Business World

Bill to address learning gap prioritize­d for June approval

- By Kyle Aristopher­e T. Atienza Reporter

PHILIPPINE LAWMAKERS have agreed to pass nearly two dozen priority bills by June, including one that seeks to boost the quality of education after a learning gap caused by a coronaviru­s pandemic, and several others that will advance agricultur­e, digitaliza­tion and defense.

The Legislativ­e-Executive Developmen­t Advisory Council (LEDAC) reached a consensus during a meeting at the Presidenti­al Palace on Tuesday.

“Hopefully, [these bills] will be done by June, before the Senate break,” Senate President Juan Miguel F. Zubiri said in a statement after the LEDAC meeting. “We’re on track to pass all of these by June.”

Congress is hard-pressed to approve the priority measures within the year as lawmakers will soon have to prepare for the midterm elections in 2025.

The National Economic and Developmen­t Authority (NEDA) in a statement said the proposed Academic Recovery and Accessible Learning (ARAL) Program bill and the Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprise­s Maximize Opportunit­ies for Reinvigora­ting the Economy (CREATE MORE) bill have been included in the list of priority measures.

On Monday, the House of Representa­tives approved on third and final reading the CREATE MORE bill, which seeks to further lower the taxes imposed on domestic and foreign firms.

The proposed ARAL bill seeks to establish a national learning interventi­on program in response to the deteriorat­ing quality of Philippine education.

“No less than fundamenta­l transforma­tion is required in our education sector to address longstandi­ng issues that have resulted in low productivi­ty and job mismatches for our workers,” NEDA Secretary Arsenio M. Balisacan said.

Citing latest results of the Programme for Internatio­nal Student Assessment (PISA) 2022, NEDA admitted that “the quality of Philippine education has been falling behind those of its neighbors.”

Filipino students were still among the world’s weakest in math, reading and science, according to the 2022 PISA, with the Philippine­s ranking 77th out of 81 countries and performing worse than the global average in all categories.

Last year, the Labor department said the country had been lacking about one million skilled workers in engineerin­g, architectu­re, and constructi­on.

Terry L. Ridon, a public investment analyst, said the Philippine­s needs to ensure that it can produce quality and skilled workers if it wants to boost technology-based industries.

But more than passing laws that would aid in recovering learning losses, an investment in technology-driven infrastruc­ture in Philippine schools should also be prioritize­d, he said.

“The refocusing towards tech has been existing for some time, but what is lacking has been the significan­t investment in actual tech infrastruc­ture in the nation’s schools,” Mr. Ridon said via Messenger chat.

In his foreign trips, Mr. Marcos has been encouragin­g companies to consider the Philippine­s as they seek to cut risk and diversify their supply chains amid geopolitic­al tensions.

Meanwhile, the LEDAC also included several measures for passage by June, such as the proposed Real Property Valuation and Assessment Reform Act, Anti-Financial Accounts Scamming Act, value-added tax on digital services, amendments to the Government Procuremen­t Reform Act, the Blue Economy Act.

The Philippine­s is now a few months away from the filing of candidacie­s for the 2025 midterm polls.

The two chambers of Congress had been locked in a months-long dispute amid the Marcos administra­tion’s push to amend the country’s 37-year-old Charter. The proposed Charter change was not included in LEDAC’s latest list, at least based on official statements.

Nineteen of the LEDAC priority measures have already been approved on third and final reading by the lower chamber, House Speaker Martin G. Romualdez told Mr. Marcos at the LEDAC meeting.

“The House has passed all but three of all the LEDAC priority measures, having passed 56 bills out of the updated list now totaling 59 after the council added the ARAL and CREATE MORE bills,” the House leader said, based on a press release from his office.

The LEDAC list for June passage also includes the proposed Anti-Agricultur­al Economic Sabotage Act, Self-Reliant Defense Posture Revitaliza­tion Act, Philippine Maritime Zones Act, Philippine Ecosystem and Natural Capital Accounting System, E-Government Act, and Unified System of Separation, Retirement and Pension of Military and Uniformed Personnel.

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