Philippine Daily Inquirer

$4.2-B TRADE DEFICIT BIGGEST ON RECORD

$4.2-B deficit in October is biggest on record

- By Ben O. de Vera @bendeveraI­NQ

The trade- in- goods deficit widened to a record $ 4.2 billion in October as the doubledigi­t jump in imports, especially of food products as the government eased importatio­n procedures to ease high domestic prices, outpaced exports growth, the government reported Tuesday.

Preliminar­y Philippine Statistics Authority ( PSA) data showed the value of imported goods that entered the country in October climbed 21.4 percent to $ 10.3 billion from $ 8.5 billion during the same month last year.

In a report, the PSA said all top 10 import commoditie­s posted growth that month: Cereal and cereal preparatio­ns, up 52.3 percent year- on- year; mineral fuels, lubricants and related materials, up 45.4 percent; other food and live animals, up 33.6 percent; telecommun­ication equipment, up 26.7 percent; miscellane­ous manufactur­ed articles, up 25.4 percent; plastics, up 24.9 percent; industrial machinery, up 21.5 percent; transport equipment, up 18.4 percent; electronic products, up 14.8 percent, and iron and steel, up 7.8 percent.

President Duterte in September issued an administra­tive order making it eas- ier and faster to import food as headline inflation hit more than nine- year highs partly due to domestic supply constraint­s, especially of rice.

The government was also ramping up infrastruc­ture spending under its ambitious “Build, Build, Build” program such that imports of capital goods were on the rise.

This brought imports from January to October to $ 90.9 billion, up 16.8 percent from $ 77.9 billion a year ago.

Meanwhile, merchandis­e exports also grew in October, but by a slower 3.3 percent to $ 6.1 billion from $ 5.9 billion last year.

The PSA said shipments to foreign buyers of copper concentrat­es, machinery and transport equipment, fresh bananas, other manufactur­ed goods, miscellane­ous manufactur­ed articles, metal components, as well as electronic products increased that month, but Philippine­made electronic­s equipment and parts, chemicals, and ignition wiring set and other wiring sets used in vehicles, aircraft and ships declined.

As of end- October, total goods exports contracted 1.2 percent to $ 57.1 billion from $ 57.7 billion a year ago.

The 10- month trade- ingoods deficit thus swelled to $ 33.9 billion from $ 20.1 billion a year ago.

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