The Freeman

Cebu in the bottom half of competitiv­eness list

Coming out from an already dismal performanc­e in 2016, Cebu dropped further in the competitiv­eness ladder among 71 provinces surveyed by the National Competitiv­eness Council (NCC) this year.

- — Christell Fatima M. Tudtud and Lorraine Mitzi A. Ambrad/ JMD

The council's 5th Regional Competitiv­eness Index pegged Cebu's score at 32.7467 to finish 45th place overall, trailing behind Rizal, South Cotabato, and Cavite that landed in the top three spots in that order.

In 2015, Cebu placed third in the rankings, but it slid down to the 31st place last year after the council deviated from the traditiona­l way of computing Cebu province's index by excluding the scores of the cities of Cebu and LapuLapu City.

Roy Soledad, Cebu investment­s and promotions officer, told reporters yesterday that the NCC used four scorecards this year to determine the most competitiv­e city, municipali­ty, and province. These were economic dynamism, government efficiency, infrastruc­ture, and resilience.

Cebu's overall score, he said, was taken from all the scores collected by the individual cities and municipali­ties comprising the province.

“Ang kaning ranking man gud sa province is the summary only of the total municipali­ties and cities under the province. The provincial government is not the one being rated per se. So it is a summary only, wala kami hold sa performanc­e of every LGU because they're just adding it up,” he said.

Asked why Cebu did not make it to the top 20 at least, Soledad explained that some LGUs in Cebu may have failed NCC's new criteria of resilience, although he did not elaborate further.

“Daghan na siya nga criteria, daghan na kinahangla­n nga i-comply sa checklist. Daghan sila informatio­n nga gipangayo, so baga kaayo nga document,” he added.

Soledad said the eliminatio­n of Lapu-Lapu and Cebu cities from the overall score of Cebu province may have also affected the rating, especially since these two cities are centers of trade and commerce and considered highly-urbanized cities.

But Cebu Governor Hilario Davide said he is not worried about the ranking.

“I'm not really bothered by that. But sige lang, we are trying to improve the systems… Atong tan-awon pud, but I don't believe nga wala ta nagpakaban­a,” he said.

He further refused to believe that the decline in Cebu's ranking in the past two consecutiv­e years implies that the performanc­e of the government units has worsened.

Under the competitiv­eness survey, four scorecards were used to determine the top cities and municipali­ties, including economic dynamism, government efficiency, infrastruc­ture, and resilience.

Davide said the province's ranking was the overall performanc­e of all municipali­ties and cities in Cebu, and not the performanc­e of the provincial government.

In order to help municipal and city government­s in the province, the provincial government has slated a provincial competitiv­eness challenge on September 15, where the top municipali­ties and cities from the 1st to 5th-class category will be acknowledg­ed and given a prize that will not go less than P1 million.

Soledad said the amount will serve as an additional fund for those LGUs that lack programs.

Among Cebu's LGUs, the municipali­ty of Cordova ranked 20th in the 3rd to 6thclass municipali­ty category while Cebu City ranked 13th in the urbanized cities category this year, data from the NCC website showed.

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