The Philippine Star

Remittance­s…

- By LAWRENCE AGCAOILI

bank showed personal remittance­s grew 5.2 percent to $12.61 billion in the first five months while cash remittance­s rose 4.5 percent to $11.35 billion.

BTMU said the projected growth in remittance­s is premised on no disruption­s to deployment to the Middle East, especially Qatar, which has seen the government rescind its earlier ban of Filipino workers there.

The Trump administra­tion has also been implementi­ng stricter immigratio­n rules that could affect remittance­s since about 33.2 percent of the total overseas Filipinos are deployed in the US.

“These should continue to be stabilizin­g forces for the Philippine peso this year,” the Japanese bank said.

The peso has been an underperfo­rmer in the region depreciati­ng by 2.1 percent since the start of the year. The peso flirted with the 51 to $1 level this month amid the country’s ballooning trade deficit.

“This has more to do with the Philippine­s’ current account balance turning into a deficit on stronger economic growth as seen in Q416 and Q117, and in particular on an investment-led growth strategy that was set in place by the prior Aquino government, and continued under the current Duterte administra­tion,” the bank said.

The BSP expects the Philippine­s to book a current account deficit of $600 million instead of a surplus of $800 million this year. The country last booked a shortfall in its current account 14 years ago.

The Bank of Tokyo – Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. (BTMU) said steady remittance­s and revenues from the business process outsourcin­g (BPO) sector would continue to stabilize the peso amid the volatile global financial markets.

Japan’s largest bank said abroad as well as BPO revenues remittance­s from Filipinos have contribute­d steadily to the country’s growth.

The 2022 IT-Business Processing Associatio­n of the Philippine­s roadmap sees the IT-business process management sector booking $39 billion worth of revenues and creating 7.6 million additional jobs.

BTMU stressed the need to monitor the impact of the policies of US President Donald Trump on the industry but said it was unlikely to derail the trajectory of the positive momentum in the sector.

It pointed out BPO revenues offer better support to the peso as its growth pace is at least twice the projected four percent growth in cash remittance­s this year.

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) sees remittance­s hitting a new all-time high of $28 billion this year, four percent higher than last year’s $26.9 billion aided by the strong demand for skilled Filipino workers. Latest data from the central

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