for their people.

He described vaccine hoarding as a shockingly “selfish act” that should be condemned.

Earlier this year, Mr. Duterte accused the European Union of holding up vaccine supplies from other countries, citing the economic bloc’s export rule that requires drugmakers to obtain permission first before shipping out coronavirus vaccines.

Meanwhile, Mr. Duterte said Filipinos who refuse to get vaccinated against the coronavirus should get the shots while sleeping.

“Look for them in your villages,” he said. “Let’s go to their homes while they’re asleep and inject them to finish the story.”

Mr. Duterte, who has been criticized for his senseless speeches late at night, said he would personally lead the campaign.

The tough-talking leader has repeatedly threatened to order the arrest of Filipinos who refuse to be vaccinated against the coronavirus. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Davao City forms inter-agency body to address resettlement issues in railway, bus projects

THE DAVAO City government has directed the creation of an inter-agency body that will address issues on the resettlement of affected residents relating to two major transportation projects, the Mindanao railway and the High Priority Bus System Project (HPBS).

“In order to ensure the successful integration and effective management of the resettlement aspects of HPBS and MRP (Mindanao Railway Project), there is a need to formulate a Local Inter-agency Committee for Resettlement to properly manage and coordinate the concerns pertaining this aspect across all agencies,” Mayor Sara Duterte-Carpio said in a statement on Tuesday.

The mayor recently signed Executive Order 56-2021 for the establishment of the body, which will be composed of representatives from the local government and national agencies.

Under the executive order, the mayor will be the committee chair with the Department of Transportation’s Davao region head as co-chair.

Ms. Carpio also directed officials of all affected barangays to provide full cooperation to ensure “the least amount of inconvenience to the public.”

NORDECO
In another development in the region, the Northern Davao Electric Cooperative, Inc. (Nordeco), formerly Davao del Norte Electric Cooperative, is eyeing to energize 45 communities known as puroks or sitio this year through the national government’s Sitio Electrification Program (SEP).

Nordeco, in a statement, said it was able to roll out power supply to 462 sitios last year despite financial difficulties due to the pandemic.

“Although we are struggling financially due to the pandemic, the SEP program has been given a share from the national budget where we have an allocation of P90 million and 45 sitios will benefit from it,” the electric cooperative said. — Maya M. Padillo

Local court convicts 3 soldiers for murder of labor leader, companion 34 years ago

A REGIONAL court has convicted three soldiers for two counts of murder for the killing of labor leader Rolando M. Olalia and his driver, Leonor Alay-ay, 34 years ago.

The Antipolo Regional Trial Court Branch 97 convicted Fernando Casanova, Dennis V. Jabatan, and Desiderio Perez who were arrested 26 years after the killings in 1986.

All three were members of the Reform the Armed Forces Movement (RAM), a group of soldiers led by former senator Gregorio “Gringo” B. Honasan II that supported the ouster of dictator Ferdinand E. Marcos and staged coups to overthrow former President Corazon C. Aquino.

Nine others accused in the case have not yet been caught by the police while one, former police officer Eduardo E. Kapunan, Jr., was acquitted in 2016 and is now the Philippine ambassador to Germany. — Bianca Angelica D. Añago

Solon to file bill limiting candidate substitution

CONGRESS.GOV.PH

A HOUSE LEADER is set to file a bill that will limit candidate substitution, citing the need to ban practices that are a “manipulation and mockery of the election process.”

House Deputy Speaker Rep. Rufus B. Rodriguez on Tuesday said he will propose an “almost absolute” ban on the substitution of candidates.

He said substitution should only be allowed if the candidate of a political party either dies or is disqualified before election day.

Current election laws allow substitution up to a set deadline if a candidate withdraws their candidacy.

“It is lamentable that for the May 2022 elections, certain candidates for the presidency are perceived to be proxies for some personalities, even if they can be considered as serious aspirants,” Mr. Rodriguez, who represents Cagayan de Oro City, said in a statement. — Russell Louis C. Ku

NUJP contradicts President’s spokesman over press freedom

THE NATIONAL Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP) has contradicted Presidential Spokesperson Herminio “Harry” L. Roque, Jr. on his statement on Monday claiming that there is no censorship of the press in the Philippines.

In a statement posted on its social media page on Tuesday, NUJP cited incidents against media under the Duterte administration, including the killing of 20 journalists, four imprisoned, 37 cases of libel, and 230 other cases of varied attacks.

They called out Mr. Roque, whom they noted as “someone who once stood before the Supreme Court bench and defended the freedom of the press against the Cybercrime Prevention Act,” citing that censorship comes in many forms.” — Bianca Angelica D. Añago

Stronger implementation of mental health law pushed as suicide cases increase

PHILSTAR

ONE of the authors of the Mental Health Care Act called for a “more aggressive” implementation of the law as suicide cases went up last year.

House Deputy Speaker Lorna Regina “Loren” B. Legarda noted that mental health issues have been heightened due to the pandemic.

“With various societal issues that we are facing, we sometimes neglect to prioritize the mental health of every citizen of this nation without us knowing its effects on people’s day-to-day performance on education, employment, physical health and even relationships,” Ms. Legarda, who represents Antique province, said in a statement.

Data from the Philippine Statistics Authority published in July showed that 4,420 Filipinos died from self-intentional harm in 2020, an increase of 57.3% from 2,810 the previous year. — Russell Louis C. Ku

Ombudsman junks graft case vs Tulfo, DoT, PTV over ad deal

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

THE OFFICE of the Ombudsman has dismissed the criminal charges against the Tourism department, officials of government-owned Peoples Television Network, Inc. (PTV), and broadcaster Bienvenido “Ben” T. Tulfo for alleged corruption involving an P89.9-million advertisement agreement in 2017.

In a resolution released on Tuesday, the Ombudsman said the criminal complaint was dismissed “for lack of probable cause.” The resolution was drafted by Graft Investigation and Prosecution Officer Rosano A. Oliva on Sept. 30 and approved by Ombudsman Samuel R. Martires on Oct. 7.

Meanwhile, the Ombudsman pushed for a 2022 budget of at least equal to this year’s allocation during Tuesday’s Senate finance committee hearing. — Bianca Angelica D. Añago and Alyssa Nicole O. Tan

P50M worth of agri, other goods seized in Bulacan

THE GOVERNMENT seized P50 million worth of imported goods in a warehouse in Bulacan last week, consisting of agricultural, cosmetic and health products.

A government task force found 2,000 concealed sacks of imported red onions, boxes of seafood, cosmetic and health products, and household items after it searched a warehouse of Elite Globus Primeholdings Corp., the Bureau of Customs said in a press release on Monday.

The cosmetic and health products do not have Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval, the bureau said. Imported goods that have violated intellectual property rights and FDA rules will be destroyed.

The warehouse owner was also given 15 days from the Oct. 7 operations to present proof of payment of duties for the agricultural and household products. If the owner fails to do so, the goods will be taken by authorities.

The warehouse has been temporarily padlocked to secure the products while a Customs inventory is underway.

The Manila International Container Port-Customs Intelligence and Investigation Service (MICP-CIIS), Intelligence Group, and Philippine Coast Guard Task Force Aduana conducted the operation as authorized by the Customs commissioner. — Jenina P. Ibañez

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