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Ceres-Negros FC secures third straight PFL title

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo
Senior Reporter

FOR the third straight year Ceres-Negros FC is the Philippines Football League (PFL) champion and it did it in style, coming from behind to bag the title.

Needing one more win and the full three points that goes with it to finally secure this year’s edition of the league title, the “Busmen” did exactly that, showing much resilience to buck an early deficit and defeat Green Archers United FC, 3-1, in their game at the Aboitiz Pitch in Lipa City, Batangas, on Oct. 12, Saturday.

The win took Ceres to 56 points with a couple of games left in its schedule to render itself out of reach from the chasing pack led by second-running Kaya FC Iloilo (50 points).

Ceres found itself trailing at the end of the opening half, 1-0, after John Celiz put GAU ahead in the 24th minute.

The league champion though regrouped in the second half, with Angelo Marasigan finding the bottom of the net in the 50th minute to level the count at 1-1.

It kept putting the pressure on GAU after and when the 81st minute struck Ceres went on top thanks to a goal from Bienvenido Maranon.

Two minutes later, the Spanish striker completed his brace and in the process gave his team a two-point cushion from which their opponents could not recover from.

Aside from clinching the 2019 PFL title, the win handed Ceres a 16th straight victory and unblemished record to date, a league record.

As the PFL champions anew, the “Busmen” earned the right to represent the Philippines in the AFC Champions League preliminary round 1 next year.

“It’s a nice feeling. The guys they started very early and with all the problems we had all season and everything, this title is the most important of all three,” said Ceres coach Risto Vidakovic after clinching their straight title.

“I think the guys showed everyone that they are very professional. They worked very hard during the whole year. Especially that we started January 5, we’re already nine months working very hard and it’s not easy,” he added, underscoring the kind of effort they put in their quest to win three straight league titles.

Ceres still has two remaining matches against Mendiola FC 1991 on Oct. 16 and Kaya on 19, in that order. Both games will be played at the Aboitiz Pitch.

Kingad falls to Johnson in ONE grand prix title fight

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo
Senior Reporter

TOKYO — Filipino mixed martial arts fighter Danny “The King” Kingad fell short in his quest to become the ONE Championship flyweight grand prix champion after losing to American Demetrious “Mighty Mouse” Johnson by unanimous decision in the co-main event of Part One of “ONE: Century” on Sunday morning here.

Put up a gallant stand for the full three rounds, Mr. Kingad just could not get the steady leverage he needed to overcome MMA legend Johnson, who turned to his vast experience to get the better of the Filipino fighter on his way to claiming the grand prix belt.

Earlier in the day, Mr. Kingad’s teammate Lito “Thunder Kid” Adiwang got his ONE career to a good start with an impressive technical knockout win (arm lock) over hometown bet Senzo Ikeda in their strawweight battle.

Messrs. Johnson and Kingad engaged in an early wrestling contest before the American got traction by taking down the legs of the Filipino.

Mr. Johnson continued to put pressure while his opponent was on his back, even attempting a kimura, but Mr. Kingad was just not to give up and fought back, eventually surviving the opening round.

In the second round, Mr, Kingad caught Mr. Johnson with a solid punch that made the latter lose his balance.

Mighty Mouse would regroup, going for a takedown anew to counter the power of The King.

The two went back-and-forth while on the mat as Mr. Johnson continued to look for the angles to go for the finish.

But like in the first round, Mr, Kingad would counter and rally back, attempting an arm bar late in the round which Mr. Johnson eventually fended off.

The third round saw the fighters trying to get early control at the start.

Mr. Kingad tried to engage Mr. Johnson in a stand-up fight but the latter did not oblige going instead for a takedown.

He got the Filipino on his back but Mr. Kingad managed to extricate himself and landed some elbows to the body.

Mr. Kingad desperately attempted to inflict more damage abut Mr. Johnson was just not to buckle down as the three-round drew to a close.

After the fight, Mr. Johnson gave credit to Mr. Kingad for putting a stand he did.

BLISTERING START FOR THE THUNDER KID
Meanwhile, in an earlier preliminary match, ONE-debuting Adiwang (10-2) made short work of Mr. Ikeda, fashioning out an explosive first-round victory.

The Filipino came out with much confidence and after a brief feeling-out went for the move.

He took down Ikeda and initially pummelled him with punches.

The two jostled on the ground before the Filipino managed to put a scarf-hold armlock on his opponent, twisting it and dislocating the arm of the Japanese.

Upon breaking the fight, the referee immediately stopped the fight at the 1:57 mark of the contest upon seeing what had happened to Mr. Ikeda, sending Mr. Adiwang and his camp to celebration.

“I was visualizing and dreaming about this moment for a long time. I knew I can do this and just needed to put in the work and get the opportunity. This is just the start for me,” said Mr. Adiwang in the postmatch interview.

Team Lakay’s Adiwang was a product of the highly successful ONE “Warriors Series,” topping the seventh edition of tournament in August where he defeated Anthony Do of Vietnam by unanimous decision in the main event.

After the victory, he was immediately signed by ONE to a six-figure contract to be part of its regular roster of athletes.

LEE SIBLINGS WIN
Also yesterday, ONE champion siblings Angela and Christian Lee were victorious in respective title fights.

Ms. Lee got back at China’s Xiong Jing Nan by submission in the last 15 seconds of the fight to retain her world atomweight title.

Ms. Xiong defeated Ms. Lee when the latter tried to get the former’s strawweight belt last March.

Lightweight champion Lee, meanwhile, was a unanimous decision winner over Saygid Guseyn Arslanaliev of Turkey in the final of the lightweight grand prix despite being a late replacement for American Eddie Alvarez.

ONE: Century was broadcast live to the United States by way of TNT and B/R Live.

Team Lakay stalwarts happy to see steady growth of ONE Championship

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo
Senior Reporter

TOKYO — On Sunday ONE Championship celebrated a landmark event in its history as it staged its 100th live event since being established with a never-been-done-before offering of two shows in one day, dubbed ONE: Century, here.

It was the organization’s way, officials said, of celebrating ONE Championship’s gains on various fronts since 2011 when it opened shop while setting up the direction it is heading to moving forward.

Practically part of the organization from the start, Team Lakay stalwarts Honorio “The Rock” Banario and Kevin “The Silencer” Belingon said they are very happy with the growth of ONE Championship even as they give credit to the promotion in helping them grow as a team and as individual athletes.

“From when ONE started to now, a lot has changed. I mean, ONE Championship is very much well known today and is still continuing to grow. We were with ONE since the start and it’s the 100th show of the promotion and we’re proud of that,” shared Mr. Banario, 30, in Filipino, to Philippine sportswriters during media day for Century on Friday.

Mr. Banario (14-9) is the company’s former world featherweight champion and was set to meet Japanese legend Shinya Aoki in a flyweight battle in part two of the two-pronged event later yesterday.

Mr. Belingon (20-6) shared his teammate’s views, adding that for ONE Championship to achieve such a milestone speaks volume of how it goes about its affairs.

“When it started it was still ONE Fighting Championship and we were already there. In 2012 we signed a contract with them and it has kept growing. It’s a testament to the organization and how they do things and it is not at all a surprise that now they are at their 100th show,” said Mr. Belingon, 31, whose fourth clash with Brazilian rival Bibiano “The Flash” Fernandes for the world bantamweight title was a featured co-main event in part two of ONE: Century.

The two veteran Filipino mixed martial arts fighters also shared that being part of ONE Championship has helped Team Lakay evolve as an organization as well.

“ONE opened an opportunity for us to compete abroad. Before we were just fighting and conquering events back home. Through ONE Championship we made a name for ourselves not only in the Philippines. And it kept us growing as individuals and as a team. I would say we are stronger as an organization since being part of ONE Championship,” said Mr. Belingon, who first fought in the organization in 2012.

“Before ONE Championship our gym was small and our equipment was not topnotch but with the success we have had in the promotion we were able to upgrade our facility and we have a bigger and brand-new gym,” said Mr. Banario.

“And in the process we have improved a lot as a team, skills-wise, and we have more fighters now who are both fighting locally and abroad,” added the former featherweight champion.

Apart from Messrs. Banario and Belingon, other Team Lakay athletes parading their wares in ONE Championship are former champions Eduard “Landslide” Folayang and Geje “Gravity” Eustaquio, reigning world strawweight champion Joshua “The Passion” Pacio, Danny “The King” Kingad, Edward “The Ferocious” Kelly, Gina “Conviction” Iniong and April Osenio.

Strawweight Lito “Thunder Kid” Adiwang is the latest Team Lakay member in ONE Championship and was set to make his debut yesterday in part one of Century against Japanese Shinzo Ikeda.

Milo throws support to 30th Southeast Asian Games

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo
Senior Reporter

AS a longtime supporter of Philippine sports, nutritional energy drink maker Milo has been involved in many an activity and program geared towards building champions and values-driven individuals.

Such thrust of the group continues as it came on board to be one of the supporters of the 30th Southeast Asian Games which the country is hosting later this year.

Officially announced on Oct. 10 in ceremonies held at the Conrad Hotel Manila, Milo Philippines will see it collaborate with the Philippine Southeast Asian Games Organizing Committee (PHISGOC) and other stakeholders as they push for a common goal of rallying the nation to support the athletes representing the country under one “Laban Pilipinas” battle cry.

Present during the press conference for the partnership unveiling were Veronica Cruz, vice-president, Nestle Philippines-Milo; Lester P. Castillo, assistant vice-president, Nestle Philippines-Milo; House Speaker Alan Peter Cayetano, Chairman, PHISGOC; Congressman Abraham Tolentino, president, Philippine Olympic Committee; and Ramon Fernandez, commissioner, Philippine Sports Commission (in behalf of PSC Chairman and SEA Games Chef de Mission William “Butch” Ramirez).

They were joined by national athletes and Milo Sports Program graduates and ambassadors Alyssa Valdez (Milo champion-volleyball), Pauline Lopez (Milo-Philippine Taekwondo Association), and Kiefer Ravena (Milo BEST Center-Basketball).

Seeing a commonality with the local organizing committee’s goals with theirs of making the Games a celebration of unity in diversity and heralding the importance of teamwork and sportsmanship among Filipinos and neighboring countries in the region, Milo officials said it was not hard convincing them to be involved in such a worthwhile endeavor.

“As a longtime supporter of Philippine sports, it is with great honor and privilege that Milo comes in as a gold partner for the historic 30th SEA Games,” said Ms. Cruz at the partnership launch.

“As our athletes and local sports communities continue to work hard in the preparation for the SEA Games, we want to help energize the country to cheer them on and let them know that we are all with them in defending our home court, win or lose,” she added.

It is an expression of support that organizers welcome wholeheartedly as they see it helping ensure a solid campaign for the Filipino athletes as well as in making the Games hosting a success.

“In this significant time for Philippine sports, we must push all our endeavors to its advancement. Milo, who we have tirelessly worked with to promote sports development and values formation at the grassroots level nationwide, has long made valuable contributions to the Filipino sporting community. We are happy to declare our partnership with Milo to strengthen our international foothold in sports and to “Win As One” as we energize a nation of champions. Laban Pilipinas!” Mr. Ramirez said in a statement.

The PSC chairman and the country’s SEA Games chef de mission went on to say that Team Pilipinas is hard at work as the biennial sporting meet approaches.

“Heart and dedication will be front and center from our Team Pilipinas delegation,” said Ramirez. Adding, “Values such as discipline, perseverance, and sportsmanship speak volumes to an athlete’s character, and I believe these attributions are as vital as to winning gold medals.

The 30th SEA Games happens from Nov. 30 to Dec. 11 in different parts of the country.

It has a theme of “We Win As One” and is touted to be the biggest to be staged in the Philippines, involving 11,000 athletes and officials from the 11 member nations, 9,000 volunteers, 530 events and 56 sports.

The last time the country hosted the SEA Games was in 2005.

Greinke is Astros’ key

Zack Greinke was already handicapped from the get-go. Even as an excess-capacity crowd of 43,311 at Minute Maid Park had his back, he understood the extent of the pressure he faced. The fact that he found himself on the mound for Game One of the American League Championship Series instead of Justin Verlander or Gerrit Cole underscored the need for him to deliver. The blowout loss he suffered in his last start extended the AL Division Series and forced Astros manager A.J. Hinch to use the pitchers ahead of him in the rotation just to overcome the challenge of the supposedly overmatched Rays.

Given Hinch’s continuing manifestation of trust, Greinke knew the least he could do in return was try his best. He simply had to live up to promise and strut his stuff as confidently as he had in the regular season. To this end, he needed to forget about his string of playoff woes, and most of all his stinker of a showing in Game Three of the ALDS; he had advancement in sight, and instead lasted all of three and two-thirds innings, during which he gave up six runs on five hits. And, what’s more, he stood to be up against much tougher competition.

Creditably, Greinke proved to be better — make that a whole lot better — in his start yesterday. And he would have given a good accounting of himself, too, had he not faltered in the sixth inning; he sent a couple of four-seam fastballs in the middle of the plate against red-hot Gleyber Torres and always-dangerous Giancarlo Stanton, resulting in homers that increased the Astros’ deficit to three. He then caught Brett Gardner looking to end the session, not coincidentally with the same pitch, but the damage had been done by then.

That the Astros went on to lose seven to none means the outcome wasn’t caused by Greinke alone. Indeed, yesterday marked a continuation of their offensive woes, and the lack of bat support indicated they would have gone down, anyway, even if the sixth inning unfolded without fanfare. The Yankees are too good, and too talented, to be overcome without a sterling two-way effort. And, yes, that’s how they themselves were upended. Masahiro Tanaka masterfully backstopped the runs with a varied repertoire that included a wicked slider and an effective split-finger fastball thrown to the periphery of the strike zone to keep them guessing.

The Astros are by no means out. They may be one set-to down, but they have yet to tap Verlander and Cole. And should they finally get to be their usual selves and swing to contact, watch out. Of course, the operative word is “should,” because the Yankees have no plans of being enablers. Quite the opposite; the bullpen is the best in baseball, with a track record of protecting leads. Still and all, Greinke is key. The next time he’s back on center stage, all eyes will be on him anew, and his capacity — or lack thereof — to deliver may well spell the difference between a World Series appearance and an early vacation.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and Human Resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

‘Four figures in search of commentary’

Felix Mendelssohn invented the genre Songs Without Words (Lieder ohne Worte), short instrumental pieces that were almost singable but contained no lyrics. Mendelssohn objected to a friend’s attempt to “put words” to them, since for him the meaning of the pieces was already crystal clear. He was right. In fact, a good deal of the power of classical music is that — like abstract paintings — the listener is left free to impute her own meaning to the piece.

In the same spirit, below are some figures that seem to express definite trends or turning points. But the meaning is left to the reader who might have a different interpretation. The titles, of course, are completely gratuitous.

*ICOR roughly measures of the inefficiency of investment: the lower the better.

END OF EXHIBIT

 

Emmanuel S. de Dios is a professor emeritus at the University of the Philippines.

Cum si, cum sa for Governance

Comme ci, comme ça,” the critical and exacting French would say for something that would not meet the superlatives of quality and aesthetics they are generally attributed with. In English, its idem sonans (sounds-like) is “cum si, cum sa,” like if someone asks you, “how are you?” you might reply, “cum si, cum sa,” meaning you are feeling not good, not bad, just average. “Cum si, cum sa” means “so-so.”

“So-so” is the Philippines’ performance in the World Bank’s World Governance Indicators (WGI) for 2019. In the Oct. 10 issue of BusinessWorld, the WGI charts detailed the answers to the curious question, “How does the Philippines fare in the World Bank’s governance metrics?”

“Governance consists of the traditions and institutions by which authority in a country is exercised. This includes the process by which governments are selected, monitored and replaced; the capacity of the government to effectively formulate and implement sound policies; and the respect of citizens and the state for the institutions that govern economic and social interactions among them,” the WGI prefaces.

The report measured and ranked the Philippines in six dimensions of governance compared with over 200 countries and territories over the period 2013–2018, with indicators on:

Voice and Accountability, Political Stability and Absence of Violence, Government Effectiveness, Control of Corruption, Rule of Law, and Regulatory Quality.

These aggregate indicators combine the views of a large number of enterprise, citizen and expert survey respondents in industrial and developing countries. They are based on over 30 individual data sources produced by a variety of survey institutes, think tanks, non-governmental organizations, international organizations, and private sector firms, the World Bank website explains.

Cum si, cum sa” can describe Philippine governance in the WGI indices, where in the six years 2013-2018, the average score across the six indicators is around 42%. On a scale of 100, this means below average (habitual) governance performance, clearly seen from 41.55% six-year average in Voice and Accountability, the 15.22% yearly average in Political Stability and Absence of Violence, the 56.10% in Government Effectiveness, the 38.91% in Control of Corruption, the 39.97% in Rule of Law, and the 58.65% in Regulatory Quality.

The sad realization is that from 2013, the performance ratings of Philippine governance have all gone down in the five indicators, except for Regulatory Quality, which has climbed through the six years from 50.24% in 2013 to 56.73% (still not a good score) in 2018. But even the slight improvement in Regulatory Quality negates the cumulative fall of Voice and Accountability to 47.78%; Political Stability and Absence of Violence to 12.86%; Government Effectiveness to 55.29%; Control of Corruption to 38.91%; Rule of Law to 34.12%; and Regulatory Quality to 56.73% in 2018 as the BusinessWorld graphics showed.

There is little to be proud of the Philippine performance when it comes to good governance, as measured by the WGI. There is much to be ashamed about in the fearsome score of Political Stability and Absence of Violence which has been habitually low since 2013 at 16.11% and plunging down to 12.86% in 2018, the second lowest (above only Myanmar with 10.48%) among 10 countries in ASEAN when the 2018 ASEAN average in this factor is already a low 48.05%. Control of Corruption of 34.13% is the 3rd lowest score among ASEAN countries, guiltily lower than the ASEAN average of 45.62%; and the Rule of Law score of 34.12% is the 4th lowest in ASEAN versus the regional average of 47.79% in 2018.

Filipinos cannot shrug their shoulders and brush away the culpable commissions and omissions in good governance with a hasty “cum si, cum sa” and pretend all’s well. That trust and popularity ratings of leaders are high in the face of externally measured good governance ratings like the WGI’s being so dismally low, sends sinister chills down one’s spine that the public might be blissfully ignorant or laxly permissive when it comes to what principles and values must underlie honest and transparent governance for sustainable progress and development, and, in the end, good quality of life for all.

The United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (UNESCAP) warns that “Bad governance is being increasingly regarded as one of the root causes of all evil within our societies. Major donors and international financial institutions are increasingly basing their aid and loans on the condition that reforms that ensure good governance are undertaken.” On its site, unescap.org, it exhorts that “Good governance has eight major characteristics. It is participatory, consensus oriented, accountable, transparent, responsive, effective and efficient, equitable and inclusive, and follows the rule of law. It assures that corruption is minimized, the views of minorities are taken into account and that the voices of the most vulnerable in society are heard in decision-making. It is also responsive to the present and future needs of society.”

The UNESCAP cites corruption and transgressions against the rule of law as well as political instability and violence as critical factors in governance, just as the WGI measured countries against uncompromising standards on these factors. How does the Philippines fare on this?

Mainstream and social media cry out against corruption, violence, civil and human rights violations every day, as television and internet news show killings and heinous crimes — but are the most sensational ever solved? Yet, who the criminals are seems obvious by empirical logic, but the technicalities of the law can save them, as often some justice operatives and defenders find some archaic law to exonerate even the most guilty-looking.

The most numbing example in the recent months has been the long-playing “telenovela” investigation that the Senate is conducting on the complicity of the highest ranking police officials in drug busts and re-selling. And this started with the re-investigation of the drug syndicates in the New Bilibid Prison whereby the Bureau of Corrections anomalies on the Good Conduct Time Allowance (GCTA) were exposed, releasing some 1,914 people convicted of heinous crimes back to mingle and live with law-fearing society.

But the unkindest cut of all was the dismissal on Oct. 8 of the Marcos plunder cases filed by the Presidential Commission on Good Government (PCGG) since 1987. “The plaintiff Republic failed to prove by preponderance of evidence that the defendants by themselves, or in conspiracy with defendants Marcoses, obtained ill-gotten wealth,” the Sandiganbayan ruled. The Sandiganbayan had in August, also dismissed the P102-billion forfeiture case against the Marcoses and other respondents.

The PCGG, the good governance watchdog of the country, has been sent off whimpering, its tail tucked between its trembling legs. And we say “cum si, cum sa” to the state of good governance in the Philippines?

 

Amelia H. C. Ylagan is a Doctor of Business Administration from the University of the Philippines.

ahcylagan@yahoo.com

Spanish beef!

Pending final clearance from the Department of Agriculture (DA), Spanish beef will soon be available for Filipino consumers to enjoy. It will compete head to head with beef imported from the US, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and Japan, all of whom have dominated the premium segment of the market. Spanish beef promises superior quality across its entire range of cuts and grades at more competitive prices. With more options and greater value, this development is a win for the Filipino consumer.

Last week, member companies of PROVACUNO, the umbrella organization of the Spanish beef industry, was in Manila to meet with potential importers, restaurateurs, and select members of media. Spanish Ambassador Jorge Moragas hosted a dinner and briefed us about the unique characteristics of Spanish beef. It was an experience that was both delicious and educational.

For most Filipinos, good beef is marked by a high fat content (marbling), tenderness, and a distinct bovine flavor. This is why the Japanese wagyu variety became the gold standard for most. Spanish beef has other benchmarks of quality. For Spaniards (and Europeans), good beef must not only be juicy, it must have adequate muscle structure to make it firm to the bite and smooth to the tongue. Flavor-wise, the beefy flavor must be both present and pleasant, not overpowering nor gamey. Visually, the fat must be of a pale yellow color, the muscle fibers must be bright red (not matte), and the bone should be ivory with an absence of black stains. Good coloring should be consistent throughout the whole cut of meat. Proper juiciness is characterized by an explosion of meaty nectar in the mouth when bit into, not dripping wet even before biting it.

We were served rib eyes and prime ribs expertly prepared by renowned chef Iñigo Urrechu. Indeed, I found the beef different from Japanese wagyu. It delivered on its promise of being well structured, explosively juicy, and aromatically pleasant. The unique aroma of Spanish beef is a result of its feedstock which is primarily cereal and oilseed.

Beef from PROVACUNO producers adhere to the European Production Model (EPM). EPM is known worldwide for having the highest food safety standards. Each cut of beef is tagged with a traceable code that tells you where the cow came from, its sex, age, feedstock, manner by which it butchered ,and details of its cold chain. This labelling systems is tantamount to a health and commercial guarantee.

Controls against animal diseases and the use of hormones are extremely rigid. So stiff are the quality control measures that the World Organization for Animal Health has included Spain in its list of countries where the risk of mad cow disease is negligible.

Despite the fact that cow raising is the most environmentally damaging form of animal husbandry, PROVACUNO members have adopted a system to reduce the methane emitted by their cows, thereby reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

The Spanish beef industry is a world leader in animal welfare too. Producers are made to ensure that the animals enjoy a good quality of life and that their slaughter is humane, if not painless.

Spain is now the 4th largest beef producer in the EU and the 14th largest exporter in the world. In 2016, it exported €900 million worth of beef products primarily to Portugal and the Netherlands. Hong Kong is its biggest market in Asia. PROVACUNO has high hopes for the Philippines considering our market size and increasing purchasing power.

In terms of health benefits, most Filipinos think that beef is laden with bad cholesterol. Nothing could be further from the truth. Dietitians attest that beef provides proteins of high biological value, iron zinc, magnesium, and potassium. It is also rich in vitamins A, D, E, K, C, and B12, which is essential for the formulation of red blood cells and the development of the nervous system. Proteins derived from beef are easy to digest and provide essential amino acids that help build muscles.

For its part, iron helps many vital functions in the body including sustaining energy and focus, facilitating digestion, strengthening the immune system, and regulating body temperature. Beef contains about 3 milligrams of iron for every 100 gram serving, 20-30% of which is easily absorbed by the body. In contrast, iron derived from vegetables has an absorption rate of only 1.5%.

Contrary to the belief that beef is fattening, in truth, it only contains 120-140 calories for every 100 gram serving. This is not much considering the recommended calorie intake for an adult is 2,000 calories per day. A portion of beef contains the same calories as a thin slice of cheese.

Eating Well Magazine and numerous publications have hailed Mediterranean cuisine as the healthiest diet in the world of which beef is an important component. The Spaniards have one of the longest lifespans, 81.57 years, compared to Filipinos who live an average of only 68.96 years.

So when will Spanish beef be available locally?

The commercial office of the Spanish embassy submitted their application to the National Meat Inspection Services (NMIS), a unit of the Department of Agriculture, back in 2017. The Spanish application was recently shortlisted to move forward. This month, a mission from the DA will travel to Spain to inspect 18 establishments including meat processing plants, cold storage facilities, and slaughterhouses. It took a while to schedule the visit as the DA prefers to conduct its inspection during the season when sanitation deficiencies are prevalent.

Should the DA find everything in order, a Certificate of System Accreditation will be awarded to Spain. This will open the way for the importation of Spanish beef.

As someone who has personally seen the class leading slaughterhouses and meat processing plants of Spain, I have no doubt that they will pass with flying colors. I just hope that the DA will grant permission to import Spanish beef before December. If so, we Filipinos can enjoy a gloriously delicious and healthy Christmas feast with Spanish beef as the star of the Noche Buena dinner.

 

Andrew J. Masigan is an economist.

The Rice Tariffication Law: amidst the sound and fury

As is typical when it comes to most laws, civil society groups have taken different positions with regard to the recently passed Republic Act 11203, otherwise known as the Rice Tariffication Law (RTL). In the midst of the continued decline in palay prices at the farmgate, some groups, led by Bantay Bigas, have launched a petition to have the law repealed. Meanwhile, Omi Royandoyan of Centro Saka and Alyansa Agrikultura wants a suspension of the law, but does not want to go back to quantitative restrictions. Rather, he wishes government to observe the rice market for six to eight cropping seasons (three to four years) and use flexible tariffs to protect the rice farmers. Other groups within the circle of the Rice Watch Action Network that are equally critical of the law have diverse positions, from outright repeal to amend, but they are united in saying that, definitely there is no more going back to quantitative restrictions. And then there’s the Federation of Free Farmers (FFF), led by Raul Montemayor, which does not see the need to repeal or even amend the law at this time. FFF points out that the Safeguard Measures Act can be invoked to protect the rice industry from the onslaught of imports which can be implemented alongside other measures.

But common to all these groups are calls to make sure that rice farmers survive by:

• Putting together a mix of interventions to immediately assist farmers who have definitely lost farm incomes due to the steep decline in the buying price of palay. This includes unconditional cash transfers and direct procurement from rice farmers by institutional buyers like the National Food Authority (NFA), local government units, the Department of Social Welfare and Development through its rice subsidy allocation to 4Ps beneficiaries, and other government agencies that have rice allocations. All these would need Congressional action, from enacting a supplemental budget to adequately fund the transfers, or procurement, or both to enacting Joint Resolution Nos. 2 and 8. In fact, the President should seriously consider calling on Congress to come back from their junkets and hold a Special Session to quickly act on these two emergency measures for our rice farmers.

• Giving farmers debt relief, especially for farmers owning one hectare and less of land who have outstanding debts with the Land Bank of the Philippines. Strengthened crop insurance and an increase in the buying price at the farmgate are likewise demanded.

• Further studying the charter of the NFA — which was left hanging in the frenzy to pass the RTL — should there be need to have government levers to regulate and accredit importers. Further, the charter review and eventual amendment should be able to address NFA’s operational and procurement budgets.

• The judicious use of the Rice Competitiveness Enhancement Fund (RCEF) to make sure that the revenues derived from the tariffs slapped on rice imports go to farmers to improve their productivity.

Lost amidst all the sound and fury though is an important element in the whole rice industry debate — an examination and elimination of rice cartels and smugglers. For all we know, they have their mouthpieces in Congress, the Senate, among elected local government officials, or even appointed in Executive positions who enjoy their current privilege by being the powers-that-be in the rice industry. It is equally urgent that the Philippine Competition Commission does its job and look at cartel-like behavior among rice importers. Further, there are resolutions filed by Representatives Estella Quimbo of Marikina and Argel Cabatbat of the Magsasaka Partylist that call for the investigation of rice cartels. If anything, the rice cartels and smugglers should be the ones exposed and pilloried.

Indeed, the problems besetting the rice industry will not be solved by the RTL. We need to address the systemic issues that serve as bottlenecks in making our agriculture sector predictable and competitive, like the enactment of the National Land and Water Use Policy, to the obliteration of the cartels and smugglers. Lest we forget, our small farmers and small holder agriculture producers must be organized and empowered.

Painfully ironic, but the more than two decades of postponing the shift from quantitative restrictions to tariffs has not made our rice farmers more competitive. Rather, they were just given a false sense of security that government would be doing something to the point that not much has been done to get them organized and prepared for this eventuality.

 

Jessica Reyes-Cantos is with the Action for Economic Reforms.

A controversial Nobel rewarded a writer’s noble failure

By Leonid Bershidsky

THE 2019 Nobel prize for literature awarded to Austrian author Peter Handke has, predictably, caused a storm of protest, both in countries that used to be part of Yugoslavia and also the global literary community. Handke is widely considered to be an apologist for the former Yugoslav strongman Slobodan Milosevic. But here’s why I think the Swedish Academy’s decision deserves a more nuanced reaction than indignation: Handke wandered into that ugly territory while on a legitimate quest that writers need, and often lack, the courage to embark on.

First things first: Milosevic was a blood-soaked dictator. Handke’s writings about him, and about what happened during the Yugoslav wars of the 1990s — such as this article in the French daily Liberation (https://www.liberation.fr/tribune/2006/05/10/parlons-donc-de-la-yougoslavie_38687) — attempted to establish a balance of condemnation between the war crimes of the Serbs, led by Milosevic, and those of their enemies, mostly Croats and Muslims. That’s a deeply misguided exercise, because each war crime stands alone in its monstrosity. International tribunals don’t go in for comparisons but rule on each case separately. It bears exploring, though, the path that led Handke, one of the most acclaimed writers in the German language today, to Milosevic’s 2006 funeral, where he made a short speech (of which no video or audio has survived).

One of the recurring themes in Handke’s work is the inadequacy of language as an instrument of communication. Beschreibungsimpotenz — descriptive impotence — is one of his favorite terms. He appears to see his work as an attempt to find more precise ways to describe experiences than people normally use. As he once put it, “I don’t have an ideology, I don’t have a worldview, no real message to communicate. My message is in changing the sentences so that the sentences become material, so that I can try to rework my speechless experiences into a kind of second nature.”

Handke dove into the Yugoslav wars at least in part because of an irritation with the charged language used by journalists and public intellectuals to describe them. He wrote in the Liberation piece:

“Let us finally listen to each other instead of screaming and barking in two enemy camps. But let us also no longer tolerate the beings (?), the evil (!) spirits (?), who, in the magical Yugoslav problem, continue to fire bullet words such as “‘revisionism,’ ‘apartheid,’ ‘Hitler,’ ‘bloody dictatorship,’ etc.”

One could see in this irritation a cynical quest for moral equivalence, for a justification of Serbia’s ambition to hold all of Yugoslavia under its sway. Handke liked the big Yugoslav federal state. His mother was Slovenian, and he wrote his first novel on the Croatian island of Krk while the federation was still intact — the way he would have preferred it to remain.

But I find it more likely that Handke mainly was searching, as usual, for a way to change the language, to defuse the “bullet words” for the sake of a better, more precise description. Handke himself certainly saw it that way, and wondered at times whether he was up to the job. He wrote in his Serbian travelogue, A Journey to the Rivers: Justice for Serbia:

“Yes, with each sentence I too have asked myself whether such a writing isn’t obscene, ought even to be tabooed, forbidden — which made the writing journey adventurous in a different way, dangerous, often very depressing (believe me).”

The journey Handke undertook was one of trying to deconflict language, to get the hatred out of it so meanings become more transparent, more equal to the underlying experiences. He counted other writers, even those with whom he disagreed, as his allies in this. In his 2012 article, “Peter Handke and the Language of War,” Scott Abbott recalled that when another Nobel Prize winner, Guenter Grass, backed the North Atlantic Treaty Organization’s intervention in Yugoslavia, Serbs started a campaign to collect Grass’s books and send them back to him. Handke — no fan of Grass or of the intervention — urged them to reconsider and to keep reading Grass even if they opposed his politics.

Yet Handke’s deconflicting effort is largely a failure. Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama, himself an artist, tweeted on Thursday the “shamelessness” of Handke’s Nobel triumph made him feel like vomiting.

As an opinion writer, I am familiar with this kind of failure, because I’ve often failed in this way, too. When you try to defuse a narrative, to listen to both sides, to find neutral but exact words for charged, polarizing issues, you end up nobody’s friend — and you often miss the truth, which often is black and white, after all. In journalism, neutrality is a necessary tool but also a trap.

But in literature, with more space available and readers more invested, it should be possible to turn neutrality into a variety of viewpoints to present a more complex picture. At least Handke tried where many others would have abstained for fear of what it would do to their ability to collect literary prizes without controversy. The failure detracts from his power as a writer; the courage adds to it.

 

BLOOMBERG OPINION

ONE Championship to be seen in the US a massive step forward — Vera

Brandon Vera of the Philippines meets Filipino sportswriters during media day for ONE: Century on Friday in Tokyo, Japan. — MIKE MURILLO

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

TOKYO — “ONE: Century,” the 100th live event of ONE Championship since being established in 2011, will be broadcast live to the United States on Sunday, Oct. 13, and it is a huge step for the organization in being introduced to a new set of audience. This is according to the company’s heavyweight champion Brandon “The Truth” Vera.

Speaking to members of Philippine media covering the two-pronged ONE: Century at media day for the event on Friday at the Grand Prince Shinagawa Hotel here, Mr. Vera shared that ONE being shown live in the States has been long time coming and that combat sports fans there are in for quality action.

“This has been a long time coming for ONE Championship to be seen in the United States on primetime TV. I would say that this is a ginormous step forward for the West to meet the East in martial arts,” Mr. Vera (16-7) said.

“How are they are going to take it? Let’s put this way. Just on the rules set alone, in other organizations, you can win this round, and you can win that round. What happens when people do that? They tend to play it safe. They take a takedown and they win. No action. They throw a kick, they win the round. But here in ONE Championship, if you want to your hand raised, when they say go you have to win the entire time or finish it. You come here to finish. You don’t come here to win by points. You don’t come here to hang around. And the West will get to see that in ONE: Century and they gonna fall in love with martial arts all over again,” he added.

Mr. Vera, 42, will challenge champion Aung La “The Burmese Python” N Sang for the light heavyweight title in his quest of fulfilling his dream of becoming a two-division champion.

Their title fight headlines Part Two of ONE: Century happening at the famed Ryogoku Kokugikan in Sumida City.

The proceedings will be broadcast in the United States by way of TNT and Bleacher Report Live.

Part One of Century has the ONE world atomweight title clash between champions Angela “The Unstoppable” Lee of Singapore and challenger and strawweight champion “The Panda” Xiong Jing Nan of China headlining.

BURDEN OF PROOF
Meanwhile, zeroing in on his fight with Aung La, Mr. Vera recognizes that the “burden of proof” is on him after calling out the Burmese champion for a title shot last March, a challenge the Filipino-American fighter said he is not backing out from.

“Let me tell you this. It’s like I coming into his house and taking something he does not want to let go of. That is going to be difficult if you put it in a real-life scenario,” said Mr. Vera in how he is treating his upcoming fight.

“So you could just imagine, that is something I’m thinking every day and every night. I’m going to his house and I have to be ready and careful not to make mistakes. My preparation has to be on point so I can represent not only myself but the sport and martial arts well,” added the ONE heavyweight champion.

Mr. Vera has fought in a total of four fights in ONE Championship and has not lost and been a champion in the promotion since 2014.

Aung La, 34, meanwhile, is undefeated in his last six fights and is currently sporting a 25-10 win-loss record with one no-contest.

FDI net inflow drops 41% in July

NET INFLOW of foreign direct investments (FDI) — which point to long-term capital that generate jobs and transfer technologies — fell by 41% in July, with Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) governor Benjamin E. Diokno attributing this to the overall global economic slowdown and lingering uncertainty over the government’s tax reform program.

Data released by the BSP on Thursday night showed that net FDI inflow sank by 40.59% to $543 million in July from $914 million in the same period a year ago. It, however, recovered by 26.28% from June’s $430 million.

“Maybe that’s partly due to the slowdown in the global economy. Secondly, also the uncertainty on the second package of the tax reform. I think many investors have adopted a wait-and-see policy,” Mr. Diokno told reporters on the sidelines of the Financial Executives Institute of the Philippines (FINEX) conference held in Makati.

House Bill 4157 or the Corporate Income Tax and Incentives Rationalization Act (CITIRA), the second package of the government’s tax reform program, was approved on third and final reading on Sept. 13. The measure seeks to cut the corporate income tax rate gradually to 20% by 2029 from 30% currently, as well as make fiscal incentives more time-bound and tied to benefits to the overall economy. It is now pending at the Senate.

“The sooner we act on that [finality of CITIRA], then the sooner the investors can make up their mind whether to enter or exit [the country],” Mr. Diokno said.

BSP data showed equity other than reinvested earnings dropped 62.2% to $99 million in July, as gross placements declined by 39.6% to $168 million and withdrawals surged 302.4% to $69 million.

“Equity capital infusions during the month came mostly from Japan, Germany, Singapore, the United States, and South Korea. These placements were directed largely to financial and insurance, real estate, manufacturing, and human health and social work industries,” BSP said in a statement.

Foreign firms’ investments in debt instruments of their Philippine affiliates declined by 38.86% to $357 million in July from $584 million a year ago.

Reinvested earnings went up 16% to $87 million in July from $75 million a year ago.

July brought the year-to-date FDI net inflow to $4.1 billion, 39.1% lower than the $6.8 billion logged a year ago.

Equity other than reinvested earnings plunged 75% to $459 million during the January-July period, from $1.84 billion a year ago. Placements fell by 49.2% to $1.02 billion, while withdrawals surged 215% to $569 million.

BSP data showed that net investments in equity capital was more than halved (55.6%) to $1.054 billion from $2.373 billion in the first seven months of 2018.

Investments in debt instruments also went down by a third (30.3%) to $3.064 billion from $4.395 billion in the same period a year ago.

Year-to-date, reinvested earnings jumped 12.6% to $595 million from $528 million in the same period a year ago.

UNCERTAINTY
“Foreign investors hate uncertainty, and so the continuing external uncertainties brought about by the trade war and a global economic slowdown derail investment appetites. We also have not been absorbing more companies who are either setting up shop outside China or relocating to avoid the tariffs imposed by the US,” Security Bank Corp. chief economist Robert Dan J. Roces said in an email to BusinessWorld.

Meanwhile, ING NV-Manila senior economist Nicholas Antonio T. Mapa said the country’s FDI lagged behind its peers in the region.

“Gauging from the flows of FDI to other ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations), most our peers have been able to attract more FDI in the first half of 2019 versus the first half of 2018 with the Philippines the lone exception to this trend,” he said in an email to BusinessWorld, noting that the “pullback” in the inflows could be “tied” more to worries over CITIRA more than the global economic slowdown or trade war.

For his part, Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. chief economist Michael L. Ricafort, said the “relatively slower” loan growth amid an environment of falling interest and inflation may mean that “some investors, both local and foreign, may have waited for interest rates to…bottom out before becoming more aggressive in their borrowing/financing requirements, given the longer-term nature of financing some FDIs.”

But despite the drop in FDI, UnionBank of the Philippines Inc. chief economist Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion is hopeful of a recovery.

“FDI recovery may be seen as early as the clarity on the fiscal reforms are observed. Particularly, once there is clear consensus on the particulars of the CITIRA bill, it is expected that FDI levels will recover,” he said in an email. — L.W.T.Noble

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