Results 1 to 10 of 12
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November 19th, 2010 10:14 AM #1
Translation: If the investor cannot collect due to a court injunction, the goverment will use the taxpayer's money (YOUR MONEY) to make up the difference.
Similar policy of the last administration subsidizing (using taxpayer's money) the MRT. Are you happy that the goverment pays for someone's use of the MRT instead of upgrading our country's infrastructure?
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/inquire...nfra-investors
Aquino to protect big infra investors
Solicited projects get regulatory risk surety
By Daxim Lucas, Norman Bordadora, Paolo Montecillo
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 00:30:00 11/19/2010
MANILA, Philippines—President Benigno Aquino III Thursday said that his administration would compensate investors prevented by the courts or Congress from collecting contractually agreed toll or user fees.
“If for some reason, a court decision threatens the adjustment, the government will compensate the private concessionaire for the difference between what the tariff should have been under the formula and the tariff which it is actually able to collect,” the President said at the opening of the public-private partnership conference in Pasay City.
Mr. Aquino said the government would provide investors with protection against so-called “regulatory risk” or the risk of being unable to recoup one’s investments due to changes in the local regulatory environment—a common complaint among foreign businesses operating in the Philippines.
“Infrastructure can only be paid for from user fees or taxes,” he said.
"When government commits to allow investors to earn their return from user fees, it is important that that commitment be reliable and enforceable. And if private investors are impeded from collecting contractually agreed fees—by regulators, courts, or the legislature—then our government will use its own resources to ensure that they are kept whole.”
SLEx example
Mr. Aquino gave the example of a private firm that agreed with the government on a specific formula for toll increases for the public’s use of a road it rehabilitated.
Malaysian-backed South Luzon Tollways Corp. (SLTC), which holds the 30-year concession for the South Luzon Expressway (SLEx), was earlier stopped by the Supreme Court from implementing a new toll rate.
The new rate, which is 250-percent higher than the existing toll, is meant to help the company recover the minimum of P12 billion it spent to rehabilitate and modernize the road.
The additional funds will also allow the company to maintain world-class services at SLEx.
The delay caused by the restraining order, which has since then been lifted, has cost SLTC up to P1 billion in foregone revenues.
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November 19th, 2010 10:36 AM #2
good for investors
bad for taxpayers
it's kinda like a bailout for investors
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November 19th, 2010 11:59 AM #3
.... To attract more investors in the country....
Need to increase the tax base, not the tax.....
40.16%+ is already too much for us....
11.3K:snow:
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November 19th, 2010 12:04 PM #4
the Phils. has a habit of screwing foreign investors
magaling mag invite pero pag nandito na pinapahirapan
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November 19th, 2010 12:21 PM #5
PNoy should try first fixing the problems of SLEX before trying to invite more investors. The problem is already on his table yet his people are sitting on it.
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November 19th, 2010 12:30 PM #6
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November 19th, 2010 01:03 PM #7
nahihirapan umangat ang Pinas (vs. our Asian neighbors) coz the masses are holding back progress
the govt is easily pressured by popular demands and protests
when the govt gives in to the demands of the masses, somebody else suffers
in this case (and topic), it's the foreign investor
if you allow foreign investors to make money, they'll keep coming back with more capital. then they'll make even more money and pump in even more capital and so on
it's common sense... it's good for the economy
but noooooo.... the masses don't see it that way
the masses always see things differently
to them, foreign investors are oppressors and should be punished
and you have a populist govt who sides with the masses and punishes foreign investors
very good
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November 19th, 2010 02:09 PM #8
hmmm... no wonder things haven't changedDamn, son! Where'd you find this?
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August 17th, 2012 05:55 PM #9
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August 18th, 2012 09:35 AM #10
The DepEd on Thursday announced the winning bids for 3 packages under the Public Private Partnership for School Infrastructure Project (PSIP), which is a build-lease transfer contract for the design, construction and maintenance of 9,301 classrooms (with toilets and furniture) in Regions I, III and IV-A for 10 years.
Fernando's BF Corp.-Riverbanks Development Corp. submitted the lowest bid to construct 2,157 classrooms in Region 1. The government will pay annual lease of P344.59 million or a total of P3.4 billion for 10 years.
Megawide-Citicore Investment Holdings, Inc. won the right to construct 2,885 classrooms in Region III and 4,259 classrooms in Region IV-A. The government will make annual lease payments of P522.98 million for Region III classrooms and P760.49 million for Region IV-A classrooms.
Choice I would have made as well.:nod:
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