{ "version": "https://jsonfeed.org/version/1.1", "user_comment": "This feed allows you to read the posts from this site in any feed reader that supports the JSON Feed format. To add this feed to your reader, copy the following URL -- /economy/feed/json/ -- and add it your reader.", "next_url": "/economy/feed/json/?paged=2", "home_page_url": "/economy/", "feed_url": "/economy/feed/json/", "language": "en-US", "title": "Economy Archives - 大象传媒 Online", "description": "大象传媒: The leading and most trusted source of business news and analysis in the Philippines", "icon": "/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/cropped-bworld_icon-1.png", "items": [ { "id": "/?p=751370", "url": "/economy/2026/05/21/751370/ecozone-moratorium-in-ncr-seen-curbing-locator-flexibility/", "title": "Ecozone moratorium in NCR seen curbing locator flexibility", "content_html": "
By Juliana Chloe A. Gonzales
\nTHE MORATORIUM on approving new economic zones in Metro Manila is restricting the flexibility of IT and business process management (IT-BPM) companies in selecting office locations, Savills Philippines said.
\nSavills Philippines Chief Operating Officer Cha Carbonell told 大象传媒 via Viber on Thursday that while the Metro Manila office market \u201chas a headline vacancy of around 20%\u2026 once you apply the filters that creditworthy multinational corporations (MNC) and business process outsourcing (BPO) occupiers require \u2014 PEZA accreditation, green certification, business continuity plan (BCP)-grade specifications \u2014 that figure drops sharply.\u201d
\nAdministrative Order (AO) No. 2018, signed by former President Rodrigo R. Duterte, instructed the Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA) to no longer accept, process, or evaluate applications for new ecozones in Metro Manila to channel investment to areas outside the capital.
\nMs. Carbonnell said the policy may no longer be a good fit given the current demand for high-quality, PEZA-compliant spaces.
\nThe core business districts have only 478,000 square meters (sq.m.) of such space available combined, including 119,000 sq.m. in the Ortigas central business district (CBD), 160,000 sq.m. in the Makati CBD, and 199,000 sq.m. in Bonifacio Global City (BGC).
\nWhen asked if major locators are migrating to secondary CBDs, or choosing to forgo PEZA incentives to remain in primary districts, Ms. Carbonell said the large occupiers with PEZA registered status, are almost universally not interested in giving up the incentives.
\n\u201cWhat we are seeing instead is a more structured migration rationale toward secondary districts, driven by\u2026 employee accessibility, cost arbitrage (secondary district rents run roughly 20-40% below BGC and Makati), and BCP considerations where companies want to split requirements across multiple hubs,\u201d Ms. Carbonell said.
\nThe supply gap is forecast to worsen in the coming years, with only 711,000 sq.m. of upcoming office stock being PEZA-certified, according to the Colliers first quarter 2026 Property Market Briefing.
\nColliers called AO 18 a \u201cblunt policy tool\u201d given that Metro Manila is the primary driver of the office sector, accounting for around 70% of IT-BPM transactions in the first quarter.
\n\u201cNon-PEZA, non-green buildings are already carrying a vacancy rate of approximately 30%, and the trajectory is upward. The structural demand drivers are firmly against this segment: the most creditworthy occupiers will not enter them, and even government office take-up\u2026 is unlikely to absorb the volume at risk,\u201d Ms. Carbonell said when asked about the occupancy outlook for non-PEZA office buildings.
\n", "content_text": "By Juliana Chloe A. Gonzales\nTHE MORATORIUM on approving new economic zones in Metro Manila is restricting the flexibility of IT and business process management (IT-BPM) companies in selecting office locations, Savills Philippines said.\nSavills Philippines Chief Operating Officer Cha Carbonell told 大象传媒 via Viber on Thursday that while the Metro Manila office market \u201chas a headline vacancy of around 20%\u2026 once you apply the filters that creditworthy multinational corporations (MNC) and business process outsourcing (BPO) occupiers require \u2014 PEZA accreditation, green certification, business continuity plan (BCP)-grade specifications \u2014 that figure drops sharply.\u201d\nAdministrative Order (AO) No. 2018, signed by former President Rodrigo R. Duterte, instructed the Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA) to no longer accept, process, or evaluate applications for new ecozones in Metro Manila to channel investment to areas outside the capital.\nMs. Carbonnell said the policy may no longer be a good fit given the current demand for high-quality, PEZA-compliant spaces.\nThe core business districts have only 478,000 square meters (sq.m.) of such space available combined, including 119,000 sq.m. in the Ortigas central business district (CBD), 160,000 sq.m. in the Makati CBD, and 199,000 sq.m. in Bonifacio Global City (BGC).\nWhen asked if major locators are migrating to secondary CBDs, or choosing to forgo PEZA incentives to remain in primary districts, Ms. Carbonell said the large occupiers with PEZA registered status, are almost universally not interested in giving up the incentives.\n\u201cWhat we are seeing instead is a more structured migration rationale toward secondary districts, driven by\u2026 employee accessibility, cost arbitrage (secondary district rents run roughly 20-40% below BGC and Makati), and BCP considerations where companies want to split requirements across multiple hubs,\u201d Ms. Carbonell said.\nThe supply gap is forecast to worsen in the coming years, with only 711,000 sq.m. of upcoming office stock being PEZA-certified, according to the Colliers first quarter 2026 Property Market Briefing.\nColliers called AO 18 a \u201cblunt policy tool\u201d given that Metro Manila is the primary driver of the office sector, accounting for around 70% of IT-BPM transactions in the first quarter.\n\u201cNon-PEZA, non-green buildings are already carrying a vacancy rate of approximately 30%, and the trajectory is upward. The structural demand drivers are firmly against this segment: the most creditworthy occupiers will not enter them, and even government office take-up\u2026 is unlikely to absorb the volume at risk,\u201d Ms. Carbonell said when asked about the occupancy outlook for non-PEZA office buildings.", "date_published": "2026-05-21T21:06:02+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-21T21:06:02+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/BPO-Call-center-employee.jpg", "tags": [ "Juliana Chloe A. Gonzales", "Economy", "Editors' Picks", "One News" ], "summary": "THE MORATORIUM on approving new economic zones in Metro Manila is restricting the flexibility of IT and business process management (IT-BPM) companies in selecting office locations, Savills Philippines said." }, { "id": "/?p=751369", "url": "/economy/2026/05/21/751369/davao-dpwh-officials-charged-over-ghost-farm-road-projects/", "title": "Davao DPWH officials charged over \u2018ghost\u2019 farm road projects", "content_html": "THE Department of Agriculture (DA) said it lodged graft, malversation, and falsification charges against multiple officials of the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) in Davao Occidental, alleging that they improperly certified eight farm-to-market road (FMR) projects as complete.
\nIn a statement, the DA said it discovered eight projects valued at P94 million in the province, with the officials allegedly falsifying documents to declare the projects complete, facilitating the release of public funds.
\nThe complaints over what the DA described as \u201cghost\u201d projects, filed on Thursday at the Office of the Ombudsman, include corrupt practices, malversation, falsification of public documents, grave misconduct, and serious dishonesty.
\nThe complaints cite violations of Articles 217, 171, and 172 of the Revised Penal Code concerning malversation through falsification of public documents, Section 3(e) of Republic Act 3019 (Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act), and administrative offenses including grave misconduct and serious dishonesty.
\nThe DA is now the lead agency for FMRs after the DPWH was stripped of responsibility for building them in the wake of the infrastructure corruption scandal of 2025.
\nValidation of the projects was carried out by the DA\u2019s Internal Audit Service (IAS), which has inspected at least 1,200 FMR projects in Regions III, IV-A, V, IX, X, and XI.
\nThose charged face potential penalties of imprisonment of up to 40 years, fines, and perpetual disqualification from public office. \u2014 Pierce Oel A. Montalvo
\n", "content_text": "THE Department of Agriculture (DA) said it lodged graft, malversation, and falsification charges against multiple officials of the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) in Davao Occidental, alleging that they improperly certified eight farm-to-market road (FMR) projects as complete.\nIn a statement, the DA said it discovered eight projects valued at P94 million in the province, with the officials allegedly falsifying documents to declare the projects complete, facilitating the release of public funds.\nThe complaints over what the DA described as \u201cghost\u201d projects, filed on Thursday at the Office of the Ombudsman, include corrupt practices, malversation, falsification of public documents, grave misconduct, and serious dishonesty.\nThe complaints cite violations of Articles 217, 171, and 172 of the Revised Penal Code concerning malversation through falsification of public documents, Section 3(e) of Republic Act 3019 (Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act), and administrative offenses including grave misconduct and serious dishonesty.\nThe DA is now the lead agency for FMRs after the DPWH was stripped of responsibility for building them in the wake of the infrastructure corruption scandal of 2025.\nValidation of the projects was carried out by the DA\u2019s Internal Audit Service (IAS), which has inspected at least 1,200 FMR projects in Regions III, IV-A, V, IX, X, and XI.\nThose charged face potential penalties of imprisonment of up to 40 years, fines, and perpetual disqualification from public office. \u2014 Pierce Oel A. Montalvo", "date_published": "2026-05-21T21:05:40+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-21T21:05:40+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/Ilocos-Norte-Farm-to-Market-Road.jpg", "tags": [ "Pierce Oel A. Montalvo", "Economy", "Editors' Picks", "One News" ] }, { "id": "/?p=751368", "url": "/economy/2026/05/21/751368/visayas-grid-on-yellow-alert-again/", "title": "Visayas grid on yellow alert again", "content_html": "THE Visayas grid was placed on yellow alert once more on Thursday, with the region\u2019s power supply remaining under pressure in the face of surging demand due to the hot weather, with a number of power plants still offline.
\nThe National Grid Corp. of the Philippines (NGCP) said the yellow alert for the Visayas was in effect between 4 p.m. and 9 p.m. on Thursday.
\nA yellow alert is issued when supply margins are insufficient to meet the transmission grid\u2019s contingency requirement.
\nDuring the period, available capacity stood at 2,670 megawatts (MW) against peak demand of 2,479 MW.
\nRemaining on forced outage were 19 power plants, with 14 plants derailed. Overall, 867 MW was unavailable to the grid.
\nNGCP said the unavailability of large coal-fired power plants in the Visayas and high forecasted power demand triggered the yellow alert.
\nThis year, the grid operator has issued a total of 15 yellow alerts and six red alerts in Luzon and the Visayas.
\nMark Anthony Ynoc, former president of Mandaue Chamber of Commerce and Industry, called the consecutive yellow alerts in the Visayas deeply concerning.
\n\u201cThese incidents reflect the need for stronger long-term energy planning, more aggressive investment in power generation, and improvements in transmission infrastructure,\u201d Mr. Ynoc said in a statement on Thursday.
\n\u201cReliable and affordable power is critical to sustaining economic growth and business confidence in the region,\u201d he added.
\nMr. Ynoc said higher power rates and recurring outages affect productivity, increase the cost of consumer goods and disrupt operations.
\n\u201cThese challenges ultimately weaken the competitiveness of businesses in Cebu and the Visayas,\u201d he said. \u2014 Sheldeen Joy Talavera
\n", "content_text": "THE Visayas grid was placed on yellow alert once more on Thursday, with the region\u2019s power supply remaining under pressure in the face of surging demand due to the hot weather, with a number of power plants still offline.\nThe National Grid Corp. of the Philippines (NGCP) said the yellow alert for the Visayas was in effect between 4 p.m. and 9 p.m. on Thursday.\nA yellow alert is issued when supply margins are insufficient to meet the transmission grid\u2019s contingency requirement.\nDuring the period, available capacity stood at 2,670 megawatts (MW) against peak demand of 2,479 MW.\nRemaining on forced outage were 19 power plants, with 14 plants derailed. Overall, 867 MW was unavailable to the grid.\nNGCP said the unavailability of large coal-fired power plants in the Visayas and high forecasted power demand triggered the yellow alert.\nThis year, the grid operator has issued a total of 15 yellow alerts and six red alerts in Luzon and the Visayas.\nMark Anthony Ynoc, former president of Mandaue Chamber of Commerce and Industry, called the consecutive yellow alerts in the Visayas deeply concerning.\n\u201cThese incidents reflect the need for stronger long-term energy planning, more aggressive investment in power generation, and improvements in transmission infrastructure,\u201d Mr. Ynoc said in a statement on Thursday.\n\u201cReliable and affordable power is critical to sustaining economic growth and business confidence in the region,\u201d he added.\nMr. Ynoc said higher power rates and recurring outages affect productivity, increase the cost of consumer goods and disrupt operations.\n\u201cThese challenges ultimately weaken the competitiveness of businesses in Cebu and the Visayas,\u201d he said. \u2014 Sheldeen Joy Talavera", "date_published": "2026-05-21T21:05:21+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-21T21:05:21+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/electricity-pylon-tower.jpg", "tags": [ "Sheldeen Joy Talavera", "Economy", "Editors' Picks", "One News" ] }, { "id": "/?p=751367", "url": "/economy/2026/05/21/751367/hybrids-evs-gain-momentum-as-energy-crisis-deepens-deloitte/", "title": "Hybrids, EVs gain momentum as energy crisis deepens \u2014 Deloitte", "content_html": "CAR OWNERS and potential buyers are expressing growing interest in hybrids and electric vehicles (EVs), according to a consumer study conducted by Deloitte.
\nCiting its 2026 Global Automotive Consumer Study, Deloitte found that in the Philippines, 34% of survey respondents expressed interest in the electrified segment, compared with 27% a year earlier.
\nThe top reasons for their preference was fuel costs (62%), the environment (49%) and the driving experience (45%), the study found.
\nPotential drawbacks cited were dearth of charging stations (48%), battery replacement costs (41%), and speed of charging (41%), Deloitte said.
\nAmong car owners, 37% were determined to have low brand loyalty, while the size of the first-time owner market was estimated at 31%, which \u201chighlights a market less anchored to legacy brands and more open to exploring alternatives,\u201d Deloitte said.
\nRespondents said they were most willing to pay for services like emergency assistance (87%), anti-theft tracking (87%), warranty/recall notices (79%), and vehicle health reporting and maintenance cost forecasts (79%).
\nThey were most concerned about sharing data from in-cabin cameras (73%), connected devices (72%), and connected services (71%).
\n", "content_text": "CAR OWNERS and potential buyers are expressing growing interest in hybrids and electric vehicles (EVs), according to a consumer study conducted by Deloitte.\nCiting its 2026 Global Automotive Consumer Study, Deloitte found that in the Philippines, 34% of survey respondents expressed interest in the electrified segment, compared with 27% a year earlier.\nThe top reasons for their preference was fuel costs (62%), the environment (49%) and the driving experience (45%), the study found.\nPotential drawbacks cited were dearth of charging stations (48%), battery replacement costs (41%), and speed of charging (41%), Deloitte said.\nAmong car owners, 37% were determined to have low brand loyalty, while the size of the first-time owner market was estimated at 31%, which \u201chighlights a market less anchored to legacy brands and more open to exploring alternatives,\u201d Deloitte said.\nRespondents said they were most willing to pay for services like emergency assistance (87%), anti-theft tracking (87%), warranty/recall notices (79%), and vehicle health reporting and maintenance cost forecasts (79%).\nThey were most concerned about sharing data from in-cabin cameras (73%), connected devices (72%), and connected services (71%).", "date_published": "2026-05-21T21:04:14+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-21T21:04:14+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/electric-vehicle.jpg", "tags": [ "deloitte", "Economy" ] }, { "id": "/?p=751366", "url": "/economy/2026/05/21/751366/da-further-signals-intent-to-cap-pork-belly-prices-at-p380-per-kilo-sinag/", "title": "DA further signals intent to cap pork belly prices at P380 per kilo \u2014 SINAG", "content_html": "GOVERNMENT consultations with farmers on capping the price of domestic pork belly (liempo) appeared to confirm the Department of Agriculture\u2019s (DA) intent to set a P380 per kilo price ceiling for the commodity, an industry association said.
\nSamahang Industriya ng Agrikultura (SINAG) Executive Director Jayson H. Cainglet said the group discussed the proposed price cap with Agriculture Assistant Secretaries Genevieve E. Velicaria-Guevarra and Michael J. Garcia on May 20.
\nAgriculture Secretary Francisco P. Tiu Laurel, Jr.\u00a0 said earlier in the month that a cap on liempo was being considered due to rising pork prices. He said the cost of liempo from domestic hogs has risen to as high as P420 per kilogram, well above what the DA considers to be a fair price of P380.
\nAs of May 20, pork belly prices remain at P420 per kilogram, according to DA reports.
\nMr. Cainglet said SINAG expressed support for the price cap, citing the significant disparity between what hog raisers receive and what consumers pay at retail.
\nAccording to SINAG, despite farmgate prices for live hogs averaging only P180\u2013190 per kilo over the past seven months, liempo continues to retail at P400 to P450 per kilo in public markets and supermarkets.
\nSINAG attributed the price gap to supply chain inefficiencies, weak market regulation, and excessive intermediary margins rather than profiteering by producers.\u00a0
\nThe industry association noted that pork imports totaled 891 million kilos last year, with a further 296 million kilos imported in the first four months of 2026, though the retail margin over farmgate ranges between 90% and 120%.
\nThe DA has not yet issued an official statement on the proposed price ceiling. \u2014 Pierce Oel A. Montalvo
\n", "content_text": "GOVERNMENT consultations with farmers on capping the price of domestic pork belly (liempo) appeared to confirm the Department of Agriculture\u2019s (DA) intent to set a P380 per kilo price ceiling for the commodity, an industry association said.\nSamahang Industriya ng Agrikultura (SINAG) Executive Director Jayson H. Cainglet said the group discussed the proposed price cap with Agriculture Assistant Secretaries Genevieve E. Velicaria-Guevarra and Michael J. Garcia on May 20.\nAgriculture Secretary Francisco P. Tiu Laurel, Jr.\u00a0 said earlier in the month that a cap on liempo was being considered due to rising pork prices. He said the cost of liempo from domestic hogs has risen to as high as P420 per kilogram, well above what the DA considers to be a fair price of P380.\nAs of May 20, pork belly prices remain at P420 per kilogram, according to DA reports.\nMr. Cainglet said SINAG expressed support for the price cap, citing the significant disparity between what hog raisers receive and what consumers pay at retail.\nAccording to SINAG, despite farmgate prices for live hogs averaging only P180\u2013190 per kilo over the past seven months, liempo continues to retail at P400 to P450 per kilo in public markets and supermarkets.\nSINAG attributed the price gap to supply chain inefficiencies, weak market regulation, and excessive intermediary margins rather than profiteering by producers.\u00a0\nThe industry association noted that pork imports totaled 891 million kilos last year, with a further 296 million kilos imported in the first four months of 2026, though the retail margin over farmgate ranges between 90% and 120%.\nThe DA has not yet issued an official statement on the proposed price ceiling. \u2014 Pierce Oel A. Montalvo", "date_published": "2026-05-21T21:01:10+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-21T21:01:10+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/meat-shop-shopper.jpg", "tags": [ "Pierce Oel A. Montalvo", "Economy" ] }, { "id": "/?p=751365", "url": "/economy/2026/05/21/751365/phl-enjoys-growing-reputation-for-fiscal-transparency-survey/", "title": "PHL enjoys \u2018growing reputation\u2019 for fiscal transparency \u2014 survey", "content_html": "THE PHILIPPINES emerged as a top performer in Southeast Asia for fiscal transparency, according to a survey conducted by the International Budget Partnership (IBP), the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) said.
\nIn a statement on Thursday, the DBM said the Philippines scored 76 out of 100 in fiscal transparency in the 2025 Open Budget Survey (OBS) \u201creaffirming the country\u2019s growing reputation as a regional leader in open governance and public financial accountability.\u201d
\nThe survey, using data from 2024, measures three pillars \u2014 transparency, public participation, and oversight.
\n\u201cFor transparency, what was measured was the public access to information on how the central government raises and spends public resources,\u201d IBP Independent Researcher Zy-za Nadine N. Suzara said at the OBS 2025 Results Forum.
\nThe Philippines\u2019 score of 76 indicates that the country is \u201cpublishing a sufficient volume of budget information,\u201d according to the survey. This was slightly higher than the score of 75 recorded in 2023.
\nWithin East Asia and the Pacific, the Philippines posted the highest score in fiscal transparency, ahead of Indonesia (71), Mongolia (64), Cambodia (54), Vietnam (51), Malaysia (51), Papua New Guinea (46), and China (19).
\nTo further improve budget transparency, the IBP recommended the inclusion of more comprehensive multi-year projections and disclosures on fiscal risks.
\nIt also urged the government to provide more comprehensive data on debt, policy and performance information, and improve disclosure of revenue categories and individual revenue sources.
\nHowever, the Philippines continued to post low scores in public participation, which measures the extent to which governments provide formal and meaningful opportunities for public involvement in the budget process.
\nThe Philippines scored 37 out of 100 in public participation in 2025, higher than the 33 recorded in 2023.
\n\u201cThat\u2019s a four-point increase \u2026 but in terms of the OBS survey and methodology, that number even if you see an improvement is still inadequate,\u201d Ms. Suzara said.
\nThe Philippines outperformed its regional peers Indonesia (33), Thailand (28), Malaysia (20), Vietnam (17), and Cambodia (2) in the category.
\nTo improve public participation, the IBP recommended that the government actively engage underrepresented communities, publish clear documentation of public inputs received during budget formulation and implementation, and provide more information on public engagement processes.
\nThe group also urged Congress to allow members of the public to testify during budget deliberations and hearings on audit reports, as well as establish a task force on people\u2019s participation.
\nMeanwhile, the Philippines scored 68 out of 100 on oversight, lower than the 83 recorded in 2023. The indicator measures the role of legislatures and supreme audit institutions in overseeing the budget process.
\n\u201cThe figures for oversight have actually been fluctuating over the years. There were years when oversight scores were quite good, some years we went down,\u201d Ms. Suzara said.
\nLegislative oversight posted a score of 58 out of 100, while audit oversight was scored 89.
\nTo strengthen legislative oversight, the IBP said the legislature should debate budget policy before the Executive\u2019s Budget Proposal is tabled and create a committee that will examine in-year budget implementation and the audit report.
\nMeanwhile, it said that audit processes should be reviewed by an independent agency on an annual basis to strengthen independence and improve audit oversight of the Commission on Audit. \u2014 Justine Irish D. Tabile
\n", "content_text": "THE PHILIPPINES emerged as a top performer in Southeast Asia for fiscal transparency, according to a survey conducted by the International Budget Partnership (IBP), the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) said.\nIn a statement on Thursday, the DBM said the Philippines scored 76 out of 100 in fiscal transparency in the 2025 Open Budget Survey (OBS) \u201creaffirming the country\u2019s growing reputation as a regional leader in open governance and public financial accountability.\u201d\nThe survey, using data from 2024, measures three pillars \u2014 transparency, public participation, and oversight.\n\u201cFor transparency, what was measured was the public access to information on how the central government raises and spends public resources,\u201d IBP Independent Researcher Zy-za Nadine N. Suzara said at the OBS 2025 Results Forum.\nThe Philippines\u2019 score of 76 indicates that the country is \u201cpublishing a sufficient volume of budget information,\u201d according to the survey. This was slightly higher than the score of 75 recorded in 2023.\nWithin East Asia and the Pacific, the Philippines posted the highest score in fiscal transparency, ahead of Indonesia (71), Mongolia (64), Cambodia (54), Vietnam (51), Malaysia (51), Papua New Guinea (46), and China (19).\nTo further improve budget transparency, the IBP recommended the inclusion of more comprehensive multi-year projections and disclosures on fiscal risks.\nIt also urged the government to provide more comprehensive data on debt, policy and performance information, and improve disclosure of revenue categories and individual revenue sources.\nHowever, the Philippines continued to post low scores in public participation, which measures the extent to which governments provide formal and meaningful opportunities for public involvement in the budget process.\nThe Philippines scored 37 out of 100 in public participation in 2025, higher than the 33 recorded in 2023.\n\u201cThat\u2019s a four-point increase \u2026 but in terms of the OBS survey and methodology, that number even if you see an improvement is still inadequate,\u201d Ms. Suzara said.\nThe Philippines outperformed its regional peers Indonesia (33), Thailand (28), Malaysia (20), Vietnam (17), and Cambodia (2) in the category.\nTo improve public participation, the IBP recommended that the government actively engage underrepresented communities, publish clear documentation of public inputs received during budget formulation and implementation, and provide more information on public engagement processes.\nThe group also urged Congress to allow members of the public to testify during budget deliberations and hearings on audit reports, as well as establish a task force on people\u2019s participation.\nMeanwhile, the Philippines scored 68 out of 100 on oversight, lower than the 83 recorded in 2023. The indicator measures the role of legislatures and supreme audit institutions in overseeing the budget process.\n\u201cThe figures for oversight have actually been fluctuating over the years. There were years when oversight scores were quite good, some years we went down,\u201d Ms. Suzara said.\nLegislative oversight posted a score of 58 out of 100, while audit oversight was scored 89.\nTo strengthen legislative oversight, the IBP said the legislature should debate budget policy before the Executive\u2019s Budget Proposal is tabled and create a committee that will examine in-year budget implementation and the audit report.\nMeanwhile, it said that audit processes should be reviewed by an independent agency on an annual basis to strengthen independence and improve audit oversight of the Commission on Audit. \u2014 Justine Irish D. Tabile", "date_published": "2026-05-21T21:00:44+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-21T21:00:44+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/Congress-House.jpg", "tags": [ "Justine Irish D. Tabile", "Economy" ] }, { "id": "/?p=751363", "url": "/economy/2026/05/21/751363/slum-share-of-phl-urban-housing-estimated-at-40/", "title": "\u2018Slum\u2019 share of PHL urban housing estimated at 40%", "content_html": "LOW-QUALITY Philippine urban housing was estimated at 40% of the total, higher than the corresponding shares for India or Indonesia, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) said in a working paper.
\nCiting significant housing challenges faced by the Philippines, the ADB said the other dimension of the housing problem is inadequacy, or the shortage of available dwellings.
\n\u201cHousing inadequacy and poor-quality housing are a global challenge affecting over 2.8 billion people, including about 1.1 billion living in informal settlements and slums and more than 300 million experiencing homelessness,\u201d the ADB said.
\n\u201cAsia and the Pacific account for a substantial share of this challenge,\u201d it added.
\nThe bank said inequality in housing is more pronounced in countries like the Philippines, along with Bangladesh, India, and Nepal.
\nThe ADB noted that \u201chousing deprivation is not only a nationwide challenge but also a significant distributional one.\u201d
\n\u201cRapid urbanization and population growth have led to a proliferation of slums and informal settlements. More than half a billion Asians live in slum conditions without secure tenure, adequate basic services, or legal recognition,\u201d it added. \u2014 Justine Irish D. Tabile
\n", "content_text": "LOW-QUALITY Philippine urban housing was estimated at 40% of the total, higher than the corresponding shares for India or Indonesia, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) said in a working paper.\nCiting significant housing challenges faced by the Philippines, the ADB said the other dimension of the housing problem is inadequacy, or the shortage of available dwellings.\n\u201cHousing inadequacy and poor-quality housing are a global challenge affecting over 2.8 billion people, including about 1.1 billion living in informal settlements and slums and more than 300 million experiencing homelessness,\u201d the ADB said.\n\u201cAsia and the Pacific account for a substantial share of this challenge,\u201d it added.\nThe bank said inequality in housing is more pronounced in countries like the Philippines, along with Bangladesh, India, and Nepal.\nThe ADB noted that \u201chousing deprivation is not only a nationwide challenge but also a significant distributional one.\u201d\n\u201cRapid urbanization and population growth have led to a proliferation of slums and informal settlements. More than half a billion Asians live in slum conditions without secure tenure, adequate basic services, or legal recognition,\u201d it added. \u2014 Justine Irish D. Tabile", "date_published": "2026-05-21T21:00:21+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-21T21:00:21+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/Poverty-buildings.jpg", "tags": [ "Justine Irish D. Tabile", "Economy" ] }, { "id": "/?p=751362", "url": "/economy/2026/05/21/751362/bcda-positioning-bataan-as-site-for-ev-charger-manufacturing/", "title": "BCDA positioning Bataan as site for EV-charger manufacturing", "content_html": "THE Bases Conversion and Development Authority (BCDA) said it evaluated the 200-hectare Morong Discovery Park in Bataan for its potential to host electric vehicle (EV) manufacturers.
\nBCDA Executive Vice-President Gisela Kalalo and Vice-President for Strategic Projects Management Randy Viacrusis visited the site along with provincial officials, V-Green Global Charging Station Development Corp., and VinFast Electric Vehicle Philippines Corp.
\nFollowing the site visit, BCDA witnessed the signing of a memorandum of understanding\u00a0 between the province of Bataan and V-Green for the planning, deployment, and operation of EV charging infrastructure across the province.
\n", "content_text": "THE Bases Conversion and Development Authority (BCDA) said it evaluated the 200-hectare Morong Discovery Park in Bataan for its potential to host electric vehicle (EV) manufacturers.\nBCDA Executive Vice-President Gisela Kalalo and Vice-President for Strategic Projects Management Randy Viacrusis visited the site along with provincial officials, V-Green Global Charging Station Development Corp., and VinFast Electric Vehicle Philippines Corp.\nFollowing the site visit, BCDA witnessed the signing of a memorandum of understanding\u00a0 between the province of Bataan and V-Green for the planning, deployment, and operation of EV charging infrastructure across the province.", "date_published": "2026-05-21T20:59:31+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-21T20:59:31+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/electric-vehicle.jpg", "tags": [ "BCDA", "Economy" ] }, { "id": "/?p=751418", "url": "/economy/2026/05/21/751418/regulatory-mismatches-hindering-biofuel-industry-devt-think-tank/", "title": "Regulatory mismatches hindering biofuel industry dev\u2019t \u2014 think tank", "content_html": "THE Congressional Policy and Budget Research Department (CPBRD) of the House of Representatives said protectionism and rigid regulations are causing bottlenecks in the bioethanol industry.
\nIn a\u00a0 policy brief, the think tank found a \u201cpolicy mismatch\u201d between the objectives of the Biofuels Act of 2006 and the way it is currently being implemented by government agencies.
\nThe House recently passed the Oil Price Stabilization Act, which explicitly allows the President to suspend mandatory biofuel blending for up to one year if the cost of blended fuel exceeds pure gasoline by at least 5%.
\nInstead of achieving the goal of energy independence and rural development, the report said the country remains dependent on imported ethanol to meet the mandatory 10% biofuel blend for gasoline.
\nIt said suspending the mandate would severely threaten the livelihoods of 84,000 to 88,000 sugarcane farmers, 80% to 85% of whom are vulnerable smallholders.
\nIt said domestic production has significantly underperformed its target of 944.15 million liters of bioethanol by 2025 set out in the Philippine Energy Plan, with only 424.6 million liters actually produced by domestic refiners in 2024, causing oil companies to rely on imports.
\nThe CPBRD said only 22 bioethanol refineries were operational as of 2025, forcing them to operate at an unsustainable 98.5% maximum capacity just to satisfy half of the domestic demand.
\nAccording to the CPBRD, policies adopted by the Sugar Regulatory Administration and the Department of Agriculture are further aggravating the situation.
\nThese include restrictions on importing sugar and molasses, as well as a moratorium on the construction of new ethanol plants. As a result, local ethanol is reportedly 1.7 to 3.8 times more costly than imports. \u2014 Pexcel Jon Bacon
\n", "content_text": "THE Congressional Policy and Budget Research Department (CPBRD) of the House of Representatives said protectionism and rigid regulations are causing bottlenecks in the bioethanol industry.\nIn a\u00a0 policy brief, the think tank found a \u201cpolicy mismatch\u201d between the objectives of the Biofuels Act of 2006 and the way it is currently being implemented by government agencies.\nThe House recently passed the Oil Price Stabilization Act, which explicitly allows the President to suspend mandatory biofuel blending for up to one year if the cost of blended fuel exceeds pure gasoline by at least 5%.\nInstead of achieving the goal of energy independence and rural development, the report said the country remains dependent on imported ethanol to meet the mandatory 10% biofuel blend for gasoline.\nIt said suspending the mandate would severely threaten the livelihoods of 84,000 to 88,000 sugarcane farmers, 80% to 85% of whom are vulnerable smallholders.\nIt said domestic production has significantly underperformed its target of 944.15 million liters of bioethanol by 2025 set out in the Philippine Energy Plan, with only 424.6 million liters actually produced by domestic refiners in 2024, causing oil companies to rely on imports.\nThe CPBRD said only 22 bioethanol refineries were operational as of 2025, forcing them to operate at an unsustainable 98.5% maximum capacity just to satisfy half of the domestic demand.\nAccording to the CPBRD, policies adopted by the Sugar Regulatory Administration and the Department of Agriculture are further aggravating the situation.\nThese include restrictions on importing sugar and molasses, as well as a moratorium on the construction of new ethanol plants. As a result, local ethanol is reportedly 1.7 to 3.8 times more costly than imports. \u2014 Pexcel Jon Bacon", "date_published": "2026-05-21T20:58:56+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-21T20:58:56+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Colorado-ethanol-plant.jpg", "tags": [ "Pexcel Jon Bacon", "Economy" ] }, { "id": "/?p=751181", "url": "/economy/2026/05/21/751181/mic-books-p623-m-net-income-in-first-quarter/", "title": "MIC books P623-M net income in first quarter", "content_html": "PHILIPPINE sovereign wealth fund manager Maharlika Investment Corp. (MIC) posted a net income of P628.85 million in the first quarter.
\nThe state-run investment vehicle booked other comprehensive income of P693.29 million in the January-to-March period, bringing its total comprehensive income to P1.32 billion.
\nBefore tax, MIC\u2019s earnings reached P628.85 million during the quarter.
\nThis came after business income totaled P686.75 million, while operating expenses reached P78.29 million. The company also recorded foreign exchange gains amounting to P20.39 million.
\nAs of end-March, MIC\u2019s total assets inched up by almost 1% to P129.48 billion from P128.23 billion at end-December 2025.
\nMeanwhile, total liabilities fell by 21% to P272.6 million as of end-March from P345.04 million as of end December 2025.
\nTotal equity stood at P129.2 billion as of March 31, up 1% from P127.88 billion at end-December.
\n2025
\nMeanwhile, for full-year 2025, MIC\u2019s net income reached P2.36 billion, down 11.8% from P2.68 billion in 2024.
However, other comprehensive income surged to P379.42 million, bringing its total comprehensive income last year to P2.74 billion, 2.3% higher than the P2.68 billion recorded in 2024.
\nThe MIC saw a 1.6% increase in business income in 2025 to P2.82 billion from P2.77 billion a year earlier. It also booked foreign exchange gains of P25.26 million in 2025.
\nHowever, operating expenses jumped by 413.9% to P478.96 million in 2025 from P93.2 million in 2024.
\nIn a separate report, the MIC said the Department of Budget and Management approved its P35.48-billion corporate operating budget for 2026, slightly lower than the proposed P35.53 billion.
\nOf the approved budget, P34.86 billion was allocated for capital outlays, P425.42 million for maintenance and other operating expenses, and P193.68 million for personal services.
\nThis leaves an excess of P93.53 billion from its total corporate funds and capitalization of P129 billion. \u2014 Justine Irish DP. Tabile
\n", "content_text": "PHILIPPINE sovereign wealth fund manager Maharlika Investment Corp. (MIC) posted a net income of P628.85 million in the first quarter.\nThe state-run investment vehicle booked other comprehensive income of P693.29 million in the January-to-March period, bringing its total comprehensive income to P1.32 billion.\nBefore tax, MIC\u2019s earnings reached P628.85 million during the quarter.\nThis came after business income totaled P686.75 million, while operating expenses reached P78.29 million. The company also recorded foreign exchange gains amounting to P20.39 million.\nAs of end-March, MIC\u2019s total assets inched up by almost 1% to P129.48 billion from P128.23 billion at end-December 2025.\nMeanwhile, total liabilities fell by 21% to P272.6 million as of end-March from P345.04 million as of end December 2025.\nTotal equity stood at P129.2 billion as of March 31, up 1% from P127.88 billion at end-December.\n2025\nMeanwhile, for full-year 2025, MIC\u2019s net income reached P2.36 billion, down 11.8% from P2.68 billion in 2024.\nHowever, other comprehensive income surged to P379.42 million, bringing its total comprehensive income last year to P2.74 billion, 2.3% higher than the P2.68 billion recorded in 2024.\nThe MIC saw a 1.6% increase in business income in 2025 to P2.82 billion from P2.77 billion a year earlier. It also booked foreign exchange gains of P25.26 million in 2025.\nHowever, operating expenses jumped by 413.9% to P478.96 million in 2025 from P93.2 million in 2024.\nIn a separate report, the MIC said the Department of Budget and Management approved its P35.48-billion corporate operating budget for 2026, slightly lower than the proposed P35.53 billion.\nOf the approved budget, P34.86 billion was allocated for capital outlays, P425.42 million for maintenance and other operating expenses, and P193.68 million for personal services.\nThis leaves an excess of P93.53 billion from its total corporate funds and capitalization of P129 billion. \u2014 Justine Irish DP. Tabile", "date_published": "2026-05-21T14:31:16+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-21T14:31:16+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/MIC_Maharlika-Investment-Corp-logo.jpg", "tags": [ "Justine Irish DP. Tabile", "Economy" ] }, { "id": "/?p=751079", "url": "/economy/2026/05/20/751079/safeguard-duties-imposed-on-imported-meat-coffee-onions/", "title": "Safeguard duties imposed on imported meat, coffee, onions", "content_html": "THE Department of Agriculture\u00a0 said it imposed price-based special safeguard measures on 21 agricultural product categories, after import prices fell below established trigger levels.
\nIn Department Order No. 15 Series of 2026, Agriculture Secretary Francisco P. Tiu Laurel, Jr. requested the Bureau of Customs to collect additional duties on frozen poultry, pork, coffee preparations, and fresh onions when their actual cost, insurance, and freight (CIF) prices breach trigger thresholds.
\nThe measure is authorized under Republic Act No. 8800, which allows the Secretary of Agriculture to impose safeguard duties without investigation when actual import prices drop below trigger prices outlined in the World Trade Organization Agreement on Agriculture.
\nAdditional duties will equal the difference between the actual CIF price at the time of import document lodgment and the corresponding trigger price for each product.
\nAffected products include frozen chicken parts, with trigger prices ranging from P93.96 to P423.55 per kilogram, various pork products (P79.63 to P305.73), and coffee products (P134.11 to P203.74). The fresh onion trigger price is P74.21 per kilogram.
\nThe order, issued on the strength of findings by the Trade Remedies Office of the Policy Research Service, takes effect immediately and revokes Department Order No. 20 Series of 2024 and Department Order No. 5 Series of 2026. \u2014 Pierce Oel A. Montalvo
\n", "content_text": "THE Department of Agriculture\u00a0 said it imposed price-based special safeguard measures on 21 agricultural product categories, after import prices fell below established trigger levels.\nIn Department Order No. 15 Series of 2026, Agriculture Secretary Francisco P. Tiu Laurel, Jr. requested the Bureau of Customs to collect additional duties on frozen poultry, pork, coffee preparations, and fresh onions when their actual cost, insurance, and freight (CIF) prices breach trigger thresholds.\nThe measure is authorized under Republic Act No. 8800, which allows the Secretary of Agriculture to impose safeguard duties without investigation when actual import prices drop below trigger prices outlined in the World Trade Organization Agreement on Agriculture.\nAdditional duties will equal the difference between the actual CIF price at the time of import document lodgment and the corresponding trigger price for each product.\nAffected products include frozen chicken parts, with trigger prices ranging from P93.96 to P423.55 per kilogram, various pork products (P79.63 to P305.73), and coffee products (P134.11 to P203.74). The fresh onion trigger price is P74.21 per kilogram.\nThe order, issued on the strength of findings by the Trade Remedies Office of the Policy Research Service, takes effect immediately and revokes Department Order No. 20 Series of 2024 and Department Order No. 5 Series of 2026. \u2014 Pierce Oel A. Montalvo", "date_published": "2026-05-20T20:50:07+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-20T20:50:07+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/pork-meat-frozen.jpg", "tags": [ "Pierce Oel A. Montalvo", "Economy", "Editors' Picks", "One News" ] }, { "id": "/?p=751078", "url": "/economy/2026/05/20/751078/adb-willing-to-fund-mindanao-railway-project/", "title": "ADB willing to fund Mindanao Railway Project", "content_html": "THE ASIAN Development Bank (ADB) said it is ready to finance the Mindanao Railway Project, with the long-delayed rail line still needing a source of funding after China withdrew support.
\n\u201cWe would be willing to fund it, if we were asked,\u201d ADB Country Director for the Philippines Andrew Jeffries told 大象传媒 on Wednesday.\u00a0
\nEarlier this month, Transportation Undersecretary for Railways Timothy John R. Batan said the Department of Transportation (DoTr) is still looking for funding for the railway.\u00a0
\nThe ADB said it is willing to assist the government to ensure the completion of the Mindanao Railway Project, one of the big-ticket DoTr projects.\u00a0
\nHe said, however, that government efforts to rein in debt levels will be a consideration in determining the ADB\u2019s ultimate involvement.
\n\u201cGiven our engagement with the government and their concern on maintaining and reducing government debt levels over time, I think they would want to explore as much private funding as they can,\u201d Mr. Jeffries said.\u00a0
\nThe ADB is ready to provide official development assistance (ODA) loans, or provide public-private partnership (PPP) advisory services to help bring in investments, he said.\u00a0
\n\u201cThe private sector could even fund some of that project like they did in the Mactan-Cebu Airport and the like. I guess we could also support it without touching ODA or public debt. That is one of the strategic pillars of what ADB is also trying to do region-wide,\u201d Mr. Jeffries said.\u00a0
\nIn 2023, the Philippines withdrew its loan request for ODA from China for the Mindanao Railway Project phase 1, and two more railway projects \u2014 the South Long-Haul railway, and the Subic-Clark railway, due to lack of progress towards a financing decision by Beijing.
\nThe first phase of the Mindanao Railway Project is valued at P83 billion. It will run between Tagum, Davao del Norte and Digos City, Davao del Sur. It is expected to carry 122,000 passengers per day and cut travel time between Tagum and Digos from three hours to one.
\nMr. Batan has said that the DoTr is exploring the possibility of PPPs structure for the Mindanao Railway Project.\u00a0
\nFor now, the DoTr remains uncertain when groundbreaking for the project can begin, as the government is still determining how to fund it.
\nMr. Batan added that the DoTr does not expect any progress on the financing front within the year due to the need to update the feasibility study.
\nLast month, the PPP Center said that the pre-feasibility study for the P100.64-billion phase 3 of the Mindanao Railway Project was completed.\u00a0
\nPhase 3, proposed as a solicited PPP, is a 61\u2011kilometer passenger and cargo railway linking the industrial and commercial centers of Cagayan de Oro.
\nThe DoTr will move to a comprehensive feasibility study to assess and refine the project\u2019s technical, financial, and economic viability, the PPP Center said. \u2014 Ashley Erika O. Jose
\n", "content_text": "THE ASIAN Development Bank (ADB) said it is ready to finance the Mindanao Railway Project, with the long-delayed rail line still needing a source of funding after China withdrew support.\n\u201cWe would be willing to fund it, if we were asked,\u201d ADB Country Director for the Philippines Andrew Jeffries told 大象传媒 on Wednesday.\u00a0\nEarlier this month, Transportation Undersecretary for Railways Timothy John R. Batan said the Department of Transportation (DoTr) is still looking for funding for the railway.\u00a0\nThe ADB said it is willing to assist the government to ensure the completion of the Mindanao Railway Project, one of the big-ticket DoTr projects.\u00a0\nHe said, however, that government efforts to rein in debt levels will be a consideration in determining the ADB\u2019s ultimate involvement.\n\u201cGiven our engagement with the government and their concern on maintaining and reducing government debt levels over time, I think they would want to explore as much private funding as they can,\u201d Mr. Jeffries said.\u00a0\nThe ADB is ready to provide official development assistance (ODA) loans, or provide public-private partnership (PPP) advisory services to help bring in investments, he said.\u00a0\n\u201cThe private sector could even fund some of that project like they did in the Mactan-Cebu Airport and the like. I guess we could also support it without touching ODA or public debt. That is one of the strategic pillars of what ADB is also trying to do region-wide,\u201d Mr. Jeffries said.\u00a0\nIn 2023, the Philippines withdrew its loan request for ODA from China for the Mindanao Railway Project phase 1, and two more railway projects \u2014 the South Long-Haul railway, and the Subic-Clark railway, due to lack of progress towards a financing decision by Beijing.\nThe first phase of the Mindanao Railway Project is valued at P83 billion. It will run between Tagum, Davao del Norte and Digos City, Davao del Sur. It is expected to carry 122,000 passengers per day and cut travel time between Tagum and Digos from three hours to one.\nMr. Batan has said that the DoTr is exploring the possibility of PPPs structure for the Mindanao Railway Project.\u00a0\nFor now, the DoTr remains uncertain when groundbreaking for the project can begin, as the government is still determining how to fund it.\nMr. Batan added that the DoTr does not expect any progress on the financing front within the year due to the need to update the feasibility study.\nLast month, the PPP Center said that the pre-feasibility study for the P100.64-billion phase 3 of the Mindanao Railway Project was completed.\u00a0\nPhase 3, proposed as a solicited PPP, is a 61\u2011kilometer passenger and cargo railway linking the industrial and commercial centers of Cagayan de Oro.\nThe DoTr will move to a comprehensive feasibility study to assess and refine the project\u2019s technical, financial, and economic viability, the PPP Center said. \u2014 Ashley Erika O. Jose", "date_published": "2026-05-20T20:50:02+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-20T20:50:02+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/railway.jpg", "tags": [ "Ashley Erika O. Jose", "Economy", "Editors' Picks", "One News" ] }, { "id": "/?p=751077", "url": "/economy/2026/05/20/751077/modest-dpwh-budget-request-for-2027-signals-flagship-project-focus-as-govt-prepares-to-exit/", "title": "Modest DPWH budget request for 2027 signals flagship-project focus as gov\u2019t prepares to exit", "content_html": "THE Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) said on Wednesday it is seeking about P215 billion in funding for 2027, with P200 billion needed to sustain ongoing flagship infrastructure projects.
\nAt a hearing of the Committee on Flagship Programs and Projects, Public Works Senior Undersecretary Emil K. Sadain said that of the 26 ongoing flagship infrastructure projects, eight are targeted for completion by 2028, the year the administration steps down.
\nThe relatively modest budget request for 2027 is well off the over P1 trillion it was granted in the 2025 spending plan and the nearly P530 billion allocation in 2026. In 2025, the department faced intense scrutiny in the wake of the flood control corruption scandal, leading to an overhaul of the DPWH leadership and a review of many of its projects. The department also had the farm-to-market road program taken away from it, with the Department of Agriculture (DA) stepping in to replace it.
\nMr. Sadain said overall, 201 infrastructure flagship projects at various stages of implementation are being overseen by 22 agencies, with 76 under the DPWH.
\nHe said five projects are currently awaiting approval by the Economic Development Council, while 12 others are under review by the Investment Coordination Committee.
\nRizal Rep. Jose Arturo S. Garcia, Jr. queried whether substantially complete projects can be put to use immediately.
\n\u201cIf there are projects like highways or buildings that are 50% to 60% complete, you can already use them, right? So they can impact people in some way,\u201d Mr. Garcia said.
\nMr. Sadain said some flood control and pumping station projects can be made use of by 2027, while several road projects are substantially complete and have been operating partially. \u2014 Pexcel John Bacon
\n", "content_text": "THE Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) said on Wednesday it is seeking about P215 billion in funding for 2027, with P200 billion needed to sustain ongoing flagship infrastructure projects.\nAt a hearing of the Committee on Flagship Programs and Projects, Public Works Senior Undersecretary Emil K. Sadain said that of the 26 ongoing flagship infrastructure projects, eight are targeted for completion by 2028, the year the administration steps down.\nThe relatively modest budget request for 2027 is well off the over P1 trillion it was granted in the 2025 spending plan and the nearly P530 billion allocation in 2026. In 2025, the department faced intense scrutiny in the wake of the flood control corruption scandal, leading to an overhaul of the DPWH leadership and a review of many of its projects. The department also had the farm-to-market road program taken away from it, with the Department of Agriculture (DA) stepping in to replace it. \nMr. Sadain said overall, 201 infrastructure flagship projects at various stages of implementation are being overseen by 22 agencies, with 76 under the DPWH.\nHe said five projects are currently awaiting approval by the Economic Development Council, while 12 others are under review by the Investment Coordination Committee.\nRizal Rep. Jose Arturo S. Garcia, Jr. queried whether substantially complete projects can be put to use immediately.\n\u201cIf there are projects like highways or buildings that are 50% to 60% complete, you can already use them, right? So they can impact people in some way,\u201d Mr. Garcia said.\nMr. Sadain said some flood control and pumping station projects can be made use of by 2027, while several road projects are substantially complete and have been operating partially. \u2014 Pexcel John Bacon", "date_published": "2026-05-20T20:49:34+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-20T20:49:34+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/DPWH.jpg", "tags": [ "Pexcel John Bacon", "Economy", "Editors' Picks", "One News" ] }, { "id": "/?p=751076", "url": "/economy/2026/05/20/751076/bsp-warned-against-taking-aggressive-policy-stance-during-middle-east-crisis/", "title": "BSP warned against taking \u2018aggressive\u2019 policy stance during Middle East crisis", "content_html": "By Katherine K. Chan, Reporter
\nTHE Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) should avoid aggressive policy tightening and keep its stance balanced between controlling inflation and supporting growth, an economist said.
\nJonathan L. Ravelas, senior adviser at Reyes Tacandong & Co., added that the BSP will likely wait for additional economic data before potentially tightening once more next month.
\n\u201cWhat we need to understand, the reason I say defensive is that they\u2019re at a crossroads. We want growth to prosper, but we need to also contain inflation, right?\u201d he told the Pandesal Forum at the Kamuning Bakery Cafe in Quezon City on Wednesday. \u00a0
\nIf the BSP were aggressive, it could have delivered an inter-meeting hike earlier this month when inflation exceeded expectations, according to Mr. Ravelas. \u00a0
\n\u201cBut probably they\u2019ll wait for June 18 to make those decisions until they look at what\u2019s happening in the Middle East, probably the impact on the total government revenue, etc., (and) what plans they have to spur growth,\u201d he said. \u201cAt least by June, there will be a plan (that will flow on to) what the President will say for the State of the Nation Address. So they can all align themselves.\u201d
\nInflation has failed to remain within central bank and market projections since the Iran war started, with the highly uncertain environment challenging forecast models.
\nIn April, inflation accelerated to an over three-year high of 7.2%, well above the BSP\u2019s 5.6-6.4% estimate and the 5.5% median forecast returned by a 大象传媒 poll of 17 analysts.
\nMr. Ravelas sees the central bank raising the key interest rate by a total of 125 basis points (bps) to 5.75% by year\u2019s end, projecting inflation to average 7.2% for the year.
\nThe BSP started a new tightening cycle last month, delivering its first 25-bp rate increase in over two years during its April 23 meeting to bring the key policy rate to 4.5%.
\nCentral bank officials said the move was a preemptive measure to curb price pressures and cautioned against spillover effects, with headline inflation projected to settle well above their 2%-4% target until next year.\u00a0
\nBSP Governor Eli M. Remolona, Jr. has left the door open to further modest rate hikes to bring inflation back within the target range in keeping with the bank\u2019s price stability mandate.
\nMr. Ravelas noted that the Philippine economy is showing signs of stagflation \u2014 a combination of slowing growth, stubborn inflation and high unemployment.\u00a0
\nGross domestic product growth eased to 2.8% in the first quarter from 3% the previous quarter and 5.4% a year earlier.
\nMr. Ravelas sees full-year growth settling between 3.8% and 4% in 2026, weakening from the 4.4% in 2025.
\nHowever, Mr. Ravelas said the conditions for stagflation may not be met with long-term unemployment remaining low at around 7%.
\nMeanwhile, Mr. Ravelas said the peso risks plummeting to the P65-to-the-dollar level over the next three years, though the BSP\u2019s policy tightening could provide the currency some relief.
\nThe peso closed at all-time low of P61.75 to the dollar as lingering market uncertainty from the Middle East meant continuing safe-haven demand for the dollar.
\n", "content_text": "By Katherine K. Chan, Reporter\nTHE Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) should avoid aggressive policy tightening and keep its stance balanced between controlling inflation and supporting growth, an economist said.\nJonathan L. Ravelas, senior adviser at Reyes Tacandong & Co., added that the BSP will likely wait for additional economic data before potentially tightening once more next month. \n\u201cWhat we need to understand, the reason I say defensive is that they\u2019re at a crossroads. We want growth to prosper, but we need to also contain inflation, right?\u201d he told the Pandesal Forum at the Kamuning Bakery Cafe in Quezon City on Wednesday. \u00a0\nIf the BSP were aggressive, it could have delivered an inter-meeting hike earlier this month when inflation exceeded expectations, according to Mr. Ravelas. \u00a0\n\u201cBut probably they\u2019ll wait for June 18 to make those decisions until they look at what\u2019s happening in the Middle East, probably the impact on the total government revenue, etc., (and) what plans they have to spur growth,\u201d he said. \u201cAt least by June, there will be a plan (that will flow on to) what the President will say for the State of the Nation Address. So they can all align themselves.\u201d\nInflation has failed to remain within central bank and market projections since the Iran war started, with the highly uncertain environment challenging forecast models.\nIn April, inflation accelerated to an over three-year high of 7.2%, well above the BSP\u2019s 5.6-6.4% estimate and the 5.5% median forecast returned by a 大象传媒 poll of 17 analysts.\nMr. Ravelas sees the central bank raising the key interest rate by a total of 125 basis points (bps) to 5.75% by year\u2019s end, projecting inflation to average 7.2% for the year.\nThe BSP started a new tightening cycle last month, delivering its first 25-bp rate increase in over two years during its April 23 meeting to bring the key policy rate to 4.5%.\nCentral bank officials said the move was a preemptive measure to curb price pressures and cautioned against spillover effects, with headline inflation projected to settle well above their 2%-4% target until next year.\u00a0\nBSP Governor Eli M. Remolona, Jr. has left the door open to further modest rate hikes to bring inflation back within the target range in keeping with the bank\u2019s price stability mandate.\nMr. Ravelas noted that the Philippine economy is showing signs of stagflation \u2014 a combination of slowing growth, stubborn inflation and high unemployment.\u00a0\nGross domestic product growth eased to 2.8% in the first quarter from 3% the previous quarter and 5.4% a year earlier.\nMr. Ravelas sees full-year growth settling between 3.8% and 4% in 2026, weakening from the 4.4% in 2025.\nHowever, Mr. Ravelas said the conditions for stagflation may not be met with long-term unemployment remaining low at around 7%.\nMeanwhile, Mr. Ravelas said the peso risks plummeting to the P65-to-the-dollar level over the next three years, though the BSP\u2019s policy tightening could provide the currency some relief.\nThe peso closed at all-time low of P61.75 to the dollar as lingering market uncertainty from the Middle East meant continuing safe-haven demand for the dollar.", "date_published": "2026-05-20T20:49:32+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-20T20:49:32+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/BSP-building-facade.jpg", "tags": [ "Katherine K. Chan", "Economy", "One News" ], "summary": "THE Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) should avoid aggressive policy tightening and keep its stance balanced between controlling inflation and supporting growth, an economist said." }, { "id": "/?p=751119", "url": "/economy/2026/05/20/751119/phls-much-reduced-gocc-lineup-still-enmeshed-in-strategic-sectors-oecd/", "title": "PHL\u2019s much-reduced GOCC lineup still enmeshed in strategic sectors \u2014 OECD", "content_html": "THE PHILIPPINES has seen a sharp decline in the number of its state-owned enterprises (SOEs) over the past decade, though remaining government firms continue to control strategic areas of the economy, according to a report by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
\n\u201cBetween 2011 and 2024, the number of SOEs declined from 158 to 118 due to privatization, mergers, and closure of loss-making entities,\u201d the OECD said.
\nHowever, government-owned and -controlled corporations (GOCCs) remain active in key industries like hydrocarbons, energy, finance, transportation and utilities, it said.
\n\u201cUnder the GOCC Governance Act of 2011, they conduct both commercial and non-commercial activities and contribute to national development by providing essential public services and infrastructure,\u201d it said.
\n\u201cSOEs may also be tasked with promoting social stability through employment creation,\u201d it added.
\nThe OECD said the Philippines has yet to fully integrate sustainability into SOE target-setting and monitoring systems.
\n\u201cIn the Philippines, the Governance Commission for GOCCs (GCG) has a central monitoring role but it provides general governance and performance oversight rather than a dedicated SOE sustainability monitoring framework,\u201d it said.
\nThe report noted that some sustainability-related key performance indicators have been incorporated into the performance evaluation system for GOCCs.
\nThe Philippines revised its performance evaluation system in 2024 to include disaster risk reduction and management, as well as gender-equality, disability, and social inclusion measures.
\nMeanwhile, the OECD also highlighted the role of governments in influencing sustainability outcomes through procurement contracts.
\nAdvanced economies such as China, India, Japan, and South Korea have overarching laws governing green public procurement (GPP), while countries like the Philippines promote GPP through broader sustainability and climate-related laws, strategic roadmaps, national plans, and eco-labeling and certification systems, it said.\u00a0
\nThe Philippines, along with Singapore and Thailand, was among only three of the 10 countries reviewed in the report that implement voluntary compliance for GPP practices applicable to SOEs. \u2014 Justine Irish D. Tabile
\n", "content_text": "THE PHILIPPINES has seen a sharp decline in the number of its state-owned enterprises (SOEs) over the past decade, though remaining government firms continue to control strategic areas of the economy, according to a report by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).\n\u201cBetween 2011 and 2024, the number of SOEs declined from 158 to 118 due to privatization, mergers, and closure of loss-making entities,\u201d the OECD said.\nHowever, government-owned and -controlled corporations (GOCCs) remain active in key industries like hydrocarbons, energy, finance, transportation and utilities, it said.\n\u201cUnder the GOCC Governance Act of 2011, they conduct both commercial and non-commercial activities and contribute to national development by providing essential public services and infrastructure,\u201d it said.\n\u201cSOEs may also be tasked with promoting social stability through employment creation,\u201d it added.\nThe OECD said the Philippines has yet to fully integrate sustainability into SOE target-setting and monitoring systems.\n\u201cIn the Philippines, the Governance Commission for GOCCs (GCG) has a central monitoring role but it provides general governance and performance oversight rather than a dedicated SOE sustainability monitoring framework,\u201d it said.\nThe report noted that some sustainability-related key performance indicators have been incorporated into the performance evaluation system for GOCCs.\nThe Philippines revised its performance evaluation system in 2024 to include disaster risk reduction and management, as well as gender-equality, disability, and social inclusion measures.\nMeanwhile, the OECD also highlighted the role of governments in influencing sustainability outcomes through procurement contracts.\nAdvanced economies such as China, India, Japan, and South Korea have overarching laws governing green public procurement (GPP), while countries like the Philippines promote GPP through broader sustainability and climate-related laws, strategic roadmaps, national plans, and eco-labeling and certification systems, it said.\u00a0\nThe Philippines, along with Singapore and Thailand, was among only three of the 10 countries reviewed in the report that implement voluntary compliance for GPP practices applicable to SOEs. \u2014 Justine Irish D. Tabile", "date_published": "2026-05-20T20:49:28+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-20T20:49:28+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/OECD-logo.jpg", "tags": [ "Justine Irish D. Tabile", "Economy" ] }, { "id": "/?p=751118", "url": "/economy/2026/05/20/751118/visayas-grid-hit-with-another-yellow-alert/", "title": "Visayas grid hit with another yellow alert", "content_html": "THE VISAYAS GRID was again placed under yellow alert on Wednesday due to the shutdown of several power plants, with industry groups raising concerns that plant outages have exceeded allowable limits.
\nIn an advisory on Wednesday, the National Grid Corp. of the Philippines (NGCP) said the Visayas grid was on yellow alert between 4 p.m. and 8 p.m.
\nA yellow alert is issued whenever power reserves are insufficient to meet the transmission grid\u2019s contingency requirement.
\nDuring the period, available capacity was at 2,692 megawatts (MW) against peak demand estimated at 2,503 MW.
\nA total of 847 MW was unavailable to the grid after forced outages at 18 power plants and derated operations at 15 more.
\nConsumer group Power for People Coalition (P4P) urged the government to conduct a full investigation after the recent series of grid alerts.
\n\u201cA full investigation into the red and yellow alerts should also be pursued both by the energy agencies and Congress. Stronger penalties should be enforced for companies responsible for the rotating brownouts \u2014 whether on the generation or transmission side,\u201d P4P Convenor Gerry C. Arances said.
\nClimate and energy policy group Institute for Climate and Sustainable Cities (ICSC) said no baseload power plant should be non-operational between April and June, citing the NGCP\u2019s own Grid Operating and Maintenance Plan.
\nHowever, the ICSC said some power plants have already exceeded the annual outage allowance, a cap set by the Energy Regulatory Commission for baseload facilities.
\n\u201cUntil these power plants are brought back online, the capacity deficit will persist, and the yellow grid alert raised in Visayas will likely remain,\u201d the ICSC said.
\nThe group underscored how dependence on a small number of large centralized baseload facilities can quickly degrade system reliability.
\n\u201cBuilding resilience through distributed energy solutions is no longer just an environmental option, but an energy-security necessity,\u201d the ICSC said.
\n\u201cA more decentralized and diversified approach strengthens local reliability and self-sufficiency while reducing the risk of supply disruptions caused by outages, disasters, and other physical shocks,\u201d it added.
\nSo far, this year, the grid has declared three red alerts and 14 yellow alerts. \u2014 Sheldeen Joy Talavera
\n", "content_text": "THE VISAYAS GRID was again placed under yellow alert on Wednesday due to the shutdown of several power plants, with industry groups raising concerns that plant outages have exceeded allowable limits.\nIn an advisory on Wednesday, the National Grid Corp. of the Philippines (NGCP) said the Visayas grid was on yellow alert between 4 p.m. and 8 p.m.\nA yellow alert is issued whenever power reserves are insufficient to meet the transmission grid\u2019s contingency requirement.\nDuring the period, available capacity was at 2,692 megawatts (MW) against peak demand estimated at 2,503 MW.\nA total of 847 MW was unavailable to the grid after forced outages at 18 power plants and derated operations at 15 more.\nConsumer group Power for People Coalition (P4P) urged the government to conduct a full investigation after the recent series of grid alerts.\n\u201cA full investigation into the red and yellow alerts should also be pursued both by the energy agencies and Congress. Stronger penalties should be enforced for companies responsible for the rotating brownouts \u2014 whether on the generation or transmission side,\u201d P4P Convenor Gerry C. Arances said.\nClimate and energy policy group Institute for Climate and Sustainable Cities (ICSC) said no baseload power plant should be non-operational between April and June, citing the NGCP\u2019s own Grid Operating and Maintenance Plan.\nHowever, the ICSC said some power plants have already exceeded the annual outage allowance, a cap set by the Energy Regulatory Commission for baseload facilities.\n\u201cUntil these power plants are brought back online, the capacity deficit will persist, and the yellow grid alert raised in Visayas will likely remain,\u201d the ICSC said.\nThe group underscored how dependence on a small number of large centralized baseload facilities can quickly degrade system reliability.\n\u201cBuilding resilience through distributed energy solutions is no longer just an environmental option, but an energy-security necessity,\u201d the ICSC said.\n\u201cA more decentralized and diversified approach strengthens local reliability and self-sufficiency while reducing the risk of supply disruptions caused by outages, disasters, and other physical shocks,\u201d it added.\nSo far, this year, the grid has declared three red alerts and 14 yellow alerts. \u2014 Sheldeen Joy Talavera", "date_published": "2026-05-20T20:49:01+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-20T20:49:01+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/electricity-pylon-tower.jpg", "tags": [ "Sheldeen Joy Talavera", "Economy" ] }, { "id": "/?p=751075", "url": "/economy/2026/05/20/751075/china-bans-phl-pork-imports-over-swine-fever/", "title": "China bans PHL pork imports over swine fever", "content_html": "CHINA has banned imports of pigs, wild boars, and related products from the Philippines following reports of swine fever outbreaks received by the World Organization for Animal Health (WOAH).
\nChina\u2019s General Administration of Customs and Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs issued Announcement No. 66 on May 14, 2026, prohibiting direct or indirect imports from the Philippines, as well as the mailing or carrying of swine products into China.
\nThe order also orders the destruction of any illegally smuggled items and supervised treatment of animal waste from transport originating from the Philippines.
\nThe Department of Agriculture\u2019s Bureau of Animal Industry (BAI) responded on May 19, clarifying that the Philippines is managing two separate swine diseases.
\nClassical swine fever, an endemic condition, is controlled through vaccination, surveillance, and farm biosecurity protocols. African Swine Fever (ASF), first detected in 2019, remains an issue managed through movement controls, biosecurity measures, culling, and surveillance in affected areas.
\nOnly eight barangays in the Philippines reported active cases of ASF in April, against 20 in the previous month and 65 a month earlier, the BAI reported.
\nSince 2019, the disease has been detected in 6,574 barangays.
\nThe BAI said that the Philippines does not currently export live pigs or swine products to China, meaning the restrictions have no immediate trade impact.
\nThe BAI said the two countries share a commitment to disease eradication and biosecurity, noting their adherence to WOAH standards. \u2014 Pierce Oel A. Montalvo
\n", "content_text": "CHINA has banned imports of pigs, wild boars, and related products from the Philippines following reports of swine fever outbreaks received by the World Organization for Animal Health (WOAH).\nChina\u2019s General Administration of Customs and Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs issued Announcement No. 66 on May 14, 2026, prohibiting direct or indirect imports from the Philippines, as well as the mailing or carrying of swine products into China.\nThe order also orders the destruction of any illegally smuggled items and supervised treatment of animal waste from transport originating from the Philippines.\nThe Department of Agriculture\u2019s Bureau of Animal Industry (BAI) responded on May 19, clarifying that the Philippines is managing two separate swine diseases.\nClassical swine fever, an endemic condition, is controlled through vaccination, surveillance, and farm biosecurity protocols. African Swine Fever (ASF), first detected in 2019, remains an issue managed through movement controls, biosecurity measures, culling, and surveillance in affected areas.\nOnly eight barangays in the Philippines reported active cases of ASF in April, against 20 in the previous month and 65 a month earlier, the BAI reported.\nSince 2019, the disease has been detected in 6,574 barangays.\nThe BAI said that the Philippines does not currently export live pigs or swine products to China, meaning the restrictions have no immediate trade impact.\nThe BAI said the two countries share a commitment to disease eradication and biosecurity, noting their adherence to WOAH standards. \u2014 Pierce Oel A. Montalvo", "date_published": "2026-05-20T20:48:24+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-20T20:48:24+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/Pigs.jpg", "tags": [ "Pierce Oel A. Montalvo", "Economy" ] }, { "id": "/?p=751074", "url": "/economy/2026/05/20/751074/food-businesses-deemed-relatively-more-resilient-during-persian-gulf-crisis/", "title": "Food businesses deemed relatively more resilient during Persian Gulf crisis", "content_html": "THE FOOD industry is better positioned to withstand the impact of the Middle East crisis, as demand for food remains resilient despite rising prices and slowing economic growth, Jose Ma. A. Concepcion III of the Go Negosyo organization said.
\n\u201cIf you are in the food and restaurant business, you have the ability to survive. Especially if the entrepreneur can serve good dishes, he will make it through,\u201d he told 大象传媒 on the sidelines of the 大象传媒 Economic Forum earlier this week.
\n\u201cIn the food sector, the industry is running well. Filipinos like to eat, so there will always be demand,\u201d he added.
\nGross domestic product grew by a weaker-than-expected 2.8% in the first quarter, amid the lingering effects of last year\u2019s corruption scandal and soaring oil prices triggered by the Middle East fighting.
\nMeanwhile, the consumer price index accelerated to 7.2% in April, exceeding both the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas\u2019 forecast and target.
\nMr. Concepcion, who is also president and chief executive officer of RFM Corp., said the listed food manufacturer is planning to expand operations.
\n\u201cWe are doing very well. Selecta now is the number one ice cream ever since we parted with Unilever and we are expanding,\u201d Mr. Concepcion said.
\n\u201cWe have grown the market; We are into milk, pasta, and many others while we continue to have our flour mill. So I am very optimistic,\u201d he added.
\nIn a disclosure to the stock exchange, RFM reported a 10.3% increase in attributable net income to P342 million in the first quarter.
\nHowever, Mr. Concepcion warned businesses against making abrupt decisions while conditions remain fluid.
\n\u201cYou don\u2019t want to make a decision abruptly because it\u2019s very hard to predict the situation. So you remain conservative first, do not be too aggressive, until this situation eases off, and in time it will ease off,\u201d he said.
\n\u201cYou always have to measure the risks. If your business is not affected by these conditions, then go ahead. If your business is affected by these conditions, then be more cautious,\u201d he added.
\nChina Bank Capital Corp. Managing Director Juan Paolo E. Colet said demand for food is likely to remain resilient as it is a basic necessity.
\n\u201cThat said, inflationary pressures from the Middle East crisis would make ordinary consumers more cost-conscious and could push demand towards options that provide better value for money,\u201d he said via Viber.
\nMr. Colet said the impact on restaurants would depend on their market positioning and cost structures.
\n\u201cRestaurants might pass on increased input costs to customers, but they have to be careful about this because they risk losing patronage or pushing customers to alternatives,\u201d he said.
\n\u201cWhile overall sector revenues could weather the crisis, we might see margin compression to sustain sales and defend market share,\u201d he added. \u2014 Justine Irish D. Tabile
\n", "content_text": "THE FOOD industry is better positioned to withstand the impact of the Middle East crisis, as demand for food remains resilient despite rising prices and slowing economic growth, Jose Ma. A. Concepcion III of the Go Negosyo organization said.\n\u201cIf you are in the food and restaurant business, you have the ability to survive. Especially if the entrepreneur can serve good dishes, he will make it through,\u201d he told 大象传媒 on the sidelines of the 大象传媒 Economic Forum earlier this week.\n\u201cIn the food sector, the industry is running well. Filipinos like to eat, so there will always be demand,\u201d he added.\nGross domestic product grew by a weaker-than-expected 2.8% in the first quarter, amid the lingering effects of last year\u2019s corruption scandal and soaring oil prices triggered by the Middle East fighting.\nMeanwhile, the consumer price index accelerated to 7.2% in April, exceeding both the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas\u2019 forecast and target.\nMr. Concepcion, who is also president and chief executive officer of RFM Corp., said the listed food manufacturer is planning to expand operations.\n\u201cWe are doing very well. Selecta now is the number one ice cream ever since we parted with Unilever and we are expanding,\u201d Mr. Concepcion said.\n\u201cWe have grown the market; We are into milk, pasta, and many others while we continue to have our flour mill. So I am very optimistic,\u201d he added.\nIn a disclosure to the stock exchange, RFM reported a 10.3% increase in attributable net income to P342 million in the first quarter.\nHowever, Mr. Concepcion warned businesses against making abrupt decisions while conditions remain fluid.\n\u201cYou don\u2019t want to make a decision abruptly because it\u2019s very hard to predict the situation. So you remain conservative first, do not be too aggressive, until this situation eases off, and in time it will ease off,\u201d he said.\n\u201cYou always have to measure the risks. If your business is not affected by these conditions, then go ahead. If your business is affected by these conditions, then be more cautious,\u201d he added.\nChina Bank Capital Corp. Managing Director Juan Paolo E. Colet said demand for food is likely to remain resilient as it is a basic necessity.\n\u201cThat said, inflationary pressures from the Middle East crisis would make ordinary consumers more cost-conscious and could push demand towards options that provide better value for money,\u201d he said via Viber.\nMr. Colet said the impact on restaurants would depend on their market positioning and cost structures.\n\u201cRestaurants might pass on increased input costs to customers, but they have to be careful about this because they risk losing patronage or pushing customers to alternatives,\u201d he said.\n\u201cWhile overall sector revenues could weather the crisis, we might see margin compression to sustain sales and defend market share,\u201d he added. \u2014 Justine Irish D. Tabile", "date_published": "2026-05-20T20:48:05+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-20T20:48:05+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Jose-Ma.-Joey-A.-Concepcion-III.jpg", "tags": [ "Justine Irish D. Tabile", "Economy" ] }, { "id": "/?p=751073", "url": "/economy/2026/05/20/751073/bir-simplifies-business-de-registration-process/", "title": "BIR simplifies business de-registration process", "content_html": "THE Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) said it streamlined procedures for the cancellation of business registrations.
\n\u201cFrom improving the ease of doing business and the ease of paying taxes, this reform completes the BIR\u2019s support for businesses through every stage of the business life cycle,\u201d BIR Commissioner Charlito Martin R. Mendoza said.
\n\u201cIf we make it easier to start and operate a business, then the government must also make it easier to properly close BIR registration once operations have ceased,\u201d he added.
\nIn Revenue Memorandum Circular No. 047-2026 issued on May 19, the BIR said the revised guidelines aim to ease the processing of applications for the closure and cancellation of taxpayers\u2019 business registrations.
\nThe circular covers all business taxpayers registered with the BIR that have permanently ceased operations or are subject to the cancellation of their business registration.
\nThese include individual taxpayers engaged in trade or business or in the practice of professions, as well as those earning income from digital or online platforms.
\nCorporations, partnerships, joint ventures, associations, cooperatives, and other juridical entities are likewise covered, along with estates and trusts, government agencies and instrumentalities, government-owned and -controlled corporations and government financial institutions.
\nThe circular also covers business taxpayers classified as micro, small, medium or large taxpayers.
\nAccording to the circular, taxpayers are required to submit their applications and documentary requirements to the revenue district officer. Electronic filing is also allowed, except for estates, trusts, government agencies, and taxpayers classified according to size.
\nThe circular requires taxpayers to file all final or short-period tax returns covering the period from the beginning of the taxable year up to the date of closure. Taxpayers are also expected to file zero returns for periods without business activity.
\nThe BIR clarified that taxpayers that cease operations without submitting the required documents will continue to be liable for tax.
\nSince micro taxpayers with gross sales are not subject to mandatory audits, their tax clearance will be issued within three working days of submission of complete requirements assuming no outstanding liabilities. \u2014 Justine Irish D. Tabile
\n", "content_text": "THE Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) said it streamlined procedures for the cancellation of business registrations.\n\u201cFrom improving the ease of doing business and the ease of paying taxes, this reform completes the BIR\u2019s support for businesses through every stage of the business life cycle,\u201d BIR Commissioner Charlito Martin R. Mendoza said.\n\u201cIf we make it easier to start and operate a business, then the government must also make it easier to properly close BIR registration once operations have ceased,\u201d he added.\nIn Revenue Memorandum Circular No. 047-2026 issued on May 19, the BIR said the revised guidelines aim to ease the processing of applications for the closure and cancellation of taxpayers\u2019 business registrations.\nThe circular covers all business taxpayers registered with the BIR that have permanently ceased operations or are subject to the cancellation of their business registration.\nThese include individual taxpayers engaged in trade or business or in the practice of professions, as well as those earning income from digital or online platforms.\nCorporations, partnerships, joint ventures, associations, cooperatives, and other juridical entities are likewise covered, along with estates and trusts, government agencies and instrumentalities, government-owned and -controlled corporations and government financial institutions.\nThe circular also covers business taxpayers classified as micro, small, medium or large taxpayers.\nAccording to the circular, taxpayers are required to submit their applications and documentary requirements to the revenue district officer. Electronic filing is also allowed, except for estates, trusts, government agencies, and taxpayers classified according to size.\nThe circular requires taxpayers to file all final or short-period tax returns covering the period from the beginning of the taxable year up to the date of closure. Taxpayers are also expected to file zero returns for periods without business activity.\nThe BIR clarified that taxpayers that cease operations without submitting the required documents will continue to be liable for tax.\nSince micro taxpayers with gross sales are not subject to mandatory audits, their tax clearance will be issued within three working days of submission of complete requirements assuming no outstanding liabilities. \u2014 Justine Irish D. Tabile", "date_published": "2026-05-20T20:47:26+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-20T20:47:26+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/BIR-building.jpg", "tags": [ "Justine Irish D. Tabile", "Economy" ] }, { "id": "/?p=751116", "url": "/economy/2026/05/20/751116/fishing-households-grow-18-but-workforce-ageing/", "title": "Fishing households grow 18% but workforce ageing", "content_html": "FISHING HOUSEHOLDS increased 18.1% over the past decade, though the overall fishing workforce is ageing, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) said.
\nIn total 897,575 households had members involved in fishing in 2022, according to preliminary PSA data, against 760,000 fishing households in 2012.
\nThe number of fisherfolk over 50 years old rose 47.3% to over 319,000, outpacing the 4.1% growth in the below-50 group to nearly 602,000.
\nThose between 30 and 49 years accounted for roughly half of all operators in 2022. The 30-39 age bracket made up 25.3% or 233,000 fisherfolk, while the 40-49 group added another 25.1%, or 231,000 fisherfolk.
\nMen accounted for 95.1% of fisherfolk (875,875), though female participation rose 139% from 2012 levels to 45,222 individuals. The Western and Central Visayas recorded the highest female representation at 9.6% each, well above the 4.9% national average.
\nSingle proprietorships dominated the industry at 98.72% of the 922,662 capture fishing operations nationwide. Marine waters accounted for 77.3% of activities, while inland waters represented 13.9%.
\nThe Bicol Region led all areas with 113,080 fishing operations. Five regions combined \u2014 Bicol, Mimaropa, and the Central, Western, and Eastern Visayas \u2014 accounted for more than half of the national total. \u2014 Pierce Oel A. Montalvo
\n", "content_text": "FISHING HOUSEHOLDS increased 18.1% over the past decade, though the overall fishing workforce is ageing, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) said.\nIn total 897,575 households had members involved in fishing in 2022, according to preliminary PSA data, against 760,000 fishing households in 2012.\nThe number of fisherfolk over 50 years old rose 47.3% to over 319,000, outpacing the 4.1% growth in the below-50 group to nearly 602,000.\nThose between 30 and 49 years accounted for roughly half of all operators in 2022. The 30-39 age bracket made up 25.3% or 233,000 fisherfolk, while the 40-49 group added another 25.1%, or 231,000 fisherfolk.\nMen accounted for 95.1% of fisherfolk (875,875), though female participation rose 139% from 2012 levels to 45,222 individuals. The Western and Central Visayas recorded the highest female representation at 9.6% each, well above the 4.9% national average.\nSingle proprietorships dominated the industry at 98.72% of the 922,662 capture fishing operations nationwide. Marine waters accounted for 77.3% of activities, while inland waters represented 13.9%.\nThe Bicol Region led all areas with 113,080 fishing operations. Five regions combined \u2014 Bicol, Mimaropa, and the Central, Western, and Eastern Visayas \u2014 accounted for more than half of the national total. \u2014 Pierce Oel A. Montalvo", "date_published": "2026-05-20T20:47:05+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-20T20:47:05+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/fishing-fisherman.jpg", "tags": [ "Pierce Oel A. Montalvo", "Economy" ] }, { "id": "/?p=751071", "url": "/economy/2026/05/20/751071/eo-117-centralizes-accreditation-under-dswd/", "title": "EO 117 centralizes accreditation under DSWD", "content_html": "On May 7, President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. signed Executive Order (EO) No. 117, Series of 2026, streamlining the accreditation system for Donee Institutions, and designating the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) as the sole accrediting entity for social welfare and development agencies (SWDAs).
\nThe order amends EO No. 720 (2008) and effectively removes the Philippine Council for NGO Certification (PCNC) from the accreditation chain for SWDAs, which are non-stock, non-profit organizations that provide social welfare and development programs and services to vulnerable Filipinos.
\nUnder the new policy, the DSWD\u2019s Certificate of Registration and Accreditation will now be recognized by the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) as sufficient basis to grant SWDAs donee-institution status, which entitles donors to tax deductions and exemptions under the National Internal Revenue Code.
\nWHAT IS PCNC?
\nPCNC is a private, voluntary, non-stock, non-profit corporation established on Jan. 29, 1997, by six of the country\u2019s largest national NGO networks (Association of Foundations, CODE-NGO, the League of Corporate Foundations, and Philippine Business for Social Progress). It was born out of the NGO community\u2019s response to government concerns about accountability, following the rapid proliferation of NGOs in the post-EDSA era.
The PCNC was formally designated by the Department of Finance (DoF) as the sole accrediting body for donee-institutions through a 1998 Memorandum of Agreement, a role later reinforced by EO No. 720 in 2008. Its core mandate was to certify that non-profit organizations meet minimum standards for financial management and accountability. It uses a peer-review model staffed by volunteer evaluators; these are professionals from civil society assessing their own sector. For nearly three decades, the PCNC served as the gateway through which SWDAs gained BIR recognition as donee-institutions.
\nWHY THE CHANGE?
\nPrior to EO No. 117, SWDAs were required to obtain accreditation from both the DSWD (for regulatory compliance) and the PCNC (as a prerequisite for BIR registration to achieve donee-institution status).
This dual-accreditation requirement made document submission more tedious, as both the DSWD and the PCNC had to verify the legitimacy of registering agencies and prevent fly-by-night organizations. While these safeguards reinforced accountability, they also contributed to longer processing times and increased administrative complexity.
\nThe EO cites Republic Act No. 11032, or the Ease of Doing Business and Efficient Government Service Delivery Act of 2018, as its legal basis \u2014 underscoring the government\u2019s broader policy direction to simplify procedures, reduce red tape, and improve the delivery of public services.
\nMAIN BENEFITS AND DRAWBACKS
\nAs we welcome any move to ease the bureaucratic challenges of NGOs, it is important to examine the main benefits as well as the potential drawbacks of this recent reform.
1. Reduced bureaucratic burden
\nSWDAs now deal with a single accrediting body, cutting down on time, paperwork, and administrative costs. This is particularly significant for small, grassroots organizations that have historically struggled with compliance overhead.
\n2. Cost efficient
\nThe removal of the PCNC accreditation fee frees up funds that organizations can redirect toward program implementation and direct service delivery \u2014 a clear win for communities they serve.
\n3. Simplified process aligned with law
\nThe EO operationalizes the Ease of Doing Business Act within the social welfare sector. A streamlined pathway may also encourage more legitimate organizations to formalize their operations and seek donee-institution status.
\n4. Transition protection
\nExisting SWDAs retain their current donee-institution status until their accreditation expires, preventing disruption to ongoing programs and donor relationships.
\nPOTENTIAL CONCERNS
\nWhile at face value, the new EO provides relief to SWDAs, some potential concerns are worth noting.
1. DSWD\u2019s capacity and readiness
\nThe DSWD will now absorb the full accreditation load for all SWDAs, on top of its core mandate of delivering social welfare services. Whether the department has the staffing, systems, and technical capacity to effectively manage this expanded role, without causing delays or backlogs, remains to be seen.
\n2. Loss of civil society peer review
\nThe PCNC\u2019s strength lies in its peer-review model: NGOs evaluating NGOs. This approach carries a degree of sector credibility and independence. Transferring accreditation entirely to a government body may raise questions among donors, international partners, and other stakeholders about the neutrality and rigor of the process.
\nIts strict process, often misconstrued as a drawback, is necessary to ensure agencies comply with basic regulatory requirements and to verify that they are properly managed and operated.
\n3. Potential regulatory conflict of interest
\nUnder EO No. 117, the DSWD acts both as a service provider and as the sole accreditor of organizations that may complement or, at times, even critique government programs. This dual role warrants the need for clear structural safeguards, such as independent oversight mechanisms or functional separation, to preserve credibility and mitigate risks. Additionally, consolidating the accreditation authority under a single government agency may weaken the checks and balances between the public and private sectors. Without adequate oversight mechanisms, this could increase the risk of misuse or abuse of funds \u2014 echoing past controversies that highlighted vulnerabilities in the system. Absent third-party certification, the government may consider implementing a more transparent and risk-based post-accreditation monitoring system to maintain public trust in donee organizations.
\n4. Pending implementing rules
\nThe DoF and BIR have yet to issue the Implementing Rules and Regulations (IRR), leaving SWDAs in a period of uncertainty regarding specific compliance requirements.
\nWhile awaiting the issuance of the IRR and before full implementation, it is imperative for the DSWD to invest in institutional capacity-building. This includes hiring additional accreditation staff, improving the reliability of the digitized application and monitoring process, and establishing clear, time-bound processing standards. Equally important is the adoption of a more participatory accreditation framework that incorporates civil society reviewers or an independent technical panel, preserving the spirit of peer accountability long embodied by PCNC, while promoting transparency and maintaining the confidence among SWDAs and their donors.
\nFor its part, the PCNC can view EO No. 117 not as an endpoint, but as an opportunity to redefine its role. Beyond SWDAs, there remains a broader ecosystem of NGOs that can benefit from its expertise. Indeed, the PCNC has already begun repositioning itself as a capacity-building and standards-setting body within the NGO sector. Its nearly three decades of experience in organizational assessment, financial accountability training, and peer evaluation remain invaluable. Moving forward, the PCNC can pivot toward providing technical assistance, pre-accreditation coaching, and sector-level research \u2014 functions that complement and support SWDAs, rather than duplicate, the government accreditation process.
\nMeanwhile, SWDAs should take a proactive approach to the transition. This includes reviewing the validity of their current accreditations and preparing for the eventual compliance under the new framework. Organizations may also continue to seek PCNC certification on a voluntary basis as it serves as a recognized \u201cSeal of Good Housekeeping.\u201d The certification process itself provides added value by encouraging NGOs to strengthen internal controls, align documentation, and enhance their financial and program reporting.
\nOn the other side, donors, including corporations, foundations, and high-net worth individuals must be more prudent in conducting their due diligence, particularly in evaluating the governance and financial practices of the donee organizations. Ensuring that donations are properly substantiated and made to duly accredited institutions remains crucial to managing compliance and reputational risk, particularly when deductions are subject to scrutiny.
\nEO No. 117 clearly represents an effort to reduce bureaucratic friction for social welfare organizations delivering essential services. The intent is sound. However, as with any reform, the true measure of success lies in its implementation. Streamlining must not come at the expense of accountability.
\nUltimately, the success of EO No. 117 will be measured not only by faster processing times, but how it sustains donor confidence, upholds accountability standards, and avoids an increase in compliance issues. As such, while we welcome such reform, stakeholders have the right to demand that the systems put in place are robust, transparent, and firmly grounded in the public interest \u2014 ensuring that they truly serve the communities at the heart of this work, and not just as a political move or gain.
\nThe views or opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of Isla Lipana & Co. The content is for general information purposes only, and should not be used as a substitute for specific advice.
\n\n
Edwin Padillo is a registered social worker and a Markets senior manager at Isla Lipana & Co., the Philippine member firm of PricewaterhouseCoopers global network. He also works at Isla Lipana & Co. Foundation, Inc.
\n\n", "content_text": "On May 7, President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. signed Executive Order (EO) No. 117, Series of 2026, streamlining the accreditation system for Donee Institutions, and designating the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) as the sole accrediting entity for social welfare and development agencies (SWDAs).\nThe order amends EO No. 720 (2008) and effectively removes the Philippine Council for NGO Certification (PCNC) from the accreditation chain for SWDAs, which are non-stock, non-profit organizations that provide social welfare and development programs and services to vulnerable Filipinos.\nUnder the new policy, the DSWD\u2019s Certificate of Registration and Accreditation will now be recognized by the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) as sufficient basis to grant SWDAs donee-institution status, which entitles donors to tax deductions and exemptions under the National Internal Revenue Code.\nWHAT IS PCNC?\nPCNC is a private, voluntary, non-stock, non-profit corporation established on Jan. 29, 1997, by six of the country\u2019s largest national NGO networks (Association of Foundations, CODE-NGO, the League of Corporate Foundations, and Philippine Business for Social Progress). It was born out of the NGO community\u2019s response to government concerns about accountability, following the rapid proliferation of NGOs in the post-EDSA era.\nThe PCNC was formally designated by the Department of Finance (DoF) as the sole accrediting body for donee-institutions through a 1998 Memorandum of Agreement, a role later reinforced by EO No. 720 in 2008. Its core mandate was to certify that non-profit organizations meet minimum standards for financial management and accountability. It uses a peer-review model staffed by volunteer evaluators; these are professionals from civil society assessing their own sector. For nearly three decades, the PCNC served as the gateway through which SWDAs gained BIR recognition as donee-institutions.\nWHY THE CHANGE?\nPrior to EO No. 117, SWDAs were required to obtain accreditation from both the DSWD (for regulatory compliance) and the PCNC (as a prerequisite for BIR registration to achieve donee-institution status).\nThis dual-accreditation requirement made document submission more tedious, as both the DSWD and the PCNC had to verify the legitimacy of registering agencies and prevent fly-by-night organizations. While these safeguards reinforced accountability, they also contributed to longer processing times and increased administrative complexity.\nThe EO cites Republic Act No. 11032, or the Ease of Doing Business and Efficient Government Service Delivery Act of 2018, as its legal basis \u2014 underscoring the government\u2019s broader policy direction to simplify procedures, reduce red tape, and improve the delivery of public services.\nMAIN BENEFITS AND DRAWBACKS\nAs we welcome any move to ease the bureaucratic challenges of NGOs, it is important to examine the main benefits as well as the potential drawbacks of this recent reform.\n1. Reduced bureaucratic burden\nSWDAs now deal with a single accrediting body, cutting down on time, paperwork, and administrative costs. This is particularly significant for small, grassroots organizations that have historically struggled with compliance overhead.\n2. Cost efficient\nThe removal of the PCNC accreditation fee frees up funds that organizations can redirect toward program implementation and direct service delivery \u2014 a clear win for communities they serve.\n3. Simplified process aligned with law\nThe EO operationalizes the Ease of Doing Business Act within the social welfare sector. A streamlined pathway may also encourage more legitimate organizations to formalize their operations and seek donee-institution status.\n4. Transition protection\nExisting SWDAs retain their current donee-institution status until their accreditation expires, preventing disruption to ongoing programs and donor relationships.\nPOTENTIAL CONCERNS\nWhile at face value, the new EO provides relief to SWDAs, some potential concerns are worth noting.\n1. DSWD\u2019s capacity and readiness\nThe DSWD will now absorb the full accreditation load for all SWDAs, on top of its core mandate of delivering social welfare services. Whether the department has the staffing, systems, and technical capacity to effectively manage this expanded role, without causing delays or backlogs, remains to be seen.\n2. Loss of civil society peer review\nThe PCNC\u2019s strength lies in its peer-review model: NGOs evaluating NGOs. This approach carries a degree of sector credibility and independence. Transferring accreditation entirely to a government body may raise questions among donors, international partners, and other stakeholders about the neutrality and rigor of the process.\nIts strict process, often misconstrued as a drawback, is necessary to ensure agencies comply with basic regulatory requirements and to verify that they are properly managed and operated.\n3. Potential regulatory conflict of interest\nUnder EO No. 117, the DSWD acts both as a service provider and as the sole accreditor of organizations that may complement or, at times, even critique government programs. This dual role warrants the need for clear structural safeguards, such as independent oversight mechanisms or functional separation, to preserve credibility and mitigate risks. Additionally, consolidating the accreditation authority under a single government agency may weaken the checks and balances between the public and private sectors. Without adequate oversight mechanisms, this could increase the risk of misuse or abuse of funds \u2014 echoing past controversies that highlighted vulnerabilities in the system. Absent third-party certification, the government may consider implementing a more transparent and risk-based post-accreditation monitoring system to maintain public trust in donee organizations.\n4. Pending implementing rules\nThe DoF and BIR have yet to issue the Implementing Rules and Regulations (IRR), leaving SWDAs in a period of uncertainty regarding specific compliance requirements.\nWhile awaiting the issuance of the IRR and before full implementation, it is imperative for the DSWD to invest in institutional capacity-building. This includes hiring additional accreditation staff, improving the reliability of the digitized application and monitoring process, and establishing clear, time-bound processing standards. Equally important is the adoption of a more participatory accreditation framework that incorporates civil society reviewers or an independent technical panel, preserving the spirit of peer accountability long embodied by PCNC, while promoting transparency and maintaining the confidence among SWDAs and their donors. \nFor its part, the PCNC can view EO No. 117 not as an endpoint, but as an opportunity to redefine its role. Beyond SWDAs, there remains a broader ecosystem of NGOs that can benefit from its expertise. Indeed, the PCNC has already begun repositioning itself as a capacity-building and standards-setting body within the NGO sector. Its nearly three decades of experience in organizational assessment, financial accountability training, and peer evaluation remain invaluable. Moving forward, the PCNC can pivot toward providing technical assistance, pre-accreditation coaching, and sector-level research \u2014 functions that complement and support SWDAs, rather than duplicate, the government accreditation process.\nMeanwhile, SWDAs should take a proactive approach to the transition. This includes reviewing the validity of their current accreditations and preparing for the eventual compliance under the new framework. Organizations may also continue to seek PCNC certification on a voluntary basis as it serves as a recognized \u201cSeal of Good Housekeeping.\u201d The certification process itself provides added value by encouraging NGOs to strengthen internal controls, align documentation, and enhance their financial and program reporting.\nOn the other side, donors, including corporations, foundations, and high-net worth individuals must be more prudent in conducting their due diligence, particularly in evaluating the governance and financial practices of the donee organizations. Ensuring that donations are properly substantiated and made to duly accredited institutions remains crucial to managing compliance and reputational risk, particularly when deductions are subject to scrutiny.\nEO No. 117 clearly represents an effort to reduce bureaucratic friction for social welfare organizations delivering essential services. The intent is sound. However, as with any reform, the true measure of success lies in its implementation. Streamlining must not come at the expense of accountability.\nUltimately, the success of EO No. 117 will be measured not only by faster processing times, but how it sustains donor confidence, upholds accountability standards, and avoids an increase in compliance issues. As such, while we welcome such reform, stakeholders have the right to demand that the systems put in place are robust, transparent, and firmly grounded in the public interest \u2014 ensuring that they truly serve the communities at the heart of this work, and not just as a political move or gain. \nThe views or opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of Isla Lipana & Co. The content is for general information purposes only, and should not be used as a substitute for specific advice.\n \nEdwin Padillo is a registered social worker and a Markets senior manager at Isla Lipana & Co., the Philippine member firm of PricewaterhouseCoopers global network. He also works at Isla Lipana & Co. Foundation, Inc.\nedwin.padillo@pwc.com", "date_published": "2026-05-20T20:46:32+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-20T20:46:32+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/economy-default.jpg", "tags": [ "Edwin Padillo", "Taxwise or Otherwise", "Economy" ] }, { "id": "/?p=750957", "url": "/economy/2026/05/20/750957/approved-building-permits-rise-2-in-march/", "title": "Approved building permits rise 2% in March", "content_html": "APPROVED building permits inched up 2% year on year in March as growth in residential construction projects weakened during the period, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) said in a report.
\nPreliminary data showed building projects covered by the permits numbered 16,066 in March from 15,750 a year earlier.
\nThis was weaker than the 8.4% expansion in March 2025 but stronger than the revised 1.8% expansion in February 2026.
\nIn March, construction projects covered 3.41 million square meters (sq.m) of floor area, down 7.8% year on year from 3.70 million sq.m.
\nThese building projects that received approval were valued at P49.07 billion, 0.5% lower than a year earlier when it reached P49.33 billion.
\nPermits for residential projects, which accounted for 62% of the total, rose 1.1% in March to 9,955.
\nThis pace was slower than the 3.9% posted in March last year but a turnaround from the revised 2.6% decline in February.
\nThese residential projects were valued at P18.70 billion, up from P18.64 billion a year earlier.
\nSingle homes, which accounted for 74.4% of the residential category, fell 14.5% year on year to 7,407.
\nApplications for apartment buildings more than doubled to 2,209 while applications for duplex or quadruplex homes also soared 89.2% to 210.
\nOn the other hand, nonresidential projects increased 4.9% year on year to 3,663 permits from 3,491 in March 2025. This accounted for 22.8% of the total.
\nNonresidential projects represented by the permits were valued at P24.87 billion, rising 7.7% from a year earlier.
\nMeanwhile, approved commercial construction applications expanded 2.9% to 2,490. These made up 68% of all nonresidential projects.
\nIndustrial permits rose 2.9% to 319, while institutional projects climbed 13.1% to 631 approvals.
\nAgricultural projects totaled 180 approvals, up 71.4%, while other nonresidential works cornered 43 approved building permits, down 55.7%.
\nPermits for additions, or construction that increases the height or area of an existing building, rose 12.1% to 667 approvals.
\nOn the other hand, alteration and repair permits totaled 1,214 in March, 11.8% lower from a year earlier, and were valued at P4.10 billion.
\nCalabarzon (Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, Rizal, and Quezon) had the most approved construction projects during the period, accounting for 21.5% of the total with 3,457 permits.
\nThis was followed by Central Luzon (19.9% share with 3,196 permits), and Central Visayas (8.8% share with 1,409 permits).
\nThe PSA said construction statistics are compiled from the copies of original application forms of approved building permits as well as from demolition and fencing permits collected monthly by the agency\u2019s field personnel from the offices of local building officials nationwide. \u2014 Heather Caitlin P. Ma\u00f1ago
\n", "content_text": "APPROVED building permits inched up 2% year on year in March as growth in residential construction projects weakened during the period, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) said in a report.\nPreliminary data showed building projects covered by the permits numbered 16,066 in March from 15,750 a year earlier.\nThis was weaker than the 8.4% expansion in March 2025 but stronger than the revised 1.8% expansion in February 2026.\nIn March, construction projects covered 3.41 million square meters (sq.m) of floor area, down 7.8% year on year from 3.70 million sq.m.\nThese building projects that received approval were valued at P49.07 billion, 0.5% lower than a year earlier when it reached P49.33 billion.\nPermits for residential projects, which accounted for 62% of the total, rose 1.1% in March to 9,955.\nThis pace was slower than the 3.9% posted in March last year but a turnaround from the revised 2.6% decline in February.\nThese residential projects were valued at P18.70 billion, up from P18.64 billion a year earlier.\nSingle homes, which accounted for 74.4% of the residential category, fell 14.5% year on year to 7,407.\nApplications for apartment buildings more than doubled to 2,209 while applications for duplex or quadruplex homes also soared 89.2% to 210.\nOn the other hand, nonresidential projects increased 4.9% year on year to 3,663 permits from 3,491 in March 2025. This accounted for 22.8% of the total.\nNonresidential projects represented by the permits were valued at P24.87 billion, rising 7.7% from a year earlier.\nMeanwhile, approved commercial construction applications expanded 2.9% to 2,490. These made up 68% of all nonresidential projects.\nIndustrial permits rose 2.9% to 319, while institutional projects climbed 13.1% to 631 approvals.\nAgricultural projects totaled 180 approvals, up 71.4%, while other nonresidential works cornered 43 approved building permits, down 55.7%.\nPermits for additions, or construction that increases the height or area of an existing building, rose 12.1% to 667 approvals.\nOn the other hand, alteration and repair permits totaled 1,214 in March, 11.8% lower from a year earlier, and were valued at P4.10 billion.\nCalabarzon (Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, Rizal, and Quezon) had the most approved construction projects during the period, accounting for 21.5% of the total with 3,457 permits.\nThis was followed by Central Luzon (19.9% share with 3,196 permits), and Central Visayas (8.8% share with 1,409 permits).\nThe PSA said construction statistics are compiled from the copies of original application forms of approved building permits as well as from demolition and fencing permits collected monthly by the agency\u2019s field personnel from the offices of local building officials nationwide. \u2014 Heather Caitlin P. Ma\u00f1ago", "date_published": "2026-05-20T18:17:56+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-20T18:44:34+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/Infra-construction-building.jpg", "tags": [ "Heather Caitlin P. Ma\u00f1ago", "Economy" ] }, { "id": "/?p=750756", "url": "/economy/2026/05/19/750756/phl-yet-to-finalize-borrowing-plan-adb-says/", "title": "PHL yet to finalize borrowing plan, ADB says", "content_html": "THE Asian Development Bank (ADB) urged the Philippines to finalize its borrowing plan for the year as the government faces a revenue shortfall while also planning to support segments of society classified as vulnerable to the effects of the Iran war.
\n\u201cThe government\u2026 is facing maybe less revenue this year because of the slowdown in the economy, and they are also facing issues helping the most vulnerable people because of the crisis and all,\u201d ADB Country Director Andrew Jeffries told reporters last week.
\n\u201cAnd so, the government needs to really think about and prioritize what it is going to borrow for this year,\u201d he added. \u201cAnd again, that process has not been finalized yet.\u201d
\nHe added that the Philippines and the ADB have been discussing a counter-cyclical support facility aimed at helping developing countries like the Philippines weather the impact of the Middle East conflict.
\n\u201cWe\u2019ve shared details and we\u2019ve had back and forth, but there has not yet been a formal request for one. But they are considering it amongst a lot of options, because, as you know, the impact here is pretty high,\u201d he added.
\nHe said the impact of the conflict is being felt through higher oil prices, rising inflation, and slower economic growth.
\n\u201cThere\u2019s obviously a high impact here, as expected, the only question is how long this will last, and nobody really knows that. But\u2026we\u2019re certainly willing to support,\u201d he said.
\nThe Philippine economy grew 2.8% in the first quarter, dragged down by the lingering effects of last year\u2019s corruption scandal.
\nMeanwhile, headline inflation accelerated to 7.2% in April, exceeding the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas\u2019 (BSP) 5.6%-6.4% forecast for the month. It also marked the second straight month that inflation breached the BSP\u2019s 2%-4% target range.
\nUnionBank of the Philippines Chief Economist Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion said he expects a recalibration in borrowing rather than a slowdown.
\n\u201cWhile weaker growth could dampen revenue collection and force the government to be more deliberate in prioritizing projects, the same external shock is also increasing fiscal pressures,\u201d he said via Viber.
\n\u201cAs a result, financing needs are unlikely to ease meaningfully. Instead of a sharp pullback, we expect borrowing to remain broadly steady, but with a greater focus on essential, high-impact spending and more flexible financing instruments such as policy-based loans,\u201d he added.
\nThe Bureau of the Treasury reported that the National Government\u2019s gross borrowings amounted to P1 trillion in the first quarter.
\nThis represents 37.4% of the P2.68-trillion gross borrowing program for the year according to the Budget of Expenditures and Sources of Financing 2026. \u2014 Justine Irish D. Tabile
\n", "content_text": "THE Asian Development Bank (ADB) urged the Philippines to finalize its borrowing plan for the year as the government faces a revenue shortfall while also planning to support segments of society classified as vulnerable to the effects of the Iran war.\n\u201cThe government\u2026 is facing maybe less revenue this year because of the slowdown in the economy, and they are also facing issues helping the most vulnerable people because of the crisis and all,\u201d ADB Country Director Andrew Jeffries told reporters last week.\n\u201cAnd so, the government needs to really think about and prioritize what it is going to borrow for this year,\u201d he added. \u201cAnd again, that process has not been finalized yet.\u201d\nHe added that the Philippines and the ADB have been discussing a counter-cyclical support facility aimed at helping developing countries like the Philippines weather the impact of the Middle East conflict.\n\u201cWe\u2019ve shared details and we\u2019ve had back and forth, but there has not yet been a formal request for one. But they are considering it amongst a lot of options, because, as you know, the impact here is pretty high,\u201d he added.\nHe said the impact of the conflict is being felt through higher oil prices, rising inflation, and slower economic growth.\n\u201cThere\u2019s obviously a high impact here, as expected, the only question is how long this will last, and nobody really knows that. But\u2026we\u2019re certainly willing to support,\u201d he said.\nThe Philippine economy grew 2.8% in the first quarter, dragged down by the lingering effects of last year\u2019s corruption scandal.\nMeanwhile, headline inflation accelerated to 7.2% in April, exceeding the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas\u2019 (BSP) 5.6%-6.4% forecast for the month. It also marked the second straight month that inflation breached the BSP\u2019s 2%-4% target range.\nUnionBank of the Philippines Chief Economist Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion said he expects a recalibration in borrowing rather than a slowdown.\n\u201cWhile weaker growth could dampen revenue collection and force the government to be more deliberate in prioritizing projects, the same external shock is also increasing fiscal pressures,\u201d he said via Viber.\n\u201cAs a result, financing needs are unlikely to ease meaningfully. Instead of a sharp pullback, we expect borrowing to remain broadly steady, but with a greater focus on essential, high-impact spending and more flexible financing instruments such as policy-based loans,\u201d he added.\nThe Bureau of the Treasury reported that the National Government\u2019s gross borrowings amounted to P1 trillion in the first quarter.\nThis represents 37.4% of the P2.68-trillion gross borrowing program for the year according to the Budget of Expenditures and Sources of Financing 2026. \u2014 Justine Irish D. Tabile", "date_published": "2026-05-19T21:24:16+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-19T21:24:16+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/ADB-1.jpg", "tags": [ "Justine Irish D. Tabile", "Economy", "Editors' Picks", "One News" ] }, { "id": "/?p=750755", "url": "/economy/2026/05/19/750755/iran-crisis-exposes-phl-energy-vulnerabilities/", "title": "Iran crisis exposes PHL energy vulnerabilities", "content_html": "THE Middle East conflict has exposed the Philippines\u2019 energy vulnerabilities and needs to leverage its chairmanship of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) to steer the bloc towards expanding regional cooperation, a sustainability expert said.
\n\u201cThe Philippines\u2019 role is to strengthen the foundations of its domestic energy system while (advocate for) a more integrated, resilient, and investment-ready ASEAN energy system,\u201d Angelo Kairos T. dela Cruz, executive director of the Institute for Climate and Sustainable Cities, said at the 大象传媒 Economic Forum on Monday.
\n
As this year\u2019s ASEAN chairman, the Philippines is expected to push for stronger regional cooperation on energy security and supply resilience as the Iran war roils global energy markets.
\u201cAs a net energy importing region, ASEAN continues to be exposed to fossil-fuel volatility, making energy security and economic resilience central to policy priorities among its members,\u201d Mr. dela Cruz said.
\nHe said the region is moving towards more diversified and decentralized energy systems, with growing renewable energy deployment across various national markets.
\nMr. dela Cruz said transitioning to renewable energy is becoming \u201cincreasingly urgent.\u201d
\n\u201cThe conversation is now shifting. The question is no longer whether the Philippines is ready for renewable energy investments, but how these investments can be structured to deliver impact across national infrastructure, local communities, and end-user systems,\u201d he said.
\nJonathan Back, group chief finance officer and chief strategy officer of renewable energy developer ACEN Corp., said the Philippines is not alone in facing challenges arising from the Middle East crisis.
\n\u201cThis is absolutely not unique for the Philippines. I think across the world, every government and regulator is asking how to become more energy independent, how do we become resilient?\u201d
\nCurrently, ACEN has about 7 gigawatts of attributable renewable energy capacity, including operational, under-construction, and committed projects. The company operates in the Philippines, Australia, Vietnam, India, Indonesia, Laos, and the US.
\nMr. Back said the Philippines has an advanced energy market structure despite its archipelagic challenges.
\nMr. Back said increasing the share of renewable energy in the power mix could be complemented by building energy storage systems to enhance integration and help stabilize the grid.
\n\u201cWe think that is the key way to really boost that 35% by 2030 and 50% by 2040, to make it even faster,\u201d he said, referring to the government targets for the share of renewables in the power mix.
\nSharon Ocampo-Monta\u00f1er, director of market operations service at the Energy Regulatory Commission, said the Iran war continues to expose weaknesses in global energy supply chains.
\n\u201cFor a country like ours, highly dependent on imported fuel, these disruptions translate directly into rising costs and uncertainty for households and businesses,\u201d she said.
\n\u201cBut while these challenges are real and immediate, they do not define us. What defines us is how we respond,\u201d she added.
\nMs. Ocampo-Monta\u00f1er said the regulator has taken steps to stabilize the system and protect consumers, by ensuring the continued operation of the spot market and easing cost pressures through the suspension of certain charges.
\n\u201cUnder its ASEAN leadership, the Philippines is actively advancing initiatives to move towards a more interconnected and resilient regional energy system,\u201d she said.
\n\u201cFor an archipelagic country like us, this presents challenges but it also opens up opportunities for greater cooperation, improved system reliability and access to more competitive energy resources,\u201d she added. \u2014 Sheldeen Joy Talavera
\n", "content_text": "THE Middle East conflict has exposed the Philippines\u2019 energy vulnerabilities and needs to leverage its chairmanship of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) to steer the bloc towards expanding regional cooperation, a sustainability expert said.\n\u201cThe Philippines\u2019 role is to strengthen the foundations of its domestic energy system while (advocate for) a more integrated, resilient, and investment-ready ASEAN energy system,\u201d Angelo Kairos T. dela Cruz, executive director of the Institute for Climate and Sustainable Cities, said at the 大象传媒 Economic Forum on Monday.\nAs this year\u2019s ASEAN chairman, the Philippines is expected to push for stronger regional cooperation on energy security and supply resilience as the Iran war roils global energy markets.\n\u201cAs a net energy importing region, ASEAN continues to be exposed to fossil-fuel volatility, making energy security and economic resilience central to policy priorities among its members,\u201d Mr. dela Cruz said.\nHe said the region is moving towards more diversified and decentralized energy systems, with growing renewable energy deployment across various national markets.\nMr. dela Cruz said transitioning to renewable energy is becoming \u201cincreasingly urgent.\u201d\n\u201cThe conversation is now shifting. The question is no longer whether the Philippines is ready for renewable energy investments, but how these investments can be structured to deliver impact across national infrastructure, local communities, and end-user systems,\u201d he said.\nJonathan Back, group chief finance officer and chief strategy officer of renewable energy developer ACEN Corp., said the Philippines is not alone in facing challenges arising from the Middle East crisis.\n\u201cThis is absolutely not unique for the Philippines. I think across the world, every government and regulator is asking how to become more energy independent, how do we become resilient?\u201d\nCurrently, ACEN has about 7 gigawatts of attributable renewable energy capacity, including operational, under-construction, and committed projects. The company operates in the Philippines, Australia, Vietnam, India, Indonesia, Laos, and the US.\nMr. Back said the Philippines has an advanced energy market structure despite its archipelagic challenges.\nMr. Back said increasing the share of renewable energy in the power mix could be complemented by building energy storage systems to enhance integration and help stabilize the grid.\n\u201cWe think that is the key way to really boost that 35% by 2030 and 50% by 2040, to make it even faster,\u201d he said, referring to the government targets for the share of renewables in the power mix.\nSharon Ocampo-Monta\u00f1er, director of market operations service at the Energy Regulatory Commission, said the Iran war continues to expose weaknesses in global energy supply chains.\n\u201cFor a country like ours, highly dependent on imported fuel, these disruptions translate directly into rising costs and uncertainty for households and businesses,\u201d she said.\n\u201cBut while these challenges are real and immediate, they do not define us. What defines us is how we respond,\u201d she added.\nMs. Ocampo-Monta\u00f1er said the regulator has taken steps to stabilize the system and protect consumers, by ensuring the continued operation of the spot market and easing cost pressures through the suspension of certain charges.\n\u201cUnder its ASEAN leadership, the Philippines is actively advancing initiatives to move towards a more interconnected and resilient regional energy system,\u201d she said.\n\u201cFor an archipelagic country like us, this presents challenges but it also opens up opportunities for greater cooperation, improved system reliability and access to more competitive energy resources,\u201d she added. \u2014 Sheldeen Joy Talavera", "date_published": "2026-05-19T21:23:55+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-19T21:31:07+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/gas-station-worker-1.jpg", "tags": [ "Sheldeen Joy Talavera", "Economy", "Editors' Picks", "One News" ] }, { "id": "/?p=750754", "url": "/economy/2026/05/19/750754/phl-losing-out-on-funding-for-decarbonization-due-to-lack-of-clear-net-zero-plan/", "title": "PHL losing out on funding for decarbonization due to lack of clear net-zero plan", "content_html": "THE PHILIPPINES is being locked out of international financing for climate and decarbonization projects because it lacks a clear framework for long-term low emission development strategies (LT-LEDS) and a net-zero target, according to a report by Bain & Co. and Standard Chartered.
\nIn the Southeast Asia\u2019s Green Economy Report 2026, the Philippines was assessed to beg unlikely on track to deliver its national climate targets, in the absence of LT-LEDS, which are voluntary plans created by signatories to the Paris Agreement to transition to net-zero.
\nNet zero refers to the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions to as close as zero while also offsetting any remaining greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.
\n\u201cPublish LT-LEDS with a net-zero target to unlock DFI (development finance institutions) and institutional capital currently flowing to peers with clearer long-term frameworks,\u201d the report concluded.
\nBain & Co. and Standard Chartered also noted that the Philippine green capital expenditure in 2025 was only 40-45% of the required green investment to meet its 2030 decarbonization targets.
\nTo better integrate renewable energy and support the growing needs of high-energy industries like data centers, the Luzon inter-island transmission and distribution backbone should be the focus, as this is where renewable energy integration constraints are most in need of investment.
\nMeanwhile, the report found that the Philippines shows promise in fiscal and regulatory incentives by having value-added tax zero rating for renewable energy projects and reduced import tariffs for electric vehicles.
\nThe Philippines should promote fleet electrification to support demand for electric vehicles (EVs) and encourage investment in assembly operations, according to the report.
\nBain & Co. and Standard Chartered said Southeast Asia stands to deliver approximately $540 billion in green investment through 2030, but a little over half could be realized due to system bottlenecks.
\n\u201cRealizing the full potential of green capital deployment in Southeast Asia hinges on the development of a robust power grid, but grid investment has lagged demand growth,\u201d they said.
\nFurther investments in power, grid, and EV capex could unlock an additional $80 billion by 2030, a 25% increase over projections.
\n\u201cThe opportunity for Southeast Asia\u2019s green economy is substantial, but capturing it requires synchronizing policy, infrastructure and finance at speed,\u201d according to Chow Wan Thonh, head of Coverage, Singapore and ASEAN for Standard Chartered. \u2014 Sheldeen Joy Talavera
\n", "content_text": "THE PHILIPPINES is being locked out of international financing for climate and decarbonization projects because it lacks a clear framework for long-term low emission development strategies (LT-LEDS) and a net-zero target, according to a report by Bain & Co. and Standard Chartered.\nIn the Southeast Asia\u2019s Green Economy Report 2026, the Philippines was assessed to beg unlikely on track to deliver its national climate targets, in the absence of LT-LEDS, which are voluntary plans created by signatories to the Paris Agreement to transition to net-zero.\nNet zero refers to the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions to as close as zero while also offsetting any remaining greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.\n\u201cPublish LT-LEDS with a net-zero target to unlock DFI (development finance institutions) and institutional capital currently flowing to peers with clearer long-term frameworks,\u201d the report concluded.\nBain & Co. and Standard Chartered also noted that the Philippine green capital expenditure in 2025 was only 40-45% of the required green investment to meet its 2030 decarbonization targets.\nTo better integrate renewable energy and support the growing needs of high-energy industries like data centers, the Luzon inter-island transmission and distribution backbone should be the focus, as this is where renewable energy integration constraints are most in need of investment.\nMeanwhile, the report found that the Philippines shows promise in fiscal and regulatory incentives by having value-added tax zero rating for renewable energy projects and reduced import tariffs for electric vehicles.\nThe Philippines should promote fleet electrification to support demand for electric vehicles (EVs) and encourage investment in assembly operations, according to the report.\nBain & Co. and Standard Chartered said Southeast Asia stands to deliver approximately $540 billion in green investment through 2030, but a little over half could be realized due to system bottlenecks.\n\u201cRealizing the full potential of green capital deployment in Southeast Asia hinges on the development of a robust power grid, but grid investment has lagged demand growth,\u201d they said.\nFurther investments in power, grid, and EV capex could unlock an additional $80 billion by 2030, a 25% increase over projections.\n\u201cThe opportunity for Southeast Asia\u2019s green economy is substantial, but capturing it requires synchronizing policy, infrastructure and finance at speed,\u201d according to Chow Wan Thonh, head of Coverage, Singapore and ASEAN for Standard Chartered. \u2014 Sheldeen Joy Talavera", "date_published": "2026-05-19T21:22:52+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-19T21:22:52+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/Nabas-Wind-Power-Project.jpg", "tags": [ "Sheldeen Joy Talavera", "Economy", "Editors' Picks", "One News" ] }, { "id": "/?p=750753", "url": "/economy/2026/05/19/750753/dotr-obtains-p3-6b-in-financing-to-settle-obligations-to-lrmc/", "title": "DoTr obtains P3.6B in financing to settle obligations to LRMC", "content_html": "THE Department of Transportation (DoTr) said it has been approved for a P3.6-billion facility by the Land Bank of the Philippines (LANDBANK) to help settle its obligations with Light Rail Manila Corp. (LRMC), the operator of Light Rail Transit Line 1 (LRT-1).
\n\u201cWe hope that as we settle our obligation with the private concessionaire, we will see more improvements in their services, including structural upgrades, digitalization, and the reliability of the rail line,\u201d Acting Transportation Secretary Giovanni Z. Lopez said in a statement on Tuesday.
\nMr. Lopez said the credit line agreement with LANDBANK will enable the DoTr to fulfill its financial obligations with the LRMC to ensure continued services.
\nIn February, the Light Rail Transit Authority (LRTA) said it is processing a loan with LANDBANK to settle the government\u2019s P4-billion obligation to the LRMC.
\nThe government, through the LRTA, has already paid P926 million to LRMC, the LRTA has said.
\nOf the more than P900 million already paid, about P499 million went to structural rehabilitation, P409 million to light rail vehicle (LRV) shortfall payments, and about P22 million for right-of-way acquisition settlements.
\nThe LRTA has said that of the P4 billion claimed by LRMC, about P3 billion was the result of delays in the approval of fare adjustments.
\nMetro Pacific Investments Corp. (MPIC) has announced plans to divest from LRMC due to mounting losses, which were mainly attributed to the government\u2019s delayed payments.
\nLRMC assumed operations and maintenance of LRT-1 in September 2015 under a P65 billion, 32-year concession agreement with the LRTA and DoTr.
\nUnder the agreement, the operator may seek a fare adjustment every two years. In April 2025, the DoTr approved LRMC\u2019s petition for fare adjustments, though the new fare matrix remains below the company\u2019s requested rates, resulting in a deficit of P2.17 billion.
\nMPIC holds a 35.8% stake in LRMC through its unit, Metro Pacific Light Rail Corp., while Sumitomo Corp. owns 19.2% and Macquarie Investments Holdings (Philippines) Pte. Ltd.10%. LRMC is a joint venture company of MPIC, AC Infrastructure Holdings Corp. (a unit of Ayala Corp.), Sumitomo, and Macquarie Investments Holdings. \u2014 Ashley Erika O. Jose
\n", "content_text": "THE Department of Transportation (DoTr) said it has been approved for a P3.6-billion facility by the Land Bank of the Philippines (LANDBANK) to help settle its obligations with Light Rail Manila Corp. (LRMC), the operator of Light Rail Transit Line 1 (LRT-1).\n\u201cWe hope that as we settle our obligation with the private concessionaire, we will see more improvements in their services, including structural upgrades, digitalization, and the reliability of the rail line,\u201d Acting Transportation Secretary Giovanni Z. Lopez said in a statement on Tuesday.\nMr. Lopez said the credit line agreement with LANDBANK will enable the DoTr to fulfill its financial obligations with the LRMC to ensure continued services.\nIn February, the Light Rail Transit Authority (LRTA) said it is processing a loan with LANDBANK to settle the government\u2019s P4-billion obligation to the LRMC.\nThe government, through the LRTA, has already paid P926 million to LRMC, the LRTA has said.\nOf the more than P900 million already paid, about P499 million went to structural rehabilitation, P409 million to light rail vehicle (LRV) shortfall payments, and about P22 million for right-of-way acquisition settlements.\nThe LRTA has said that of the P4 billion claimed by LRMC, about P3 billion was the result of delays in the approval of fare adjustments.\nMetro Pacific Investments Corp. (MPIC) has announced plans to divest from LRMC due to mounting losses, which were mainly attributed to the government\u2019s delayed payments.\nLRMC assumed operations and maintenance of LRT-1 in September 2015 under a P65 billion, 32-year concession agreement with the LRTA and DoTr.\nUnder the agreement, the operator may seek a fare adjustment every two years. In April 2025, the DoTr approved LRMC\u2019s petition for fare adjustments, though the new fare matrix remains below the company\u2019s requested rates, resulting in a deficit of P2.17 billion.\nMPIC holds a 35.8% stake in LRMC through its unit, Metro Pacific Light Rail Corp., while Sumitomo Corp. owns 19.2% and Macquarie Investments Holdings (Philippines) Pte. Ltd.10%. LRMC is a joint venture company of MPIC, AC Infrastructure Holdings Corp. (a unit of Ayala Corp.), Sumitomo, and Macquarie Investments Holdings. \u2014 Ashley Erika O. Jose", "date_published": "2026-05-19T21:22:13+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-19T21:22:13+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/LRT-1.jpg", "tags": [ "Ashley Erika O. Jose", "Economy", "One News" ] }, { "id": "/?p=750752", "url": "/economy/2026/05/19/750752/yellow-alert-raised-over-visayas-grid-once-more/", "title": "Yellow alert raised over Visayas grid once more", "content_html": "THE Visayas grid was placed on yellow alert once again with the supply margin remaining narrow due to the unavailability of several power plants in the face of high electricity demand.
\nIn an advisory on Tuesday, the National Grid Corp. of the Philippines placed the Visayas grid under yellow alert between 3 p.m. and 9 p.m. that day.
\nA yellow alert is issued whenever power reserves are insufficient to meet the transmission grid\u2019s contingency requirement.
\nAvailable capacity stood at 2,691 megawatts (MW) against the peak demand of 2,594 MW.
\nA total of 846.3 MW was not available to the grid as 21 power plants remained offline and 10 plants running derated.
\nThe Department of Energy (DoE) is expecting more grid alerts to be issued in the second half of 2026 with El Ni\u00f1o setting in next month and likely to persist until early next year.
\nThe DoE said it is projecting at least one yellow alert in Luzon, along with seven in the Visayas and six in Mindanao. The Visayas grid is expected to experience six red alerts. \u2014 Sheldeen Joy Talavera
\n", "content_text": "THE Visayas grid was placed on yellow alert once again with the supply margin remaining narrow due to the unavailability of several power plants in the face of high electricity demand.\nIn an advisory on Tuesday, the National Grid Corp. of the Philippines placed the Visayas grid under yellow alert between 3 p.m. and 9 p.m. that day.\nA yellow alert is issued whenever power reserves are insufficient to meet the transmission grid\u2019s contingency requirement.\nAvailable capacity stood at 2,691 megawatts (MW) against the peak demand of 2,594 MW.\nA total of 846.3 MW was not available to the grid as 21 power plants remained offline and 10 plants running derated.\nThe Department of Energy (DoE) is expecting more grid alerts to be issued in the second half of 2026 with El Ni\u00f1o setting in next month and likely to persist until early next year.\nThe DoE said it is projecting at least one yellow alert in Luzon, along with seven in the Visayas and six in Mindanao. The Visayas grid is expected to experience six red alerts. \u2014 Sheldeen Joy Talavera", "date_published": "2026-05-19T21:21:31+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-19T21:21:31+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/power-grid-pylon.jpg", "tags": [ "Sheldeen Joy Talavera", "Economy" ] }, { "id": "/?p=750750", "url": "/economy/2026/05/19/750750/guidance-to-lgus-pursuing-ppp-projects-due-in-2nd-half/", "title": "Guidance to LGUs pursuing PPP projects due in 2nd half", "content_html": "\n
THE Public-Private Partnership (PPP) Center is set to release a joint memorandum circular (JMC) in the second half to guide local government units (LGUs) seeking to tap PPPs for development projects.
\nIn a statement, the PPP Center said it is working with the Department of the Interior and Local Government on the JMC, which will serve as a PPP implementation guide for LGUs, particularly for projects involving healthcare.
\n\u201cThe JMC is targeted to be issued in the early second semester of 2026,\u201d the center said.
\nThe PPP Center is also drafting guidelines for health PPPs to support the initiatives of the Department of Health.
\nPPP Center Undersecretary and Executive Director Rizza Blanco-Latorre said the PPP Code streamlined the processing of PPP projects for LGUs, with each Sanggunian now empowered with project approval regardless of project cost.
\nAs of May 15, 15 health PPP projects are in the pipeline worth P26.05 billion.
\nOverall, the PPP pipeline consists of 251 projects valued at P3.13 trillion. Of the total, 167 projects will be implemented by the National Government, while 64 projects will be overseen by LGUs.
\nSolicited projects numbered 195, while 56 were unsolicited proposals.
\nThe railway sector accounted for P1.97 trillion of the project pipeline, followed by land transport (P277.26 billion) and property development (P221.46 billion). \u2014 Justine Irish D. Tabile
\n", "content_text": "THE Public-Private Partnership (PPP) Center is set to release a joint memorandum circular (JMC) in the second half to guide local government units (LGUs) seeking to tap PPPs for development projects.\nIn a statement, the PPP Center said it is working with the Department of the Interior and Local Government on the JMC, which will serve as a PPP implementation guide for LGUs, particularly for projects involving healthcare.\n\u201cThe JMC is targeted to be issued in the early second semester of 2026,\u201d the center said.\nThe PPP Center is also drafting guidelines for health PPPs to support the initiatives of the Department of Health.\nPPP Center Undersecretary and Executive Director Rizza Blanco-Latorre said the PPP Code streamlined the processing of PPP projects for LGUs, with each Sanggunian now empowered with project approval regardless of project cost.\nAs of May 15, 15 health PPP projects are in the pipeline worth P26.05 billion.\nOverall, the PPP pipeline consists of 251 projects valued at P3.13 trillion. Of the total, 167 projects will be implemented by the National Government, while 64 projects will be overseen by LGUs.\nSolicited projects numbered 195, while 56 were unsolicited proposals.\nThe railway sector accounted for P1.97 trillion of the project pipeline, followed by land transport (P277.26 billion) and property development (P221.46 billion). \u2014 Justine Irish D. Tabile", "date_published": "2026-05-19T21:21:15+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-19T21:21:15+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/PPP-center-e1667213478466.jpg", "tags": [ "Justine Irish D. Tabile", "Economy" ] }, { "id": "/?p=750749", "url": "/economy/2026/05/19/750749/p50-imported-rice-price-cap-deemed-fair-domestic-rice-srp-to-be-set-at-p53-per-kilo/", "title": "P50 imported rice price cap deemed fair, domestic rice SRP to be set at P53 per kilo", "content_html": "THE Department of Agriculture (DA) called the P50 per kilo price ceiling on imported rice fair for all participants in the supply chain, while announcing plans to establish a P53 per kilogram suggested retail price (SRP) for domestically grown rice.
\nAgriculture Secretary Francisco P. Tiu Laurel, Jr. said on Tuesday that the cap on the 5% broken variety of imported rice \u2014 imposed by President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. for 30 days starting May 14 \u2014 assumed a landed cost of P37 to P38 per kilo, leaving a margin sufficient to cover logistics, shrinkage, and markups.
\n\u201cThere is still a workable margin across the value chain,\u201d Mr. Laurel said after inspecting rice prices at Paco Public Market. \u201cWe are ensuring that consumers get affordable rice while traders and retailers remain viable. The goal is balance, not disruption.\u201d
\n\u201cFor the entire value chain \u2014 from importer to trader to retailer \u2014 the markup should only be around P10. If landed cost is P38, retail should be about P48,\u201d he said.
\n\u201cNo one should be profiteering, especially during this period,\u201d Mr. Laurel added.
\nFull enforcement of the price cap will begin next week, giving retailers and consumers time to adjust. DA field teams will monitor markets nationwide and distribute implementation guidelines with contact details for stakeholder concerns.
\nMeanwhile, Mr. Laurel said the DA has reached a consensus with the rice industry to set a suggested retail price of P53 per kilo for domestic rice, positioning it slightly above the imported rice ceiling.
\nThe SRP \u201cis just a guide for consumers on fair local rice prices,\u201d he said, adding that market participants remain free to sell for less. \u201cI\u2019ve consulted rice millers and industry groups, and P53 per kilo is acceptable.\u201d
\nA DA memorandum detailing price guidance for domestic rice will be issued shortly. \u2014 Pierce Oel A. Montalvo
\n", "content_text": "THE Department of Agriculture (DA) called the P50 per kilo price ceiling on imported rice fair for all participants in the supply chain, while announcing plans to establish a P53 per kilogram suggested retail price (SRP) for domestically grown rice.\nAgriculture Secretary Francisco P. Tiu Laurel, Jr. said on Tuesday that the cap on the 5% broken variety of imported rice \u2014 imposed by President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. for 30 days starting May 14 \u2014 assumed a landed cost of P37 to P38 per kilo, leaving a margin sufficient to cover logistics, shrinkage, and markups.\n\u201cThere is still a workable margin across the value chain,\u201d Mr. Laurel said after inspecting rice prices at Paco Public Market. \u201cWe are ensuring that consumers get affordable rice while traders and retailers remain viable. The goal is balance, not disruption.\u201d\n\u201cFor the entire value chain \u2014 from importer to trader to retailer \u2014 the markup should only be around P10. If landed cost is P38, retail should be about P48,\u201d he said.\n\u201cNo one should be profiteering, especially during this period,\u201d Mr. Laurel added.\nFull enforcement of the price cap will begin next week, giving retailers and consumers time to adjust. DA field teams will monitor markets nationwide and distribute implementation guidelines with contact details for stakeholder concerns.\nMeanwhile, Mr. Laurel said the DA has reached a consensus with the rice industry to set a suggested retail price of P53 per kilo for domestic rice, positioning it slightly above the imported rice ceiling.\nThe SRP \u201cis just a guide for consumers on fair local rice prices,\u201d he said, adding that market participants remain free to sell for less. \u201cI\u2019ve consulted rice millers and industry groups, and P53 per kilo is acceptable.\u201d\nA DA memorandum detailing price guidance for domestic rice will be issued shortly. \u2014 Pierce Oel A. Montalvo", "date_published": "2026-05-19T21:21:03+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-19T21:21:03+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/rice-workers.jpg", "tags": [ "Pierce Oel A. Montalvo", "Economy" ] }, { "id": "/?p=750828", "url": "/economy/2026/05/19/750828/dairy-industry-expected-to-hit-5-sufficiency-rate-by-2028/", "title": "Dairy industry expected to hit 5% sufficiency rate by 2028", "content_html": "THE dairy industry expects to meet its 5% liquid milk self-sufficiency target by 2028, backed by expanded funding and foreign partnerships, the National Dairy Authority (NDA) said on Monday.
\nMilk production rose to 43 million liters in 2025 \u2014 equivalent to a 2.2% self-sufficiency rate, NDA Administrator Marcus Antonius T. Andaya said at a European Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines meeting at the Makati Shangri-La.
\nMr. Andaya noted that Republic Act 12308 (the Animal Industry Development and Competitiveness Act) will support growth in the industry. The NDA will receive P1.5 billion annually over the next decade from the Animal Competitiveness and Enhancement Fund (ACEF).
\nFor three decades, the Philippines produced only 1% of its total dairy requirements, with 99% imported, making the country one of the most import-dependent dairy markets in the region, Mr. Andaya said.
\nThe administrator said the agency is targeting 53 million liters of production in 2026, equivalent to a 3.3% self-sufficiency rate.
\n\u201cThese numbers tell us two things: First, our domestic dairy industry remains underdeveloped. Second, the room for growth is enormous. The challenge is significant, but so is the opportunity,\u201d Mr. Andaya said.
\nThe NDA\u2019s 2026 budget increased to P2.37 billion from P500 million in 2025, with P1.8 billion earmarked for the Department of Education milk-feeding program.
\nFor 2027, the NDA is proposing a General Appropriations Act allocation of up to P1 billion, not including the P1.5 billion from the ACEF. \u201cThe NDA will have so much money that we have to spend,\u201d Mr. Andaya told reporters at the sidelines of the event.
\nHe cited plans to import about 800 Holstein-Jersey cattle from Australia in August, with another 800 animals expected around October.
\nMr. Andaya added that the NDA is \u201cvery optimistic\u201d about hitting the 53 million-liter target once the cattle arrive.
\nIt currently operates four stock farms, with a fifth in Bukidnon set to become operational this year. Three additional 50-hectare facilities are planned for Sorsogon, Baguio, and Negros, each requiring approximately P50 million.
\nDespite the heavy reliance on imports, the Iran conflict has unexpectedly boosted demand for domestically produced fresh milk. Suppliers for the milk-feeding program now prefer local milk over imported powdered milk, after prices for the latter rose due to the war, Mr. Andaya said.
\n\u201cBefore, they wanted more powdered milk. But prices went up,\u201d Mr. Andaya said. \u201cNow they prefer less powdered milk, and more local.\u201d
\nCattle import costs have also risen to approximately P220,000 per head, though Mr. Andaya said aggressive institutional support and feed provisions should keep production targets on track even with increased costs.
\nThe NDA is also working with international partners, with the French development agency conducting a feasibility study expected to conclude in March for technology transfer at the Ubay, Bohol stock farm, while the Czech Republic has offered grant funding for farmer training. \u2014 Pierce Oel A. Montalvo
\n", "content_text": "THE dairy industry expects to meet its 5% liquid milk self-sufficiency target by 2028, backed by expanded funding and foreign partnerships, the National Dairy Authority (NDA) said on Monday.\nMilk production rose to 43 million liters in 2025 \u2014 equivalent to a 2.2% self-sufficiency rate, NDA Administrator Marcus Antonius T. Andaya said at a European Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines meeting at the Makati Shangri-La.\nMr. Andaya noted that Republic Act 12308 (the Animal Industry Development and Competitiveness Act) will support growth in the industry. The NDA will receive P1.5 billion annually over the next decade from the Animal Competitiveness and Enhancement Fund (ACEF).\nFor three decades, the Philippines produced only 1% of its total dairy requirements, with 99% imported, making the country one of the most import-dependent dairy markets in the region, Mr. Andaya said.\nThe administrator said the agency is targeting 53 million liters of production in 2026, equivalent to a 3.3% self-sufficiency rate.\n\u201cThese numbers tell us two things: First, our domestic dairy industry remains underdeveloped. Second, the room for growth is enormous. The challenge is significant, but so is the opportunity,\u201d Mr. Andaya said.\nThe NDA\u2019s 2026 budget increased to P2.37 billion from P500 million in 2025, with P1.8 billion earmarked for the Department of Education milk-feeding program.\nFor 2027, the NDA is proposing a General Appropriations Act allocation of up to P1 billion, not including the P1.5 billion from the ACEF. \u201cThe NDA will have so much money that we have to spend,\u201d Mr. Andaya told reporters at the sidelines of the event.\nHe cited plans to import about 800 Holstein-Jersey cattle from Australia in August, with another 800 animals expected around October.\nMr. Andaya added that the NDA is \u201cvery optimistic\u201d about hitting the 53 million-liter target once the cattle arrive.\nIt currently operates four stock farms, with a fifth in Bukidnon set to become operational this year. Three additional 50-hectare facilities are planned for Sorsogon, Baguio, and Negros, each requiring approximately P50 million.\nDespite the heavy reliance on imports, the Iran conflict has unexpectedly boosted demand for domestically produced fresh milk. Suppliers for the milk-feeding program now prefer local milk over imported powdered milk, after prices for the latter rose due to the war, Mr. Andaya said.\n\u201cBefore, they wanted more powdered milk. But prices went up,\u201d Mr. Andaya said. \u201cNow they prefer less powdered milk, and more local.\u201d\nCattle import costs have also risen to approximately P220,000 per head, though Mr. Andaya said aggressive institutional support and feed provisions should keep production targets on track even with increased costs.\nThe NDA is also working with international partners, with the French development agency conducting a feasibility study expected to conclude in March for technology transfer at the Ubay, Bohol stock farm, while the Czech Republic has offered grant funding for farmer training. \u2014 Pierce Oel A. Montalvo", "date_published": "2026-05-19T21:20:33+08:00", "date_modified": "2026-05-19T21:20:33+08:00", "authors": [ { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" } ], "author": { "name": "大象传媒", "url": "/author/cedadiantityclea/", "avatar": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc38d2668fdee8f1e2b22df5e72ae6f4ad265ab7814de4aa60060edd377a70ce?s=512&d=mm&r=g" }, "image": "/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Dairy-farm-Cows.jpg", "tags": [ "Pierce Oel A. Montalvo", "Economy" ] } ] }