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Congress’ failure to ok ’06 budget to nip growth
Slow export, agri growth rates hurt economy
Call center puts workers’ incentive in mutual fund to make staff stay
Dealers see prices merging next week
Group calls on Pinoy IT workers overseas to help RP counterparts
BOC warns firms against insurance agents who ‘collect’ customs duties
HP contact center in KL gets award
Batuhan: Has media overstepped its bounds?




Saturday, January 28, 2006
Congress’ failure to ok ’06 budget to nip growth

MANILA- Economic growth targets may be in peril due to the legislature’s failure to pass the 2006 national budget, a senior economic official warned last Thursday.

Higher levels of capital spending outlined in the proposed P1.05-trillion ($20 billion) budget bill is designed to improve infrastructure and encourage economic activity, Economic Planning Secretary Augusto Santos said in a statement.

The Senate is continuing hearings on the budget bill this week after it failed to pass it last year.

Previous year’s

If the legislature fails to pass it, the government automatically spends the same amount as the previous year’s budget, which was 14.7 percent lower than the proposed outlays.

“If the 2006 (budget) is enacted, GDP growth for the year would be between 5.7 to 6.3 percent but if the budget (is the same as last year’s) for the first quarter, GDP growth will go down to around 5.6 percent; and for one semester, it will go down to 5.5 percent,” Santos said.

“If the (2005) budget will be re-enacted for the whole year, GDP growth will further slide to 5.3 percent,” he added.

Partly finance

The government plans to partly finance the higher spending levels this year with an increased value-added tax, which goes up by two percentage points to 12 percent on Feb. 1.

“The (tax) will have an inflationary effect in the short-term but it will have a tremendous beneficial effect in the long-run. The huge amount of money generated from the (tax) can be used for spending on very basic public investment needs of the country, like education, health, nutrition and  infrastructure,” Santos said. (AFP)

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(January 28, 2006 issue)
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