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Alice Kim

Philippines - 0 views

    • Alice Kim
       
      Industries Fishing, food processing, textiles, leatherware, automobile components, home appliances, tourism, mining of iron, nickel and copper
    • Alice Kim
       
      Currency The peso (P), divided into 100 centavos
    • Alice Kim
       
      Main agricultural products Rice, coconuts (copra), abaca (Manila hemp), tobacco, bananas, pineapples, orchids, rubber, sugar
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  •  Currency The peso (P), divided into 100 centavos
Alice Kim

Philippines Economy, Philippines Economic Profile | Economy Watch - 0 views

    • Alice Kim
       
              Literacy Rate: Simple 93.4% (2003 est.) Functional 84.1% (2003 est.) 
    • Alice Kim
       
              Labor force: 37.89 million (2009 est.)           Unemployment rate: 7.5% (2009 est.) 7.4% (2008 est.)          Population below poverty line: 32.9% (2006 est.)  
    • Alice Kim
       
        GDP - per capita (PPP):   $3,300 (2009 est.) $3,400 (2008 est.) $3,300 (2007 est.) 
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    • Alice Kim
       
      GDP (official exchange rate): $160.6 billion (2009 est.)           GDP - real growth rate:   0.9% (2009 est.) 3.8% (2008 est.) 7.1% (2007 est.)
    • Alice Kim
       
      Philippines Economy: Profile The Philippines economy is the world's 47th largest economy (as of 2008). The Philippine peso is the country's unit of currency. The Philippines has undergone a transformation from being an agriculture based country to that of a newly industrialized country. The economy is now vastly dependent on the services and manufacturing sector. The country has a total labor force of around 38.1 million. As of October 2009, its foreign currency reserves stood at US$36.13 billion.
    • Alice Kim
       
      The Philippines or the Republic of the Philippines (officially), is a Southeast Asian country. It is an archipelago of 7,107 islands located in the western Pacific Ocean. Its neighboring countries are Vietnam, Borneo and Indonesia. Manila is its capital city. Geographically, the Philippines can be divided into three parts, namely, Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao. With all these islands combined, the country's coastline is the fifth longest in the world, spanning 36,289 kilometers. It is considered as Asia's largest Catholic country of Asia, since Spanish colonial times. Further, the Philippines is the world's 12th most populated country with approximately 92 million people (as of 2009).   The country can be reached by plane. Other means of traveling are not feasible as the Philippines is an archipelago. Some major airports are in Manila, Cebu, Davao, Clark (Angeles), Kalibo, Laoag, Subic (Zambales), and Zamboanga.
Alice Kim

Economic Problems of the Philippines - 0 views

    • Alice Kim
       
      Philippine Economy The Republic of the Philippines is located in Southeast Asia and Manila is its capital city. The country comprises 7,107 islands and ranks as the 12th most populous country in the world. Like most other southeast Asian regions, the Philippines too has a history of European colonization. It was a colony of Spain and the USA. The country is now home to multiple cultures and traditional ethnicities. It is also looked upon as a perfect example of a 'mixed economy'. Industrialization is a new development in the Philippines. Traditionally, the economy stabilized on the agrarian contributions and the manufacture of garments, pharmaceutical products and semiconductors. In the last decade, electronic exports added to the exports, including various products obtained by mining.  The economy of the nation also largely depends on the remittances from Filipinos residing overseas and investing in the homeland. However, exports are not evenly balanced by the imports that include heavy electronics, garments, various raw materials, intermediate goods and fuel. The influence of the Manila galleon on the nation's economy during the Spanish period, and bilateral trade when the country was a colony of the United States has resulted in the preference of a mixed economy over a centrally planned or market based one. It is very important to understand the shift during the Ferdinand Marcos leadership, from a market economy to a centrally planned economy, to relate to the economic recession that the country is now facing. It is only in the wake of economic liberalization and the make over from the monopolies during the Marcos era that the country is now able to apply the fundamentals of a mixed economy to remain buoyant. 
    • Alice Kim
       
      Import-Export Imbalance: Among the many economic problems faced by the Philippines, one is the imbalance of imports and exports. The negative trade is heavy and only counterbalanced by the service account surplus. Over the last two decades, Philippine exports have shifted from commodity-based products to manufactured goods. However, in the midst of the current global economic recession, the exports of electronics, garments and textiles are yet to reach a level of import neutralization. 
    • Alice Kim
       
      Decline of the Philippine Peso: The economic downturn has resulted in the devaluation of the Philippine peso and subsequently, a fall in the stock market. The fiscal conservatism strategy adopted by the Philippine government has yet to reflect a positive effect on acceleration of economic growth. 6% growth in the gross domestic product (GDP) in 2004 and 7.3% in 2007 has yet to accelerate to the linear GDP growth projected by the government. 
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    • Alice Kim
       
      Reliance on Remittances: President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo has pledged complete development of the economy by the year 2020. There have been a number of tax reforms put in place, alongside extensive asset privatization. Nevertheless, Philippines' dependency on remittances from non-resident investors is large. Neighboring competitors have been siphoning away big investors in infrastructure and outsourcing. This has resulted in an uneven regional development. 
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