The Philippine Star

BOP surplus down 74% to $1.316 B in H1

- By PRINZ P. MAGTULIS

The country’s balance of payments (BOP) surplus dropped 74 percent in the first half of the year as a weak global economy heightened risk aversion among foreign investors, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) reported yesterday.

BOP surplus fell to $1.316 billion from January to June this year, 74 percent lower than the previous year’s $5.016 billion.

or June alone, surplus likewise decreased to $14 million from $222 million posted in June 2011. The monthly figure was also down from $138 million surplus in ay.

“Over-all, the global economy is much weaker than last year. As a result, foreign investment­s were weaker while external debt servicing continued,” BSP Deputy Governor Diwa Guinigundo told reporters in a text message.

BOP summarizes a nation’s transactio­ns with the rest of the world. It measures the capacity of a country to settle its debts and meet external trade obligation­s.

A surplus means there were more capital inflows than outflows during a particular period. It also shows that the Philippine­s has more resources to meet future external requiremen­ts.

The BSP last month revised its BOP forecast for the year to $2.6 billion from $2.8 billion initially seen, reasoning out that the world economy con- tinues to be weak in light of the prevailing debt crisis in the eurozone. BOP surplus hit $10.179 billion in 2011. BOP is composed of current and capital accounts. Current account transactio­ns include remittance­s from overseas ilipino workers and exports, while those of capital account pertain to foreign investment­s in the stock and bond markets as well as long-term capital investment­s in the country.

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