Baguio competitive despite survey,city mayor insists
>> Tuesday, November 12, 2013
BAGUIO CITY – Shrugging off
Baguio's poor showing in a 2012 competitiveness poll, city officials
casted doubts on the reliability and accuracy of data gathered by the Trade
department about doing business in the city.
The summer capital,
Mayor Mauricio Domogan said, remains competitive.
Cordillera Trade and
Industry regional director Myrna Pablo, who serves as chairman of the regional
competitiveness committee; assistant regional director Carmelita Usman, investments promotions officer Vilma Abad and DTI Baguio-Benguet director Freda
Gawisan, who presented the results before the department heads, said they were
supplied incomplete data and most of the information provided were contradicting
therefore not satisfying the factors and indicators provided under the survey.
The survey is
commissioned by the National Competitiveness Council and is done annually to
assess the performance of the municipalities and cities toward realizing the
country’s goal of improving its economic standing in the various international
survey groups.
The parameters were
economic dynamism, government efficiency and infrastructure.
Year 2012 results
around the country showed the City of Tabuk performing better, placing 38th in
the survey.
The survey was topped
by Cagayan de Oro, Iloilo, San Fernando (Pampanga) and Butuan City.
Domogan, the public
information office said, has asked the department heads to confer with the DTI
and the Department of the Interior and Local Government Baguio to reconcile the
data and the procedures being done by the city for revalidation by the
identified offices.
“It is not important
that we become number 2 or 3 or be on top of the survey, what is important is
that the data are reconciled and that the real situation of our city is
reflected,” the mayor had said.
Domogan said fiscal
status of the city remains good as its local revenues remain bigger than its
Internal Revenue Allocation (IRA) share and therefore, unlike other cities,
does not depend solely on the IRA to finance its operations and projects.
“Despite being one of
the smallest cities with only 57.49 square kilometer land area, our city
generates more than P800 million from local sources which is larger that our
IRA share of P530 million," he said.
The proposed budget of
Baguio City for next year is about P1.39 billion.
“If indeed we are not
competitive economically, then we would have been experiencing financial
problems but as it is, we are okay and financially stable. We have no loans
from internal or external sources. Of course, we cannot execute all the
projects we want but steadily, our local revenues are growing and they support
the budgetary needs of our city,” the mayor said.
Among those to be
revalidated is the city’s business process and licensing system (BPLS) where
the city performed poorly having not complied with the recommended BPLS
streamlining reforms particularly the use of a unified form, lessening of the
number of signatories to five, processing steps to five and processing time to
10 days for new permits and five days for renewal.
As per assessment, the
city does not use the unified form, has seven signatories and nine steps.
Baguio has expressed
willingness to further streamline the city’s BPLS system to comply with the
reforms as long as these are realistic and conform with the city’s business
situation.
“If the changes would
mean that we will do away with steps that are crucial in ensuring the
applicants’ compliance with our requirements and will be in violations of our
existing ordinances, then I will not allow them as we cannot sacrifice the
integrity of our process just to shorten it,” Domogan said.
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