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Peso’s
gain is OFW’s bane
by
LEO J. SANTIAGO AND JULIE JAVELLANA-SANTOS
MANILA—IN
A remittance slip, there was an additional US$50 that Cesar
Dimasupil’s daughter Arlene sent from London. But he
remained stoic.
“That [money] would just even things out,” Dimasupil
says of the dilemma that most families of overseas Filipino
workers are facing under a stronger peso and a record-low
inflation rate.
Dimasupil, like most Filipinos brought up in a male-as-strong
society, says he doesn’t know if he should celebrate
for getting the added money from something he said he shouldn’t
have asked from his daughter in the first place.
“But what can I do? They say the strong peso could lead
to lower prices. That hasn’t happened in the past months,”
Dimasupil said.
The Dimasupil family shares the conundrum of a Philippine
economy that a recent World Bank report said has been growing,
in part because of the cash sent by nearly eight million Filipinos
temporarily or permanently working or living abroad.
In a report released by the WB last month, it noted that the
stronger peso helped inflation rates to fall to 4.3 percent
by end-2006 and to 2.6 percent by February this year. Food
and oil prices remained “relatively” stable, the
WB said.
Pummeled in recent years by political shocks to the economy
and macro-economic anxieties, the peso appreciated by nearly
eight percent against the US dollar in 2006, and strengthened
further in early this year.
It’s a cause celebre for most businesses, especially
importers who can pay less from products they’re bringing
in from abroad.
But for an economy that the WB said is relying on consumption,
the celebration isn’t felt yet by OFW families here
whose remittance receipt is boosting consumption.
According to economist Fernando Aldaba, herein lies the risks
of an economy relying much on remittances since many OFWs
could also hedge on a possible uptick of the dollar.
Hedge
BUT with the expected spending this May up to June, particularly
on tuition and school expenses, the hedge couldn’t be
applied despite the peso gaining further against the greenback
on a two-month high of P47 exchange rate.
“That enrolment is just around the corner prompted me
to ask for the additional money,” Dimasupil said whose
two other children are also studying to be nurses like Arlene.
Indeed, low inflation rates may have abated prices of basic
commodities from pushing up but the cost of education, something
held dearly by most Filipino families, remain expensive.
Ditto, says Beth Realubid who said she also asked her husband
Lando in Bahrain to hike what he sends monthly.
They have three children who are all in college.
Jose Alfonso, a seafarer, said aside from tuition, the higher
cost of his brother’s clothing requirements in a maritime
school also caused him to send an additional hundred dollars
a month.
“My brother asked that his monthly dollar allowance
be raised because the peso equivalent of what I used to send
him has gone down,” Alfonso said.
Alfonso said that before, he sends US$150 a month, which is
equivalent to around P8,400. But with the appreciation of
the peso, that amount is now just a few change above P7,000.
“I feel like losing a thousand pesos every month,”
he added.
Alfonso’s brother Michael also needed an additional
US$25 in allowance to be able to pay rent and eat three times
a day. He lives in a Manila dormitory and goes to their home
in the southern Philippine province of Cavite on weekends.
Arlene’s parents, on the other hand, used to get the
equivalent of around P28,000 from her US$500 monthly remittance.
Now, her parents said they get only a little more than P23,500,
a difference of P4,500 since the exchange rate of P56 to the
US$1 in 2005.
“Yung ibinaba ay sapat na para sa allowance ng isang
bata sa isang buwan (The difference is already equivalent
to a month’s allowance of one kid going to college),”
Flavia, Arlene’s mother, said.
Uptick
STILL, not all Filipinos sending money home are pessimistic.
Take US-based overseas Filipino-turned-exporter Robert Ceralvo,
who expects a stronger peso to “gradually –and
hopefully not very long– translate to lower prices of
utilities, commodities and many other day-to-day needs that
the OFW family regularly purchases and consumes.”
“A lower exchange rate, which at the onset translates
to lower domestic purchasing power for OFW beneficiary families,
will, in time, translate to a general increase in the real
purchasing power, i.e. it will be cheaper to buy imported
goods, cheaper to travel abroad, etc.,” Ceralvo said
in reply to questions sent by electronic mail.
Indeed, Average inflation has fallen substantially from 7.6
percent in 2005 to 6.2 percent in 2006 as the dollar weakened
against the peso.
Ceralvo added a stronger peso spells “good news for
businesses that rely on imported input or raw materials and
for those who are investing on call centers, telecoms and
BPOs who are buying and bringing in new technology from other
countries.”
But from an exporter’s point of view, Ceralvo said they
share the same sentiments as the OFWs have.
“Right now our handicrafts, woodcrafts, toys, gifts
and collectibles, home furnishings, Christmas décor,
apparel and garments industries, etc. are gasping their last
breathe, trying to survive from stiff competition from China,
Vietnam, Indonesia, new republics from eastern Europe and
Africa,” he explained.
“A strong currency … will make our exports more
expensive, and a fall in exports has a negative effect on
our economic growth,” he added.
For some OFWs like Arlene, however, sending the additional
remittance amount meant additional work hours or securing
additional sources of income.
Her father said their daughter has asked the administrator
of the hospital she’s working for to increase her weekly
overtime by at least five hours.
“She cannot just increase my remittances without increasing
her monthly income,” Arlene’s father said.
On the other continent, Lando Realubid began repairing appliances
for fees lower than licensed repair shops.
His wife Beth said Lando does this on his off-hours working
in the docks of Bahrain as a port-based third engineer.
“He makes an additional US$100 to US$200 a month doing
appliance repairs,” Beth said. However, this is seasonal
since she said there are months when no one asks for repairs.
Joseph, likewise, had to work extra hours. From a 52-hour
workweek, including overtime, he is now breaking his back
12 hours more, or two additional hours everyday on a six-day
workweek on board a tanker.
"For a fragile, [some say] ‘strange’ economy
like ours, there are certainly losers and winners in the fluctuation
of the exchange rates, both short-term and long-term,”
Ceralvo said.
Still, he added that the OFW family still has more leverage
and hedging abilities than the rest of the population, to
offset the negative effects of a strong currency.
“They can still fully enjoy the positive effects of
a deteriorating peso exchange rate,” because they can
rely on our dollars, he said. end
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