Friday, March 29, 2024

NEDA cites importance of digital technologies in economic recovery

The National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) has stressed the importance of using digital technologies to ensure price stability and support the agriculture value chain necessary to help build consumer confidence and gradual recovery of the domestic economy.

Acting Socioeconomic Planning secretary Karl Kendrick Chua said that digital technologies such as eKadiwa, a digital marketing platform, the Supply Chain Analytics (SCAn) Dashboard and the SCAn Reporter, are important government platforms to address potential supply bottlenecks and ensure ample and unhampered supply of commodities while many regions are still on various forms of community quarantine.

“It is also essential to increase the utilization of high-yielding and early maturing varieties of crops and adopt disaster-resilient farm technologies and practices in order to ensure stable food supply and prices in the months ahead,” Chua said.

As the Covid-19 pandemic continues to affect the daily lives of Filipinos, the government needs to ensure that commodity prices remain low and stable to preserve the purchasing power of Filipino consumers especially those in the bottom 30 percent income households, said Chua.

The NEDA chief pointed out that with the onset of the rainy season and continued implementation of community quarantine measures, the government and the private sector need to use existing digital technologies to better address supply bottlenecks and ensure stable prices.

Chua noted that the faster inflation was largely due to the increase in transport price index as public transport remains partly restricted and domestic petroleum prices started to increase month-on-month because of the recovery in international oil prices.

Transport services inflation rose significantly to 8.4 percent in June 2020 from 1.3 percent in May 2020. Inflation in passenger transport by road accelerated to 9.5 percent from 2.6 percent. In particular, tricycle fares recorded an increase of 26.0 percent from 6.6 percent, as operators tried to compensate for reduced passenger load to follow social distancing measures with higher fares.

Meanwhile, food inflation decelerated to 2.7 percent. This is attributed to the stable supply of agricultural commodities with the implementation of the food resiliency protocol and related guidelines which ensured the unhampered delivery of essential items.

“Although inflation is expected to remain within the target range of 2 to 4 percent this year, we need to closely monitor possible upside risks to inflation as select economic activities are now resuming, although at reduced capacities. This is to comply with guidelines and protocols set to contain the spread of Covid-19,” Chua added.

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