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The Philippines recorded a balance of payments (BOP) deficit of $67 million in November, reversing the previous month's $1.19 billion surplus, mainly due to debt servicing, the central bank said on Monday. It was only the second deficit this year after a September shortfall of $95 million.
For the first 11 months of the year, the Philippines had a balance of payments surplus of $7.782 billion, fuelled by record remittances from around 8 million Filipinos, or 10 percent of the population, who work overseas.
Remittance inflows in the first 10 months of the year climbed 15 percent to $11.865 billion and the central bank expects remittances through formal channels to hit a record $14.3 billion this year, up around 12 percent from last year.
The central bank expects the BOP surplus to hit $8-8.5 billion this year, the highest since 1999 when the current definition of the BOP began being used and more than double last year's surplus of $3.77 billion.
But the central bank said at the weekend it expected next year's surplus to shrink to between $3 billion and $3.5 billion as high prices for oil and other imported commodities and slower demand from its main trading partner, the United States, were likely to widen its trade deficit.

Copyright Reuters, 2007

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