Filipino ASEAN exec: MSMEs to benefit from RCEP agreement

Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) deputy secretary general Anna Reboniol said micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) will benefit from the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) agreement, particularly with government support. “That is one of the objectives of the RCEP, to help the MSME to go into the mainstream of regional trade, let them play or perhaps help them by developing them to nurture their industries and have a bigger role in the supply chain,’ Reboniol said in an interview with the Philippine News Agency on the sidelines of the 2023 RCEP Local Governments and Friendship Cities Cooperation Forum here on June 10. “The supply chain, the production networks are controlled by big companies, the multinational companies if they can go to the MSMEs as supporting industries, then that would also be good,” the Filipino ASEAN official added. According to the ASEAN website, there are 70 million MSMEs in the region’s member countries of Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. Reboniol said MSMEs account for more than 90 percent of the businesses in the Philippines and helping them become exporters will further boost the economies in the region. She urged ASEAN member states to invite their MSMEs to utilize the RCEP agreement and get benefits from it. She said the Philippines’ Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) has done public awareness to strengthen the MSME sector. “I am not sure what level of information dissemination the DTI has done but a lot is being done. I know the department gives priority to the MSMEs and is doing efforts to reach them,” she said. To encourage more MSME participation, she said the provisions of the RCEP agreement should be simplified to make sure it is easily understood by ordinary business people. Reboniol said capacity-building can also help boost the MSMEs by holding training about RCEP agreements in countries with a high number of MSMEs. “If they know, they can export and the government can do trade facilitation and skip the layers of bureaucratic processes apart from the use of digital systems in the customs that are fitted to them,” she said. She said it was the Philippines that pushed for the inclusion of MSMEs in the RCEP. ‘When I joined the negotiation as chief negotiator for the Philippines, MSMEs was actually out of the negotiating table but we managed to put that in,” Reboniol said. She also said a market access clause has been added to the agreement to protect the farmers. “We did not give to the RCEP our sensitive agricultural products like rice, sugar, highland vegetables, and meat so there shouldn’t be entry to the Philippines, except if it is us who asked that we get it,” she added. Laoag City Mayor Michael Marcos Keon also attended the forum, saying RCEP is good for the Philippines’ economy. “It is good that we participate economically with the RCEP. As ASEAN members, it makes it easy for us to access goods from all these countries and at a cheaper level, and it is good for the economy,’ he said. The RCEP entered into force in the Philippines on June 2, over two years since participating countries concluded the free trade deal in November 2020. Aside from ASEAN, other RCEP signatories include China, South Korea, New Zealand, Australia and Japan. In his virtual message, ASEAN Secretary-General Kao Kin Hourn also encouraged member countries to intensify efforts to increase RCEP participation. “Intensify effort for the private sector, private companies, and the MSMEs in your countries to take part in the agreement and utilize the benefits of the RCEP agreement,’ Kao said. He advised signatory countries to further harmonize rules to lower the transaction cost.

Source: Philippines News Agency

DPWH: Quick response ready in case Mayon alert level raised

The Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) assured on Wednesday its quick response teams and assets are ready should the alert level in Mayon Volcano be raised. The DPWH made the remark following the report of the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (Phivolcs), indicating an increase in volcanic activity in Albay in the past 24 hours. In a statement, DPWH Secretary Manuel Bonoan said the department has been preparing for quick response strategies amid the continued unrest of the Mayon volcano. “The DPWH Disaster and Incident Management Teams of Regional and nearby District Engineering Offices have been activated, while Quick Response Assets composed of 340 individuals with 30 equipment were prepositioned for any eventuality,” he said. Besides these assets, the DPWH also intends to ensure that relief aid and other assistance from various government agencies and sectors shall reach the Bicol region with ease. “As with all emergencies and calamities, DPWH quick response teams shall monitor the status of national roads and bridges and ensure access of roads for unhampered delivery of goods and services as well as response operations,” the DPWH said. The DPWH-Bicol Region has also identified alternative routes should the roads be closed or declared impassable. These include the Ligao-Tabaco Road as an alternative to Legazpi-Sto. Domingo-Tabaco Road; and Camalig-Comun-Gapo-Peñafrancia Road should the Camalig Section of Daang Maharlika be closed. As of Wednesday, seven volcanic earthquakes have been recorded in Mayon Volcano, with 309 rockfall events. This is much higher than Tuesday’s record logged with only a single volcanic earthquake and 221 rockfall events.

Source: Philippines News Agency

PSEi slips, peso almost flat after US inflation slowdown

The further slowdown of the United States’ inflation in May made investors turn to the US anew, resulting in the negative close of most counters in the local bourse but the peso barely moved against the greenback. The Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) shed 1.12 percent, or 73.2 points, to 6,434.06 points. All Shares followed with a decline of 0.87 percent, or 30.21 points, to 3,437.04 points. Most of the sectoral gauges also ended the day down, led by Services after it slipped by 2.04 percent. Trailing behind were Property, 1.59 percent; Holding Firms, 1.27 percent; Mining and Oil, 1.13 percent; and Financials, 0.55 percent. Only the Industrial index managed to end with gains although minimal at 0.003 percent. Volume reached 1.16 billion shares amounting to PHP11.45 billion. Decliners led advancers at 118 to 72 while 41 shares were unchanged. ‘Investors pulled back into the US, as the latest inflation data showed that price pressures continued to slow down in May, fueling optimism that the Fed (Federal Reserve) may skip a rate hike in upcoming policy-setting meeting,’ said Luis Limlingan, Regina Capital Development Corp. head of sales. The US inflation rate posted its slowest since March 2021 when it decelerated to 4 percent on an annual basis in the fifth month this year compared to 4.9 percent in April. On a month-on-month basis, the rate of price increases jumped by 0.1 percent, slower than the 0.4 percent rise in the previous month. ‘Following the report, traders increased their bets that the Fed will keep rates unchanged on Wednesday after hiking at 10 consecutive meetings,’ Limlingan said, referring to the June 13-14 meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee. Meanwhile, oil prices went up by 3 percent to USD74.06 per barrel for Brent crude and by 3.1 percent to USD69.19 per barrel for the West Texas Intermediate (WTI), ‘recovering from steep losses the previous session after China’s central bank lowered a short-term lending rate for the first time in 10 months.’ Meanwhile, the local currency ended the day at 55.94 from 55.95 on Tuesday. It opened the day at 55.88, better than its 56.09 start in the previous session and traded between 56.015 and 55.88, resulting in an average of 55.97. Volume increased to USD881.9 million from the previous session’s USD834.75 million. Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. chief economist Michael Ricafort said the peso was little changed ahead of the announcement of the Federal Reserve decision. He said the slowdown in US inflation rate gives the Fed ‘room to take a pause from interest rate hikes later today.’ For Thursday, Ricafort forecast the peso to trade between the 55.85 and 55.95 levels against the US dollar.

Source: Philippines News Agency