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Tsikot Member Rank 3
- Join Date
- Oct 2002
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- 1,271
August 23rd, 2007 01:00 AM #41amen to that....+ 1 here.....i'm also an OFW....indeed very few OFWs understand the full effect of weak peso...most are just after their own interest...exception from the income tax is already a big incentive.
ang problema kasi sa karamihan ng OFWs...ang yayabang pa-uwi ng pinas...one day millioner...tapos kahit pamasahe pabalik abroad wala na at utang na naman...
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September 3rd, 2007 10:46 PM #42
Niloloko ba tayo ni Kabayan Noli De Castro? Nabasa kaya nya na pwede natin syang ilukluk bilang pangulo sa 2010 kung Tayong mga OFW's ay magkaisa kaya nya ngayon todo suporta sya sa atin?
Kaya nya nagawa ito.
[SIZE=3]De Castro backs fixed forex rate for OFWs
[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2]Vice-President Noli de Castro has agreed to endorse a letter from overseas Filipino workers to President Arroyo that seeks to establish a preferential foreign exchange rate for legitimate OFWs that is above the 10-percent prevailing market value.
Based on the proposal, OFWs want a fixed P50:US$1 rate for migrant workers instead of the varying daily market price. The peso ended at 46.57 to the dollar on Monday.
Primary signatories to the letter were Ronnie Abeto, an OFW based in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, and former overseas financial analyst Miguel Bolos. The two said the petition was also signed by 15,000 OFWs worldwide.
The petition was circulated in the Internet for maximum exposure.
Abeto, the senior action officer of V-Team -- Advocacy and Community Service, said the group is proposing that the Philippine government put up a stabilization fund to address the peso-dollar exchange rate fluctuation.
It added that the government should also enter into a collective "Forward Contract or Currency Options" with financial institutions to peg the peso-dollar exchange rate at 50:1.
De Castro said he would endorse the letter to the President and would monitor the progress of the request.
He also said he would will look into the possibility of the group's proposal for the government agreement with financial institutions. The viability of the proposal depends on the volume of the transaction and their ability to organize themselves, he said.
He said that as early as last year, he has been pushing for plans to alleviate the plight of OFWs by urging the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas to study his proposal to lower bank charges on OFW remittances.
BSP junks proposal
Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita earlier said the administration was studying the proposal to have a fixed exchange rate for OFWs.
Ermita said the matter is being addressed by the Department of Finance and the central bank.
The President's chief aide said Mrs. Arroyo and senior economic officials planned to meet with local and foreign businessmen to discuss the impacts of the strong peso and other pressing concerns.
“We would be explaining to them the implications of the strong peso and what the government is doing to cushion its effects especially to exporters and importers,” he said in an Arab News report.
OFW groups are pushing for a fixed rate of P50:US$1, saying that the steep rise of the peso has resulted in a 20 percent reduction of their earnings.
Ermita’s remarks has helped assuage OFWs' concern by reactions of Mrs. Arroyo’s economic and finance officials opposed to the proposal, among them Bangko Sentral Governor Amando Tetangco Jr. who thumbed down the proposal as “costly and impossible to implement.”
“That proposal is fraught with difficult questions and issues,” he said, explaning that such a program would require huge amounts of public funds because the difference between the market-determined foreign exchange rate and the fixed exchange rate would have to be subsidized.
“Who would bear the cost of that subsidy?” Tetangco asked, adding that if the current exchange rate of P45.7 to the dollar is offered to OFWs at, say P50:US$1, with the difference of P4 would have to be paid by someone.
'It's impossible'
With OFW remittances expected to reach at least $14 billion this year, such a program would cost over P60 billion annually, assuming a market rate of P45.7 to the dollar and the fixed rate of P50:US$1.
The amount would be over 85 percent of the total national government budget deficit for 2007 alone.
Tetangco also said access to such a program would be administratively impossible to implement.
“Who will be given this benefit? Just OFWs?” he said.
“If you offer such a facility to one sector, why not open it to all the other sectors that also contribute to the economy and are just as affected by the appreciation of the peso.”
The BSP has been on the spot since the peso started to appreciate as a result of strong dollar inflows combined with the effects of an inherently weakening US dollar.[/SIZE]
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