Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Fil-Am Spoelstra is new coach of Miami Heat



MANILA, Philippines—Filipino-American Erik Spoelstra has replaced Pat Riley as the new head coach of Miami Heat after the latter announced his resignation on Tuesday.

"I just want to let everybody know how excited and honored I am to be the next coach of the Miami Heat," said Spoelstra, who has worked for the club for the past 13 years. "I want to thank everybody for having the confidence in me to lead this team on the court and in the future."

Before he assumed his new post in the 2006 National Basketball Association champion team, the 35-year-old Spoelstra served as Riley’s assistant, training young players such as Dwyane Wade.

Spoelstra’s mother is a Filipino, the former Fe Celino of San Pablo City, Laguna and his father Jon is of Dutch-Irish origin.

Monday, April 28, 2008

NIKE Manny Pacquiao new TV Commercial

After watching Manchester United lost to Chelsea for a late penalty I was down in shock.
Suddenly there was this new NIKE add showing Cristiano Ronaldo practicing his free kicks, then Kobe Bryant shooting, then Maria Sharapova, then Roger Federer, then Liu Xiang and then Manny Pacquiao.

Manny Pacquiao, Pinoy !

"Ang mamatay ng dahil sayo ! "

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Proud of his heritage

Proud of his heritage
SPORTING CHANCE By Joaquin M. Henson
Friday, February 29, 2008

World Wrestling Entertainment superstar Batista has a book out in the market–“Batista Unleashed”–and it’s about his life. He wrote the 305-page, hardcover edition that I bought at Fully Booked in the Fort recently.

For those who don’t believe that Batista is half-Filipino, the book is convincing proof of his heritage. His real name is David Michael Bautista. His Filipino father David, Sr. worked as a hairdresser in Washington, D. C., and separate from his Greek mother when he was eight years old.

To honor his ancestry, Batista has a colored tattoo on his left triceps of the Filipino and Greek flags merged into one. His wife Angie, from whom he is now separated, is a Filipina.

“My father was born in Washington, D. C. but his family was from the Philippines,” wrote Batista, 39. “As a wrestler, I’ve always felt a strong bond with the fans in the Philippines because of that family connection. His father, my granddad, was in the army; he didn’t talk much about what he did but I know he was in World War II and was wounded or hurt in some way.

“Every once in a while, the other kids would tease me about being Filipino. They’d call me a Flip. We could spend quite a bit of time teasing one another.”

One of his best friend Richard Salas is a Filipino.

Batista recounted his visit to Manila two years ago.

“I went to the Philippines,” he wrote. “I’d heard from some Filipino people that I was very popular there. I am half-Filipino and I’m proud of my heritage. I have a Filipino flag tattooed on my left shoulder. But had absolutely no idea how popular I was there because of my background. When I got there, I was mobbed. Everywhere I went, thousands and thousands of people showed up for my appearances.

“It was unlike anything else I had experienced in the world. They stuck me on the roof of this car and paraded me around the streets of Manila. People by the thousands showed up, cheering and waving, just because I have Filipino blood. It was a proud moment for me.

“And for them. Because I represent hope, good triumphing over evil, a guy overcoming bad stuff in his pasts to do the right thing and be successful at it. That’s what people want. That’s what heroes are about–showing us the way we can overcome all the bad things that happen to us.”

Batista said for someone who didn’t even finish high school, he’s come a long way. Life was harsh during his early years. When his father left, his mother took care of him and a younger sister Donna Raye but there was hardly any food on the table. Once, they had only a pot of burned beats to eat for a week. Batista, by the way, has a half-brother Michael from his father’s second marriage.

When Batista was 13, he was arrested for stealing cars. Then, working as a nightclub bouncer, he was jailed for nearly decapitating two roughhousers despite claiming to fight in self-defense.

“People look at the financial success but that’s probably the smallest part of it,” he continued. “It does let me do one thing I really, really love: I always wanted to spoil people. Now I can. So how did I get here?

“There were tons of components but it started with people believing in me. And I believed in myself. There were times when I was down, a lot of times, but I dug in. Some of it was out of fear that if I didn’t make it, I didn’t know what else I would do. But it was more than that. A lot of people were depending on me. I had to do it.

“In my heart, I’ll always be that poor kid from D. C. At least I hope I will. Because I don’t think there’s anything wrong with that–I wouldn’t want to be anyone else.”

Batista has two daughters, Keilani, 17, and Athena, 15, from his first marriage to a lady named Glenda. The marriage ended after six years. Keilani now has two children, Jacob and Aiden, so Batista is a grandfather.

Thursday, February 21, 2008

John Gokongwei

Here is the speech that Mr. John Gokongwei delivered at the 20th Ad Congress last November 21, 2007.

Before I begin, I want to say please bear with me, an 81-year-old man who just flew in from San Francisco 36 hours ago and is still suffering from jet lag. However, I hope I will be able to say what you want to hear…

Ladies and gentlemen, good evening. Thank you very much for having me here tonight to open the Ad Congress. I know how important this event is for our marketing and advertising colleagues. My people get very excited and go into a panic, every other year, at this time.

I would like to talk about my life, entrepreneurship, and globalization. I would like to talk about how we can become a great nation.

You may wonder how one is connected to the other, but I promise that, as there is truth in advertising, the connection will come.

Let me begin with a story I have told many times. My own.

I was born to a rich Chinese-Filipino family. I spent my childhood in Cebu where my father owned a chain of movie houses, including the first air-conditioned one outside Manila. I was the eldest of six children and lived in a big house in Cebu’s Forbes Park.

A chauffeur drove me to school everyday as I went to San Carlos University, then and still one of the country’s top schools. I topped my classes and had many friends. I would bring them to watch movies for free at my father’s movie houses.

When I was 13, my father died suddenly of complications due to typhoid. Everything I enjoyed vanished instantly. My father’s empire was built on credit. When he died, we lost everything—our big house, our cars, our business—to the banks.

I felt angry at the world for taking away my father, and for taking away all that I enjoyed before. When the free movies disappeared, I also lost half my friends. On the day I had to walk two miles to school for the very first time, I cried to my mother, a widow at 32.

But she said: “You should feel lucky. Some people have no shoes to walk to school. What can you do? Your father died with 10 centavos in his pocket.”

So, what can I do? I worked.

My mother sent my siblings to China where living standards were lower. She and I stayed in Cebu to work, and we sent them money regularly. My mother sold her jewelry. When that ran out, we sold roasted peanuts in the backyard of our much-smaller home. When that wasn’t enough, I opened a small stall in a palengke.

I chose one among several palengkes a few miles outside the city because there were fewer goods available for the people there. I woke up at five o’clock every morning for the long bicycle ride to the palengke with my basket of goods.

There, I set up a table about three feet by two feet in size. I laid out my goods—soap, candles, and thread—and kept selling until everything was bought. Why these goods? Because these were hard times and this was a poor village, so people wanted and needed the basics—soap to keep them clean, candles to light the night, and thread to sew their clothes.

I was surrounded by other vendors, all of them much older. Many of them could be my grandparents. And they knew the ways of the palengke far more than a boy of 15, especially one who had never worked before.

But being young had its advantages. I did not tire as easily, and I moved more quickly.

I was also more aggressive. After each day, I would make about 20 pesos in profit! There was enough to feed my siblings and still enough to pour back into the business. The pesos I made in the palengke were the pesos that went into building the business I have today.

After this experience, I told myself, “If I can compete with people so much older than me, if I can support my whole family at 15, I can do anything!”

Looking back, I wonder, what would have happened if my father had not left my family with nothing? Would I have become the man I am? Who knows?

The important thing to know is that life will always deal us a few bad cards. But we have to play those cards the best we can. And WE can play to win!

This was one lesson I picked up when I was a teenager. It has been my guiding principle ever since. And I have had 66 years to practice self-determination. When I wanted something, the best person to depend on was myself.

And so I continued to work.

In 1943, I expanded and began trading goods between Cebu and Manila. From Cebu, I would transport tires on a small boat called a batel. After traveling for five days to Lucena, I would load them into a truck for the six- hour trip to Manila. I would end up sitting on top of my goods so they would not be stolen!

In Manila, I would then purchase other goods from the earnings I made from the tires, to sell in Cebu. Then, when WWII ended, I saw the opportunity for trading goods in post-war Philippines.

I was 20 years old. With my brother Henry, I put up Amasia Trading which imported onions, flour, used clothing, old newspapers and magazines, and fruits from the United States.

In 1948, my mother and I got my siblings back from China. I also converted a two-story building in Cebu to serve as our home, office, and warehouse all at the same time. The whole family began helping out with the business.

In 1957, at age 31, I spotted an opportunity in corn-starch manufacturing. But I was going to compete with Ludo and Luym, the richest group in Cebu and the biggest cornstarch manufacturers. I borrowed money to finance the project.

The first bank I approached made me wait for two hours, only to refuse my loan. The second one, China Bank, approved a P500,000-peso clean loan for me.

Years later, the banker who extended that loan, Dr. Albino Sycip said that he saw something special in me. Today, I still wonder what that was, but I still thank Dr. Sycip to this day.

Upon launching our first product, Panda corn starch, a price war ensued. After the smoke cleared, Universal Corn Products was still left standing. It is the foundation upon which JG Summit Holdings now stands.

Interestingly, the price war also forced the closure of a third cornstarch company, and one of their chemists was Lucio Tan, who always kids me that I caused him to lose his job. I always reply that if it were not for me, he will not be one of the richest men in the Philippines today.

When my business grew, and it was time for me to bring in more people--my family, the professionals, the consultants, more employees--I knew that I had to be there to teach them what I knew.

When dad died at age 34, he did not leave a succession plan. From that, I learned that one must teach people to take over a business at any time.

The values of hard work that I learned from my father, I taught to my children. They started doing jobs here and there even when they were still in high school. Six years ago, I announced my retirement and handed the reins to my youngest brother James and only son Lance.

But my children tease me because I still go to the office every day and make myself useful. I just hired my first Executive Assistant and moved into a bigger and nicer office.

Building a business to the size of JG Summit was not easy. Many challenges were thrown my way. I could have walked away from them, keeping the business small, but safe. Instead, I chose to fight.

But this did not mean I won each time.

By 1976, at age 50, we had built significant businesses in food products anchored by a branded coffee called Blend 45, and agro-industrial products under the Robina Farms brand.

That year, I faced one of my biggest challenges, and lost. And my loss was highly publicized, too. But I still believe that this was one of my defining moments.

In that decade, not many business opportunities were available due to the political and economic environment. Many Filipinos were already sending their money out of the country.

As a Filipino, I felt that our money must be invested here. I decided to purchase shares in San Miguel, then one of the Philippines’ biggest corporations.

By 1976, I had acquired enough shares to sit on its board.

The media called me an upstart. “Who is Gokongwei and why is he doing all those terrible things to San Miguel?” ran one headline of the day. In another article, I was described as a pygmy going up against the powers-that- be.

The San Miguel board of directors itself even paid for an ad in all the country’s top newspapers telling the public why I should not be on the board.

On the day of reckoning, shareholders quickly filled up the auditorium to witness the battle. My brother James and I had prepared for many hours for this debate. We were nervous and excited at the same time.

In the end, I did not get the board seat because of the Supreme Court Ruling. But I was able to prove to others--and to myself--that I was willing to put up a fight. I succeeded because I overcame my fear, and tried. I believe this battle helped define who I am today.

In a twist to this story, I was invited to sit on the board of Anscor and San Miguel Hong Kong 5 years later. Lose some, win some.

Since then, I’ve become known as a serious player in the business world, but the challenges haven’t stopped coming.

Let me tell you about the three most recent challenges. In all three, conventional wisdom bet against us. See, we set up businesses against market Goliaths in very high-capital industries: airline, telecoms, and beverage.

Challenge No. 1: In 1996, we decided to start an airline.

At the time, the dominant airline in the country was PAL, and if you wanted to travel cheaply, you did not fly. You went by sea or by land.

However, my son Lance and I had a vision for Cebu Pacific: We wanted every Filipino to fly.

Inspired by the low-cost carrier models in the United States, we believed that an airline based on the no-frills concept would work here. No hot meals. No newspaper. Mono-class seating. Operating with a single aircraft type. Faster turn around time.

It all worked, thus enabling Cebu Pacific to pass on savings to the consumer.

How did we do this? By sticking to our philosophy of “low cost, great value.”

And we stick to that philosophy to this day. Cebu Pacific offers incentives. Customers can avail themselves of a tiered pricing scheme, with promotional seats for as low a P1. The earlier you book, the cheaper your ticket.

Cebu Pacific also made it convenient for passengers by making online booking available. This year, 1.25 million flights will be booked through our website. This reduced our distribution costs dramatically. Low cost. Great value.

When we started 11 years ago, Cebu Pacific flew only 360,000 passengers, with 24 daily flights to 3 destinations. This year, we expect to fly more than five million passengers, with over 120 daily flights to 20 local destinations and 12 Asian cities.

Today, we are the largest in terms of domestic flights, routes and destinations. We also have the youngest fleet in the region after acquiring new Airbus 319s and 320s. In January, new ATR planes will arrive.

These are smaller planes that can land on smaller air strips like those in Palawan and Caticlan. Now you don’t have to take a two-hour ride by mini-bus to get to the beach.

Largely because of Cebu Pacific, the average Filipino can now afford to fly. In 2005, 1 out of 12 Filipinos flew within a year. In 2012, by continuing to offer low fares, we hope to reduce that ratio to 1 out of 6. We want to see more and more Filipinos see their country and the world!

Challenge No. 2: In 2003, we established Digitel Mobile Philippines, Inc. and developed a brand for the mobile phone business called Sun Cellular.

Prior to the launch of the brand, we were actually involved in a transaction to purchase PLDT shares of the majority shareholder.

The question in everyone’s mind was how we could measure up to the two telecom giants. They were entrenched and we were late by eight years! PLDT held the landline monopoly for quite a while, and was first in the mobile phone industry.

Globe was a younger company, but it launched digital mobile technology here.

But being a late player had its advantages. We could now build our platform from a broader perspective. We worked with more advanced technologies and intelligent systems not available ten years ago. We chose our suppliers based on the most cost-efficient hardware and software.

Being a Johnny-come- lately allowed us to create and launch more innovative products, more quickly.

All these provided us with the opportunity to give the consumers a choice that would rock their world.

The concept was simple. We would offer Filipinos to call and text as much as they want for a fixed monthly fee. For P250 a month, they could get in touch with anyone within the Sun network at any time. This means great savings of as much as 2/3 of their regular phone bill! Suddenly, we gained traction.

Within one year of its introduction, Sun hit one million customers.

Once again, the paradigm shifts - this time in the telecom industry. Sun’s 24/7 Call and Text unlimited changed the landscape of mobile-phone usage.

Today, we have over 4 million subscribers and 2000 cell sites around the archipelago. In a country where 97% of the market is pre-paid, we believe we have hit on the right strategy.

Sun Cellular is a Johnny-come- lately, but it’s doing all right. It is a third player, but a significant one, in an industry where Cassandras believed a third player would perish.

And as we have done in the realm of air travel, so have we done in the telecom world: We
have changed the marketplace. In the end, it is all about making life better for the consumer by giving them choices.

Challenge No. 3: In 2004, we launched C2, the green tea drink that would change the face of the local beverage industry — then, a playground of cola companies.

Iced tea was just a sugary brown drink served bottomless in restaurants. For many years, hardly was there any significant product innovation in the beverage business.

Admittedly, we had little experience in this area. Universal Robina Corporation is the leader in snack foods but our only background in beverage was instant coffee. Moreover, we would be entering the playground of huge multinationals.

We decided to play anyway.

It all began when I was in China in 2003 and noticed the immense popularity of bottled iced tea. I thought that this product would have huge potential here. We knew that the Philippines was not a traditional tea-drinking country since more familiar to consumers were colas in returnable glass bottles.

But precisely, this made the market ready for a different kind of beverage. One that refreshes yet gives the health benefits of green tea.

We positioned it as a “spa” in a bottle. A drink that cools and cleans…thus, C2 was born.

C2 immediately caught on with consumers. When we launched C2 in 2004, we sold 100,000 bottles in the first month. Three years later, Filipinos drink around 30 million bottles of C2 per month. Indeed, C2 is in a good place.

With Cebu Pacific, Sun Cellular, and C2, the JG Summit team took control of its destiny. And we did so in industries where old giants had set the rules of the game. It’s not that we did not fear the giants. We knew we could have been crushed at the word go.

So we just made sure we came prepared with great products and great strategies. We ended up changing the rules of the game instead.

There goes the principle of self-determination, again. I tell you, it works for individuals as it does for companies. And as I firmly believe, it works for nations.

I have always wondered, like many of us, why we Filipinos have not lived up to our potential.

We have proven we can. Manny Pacquiao and Efren Bata Reyes in sports. Lea Salonga and the UP Madrigal Singers in performing arts. Monique Lhuillier and Rafe Totenco in fashion.

And these are just the names made famous by the media. There are many more who may not be celebrities but who have gained respect on the world stage.

But to be a truly great nation, we must also excel as entrepreneurs before the world. We must create Filipino brands for the global market place.

If we want to be philosophical, we can say that, with a world-class brand, we create pride for our nation. If we want to be practical, we can say that, with brands that succeed in the world, we create more jobs for our people, right here.

Then, we are able to take part in what’s really important—giving our people a big opportunity to raise their standards of living, giving them a real chance to improve their lives.

We can do it. Our neighbors have done it. So can we.

In the last 54 years, Korea worked hard to rebuild itself after a world war and a civil war destroyed it. From an agricultural economy in 1945, it shifted to light industry, consumer products, and heavy industry in the ’80s.

At the turn of the 21st century, the Korean government focused on making Korea the world’s leading IT nation. It did this by grabbing market share in key sectors like semiconductors, robotics, and biotechnology.

Today, one remarkable Korean brand has made it to the list of Top 100 Global Brands: Samsung.

Less then a decade ago, Samsung meant nothing to consumers. By focusing on quality, design, and innovation, Samsung improved its products and its image. Today, it has surpassed the Japanese brand Sony.

Now another Korean brand, LG Collins, is following in the footsteps of Samsung. It has also broken into the Top 100 Global Brands list.

What about China? Who would have thought that only 30 years after opening itself up to a market economy, China would become the world’s fourth largest economy?

Goods made in China are still thought of as cheap. Yet many brands around the world outsource their manufacturing to this country. China’s own brands—like Lenovo, Haier, Chery QQ, and Huawei—are fast gaining ground as well. I have no doubt they will be the next big electronics, technology and car brands in the world.

Lee Kwan Yu’s book “From Third World to First” captures Singapore’s aspiration to join the First World. According to the book, Singapore was a trading post that the British developed as a nodal point in its maritime empire.

The racial riots there made its officials determined to build a “multiracial society that would give equality to all citizens, regardless of race, language or religion.”

When Singapore was asked to leave the Malaysian Federation of States in 1965, Lee Kwan Yew developed strategies that he executed with single-mindedness despite their being unpopular. He and his cabinet started to build a nation by establishing the basics: building infrastructure, establishing an army, weeding out corruption, providing mass housing, building a financial center.

Forty short years after, Singapore has been transformed into the richest South East Asian country today, with a per capita income of US$32,000.

These days, Singapore is transforming itself once more. This time it wants to be the creative hub in Asia, maybe even the world. More and more, it is attracting the best minds from all over the world in filmmaking, biotechnology, media, and finance.

Meantime, Singaporeans have also created world-class brands: Banyan Tree in the hospitality industry, Singapore Airlines in the Airline industry and Singapore Telecoms in the telco industry.

I often wonder: Why can’t the Philippines, or a Filipino, do this?

Fifty years after independence, we have yet to create a truly global brand. We cannot say the Philippines is too small because it has 86 million people.

Switzerland, with 9 million people, created Nestle. Sweden, also with 9 million people, created Ericsson. Finland, even smaller with five million people, created Nokia.

All three are major global brands, among others.

Yes, our country is well-known for its labor, as we continue to export people around the world. And after India, we are grabbing a bigger chunk of the pie in the call-center and Business Process Outsourcing industries.

But by and large, the Philippines has no big industrial base, and Filipinos do not create world-class products.

We should not be afraid to try—even if we are laughed at.

Japan, laughed at for its cars, produced Toyota. Korea, for its electronics, produced Samsung. Meanwhile, the Philippines’ biggest companies 50 years ago—majority of which are multinational corporations such as Coca-Cola, Procter and Gamble, and Unilever Philippines, for example—are still the biggest companies today.

There are very few big, local challengers. But already, hats off to Filipino entrepreneurs making strides to globalize their brands.

Goldilocks has had much success in the Unites States and Canada, where half of its customers are non-Filipinos. Coffee-chain Figaro may be a small player in the coffee world today, but it is making the leap to the big time.

Two Filipinas, Bea Valdez and Tina Ocampo, are now selling their Philippine-made jewelry and bags all over the world. Their labels are now at Barney’s and Bergdorf’s in the U.S. and in many other high-end shops in Asia, Europe, and the Middle East.

When we started our own foray outside the Philippines 30 years ago, it wasn’t a walk in the park. We set up a small factory in Hong Kong to manufacture Jack and Jill potato chips there.

Today, we are all over Asia. We have the number-one-potato- chips brand in Malaysia and Singapore. We are the leading biscuit manufacturer in Thailand, and a significant player in the candy market in Indonesia.

Our Aces cereal brand is a market leader in many parts of China. C2 is now doing very well in Vietnam, selling over 3 million bottles a month there, after only 6 months in the market. Soon, we will launch C2 in other South East Asian markets.

I am 81 today. But I do not forget the little boy that I was in the palengke in Cebu. I still believe in family. I still want to make good. I still don’t mind going up against those older and better than me. I still believe hard work will not fail me. And I still believe in people willing to think the same way.

Through the years, the market place has expanded: between cities, between countries, between continents. I want to urge you all here to think bigger.

Why serve 86 million when you can sell to four billion Asians? And that’s just to start you off. Because there is still the world beyond Asia.

When you go back to your offices, think of ways to sell and market your products and services to the world. Create world-class brands. You can if you really tried. I did.

As a boy, I sold peanuts from my backyard. Today, I sell snacks to the world.

I want to see other Filipinos do the same.

Thank you and good evening once again.

[John Gokongwei's Speech at the 20th Ad Congress, 21 November 2007]

Monday, February 18, 2008

Baguio Taxi Driver Returns Bag to Owner


Sounds like a news headline, doesn’t it?

Nah, it’s just a short story for you.

Well, I had guests who rode a cab to go to town after checking in yesterday, left a bag inside the cab, then called me to ask if I was able to get the name of the Baguio cab they rode in.

I said I did not but that I would PRAY instead.

Five hours later, as I returned from dinner with yet another set of guests, I asked the first group if the contents of the lost bag were irreplaceable, and much to my surprise and pleasure they said, “He returned it! He brought it back here!”

They still did not get the name of the cabbie or the cab company, but I figured, if one dishonest act condemns all Baguio cabbies, one honest act can serve to redeem all of them as well.

Just thought to give you a ‘Feel Good’ story to start the day off right!

www.i-baguio.com



Thursday, February 14, 2008

Fil-American makes the cut in American Idol

Fil-American makes the cut in American Idol


Another Filipino-American made it in the Top 24 of American Idol Season 7. Her name is Ramiele Malubay, 19, who auditioned in Miami, Florida.

Ramiele is the fourth Filipino-American who made it in the Top 24 of American Idol, after Jasmine Trias and Camile Velasco in Season 3 and Jose "Sway" Penala in Season 5.

Jasmine and Camile both went on to compete in the Final 12. Jasmine finished third while Camile was the fourth to be eliminated. Fantasia Barrino was declared American Idol of Season 3.

Sway, on the other hand, didn't make the cut into the Final 12 where Taylor Hicks was named the American Idol in Season 5.

Ramiele, who is based in Orlando, Florida, wants to be the next Jasmine Trias.

During her audition in Miami, Ramiele sang Aretha Franklin's "Natural Woman."

She got the following comments from the three American Idol judges—Paula Abdula, Simon Cowell, and Randy Jackson—after her performance:

Paula: "I think you are a fine singer and a fine performer... I think you're a phenomenal."

Simon: "I think you're a good singer. I don't think you're a contemporary singer. I think you're more like a hotel singer."

Randy: "I actually thought you were good. I was impressed. You definitely have a big voice for a very cute, smaller girl." - Philippine Entertainment Portal

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Economy expands 7.3% in 2007, fastest pace in 31 years

Just imagine if we Pinoys are not fighting each other it could reach a annual growth of 9 or 10 enough to solve poverty.



INQUIRER.net

First Posted 10:26:00 01/31/2008

MANILA, Philippines -- (UPDATE 2) The economy expanded by a forecast-beating 7.3 percent in 2007, its fastest pace in 31 years, boosted by the services sector, the government said Thursday.

"In an environment of benign inflation, low interest rates and a strong peso, the Philippine economy turned in its best performance in 31 years," said Romulo Virola, the secretary-general of the National Statistics Coordination Board.

"On the demand side, increased consumer spending, investments in public and private construction, government spending and exports of non-factor services largely contributed to the remarkable performance of the economy."

Following the strong performance last year, Economic Planning Secretary Augusto
Santos said the government is maintaining its forecast that growth will slow to 6.3-7.0 percent in 2008 given the expected slowdown in the US, the biggest market for Philippine exports.

"What we are saying is that if there is a recession in the US, then that will affect us, but the situation is closely being monitored," he told a media briefing.

Santos said the world's largest economy is unlikely to slip into recession.

"As we see it, there may in fact be no recession in the US given the stimulus package of the Bush administration.”

SERVICE BOOM

The Philippine economic growth last year was led by the robust services sector whose output grew 8.7 percent.

Industrial output increased 6.6 percent, while farm production rose 5.1 percent.

Gross national product, swelled by money sent home by Filipinos working overseas, grew 6.5 percent in the fourth quarter from a year earlier and 7.8 percent in the full year.

The economy grew a seasonally adjusted 1.8 percent in the fourth quarter, faster than expected.

From a year earlier, the economy grew 7.4 percent in the fourth quarter.

"The GDP data was a surprise. The country's economic growth remains very robust and it is unlikely to decelerate in the first half," said Frederic Neumann, economist at HSBC in Hong Kong.

"The Philippine government's proposal for a P75-billion stimulus package should even add to this year's growth and cushion the impact of an economic slowdown in the US," said Neumann.

RATE CUT

Analysts said the data implied that the Philippines' growth momentum would continue into 2008, and that the central bank may cut rates by 25 basis points at a policy meeting later on Thursday, despite earlier expectations of a 50 basis point cut.

"Evidently economic momentum is very strong. Therefore, if we see a slowdown in economic growth, it would only materialize in the second half of the year," Neumann said.

"We therefore see a reduced need for the central bank to cut rates aggressively now and we might see that today with a 25 basis point cut."

But Vishnu Varathan, an analyst at Forecast Pte., said last year's performance should not affect the rate policy.

"We really don't want to be looking through the rear-view mirror in constructing monetary policy. In my view, this number should not materially affect the decision today." From reports by Thomson Financial, Reuters, and Agence France-Presse; edited by INQUIRER.net

($1 = P40.69 pesos)

USEFUL LINK:
http://www.nscb.gov.ph/sna/2007/4thQ2007/2007qpr4.asp.