Taiwan Taps Filipino Talent For Global Semiconductor Workforce At 2026 Career Day

Taiwan brings semiconductor career opportunities to Manila, connecting Filipino engineers with global industry leaders as demand for skilled talent continues to rise.

When Publicity Stopped Being Proof Of Reputation Strength

Modern reputation management requires more than visibility, as stakeholders now rely on evidence from actions, culture, and engagement rather than curated public communications.

Chef Tatung Sarthou Introduces A Filipino Philosophy Of Living Through The Wisdom Of The Kitchen

Chef Tatung Sarthou introduces KitchiZen, a book that reframes the Filipino kitchen as a space for life lessons on balance, patience, and understanding enough.

From Narrative To Infrastructure: How Reputation Management Evolved In The Last 10 Years

Reputation today is no longer shaped by messaging alone but by systems, actions, and consistency that stakeholders experience and verify across platforms over time.

Sun Life Executive Forecasts Within Target ’19 Growth For PH

Sun Life Executive Forecasts Within Target ’19 Growth For PH

126
126

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

An official of Sun Life Philippines remains positive of within-target growth for the Philippine economy this year if government spending sustains its strong growth.

In the first three quarters of the year, growth, as measured by gross domestic product (GDP), averaged at 5.8 percent, still short of the 6 to 7-percent growth target this year.

For the fourth quarter, Sun Life Philippines Chief Investments Officer Michael Enriquez forecasts domestic output to be at 6.5 to 6.6 percent, which would bring full-year growth to around 5.975 percent.

“Hopefully, it registers at 6.6 percent or 6.7 percent for the fourth quarter,” he said in an economic briefing Friday.

While government spending will boost growth, Enriquez said regulatory overhangs are among the risks to domestic growth.

“I think there are a lot of changes in regulations that affect some companies right now, especially the utility companies,” he said.

Enriquez said regulatory issues “create some negative outlook on how business is conducted in the country.”

Meanwhile, he forecasts inflation rate to average this year at 2.4 percent, same level as that of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), while his 2020 forecast is three percent.

Both projections are within the government’s 2-4 percent target band until 2021.

The rate of price increases in the first 11 months this year averaged at 2.5 percent.

Last November, it posted an uptick to 1.3 percent from 0.8 percent in the previous month primarily due to faster inflation of alcoholic beverages and tobacco index given the higher sin taxes.

Last month’s uptick is the second jump after domestic inflation peaked at 6.7 percent in September and October 2018.

The first increase was recorded last May when the figure rose to 3.2 percent from month-ago’s 3 percent. (PNA)