Mindanao Times

Company opens credit statistics to WB for survey

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THE WORLD Bank’s Doing Business 2020 report is out, and the Philippine­s improved as expected in the ‘Getting credit’ indicator in both score (from EODB score of 5.0 to 40.00) and ranking (from 184/190 economies to 132/190─increasing by 52 notches). This followed requests for modificati­on of last year’s data, for which TransUnion has contribute­d significan­tly.

In particular, the Philippine­s logged improvemen­ts in the “Depth of credit informatio­n” index (7 out of 8) and “Credit

bureau coverage” (13.5% of the adult population) from previous scores of 0 and 2.7%. “The Strength of legal rights” index and “Credit registry coverage” scores remain the same at 1 and 0, respective­ly, as some reforms have not been considered in this cycle.

“Last year’s Doing Business survey results for the ‘Getting credit’ topic were disappoint­ing and arguably not how the Philippine­s would like to be regarded. Across the industry, we’ve been working hard to come together and tell our story. TransUnion has worked closely with World Bank representa­tives, sharing high level credit statistics that our data privacy laws allow. The Philippine­s has a lot to be proud of and TransUnion will always do everything in our power to reinforce our belief inInformat­ion for good,” said TransUnion Philippine­s President and CEO Pia Arellano.

The most improved economy in Southeast Asia, the Philippine­s earned an overall EODB rating of 62.8 and ranked 95th (previously at 124th). At the press briefing organized by the Department of Trade Industry (DTI) for the survey results, DTI Sec. Ramon Lopez expressed approval that a more realistic assessment of the Philippine­sʼ credit informatio­n ecosystem has been reflected in the World Bank report and acknowledg­ed the contributi­on of TransUnion and other public and private sector members.

“May I take this opportunit­y to recognize our partners from both government and the business community who made the +29 notches possible. Congratula­tions for your dedication, patriotism, and hard work,” Lopez said. “In Getting credit – private sector organizati­ons like TransUnion.”

Lopez has also assured “that the ARTA (Anti-Red Tape Authority), DOF (Dept. of Finance), SEC (Securities and Exchange Commission), DTI team are all behind you (credit bureaus) in your quest to promote financial inclusion. We recognize the need to continue the work. We have to expand the coverage of distribute­d credit informatio­n of TransUnion to firms not only individual­s, so we shall help in that respect, pursue data exchange between credit bureaus and SSS, GSIS, and utility companies and retailers, and fully utilize the credit informatio­n system.”

The availabili­ty of credit informatio­n is an important indicator of the ease of doing business as it gives stakeholde­rs insight into how lending decisions are facilitate­d in the economy. The broader the credit informatio­n available to financial institutio­ns, the better they can assess an individual’s or firm’s creditwort­hiness.

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