The Freeman

Cebu, Bohol LGUs hailed best in CV

- — Mitchelle L. Palaubsano­n/GAN

Among the local government units (LGUs) in Central Visayas, Cebu and Bohol dominated the recent 6th Regional Competitiv­eness Summit, which recognizes the most competitiv­e cities and municipali­ties in the country.

For Cebu, 11 LGUs got 21 different recognitio­ns, while 12 LGUs in Bohol province got 20 citations. Four LGUs in Negros Oriental got four accolades.

Bohol was hailed as the most competitiv­e province in Central Visayas. In the overall tally where 75 qualified provinces were assessed, Bohol landed at 12th place.

Mandaue placed 2nd in the most improved highly-urbanized cities, while Cebu City copped eighth place.

For the most improved component cities, Talisay City ranked third, Naga took the fifth spot, Dumaguete City at seventh, while Tagbilaran City bagged the 17th spot.

For the most improved 3rd to 6th class municipali­ties, Carmen, Cebu made it to the seventh place; Bindoy, Negros Oriental landed in the ninth spot, while Pilar, Cebu was in the 18th place.

In the field of economic dynamism, the top performing highlyurba­nized cities include Cebu City (6th place) and Mandaue City (7th place).

Tagbilaran City, Bohol took the ninth spot for the component city category. Its neighborin­g municipali­ties Talibon and Loon got the seventh and ninth place, respective­ly, in the top performing 1st and 2nd class municipali­ties.

For the 3rd to 6th class municipali­ties – Jagna, Bohol landed second, Antequera, Bohol in third place, Corella, Bohol took the seventh spot, San Remigio, Cebu landed in the 17th place, while Carmen, Cebu took the 18th place.

For government efficiency, Mandaue City took the 20th spot in the highly-urbanized city category. Dumaguete City took the second spot, while Tagbilaran City got the sixth place for the component cities.

For the 3rd to 6th class municipali­ties – Valencia, Bohol ended at 11th place, while Trinidad, Bohol placed 18th.

In the field of infrastruc­ture, Cebu City collared the eighth place, while Lapu-Lapu City ended at 20th in the highly-urbanized cities. Tagbilaran City, Bohol took the ninth spot in the component city category.

For the 3rd to 6th municipali­ties category, Tabogon, Cebu took the fifth spot, Albuquerqq­ue, Bohol got the 13th place, while San Remigio, Cebu ended at 14th.

For resilience, Cebu City was adjudged fifth place for the highlyurba­nized city category, Mabinay, Negros Oriental got the 12th place, and Tuburan, Cebu the 14th place in the 1st and 2nd class municipali­ties.

For the 3rd to 6th class municipali­ties, Sierra Bullones, Bohol ended at second place, Batuan, Bohol in eight place, while Badian, Cebu got the 13th spot.

In the field of overall competitiv­e cities and municipali­ties, Cebu City ranked ninth, while Mandaue City landed at 13th place for highly-urbanized cities. Tagbilaran City clobbered the eighth place in the component city category.

For the 3rd to 6th class municipali­ties, Jagna, Bohol took the fourth spot, San Remigio, Cebu at eighth, Corella, Bohol at 11th, Antequera, Bohol at 12th place, and Sierra Bullones, Bohol at the 16th spot.

The Cities and Municipali­ties Competitiv­eness Index (CMCI) measures the competitiv­eness of a local government in terms of four pillars: economic dynamism (activities that create stable expansion of business and industries and higher job creation); government efficiency (quality and reliabilit­y of government services and support for effective and sustainabl­e productive expansion); infrastruc­ture (physical building blocks of a locality that enable the provision of goods and services); and resiliency (capacity of a locality to facilitate industries and raise productivi­ty despite the shocks and stresses it encounters).

The Department of Trade and Industry, in a statement, said these pillars are aligned with the competitiv­eness indicators used by IMD Competitiv­e Survey, Internatio­nal Finance Corporatio­n (IFC) Doing Business Survey, and the World Economic Forum (WEF) Global Competitiv­eness Index.

Quezon City retained the top spot as most competitiv­e highlyurba­nized, a distinctio­n it has held for three consecutiv­e years now.

Manila likewise remained on the second spot, while Pasay City obtained the third place.

Completing the top 10 for the most competitiv­e highly-urbanized cities in the country are Cagayan de Oro at fifth place, Makati at sixth, Pasig at seventh, Bacolod at eight, Cebu at ninth, and Muntinlupa at tenth.

The CMCI 2018 named Rizal as the most competitiv­e province in the country; Legazpi, Albay as most competitiv­e component city; and Cainta as the most competitiv­e municipali­ty.

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