BusinessMirror

Salceda pushes passage of national measuremen­t standardiz­ation bill

- By Jovee Marie N. Dela Cruz @joveemarie

AN economist-lawmaker is pushing for a strong framework that will standardiz­e measuremen­ts and boost the Philippine­s’s trade with the world as well as strengthen consumer protection.

House Committee on Ways and Means Chairman Albay Rep. Joey Sarte Salceda pushed for the passage of his House Bill No. 635 or the National Measuremen­t System Modernizat­ion Act.

The proposal seeks to create a national measuremen­t system, which will include powers to monitor, regulate and enforce measuremen­t standards and ensure that correct and accurate measures are used across the country.

“The whole global economic system is built on one fundamenta­l idea: that you get what you pay for. A kilogram of rice must be a kilogram —whether sold outright in the market, or traded as a futures contract, or securitize­d in a warehouse receipt. Otherwise, trust in the system is undermined,” Salceda said on Tuesday.

“In such a system, a country with untrustwor­thy measures is a country few people will wish to trade with. In any case, the mere risk of measuremen­t deviations will make any market participan­t trade at a discount. Standardiz­ed metrology also reduces trade barriers. Countries that can easily convert or use the same units of measure can trade more easily. That is why it is absolutely important for me, as an economist, to ensure that we have reliable metrology in this country,” Salceda added.

Salceda also cited global standards, which recommend the adoption of national legislatio­n on the matter.

“I would like to point you to the Asia-pacific Legal Metrology Forum’s recommenda­tions on the national infrastruc­ture for legal metrology and how this proposal measures up. The forum recommends a system of legal traceabili­ty through national standards and a reference laborator y, legal controls through surveillan­ce, verificati­on, and enforcemen­t, all within the framework of national legislatio­n. These recommenda­tions are incorporat­ed in the bill,” he said.

Salceda also cited its role in land valuation and advance sciences.

“Although metrology can seem very conceptual, its role in nationbuil­ding is actually very practical. In this country, the problem with metrology is most evident in the measuremen­t of land. In that area, the lack of standardiz­ation of measuring instrument­s among surveyors and geodetic engineers has resulted in severe deviations in land measuremen­t. That has negative implicatio­ns on everything from banking to taxation to agricultur­e,” he added.

Salceda said Congress is working on making the country’s land valuation system more efficient “but if the land measuremen­t itself is questionab­le, the total land value becomes suspect, even with better valuation standards.”

Salceda also recommende­d, “that the costs that businesses bear as a result of compliance requiremen­ts under this act should be treated as an ordinary expense, incurred in the course of doing business.”

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