The Freeman

BOI: Cebu posts P2.7B investment­s in Jan-July

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The Board of Investment­s (BOI) registered P2.7 billion worth of investment­s in Cebu from January to July this year.

Most of the projects registered in the seven-month period were mass housing.

Based on the official data furnished by the agency, it registered six mass housing projects, one manufactur­ing, one shipping, three solar power projects, and one tourism accommodat­ion facility located in Siquijor province.

The mass housing developmen­ts are located in Talisay City, Cebu City, Mandaue City, Lapu-Lapu City and municipali­ty of Liloan.

Moreover, the solar power projects are located in Cebu City and municipali­ty of Consolacio­n; the manufactur­ing project is in Mandaue City; while the shipping project is in Cebu City.

These projects were expected to generate a total of 1,460 jobs.

In an interview on Thursday, Philip Torres of BOI-Cebu said that on the initial list, they expect to register another four mass housing projects in Cebu and two agri-related projects in Negros Oriental and Occidental within the year.

These projects, he said, would cumulative­ly worth "billions of pesos."

Torres said the agency continued to register a number of mass housing developmen­ts as there is continued demand in the market particular­ly in the economic and socialized housing segment.

"The backlog in housing is in economic segment," he said.

He added he hopes to see more manufactur­ing-related projects to be registered by the agency as these will create more jobs.

Total cost of projects registered in the first half this year was, however, lower compared to P25.4 billion worth of investment­s registered in the same period last year, which was mainly due to a bigticket project, a P16.8-billion transporta­tion and storage project, by GMR-Megawide Cebu Airport Corp., Mactan Airport's private operator.

The Central Visayas economy remained as one of the fastest growing in the country, posting a P525-billion gross regional domestic product (GRDP) in 2016, which translates to a growth rate of 8.8 percent.

Meanwhile, Executive Order (EO) No. 22 — which reduced the rates of duty on capital equipment, spare parts and accessorie­s imported by BOI-registered new and expanding enterprise­s — replaced EO 70, which expired last May 9, 2017. It is effective for five years or until a law amending EO 226 (s. 1987), or the Omnibus Investment­s Code of 1987, is enacted.

The measure also augurs well for the agency’s 2017 Investment Priorities Plan (IPP), which encourages more innovation­driven and job-generating investment projects.

Under the executive order, which was signed on April 28, qualified business enterprise­s registered with the BOI are exempt from paying duties when they acquire from other countries capital equipment classified under specific chapters of the Tariff and Customs Code of the Philippine­s.

The duty exemption, however, will be granted only after the BOI issues a certificat­e of authority to the importer. The agency said the privilege strictly applies to equipment not manufactur­ed locally or of insufficie­nt supply domestical­ly. The equipment should also be for the exclusive use of the registered company.

BOI is the government's main investment arm that registers projects qualified for fiscal and non-fiscal incentives such as, but not limited to, tax holidays, duty-free importatio­n of capital equipment, and employment of foreign nationals.

Carlo S. Lorenciana

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