OFW Filipino Heroes

Friday, October 26, 2012

Philippines Needs to Boost Sin Tax to Win Investment Ratings Upgrade

Kim Henares - Philippines tax commissioner.


The Philippines must pass a law increasing the excise levy on liquor and tobacco, or sin tax, to meet its goal of winning an investment-grade rating in four years, Tax Commissioner Kim Henares said.

 

"This is one of two measures that the three major rating agencies have identified as important," Henares said in an interview in Bloomberg's Manila office yesterday. "We want to correct a defective system that will increase our revenue and use the funds for health care. Once passed, we think the measure will trigger rating upgrades and positive outlook."

 

Standard & Poor's raised the nation's credit rating twice in the past two years, bringing it to one level below investment grade in July, citing a reduced debt burden and improved public finances. The bill that seeks to boost annual collections by at least 60.6 billion pesos ($1.46 billion) and introduce an inflation-adjustment mechanism will test the resolve of President Benigno Aquino, a smoker himself, to battle some of the country's biggest companies.

 

"One of the key ratings constraints of the Philippines is the low revenue mobilization relative to peers," Christian de Guzman, a Singapore-based assistant vice president at Moody's Investors Service, said by e-mail. "It would be an indication that the Aquino administration can leverage its high approval ratings and political capital into meaningful progress on legislative reforms."

 

Shares Rise

 

The Philippines' benchmark stock index, which has risen 24 percent this year, rose 0.1 percent at the close in Manila. The yield on the benchmark three-year bonds fell the most in a month, dropping by 7 basis points to 3.97 percent, its lowest level in more than two weeks, according to midday fixing prices at Philippine Dealing & Exchange Corp. The peso rose 0.4 percent to 41.208 per dollar.

 

When he was elected to office two years ago, Aquino pledged to fight corruption and tackle an entrenched culture of tax evasion that's contributed to the budget deficit and hampered growth as neighbors prospered. Aquino, with the highest approval rating for a president since actor Joseph Estrada in 1999, also received rating upgrades by Fitch Ratings and Moody's.

 

The tiered excise sin tax rates were approved in 1996 based on cigarette and beer costs at the time, and weren't raised until an amendment in 2004 that called for increases every two years, according to Henares.

 

The government collected about 26 billion pesos in excise taxes from tobacco last year. It wants to boost revenue from smokers by 30 billion pesos in the first year, intending to collect the rest from alcohol drinkers.

 

'Moderate Smoking?'

 

"Between the two, we think smoking is more hazardous to health," Henares said, explaining the focus on tobacco. "Have you ever heard of moderate smoking?"

 

Seven of the 10 leading causes of death in the Philippines, where 28 percent of people aged 15 and older smoke, are diseases related to tobacco consumption, according to data from the Department of Health.

 

The Philippines has the fourth-lowest price per pack of cigarettes worldwide, according to the World Health Organization, and has one of the lowest excise tax rates, Henares said. A Marlboro pack of 20 cigarettes sells for 40 pesos, about a 10th of its cost in Singapore.

 

The low price has encouraged usage, placing the nation at the top in the region for per-capita consumption, based on government data. Smoking costs the economy about 188 billion pesos, including expenses related to health care, productivity losses and premature death, according to government estimates.

 

The Bloomberg Initiative provided a $255,626 grant to an advocacy that seeks to reform and increase tobacco taxes in the Philippines, according to its website. The grant ends in April 2013. The program was started by Michael Bloomberg, the founder and majority owner of Bloomberg News parent Bloomberg LP.

 

Fiscal Boost

 

The tobacco and liquor levy and the rationalization of tax incentives can increase fiscal revenue as a percentage of gross domestic product to at least 16 percent from about 15 percent now, Henares said.

 

The tax bill "could broaden the fiscal revenue base, and potentially increase fiscal space for the government to increase capital expenditures, public investment and other discretionary spending items such as health and education," Philip McNicholas, Fitch's Hong Kong-based director of Asia Pacific Sovereigns, said in an e-mail. "This could lead to a higher investment rate for the economy as a whole and potentially higher-trend GDP growth."

 

Corporate Opposition

 

San Miguel Corp. (SMC), the nation's largest company, has about 90 percent of the beer market. Eduardo Cojuangco, Aquino's uncle, is the chairman of San Miguel. Philip Morris Philippines Manufacturing Inc. and Fortune Tobacco Corp., controlled by billionaire Lucio Tan, formed a venture in 2010 that was projected to control 90 percent of the market.

 

"We support the president's reform agenda," Michael Tan, son of the billionaire, said in an interview today. "What we don't want is to have an increase that is so huge that it will disrupt what's working. We are for a reasonable and moderate increase."

 

In March, the companies opposed the 60 billion-peso sin tax proposal. The Philippine Tobacco Institute, in a paid ad, said the measure will increase the tax on low-cost brands by more than 1,000 percent. San Miguel and rival Asia Brewery Inc., also controlled by billionaire Tan, said in a separate ad that month that a 140 percent increase in the tax on economy beer brands will hurt sales and put 8,000 jobs at risk.

 

Additional revenue from the bill approved by the House of Representatives in June was cut to 31.4 billion pesos, almost half the Department of Finance target, according to a government presentation. The Senate ways and means committee under Senator Ralph Recto endorsed a version this month that cut the revenue goal to 15 billion pesos, according to his sponsorship speech.

 

Competing Interests

 

Recto quit as head of the committee on Oct. 15 and withdrew the measure. A group called Action for Economic Reforms called on the senator to resign and in an Oct. 12 statement said "civil society groups describe the ways and means committee report as Philip Recto or Recto Morris report."

 

"In any taxation exercise, you are always caught in a vise-grip of competing interests," Recto said in a speech the day he resigned. "If you try to seek the middle, chances are you will be crushed in between."

 

The Senate will resume discussions on the bill in early November and the country has enough time to pass the law by December, Henares said. What's acceptable to the government is no less than 40 billion pesos in incremental revenue and the defects must be addressed, she said.

 

Face Delay

 

"We will face delay in getting the upgrades that may already be in the pipeline if we don't pass it in a credible form this Congress," the tax commissioner said. "Think also of the poorest of the poor who will benefit from health services that we can provide from the sin tax revenue."

 

The Bureau of Internal Revenue, which collects more than 60 percent of the government's annual earnings, will "without a problem" collect a record 1 trillion pesos in taxes this year, Henares said. She declined to say if the agency's 1.066 trillion-peso target will be met. Revenue in the first nine months of the year rose 13 percent to 772.5 billion pesos from a year earlier.


Bloomberg 

Taiwanese envoy said: Taiwan-Philippines ties closer than ever

Manila, Oct. 26 (CNA) The links between Taiwan and the Philippines are closer now than at any time in the past, according to Taiwan's representative to the Southeast Asian country Raymond Wang.

 

Bilateral ties between the two countries have grown closer because of increasing interaction on economic, trade and labor affairs, as well as humanitarian relief efforts, Wang said Thursday in a newspaper interview that will be published in mid-November in the Philippines.

 

Taiwan is now the Philippines' eighth largest trading partner and its seventh biggest foreign investor, he told the English-language Business Mirror.

 

Wang said trade between Taiwan and the Philippines totaled US$10 billion last year, and that exchange visits by trade and economic officials and business delegations have become more frequent over the past years, according to his office.

 

The two countries have also maintained close relations in the labor and tourism sectors, he said.

 

He noted that there are about 100,000 Filipinos working in Taiwan and that their remittances to the Philippines total some US$650 million per year.

 

Taiwan is the Philippines' fifth largest source of tourism, he added, citing data that showed there were 180,000 Taiwanese tourist arrivals to the Philippines in 2011.

 

Moreover, Taiwan has always been quick to provide medical aid and donations to people in need in cases of natural disasters in the Philippines, the envoy said.

 

Currently, Taiwan is actively pursuing agreements with the Philippines on economic cooperation, mutual legal assistance and cooperation in fighting cross-border crimes, he noted.

 

In addition, Taiwan is pushing for the Philippines to grant.

 

The Central News Agency

Philippine Geothermal Power: second largest geothermal power in the world

Philippine geothermal power plant in Negros Oriental

 

Among the renewable energy industries in the Philippines, geothermal energy is the one able to keep on expanding. What's more, it ranks second among other providers of geothermal power in the world.

 

Along with the sector's development is the continuing support of New Zealand's Institute of Geothermal and Nuclear Sciences (GNS Science), which evaluates current systems and progresses and recommends steps for improvement.

 

In fact, the Energy Development Corporation (EDC), a Philippine geothermal company and one of the largest in the world, was able to save $2.48 million in operating costs with the GNS Science's previous evaluation and recommendation.

 

As EDC is currently undergoing an expansion, GNS Science will once again help in developing Philippine's geothermal energy industry as recently signed in an agreement during the two-day state visit in New Zealand of Philippine President Benigno Aquino, Jr.

 

According to GNS Science, they will be conducting viability reviews of EDC's steam fields for half a year, and the new contract is likely to be a forerunner to further work in the Philippines. They will be working with Filipino specialists to improve geothermal operations at certain fields, according to Richard Tantoco, EDC's chief operating officer.

 

"This will greatly help us in the reservoir management for our existing operating fields and identify and eliminate costs, complexity and risks. Over the next four years we plan to drill 75 new geothermal wells. If production improves by at least 1 MW per well, compared to the average of the last three years, the value it will deliver will be an added $75 million a year in revenues," said Tantoco.

 

While things are going great for geothermal energy in the country, the solar energy industry experiences otherwise. For whatever reasons there may be that hinder solar energy from burgeoning, perhaps political, hopefully, these would be surpassed should the government would also realize its great potential in reducing electrical costs and finally support solar energy projects as they would have for geothermal energy.

 

Ultimately, these renewable energy sources must also be accessible to the poor, and solar cell panels have the potential to achieve this goal.

 

philSTAR

Thursday, October 25, 2012

European Union offers scholarships for Filipino students for $1,330 -$3,250 allowance

European Union offers scholarships for Filipino students

 

Filipino students will be treated to wide-ranging opportunities for study and travel in Europe at a higher education fair to be held by the European Union's (EU) Delegation to the Philippines next month.

 

Dubbed as "Brighter Prospects," the European Higher Education Fair Manila 2012 will be featuring a total of 22 European higher education institutions at the exhibit. The second in the country, the fair will be open to the public for free from 2:30 pm to 8 pm at the Peninsula Hotel on November 14, 2012.

 

Julian Vassallo, political counselor at the EU Delegation to the Philippines, described the event as a milestone in strengthening the people to people links and relations between the EU and the Philippines, particularly in the area of higher education, which he said was a priority for the EU.

 

"The EU is modern, open, sophisticated and fun and we want to open the doors for Filipino students to enjoy this," Vassallo said in a press briefing held at the Oakwood Center, in Mandaluyong City. Vassallo said that participating European institutions would come from eight EU member states—Austria, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Sweden, Netherlands and the United Kingdom.

 

Vassallo, in explaining the programs for students, noted that while Europe takes pride in its reputation as a home of world-class universities, what they wanted to highlight was the unique cultural experience and dynamic multinational environment that it offered. He said that in Europe, universities were "very much embedded in the towns and villages" and that more than the interesting courses they offered, scholars would experience living with the European local communities and living the European life.

 

Vassallo also noted that prior to the fair proper; an EU-Philippines symposium would also take place. He said the event would solidify partnerships between European and Philippine higher education institutions by providing a venue for stakeholders to discuss how Philippine institutions could facilitate working partnerships within the European higher education framework.

 

Filipino officials from the Commission on Higher Education and the Department of Education would also be invited to discuss the state of play in higher education, the rationale of and status of the current K-to-12 initiative, among others.

 

Erasmus Mundus Scholarship

 

Vassallo noted that this year's fair was particularly significant because it marks 25 years of the EU's Erasmus Mundus Scholarship programme, which he said was one of the most successful European programs in the last 56 years of the EU.

 

He said that apart from the scholarships offered by the individual member-states, which would be present at the fair, the Erasmus Mundus was a major option for Filipino students, academics, and researchers who cannot afford to finance themselves and carry out their study in Europe.

 

He noted that the scholarship covers air travel to Europe, tuition fees, and a monthly living allowance of between 55,000-135,000 depending on the course.

 

"Since 2004, almost 200 Filipino scholars, students, and researchers have enjoyed the benefit of what I could say as rather a generous program of the EU," Vassallo said.

 

Vassallo noted that a particularly "pleasant" aspect of the scholarship was that it allowed students to pursue their studies in two or three European universities and campuses, giving them the chance to have a taste of the different approaches of the European universities.

 

Filipino enjoying the first world

 

Vilma Del Rosario, described by Vassallo as a pride of the Erasmus Mundus programme and was also present at the press briefing, said that three words summarized her experience as an Erasmus Mundus Scholar—learning, sharing, and discovering.

 

Del Rosario, who now works as a project management specialist at the Energy Development Corporation, took up her master's degree in strategic planning management under the Erasmus Mundus Programme. She stayed in Europe from September 2006 to February 2008 and in a span of 16 months, she was able to experience studying in three different European institutions in Italy, Scotland, and Sweden.

 

Del Rosario noted that while she learned much from the critical issues discussed by the institutions, she realized that what she enjoyed the most was her experience of getting out of her comfort zone and learning and appreciating different kinds of people.

 

She said that their batch comprised of 26 individuals from different cultures and educational backgrounds, and she was the only Filipina.

 

"Truly there is joy and challenge in a multicultural mix. For 16 months we shared the pains and pleasures of life in Europe, and engaged each other in heated debates and discussions while coming to respect each other's differences," she said.

 

She also said that more than the perks of studying and traveling, the experience was also about discovering one's self in a dynamic and multicultural setting.

 

"It was a balancing act of appreciating the system and the progress of the first world and experiencing their culture without losing my identity as a Filipino," she said.

 

She said that the great possibilities opened for scholars challenged their choices and decisions, but that she chose to return to the Philippines and use her acquired skills back home.

 

"I now work at a renewable energy company providing reliable energy sources. The knowledge, skills, and competencies I have acquired have helped me now in facilitating the company's journey into continuous improvement in formulating strategies for its implementation," she said.

 

Inquirer Global Nation

Spain invades the Philippines for the 2nd time: 5 pacts signed

Queen Sofia of Spain visited the Philippines to signed 5 agreements with the Philippines


Philippines, Spain ink 5 agreements

 

The Philippines and Spain have signed five agreements aimed at boosting the two countries' relations in sports, culture, and education, the Department of Foreign Affairs announced Thursday.

 

The agreements were the results of the first meeting of the Philippines-Spain Joint Standing Committee (JSC) held in Manila on October 23, the DFA said in a statement.

 

"They welcomed the signing of several agreements pertaining to the promotion of the Spanish language and culture in the Philippines, on the mutual recognition of higher education studies and academic degrees, and on sports cooperation," it said.

 

It noted that among the agreements signed were:

 

Agreement of Collaboration on the Mutual Recognition of Higher Education Studies and Academic Programs between the Commission on Higher Education (CHED) of the Philippines and the Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports of Spain;

 

Memorandum of Understanding for the Improvement and Promotion of Spanish Language and Culture Teaching between the Department of Education (DepEd) and the Spanish Ministry of Education, Culture and Sport, the Cervantes Institute, and the Spanish Agency for International Cooperation for Development; Sports Cooperation Programme between the Philippine Sports Commission and the High Council for Sport of Spain;

 

Agreement of Collaboration between the Technical Education and Skills Development Authority (TESDA) and the Ministry of Education, Culture and Sport of the Kingdom of Spain, the Cervantes Institute, the Spanish Agency for International Cooperation for Development; and

 

Agreement of Collaboration between the Philippine Normal University (PNU) and the Ministry of Education, Culture and Sport of Spain, the Cervantes Institute, the Spanish Agency for International Cooperation for Development for the development of the promotion, teaching and learning of the Spanish language in the Philippines

 

The Philippine delegation was headed by Foreign Affairs Assistant Secretary for European Affairs Elizabeth Buensuceso and other senior officials from the Department of Education , National Commission for Culture and the Arts, Commission on Higher Education, Technical Education and Skills Development Authority, Philippine Normal University, National Museum, National Archives, Philippine Sports Commission, and the Information and Communications Technology Office.

 

The Spanish delegation was led by  Miren Itziar Taboada, director for Cultural and Scientific Relations of the Spanish Agency for International Cooperation and Development of the Spanish Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation.

 

Inquirer Global Nation 

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Philippines is top 10 best place in the world for Women dreaming power and Gender Equality

Philippines is Asia's best in closing gender gaps

 

GENEVA -- (AFP) - Women are closing the gender gap with men in health and education but struggle to get top jobs and salaries, data from a study of 135 countries showed on Wednesday (October 24, 2012).

 

Top 10 Global Gender Equality Ranking

  1. Iceland (1st)
  2. Finland (2nd)
  3. Norway (3rd)
  4. Sweden (4th)
  5. Ireland (5ft)
  6. New Zealand (6th)
  7. Denmark (7th)
  8. Philippines (8th)
  9. Nicaragua (9th)
  10. Switzerland (10th)

 

ASEAN Association of Southeast Asian Nations Rankings

 

  1. the Philippines (8th)
  2. Singapore (55th)
  3. Thailand (65th)
  4. Vietnam (66th)
  5. Brunei Darussalam (75th)
  6. Indonesia (97th)
  7. Malaysia (100th) a
  8. Cambodia (103rd)
  9. Myanmar and Laos are not included in the list.

 

Top 5 Worst Place for Women with Lowest gender Equality Ranking that Stuck at the bottom of the list are

 

  1. Yemen (135th)
  2. Pakistan (134th
  3. Chad (133rd)
  4. Syria (132nd)
  5. Saudi Arabia (131st)

 

"Gaps in senior positions, wages and leadership levels still persist," even in countries that promote equality in education and have a high level of economic integration among women, the World Economic Forum (WEF) said in its annual Global Gender Gap Report.

 

The new figures were released just hours after a European Union initiative to set a 40-percent quota for women on the boards of listed companies stalled because of a lack of support.

 

The report, which covered more than 90 percent of the world's population, looked at how nations distribute resources and opportunities between women and men.

 

It found that the Nordic countries, headed by Iceland, Finland and Norway, had done the best job of closing the gap, while Chad, Pakistan and Yemen had the worst rankings.

 

While almost all countries had made progress in closing the gap in healthcare and education between women and men, only 60 percent of countries had managed to narrow the economic gender gap and only 20 percent had progressed on a political level, the study said.

 

Of the top four global economies, the United States, Japan and Germany all made progress in closing their economic gender gap in 2012.

 

However, they slipped in the overall ranking, which also looks at health, education and politics, with Germany falling two spots to 13th place, the United States sliding five spots to 22nd, and Japan dipping to 101st from 98th last year.

 

China, which took a step backwards when it came to closing the economic gender gap, also fell in the overall ranking to 69th place from 66th last year.

 

Greece, which ranked 82nd, registered one of the biggest falls since 2011, when it ranked 56th -- largely owing to a change in the percentage of women holding ministerial positions, from 31 percent in 2011 to only six percent in 2012.

 

Countries such as Nicaragua (9) and Luxembourg (17) climbed up the ranking thanks to an increase in the percentage of women in parliament.

 

Reducing the male-female employment gap has been an important driver of European economic growth in the last decade, the report said.

 

It added that introducing even more equality could boost US gross domestic product by nine percent and eurozone GDP by up to 13 percent.

 

EU Justice Commissioner Viviane Reding said Tuesday that a move to set a 40-percent quota for women on the boards of listed companies had been delayed amid an ongoing row over the lack of female candidates for a key European Central Bank (ECB) job.

 

Reding, who was scheduled to present the plan, said on Twitter: "Gender balance directive postponed," owing to insufficient support for the idea within the 27-member European Commission.

 

The delay came a day after the European Parliament's economic affairs committee rejected the nomination of Luxembourger Yves Mersch to the ECB executive board, because it would result in an all-male board until 2018.

 

The WEF report said that closing the global gender gap was fundamental to economic growth and stability. It pointed out that no country in the Middle East or North Africa featured in the top 100 of the index: these were regions often troubled by instability and frequently pointed to when gender inequality is discussed.

 

Elsewhere in Africa, however, five countries ranked in the top 30.

 

By region, the Philippines (8) remained the highest-ranking country from Asia in the index.

 

With women making up 50 percent of countries' "human capital", governments needed to find ways to benefit from their talent, insisted Saadia Zahidi, senior director at the World Economic Forum.

 

"If that capital is not invested in, educated or healthy, countries are going to lose out in terms of their long-term potential," she said.

 

Only six countries had showed an improvement of 10 percentage points since the report launched seven years ago, Zahidi added, and almost 75 countries have improved by less than five points.

 

"So the progress is very slow... even though we are seeing a trend in a positive direction," she said.

 

Philippines leads Asian countries in Global Gender Gap Report

 

The Philippines remained as the top Asian country in ensuring that men and women have equal access to rights and privileges, including economic opportunities, a report released Wednesday by the World Economic Forum showed.

 

The country remained at the 8th spot of the World Economic Forum's Global Gender Gap Index 2012, which ranks countries based on their ability to close the gender gap in healthcare, education, political participation and economic equality.

 

"The Philippines remains the highest-ranking country from Asia in the Index. It ranks 1st on both education and health and is also among the top 20 on economic participation and political empowerment. The Philippines is the only country in Asia this year to have closed the gender gap in both education and health," the report said.

 

It added that the country also performs in the top 10 of indicators that include legislators, senior officials and managers, literacy rate, enrolment in secondary education and years with female head of state.

 

The Philippines has already elected two women presidents which include Corazon Aquino and Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo. In August, President Benigno S. Aquino III appointed Maria Lourdes Sereno chief justice of the Supreme Court, the first female to hold the position.

 

Ranked ahead of the Philippines are Iceland (1st), Finland (2nd), Norway (3rd), Sweden (4th), Ireland(5), New Zealand (6th) and Denmark (7th), while Nicaragua (9th) and Switzerland (10th) rounded out the top 10.

 

Among the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, the Philippines is followed by Singapore (55th), Thailand (65th), Vietnam (66th), Brunei Darussalam (75th), Indonesia (97th), Malaysia (100th) and Cambodia (103rd). Myanmar and Laos are not included in the list.

 

Among economic powerhouses, the United States is ranked 22nd, China is 69th and Japan is 101st.

 

Stuck at the bottom of the list are Saudi Arabia (131st), Syria (132nd), Chad (133rd), Pakistan (134th) and Yemen (135th).

 

The report said there is a strong correlation between countries at the top of the index and the countries that are most economically competitive.

 

"The key for the future of any country and any institution is the capability to attract the best talents," said Klaus Schwab, WEF founder and executive chairman.

 

"In the future, talent will be more important than capital or anything else. To develop the gender dimension is not just a question of equality; it is the entry card to succeed and prosper in an ever more competitive world," he added.

 

Manila Bulletin, philSTAR

Israel & Australia Boost trade and Investment with the Philippines

The Philippines and Australia have agreed to increase trade and investment flows, particularly citing the potential of the mining sector to boost development.

 

President Benigno S. Aquino III met Prime Minister Julia Gillard at the Parliament House and agreed to resist trade protectionism and promote stable business environment in their respective countries.

 

The two leaders also witnessed the signing of a new air services agreement between the two countries to help lay the groundwork for increased trade and people-to-people links.

 

Also tackled were the historic Bangsamoro peace agreement, efforts to combat transnational crimes and counter-terrorism and development aid.

 

"The leaders agreed the economic relationship between Australia and the Philippines holds great promise, building on the strong foundation provided by the Agreement Establishing the ASEAN-Australia-New Zealand Free Trade Area," a joint statement of Aquino and Gillard read.

 

"Both leaders also shared the objective of increasing two-way trade and investment flows and agreed on the importance of a stable and predictable regulatory environment," it added.

 

Gillard praised Aquino's reform agenda to promote good governance, transparency and accountability in government.

 

"The Leaders agreed to continue to work in regional and multilateral forums to advance regional economic integration and resist trade protectionism," the statement read.

 

The two leaders likewise tackled the potential of the mining sector to contribute to the Philippines' development.

 

"Prime Minister Gillard described the mining industry's role in Australia's economic success, its leadership in environmentally sustainable and socially responsible mining, and the contribution Australian companies could play in the responsible development of the Philippine mining sector, particularly the development of Mindanao," the statement read.

 

Gillard likewise welcomed the Philippines' decision to apply to join the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative. "The leaders also noted the development cooperation activities provided by Australia that will support responsible mining in the Philippines," the statement read.

 

Presidential Communications Development Secretary Ramon Carandang said the President mentioned that the government has revised rules on mining to safeguard the environment.

 

Carandang, speaking to reporters here, said Australia understands that no new mining investments will be approved in the Philippines until a new mining tax is passed by Congress. "They all also know that there's pending legislation. As we've announced before, we want to file a bill with Congress that would allow the state, the Philippine state, to have a greater share of the revenues from mining," he said.

 

In the same statement, the two leaders welcomed the recent entry into force of the Status of Visiting Forces Agreement between Australia and the Philippines.

 

They also hailed the recent signing of a Memorandum of Understanding on Combatting Transnational Crime and Developing Police Cooperation between the Australian Federal Police and the Philippine National Police. "The leaders noted the high level of cooperation between Australia and the Philippines on counter-terrorism," the statement read.

 

Gillard likewise thanked Aquino for supporting Australia's bid to become a member of the United Nations Security Council.

 

The leaders also cited the development aid given by Australia to the Philippines to help reduce poverty.

 

They also highlighted a program that will help improve access to education in Mindanao which may help promote peace and stability in the region.

 

"BEAM-ARMM (Basic Education Assistance to Mindanao – Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao), will support the most disadvantaged conflict-affected communities. The program will introduce community-based education in remote communities, integrate health and hygiene programs in schools, develop technical and vocational training for out-of-school youth, and increase access to quality early childhood and basic education," the statement read.

 

After the meeting with Gillard, the President laid a wreath at the Australian War Monument and later toured the place. He also attended a state banquet hosted by Gillard at the Parliament House.

 

Early in the day, he met Governor General Quentin Bryce at the Government House where he was given a 21-gun salute.

 

On Thursday, the President will travel to Sydney for a series of meetings with business executives from Atlantic Gulf and Pacific Company of Manila, Macquarie, Austal, and Telstra. He will also deliver speeches before the Philippine-Australia Business Forum, the Asia Society of Australia, and the Australia-Philippine Business Council.

 

On Friday, Aquino will lead the unveiling of a statue of Dr. Jose Rizal in Campbeltown City and later meet with the Filipino community. There are around 225,000 Filipinos living in Australia while some 6,000 Filipino students are enrolled in Australian schools.

 

Before flying back home, Aquino will attend a special counter-terrorism demonstration by Australian forces.

 

Australian officials lauded the Philippine government for forging a historic peace agreement with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, saying it could be a "model" for other peace processes in the region.

 

The Australian Prime Minister and her ministers pledged support to the peace process in Mindanao, according to Philippine officials.

 

"They not only welcomed our Framework Agreement and congratulated the President for concluding the Framework Agreement but they did say that our Framework Agreement can be used as a model for other peace processes in the region," Philippine Ambassador to Australia Belen Anota said in a press briefing after the meeting of the two leaders.

 

"I think that's a very good sign of Australia's very strong support for us, a strong affirmation of the accomplishments of the President," she added.

 

Australia and the Philippines are also exploring possible cooperation on disaster relief and rehabilitation under an existing military agreement, Carandang said.

 

"One of the things that we might look into is enhancing our humanitarian assistance and disaster relief. That's something that has been very close to the President's concerns," Carandang told Manila-based reporters here.

 

Philippines & Israel will boost Trades and investments

 

Vice President Jejomar C. Binay expressed confidence that his meeting with Israeli President Shimon Peres will translate into more trade and investment opportunities between the Philippines and Israel.

 

Binay met Peres met last Tuesday at the Presidential Residence in Jerusalem on the first day of his official visit to the "Promised Land."

 

During the meeting, Binay urged Peres and ranking Israeli officials to explore new trade and investment opportunities in the Philippines.

 

"The Philippine-Israel bilateral trade represents a very small percentage of the overall Israel-Asia two-way trade. I hope that our strengthening bilateral relations translate to more investments between our countries," Binay said.

 

The Philippines could also benefit from Israel's technological advances in agriculture and food production, according to the Vice President.

 

Binay said he wants to learn how the Philippines could attract technology transfer and further investments from Israel to the Philippines.

 

"I am happy to note that Filipino agricultural workers are being exposed to Israeli agricultural technology that is considered among the best in the world," Binay said.

 

"I hope that more Philippines fresh produce such as pineapples and coconuts would find its way into the mainstream Israeli retail market. The Embassy has initiated the mechanism for the approval of pineapple importation to Israel in coordination with the Israel Ministry of Agriculture," he said.

 

While in Israel, Binay is set to attend a dinner meeting with Foreign Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Avigdor Lieberman to discuss regional developments.

 

He is also expected to meet with Israeli business groups to reinvigorate the overall trade relations between the two countries.

 

The Vice President will also lay a wreath at the Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum in Jerusalem to pay his respects to the victims of the Holocaust.

 

He will also go to the Rishon Lezzion Municipality and visit the Open Doors Monument which honors the Philippines' humanitarian act of providing refuge to Jews during the Holocaust.

 

Binay will also be meeting the Filipino community in Beit Dani, Tel Aviv.

 

He is slated to attend the inauguration of the Philippine Square at the City of Haifa and meet Mayor Yona Yahav of Haifa city in honor of the sister-city relations between Haifa and Manila.

 

Binay went to Israel straight from Rome where he witnessed the canonization of the St. Pedro Calungsod over the weekend.

 

He also represented President Benigno S. Aquino III at the 2012 European Development Days in Brussels last week.

 

Binay is expected to be back in Manila on October 29.

 

Manila Bulletin 

Philippine Discovered and Invented Bio-Corn want to sow in USA and ASEAN countries

Philippines eyes working with US, ASEAN on genetically modified crops

 

The Philippines is open to collaborating with the United States and members of the Association of Southeast Nations (ASEAN), to share its experience on how biotechnology allowed Filipino farmers to improve their productivity, the Department of Foreign Affairs said Wednesday.

 

In his remarks during the agriculture and food security conference for the ASEAN diplomatic community in Washington DC, Ambassador Jose L. Cuisia Jr. said the Philippines is willing to share the knowledge and experience it has obtained in the 10 years it has implemented its science-based regulatory system for products of modern biotechnology and also learn from the experiences of the US and ASEAN.

 

The Philippines is considered a leader in biotechnology in Southeast Asia, being the first country in the region to have a regulatory system for biotech products in place and the first to grow a major biotech crop for food, feed and processing – Bt corn – that was approved for commercial production in 2002.

 

"To date, biotechnology is contributing towards increased farmers' incomes and food security," Cuisia said, citing the increase not only in land area devoted to Bt corn production – from 11,000 hectares in 2003 to 685,000 hectares in 2011 – but also in the number of farmers from 10,000 in 2003 to 300,000 in 2011.

 

The conference, attended by Philippine embassy officials, was organized by the US Department of State and Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the American chemical manufacturer E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company (DuPont) as a forum for participants to gather and exchange information on the role of agricultural biotechnology in achieving sustainable agriculture production.

 

"The Philippine Government policy is to promote the safe and responsible use of modern biotechnology as one of the means to achieve food security, equal access to health services, a sustainable and safe environment and industry development," Dr. Josyline C. Javelosa, Philippine Agriculture attaché, told US and ASEAN diplomats during a panel discussion at the DuPont Chesapeake Farms in Maryland, last Oct. 16.

 

"This enabled Filipino farmers to increase their incomes and adopt sustainable agricultural practices," Javelosa said, citing results of a study that showed Bt corn farmers earned 38 percent more than other corn farmers. The additional value of Bt corn to corn productivity is estimated between $100 million to $400 million.

 

Others in the panel discussion on "Food Security, Agriculture Technology and the Role of Government" were Jack Bobo, senior advisor for Biotechnology from the State Department; Dr. Pace Lubinsky, USDA Science advisor; Dr. Judy Chambers, director, Program on Biosafety Systems of the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research; Dr. John Duesing, senior director for Regulatory Science Support and Operations of DuPont Pioneer. The panel was moderated by Max Holtzman, USDA senior advisor.

 

In the discussions, Cuisia sought the comments of panel members on the warning by Greenpeace that the Philippine government's approval

of genetically modified crops will lead to a food crisis because inputs for crops are dependent on supplies controlled by giant agrochemical corporations.

 

In response, the panel members said farmers are intelligent and would adopt a technology with economics as the driver. According to them, genetically modified crops like Bt corn require less insecticide. Panel members also agreed on the need to address public misperceptions about biotechnology by coming out with the best messages on its safety and benefits.

 

Javelosa said the Philippines is not considering biotechnology as the only approach to improve farm productivity and sustainability but is only one of several options it would like farmers to have access to. The Philippines is also very active in promoting organic agriculture.

 

The daylong event included field tours at the 3,300-acre DuPont facility in Chestertown, Maryland, that gave participants an opportunity to see biotech crops in the field, observe harvest activities, and listen to briefings by farmers and researchers.

 

The program was opened by DuPont vice president Jim Borel and USDA Deputy Undersecretary for Farm and Foreign Agricultural Services Darci Vetter. This was followed by a presentation about DuPont and DuPont Pioneer in ASEAN by DuPont director for International Government Affairs Geoff Gambles.

 

GMA News

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