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CONSOLIDATED BLACKLISTED CONTRACTORS
AS OF 30 SEPTEMBER 2016 The Construction Industry Authority of the Philippines (CIAP) is mandated to promote, accelerate and regulate the growth and development of the construction industry in conformity with national goals. Through CIAP’s licensing arm, the Philippine Construction Accreditation Board (PCAB), the government ensures that all contractors are reliable, competent and qualified to engage in construction contracting business in the country. PCAB revokes and/or suspends the license offering contractors. With the help of the Philippine Domestic Construction Board (PDCB), another implementing arm of CIAP, appropriate policies and guidelines for pre-qualification, bidding and contract award for public infrastructure projects are formulated and recommended. CIAP assures that Filipinos receive premium service through government infrastructure projects. The CIAP, through PDCB, implements the Construction Performance Evaluation System (CPES), a uniform rating system for evaluating the performance of constructors based on a set of criteria. These are workmanship, materials used in the construction, timeliness, facilities, environmental safety and health and human resources deployment during construction. Its implementation is governed by Section 12, Annex E of the Implementing Rules and Regulations (IRR) of Republic Act No. 9184 (Government Procurement Reform Act).The evaluation is done at certain stages during the actual construction of the project, and upon its completion. Based on the CPES results, among others, contractors are blacklisted by various infrastructure agencies (agency-level). The list are consolidated and submitted by PDCB to the Government Procurement Policy Board (GPPB) are posted at the GPPB website for reference by the Bids and Awards Committees of various agencies. The Consolidated Blacklisting Report contains the list of contractors blacklisted by the procuring entities. Based on the List... read moreGidusong kabag-ohan sa foreign policy, di makaapekto sa ekonomiya sa nasod
MANILA, November 2 (PIA)–Gibarugan sa Malakanyang nga dili makaapekto sa ekonomiya sa nasod ang giduso nga kabag-ohan sa foreign policy ni Presidente Rodrigo Duterte, sukwahi sa kahadlok sa credit watchdog nga Moody’s Investor Service. Matud pa kagahapon ni Presidential Communications Office (PCO) Kalihim Martin Andanar, nagpabiling lig-on ang economic fundamental sa nasod. “The economic fundamental remain strong. The poverty rate has dropped, Inflation rate is stable. Government-private contracts continue to be honored. We will be okay,” matud pa ni Andanar. Ang maong pahayag gihimo sa Kalihim human sa pasidaan sa Moody’s nga posibleng mohinay ang ekonomiya sa nasod kun magbaton og kalit nga polisiyang ipatuman ang administrasyong Duterte sama sa foreign policies. “Risks are emerging in terms of the banks’ increasing exposure to real estate-related loans and higher yielding small and medium enterprises,” matud pa sa Moody’s. Apan gitaho usab sa Moody’s nga sulod sa 12 ngadto sa 18 ka bulan, magpabiling lig-on ang Philippine banking system. “Asset quality will remain broadly stable, supported by stable macroeconomic factors, and the stable debt servicing metrics of borrowers,” matud pa sa gipagawas nga taho ni Alka Anbarasu, Moody’s vice president ug senior analyst kagahapon.... read more
PH exports up by 18.34% in Q1
Philippine exports for the first quarter of 2017 grew by 18.34% after it reflected double-digit growth for March 2017 with 21% total increase amounting to $5.58 billion compared to $4.61 billion recorded value in the same period in 2016, Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) announced. In the recent report of the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA), the increase for March 2017 exports data, an almost double of the 11% year-on-year growth figure posted in February this year, further lifted the cumulative value of merchandise exports covering the period January-March 2017. “Increase for March 2017 exports marked the fourth consecutive positive growth in the value of Philippine merchandise exports since December 2016,” explained DTI Export Marketing Bureau Director Senen M. Perlada. For March 2017, electronics remained to be the country’s top export with total receipts of $2.80 billion, accounting for 50.2% of the total exports revenue in March 2017. It increased by 19.0% from $2.36 billion registered in March 2016. On the other hand, exports of manufactured goods were valued at $4.69 billion, accounting for 84.1% share of the total export receipts in March 2017, went up by 16.5% from $4.03 billion recorded in the same month last year. United States (including Alaska and Hawaii), with export receipts valued at $809.93 million, topped other countries as the Philippine top export market for March 2017. It is followed by Hong Kong with revenue amounting to $798.25 million, and Japan as third market with $762.43 million export sales. By economic bloc, East Asia registered to be the top destination of Philippine goods with 46.4% share to total exports, followed by European Union...No Results Found
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