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Monday, January 6, 2014

Philippine Population to breach 100 Million by September 2014; Foreign Analyst call to curve fastest growth

Philippines unfazed by rising population

 

The Philippines said the prospect of breaching the 100 million population mark is both a challenge and an opportunity.

 

"It is both a challenge and an opportunity because people are the most important resource. That is our balanced view of the situation," Presidential Communications Operations Office Secretary Herminio Coloma Jr. said on the state-run DZRB Radyo ng Bayan yesterday.

 

Coloma was reacting to a statement given by Philippine Populations Commission (Popcom) executive director Dr Juan Antonio Perez that the country was expected to breach the 100 million mark by the third or fourth quarter of the year.

 

Perez, in an interview published in the Philippine Star, noted that a rising population would require investment in social health, education and infrastructure — expenditures that the government can hardly afford right now.

 

Perez said that with the country's population growth rate pegged at an annual two per cent, the Philippines needs to "maintain a gross domestic product of more than four per cent to keep pace with employment".

 

But Coloma said these issues were factored in when the National Economic Development Authority (NEDA) came up with the 2011-2016 Philippine Development Plan (PDP).

 

Coloma said the PDP is geared for inclusive growth, to make sure all Filipinos benefit from any improvements in the country's economy. Coloma, likewise, stressed a large part of the budget for 2014 was geared towards social protection and social welfare and development.

 

"The majority of Filipinos should not be left out of any growth," he said.

 

The country's population growth had always been a subject of debate among economists. During the administration of president Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo this matter had been brought up and the standard response was that population growth would be good for a country like the Philippines. This, given that the country had no qualms about exporting its surplus manpower and benefiting from this arrangement in terms of foreign currency remittances.

 

International observers have said that the Philippines has to rein in its population growth so that its citizens would be able to share the benefits. – Gulf News

 

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Saturday, January 4, 2014

PCGG Good Government welcomes Singapore court decision on Marcos' Swiss funds

PNB WINS. The Philippine National Bank gets the legal title to former President Ferdinand Marcos' ill-gotten wealth. File photo by AFP.


The Presidential Commission on Good Government (PCGG) on Saturday, January 4, welcomed the move of Singapore's top court to grant Philippine National Bank (PNB) legal title to former President Ferdinand Marcos' Swiss funds.

 

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"The PCGG views the Singapore decision in a positive light. While the Court ruled that PNB has legal title to the account, PNB holds the monies in its capacity as a trustee for the republic pursuant to an escrow agreement with the government," PCGG chairman Andres Bautista said.

 

The decision comes 10 years after a German bank in Singapore sought the country's Court of Appeals to decide on the rightful owner of the funds – a total of US$30.1 million.

 

PNB is one of 4 claimants to Marcos' Swiss funds, along with the Philippine government, 5 foundations allegedly set up by the dictator to hold the money in Swiss bank accounts, and 9,539 human rights victims during the Marcos era, reported The Straits Times.

 

"The [Philippine] Republic, Human Rights Victims and the Foundations have not satisfied us that they are legally or beneficially entitled to the Funds," the judgment dated Dec 30, 2013 and released Thursday, January 2, said.

 

"We also hold that PNB has legal title to the Funds as the original named account holder with WestLB prior to the commencement of the Interpleader Proceedings. As all three contesting parties have failed in their claims for the Funds, none of them is entitled to any costs."

 

The deposits, held in the Singapore branch of German bank WestLB, comprise US$16.8 million (S$21.3 million) and £4.2 million (S$8.8 million).

 

At the onset of the Corazon Aquino administration in 1986, the government recovered the wealth of Marcos from Swiss accounts. In 1997, the Swiss Federal Supreme Court issued a decision to return $680 million from the accounts to the Philippines after complying with two conditions:

 

A final and executory decision of a credible Philippine court declaring Marcos' Swiss funds as ill-gotten.

Giving a rightful share of the funds to Martial Law victims – those who won a class suit in a Honolulu court against the Marcos estate.

Both conditions have already been met: the first one in July 2003, when the Philippine Supreme Court declared Marcos' Swiss funds ill-gotten, and the second one, when President Benigno Aquino III signed last year the Human Rights Victims Reparation and Recognition Act of 2013.

 

Under the law, some P10 billion funds recovered from the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos' Swiss bank accounts will be appropriated for victims' reparation. 80% of the amount will be spent for existing claims and 20% for future ones. (READ: Aquino: We recognize Martial Law victims)

 

PCGG could also technically use the $23 million for the Marcos regime's human rights victims, Bautista told Malacañang.

 

Court rejects other parties' claims

 

In 2002, Swiss authorities also transferred US$658 million to PNB for safekeeping, which PNB itself placed in other banks in Singapore and Britain, including WestLB. In 2003, the human rights victims "staked" their claims.

 

"They had won a US$1.9 billion judgment in the United States against the Marcos estate for human rights abuses and sought to recover the sum by staking a claim on the $30.1 million with WestLB," The Straits Times report said.

 

The Court of Appeals was "compelled" to reject the human rights victims' claim to the funds because relevant documents "did not have the legal effect of transferring a proprietary interest in the Funds to the Human Rights Victims at any point in time."

 

Despite the rejection, the court emphasized they "would not in any way wish to deny the moral claims of the human rights victims," acknowledging they "deserve redress for the grievous wrongs that they have suffered."

 

As for the foundations, their claims were rejected by the court as their legal title was lost when they ignored the effects of the orders of the Swiss courts and authorities in authorizing the fund transfer in Swiss deposits to be held in escrow.

 

The Swiss court ordered the money transferred to PNB, where the funds are held in escrow. –Rappler.com

 

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