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‘Hungry’ Ravena determined to be of help to Gilas Pilipinas

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo
Senior Reporter

WITH HIS FIBA-imposed suspension officially lapsing at the weekend, a “hungry” Kiefer Ravena said he is determined to get back on the court and do his thing, beginning with helping the Philippine men’s national basketball team in its bid in the FIBA Basketball World Cup in China.

Part of the 19-man pool of Gilas for the World Cup, Mr. Ravena, whose suspension of the world basketball body took effect in May last year after he tested positive for three ingredients prohibited by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) from a pre-warm-up supplement he took, said he is very happy to have the ban lifted and that now is the time to work his way back.

“I’m happy that my suspension [has been] lifted. My focus now is getting back and helping the team (Gilas), more than anything else. It’s been a long time, long time coming. I’m ecstatic,” said the NLEX Road Warriors guard, who was set to play his first game back with Gilas in the second tune-up match with the visiting Adelaide 36ers later yesterday at the Meralco Gym.

“I just have to stay patient, work my way back. Trust the people around [me],” he added as he talked about his mindset upon his return to playing after his 18-month suspension.

Mr. Ravena was suspended after urine samples taken from him following Gilas’ game against Japan on Feb. 25, 2018 in the second window of the World Cup Asia Qualifiers at the Mall of Asia Arena turned out to be positive for prohibited substances under WADA.

The prohibited substances — 4-methylhexan-2-amine(methylhexaneamine), 1,3-dimethylbutylamine (DMBA), and higenamine — was found in the pre-warm-up supplement that Mr. Ravena took it was later revealed.

The suspension meant no basketball activity for the former Ateneo King Eagle, including for his mother ball club in the Philippine Basketball Association — NLEX.

Now back in harness, Mr. Ravena said hunger to get back on the court is one part of the motor that keeps him humming.

“It’s more of hunger. I was away from the game for a long time and I’m hungry to get back on the court. Proving myself to everybody is not necessary right now. I’m setting aside personal things first for the betterment of the team,” said Mr. Ravena, who is hoping to be part of the 12-man team seeing action in China for the World Cup.

Gilas was holding out releasing the final roster of the team until after their final tune-up game with the 36ers on Sunday.

But regardless if he makes it or not, Mr. Ravena shared that he is willing to help Gilas in whatever capacity given to him.

The FIBA World Cup happens from Aug. 31 to Sept. 15 in China.

The Philippines, which is making its second straight appearance, is bracketed in Group D along with Serbia, Italy and Angola in the opening round. It begins its campaign on Aug. 31 versus Italy.

Apart from Mr. Ravena also part of the Gilas pool are June Mar Fajardo, Troy Rosario Rosario, Roger Pogoy, Japeth Aguilar, CJ Perez, Robert Bolick, Gabe Norwood, Paul Lee, Mark Barroca, Beau Belga, Poy Erram, Marcio Lassiter, Matthew Wright, Raymond Almazan and naturalized players Andre Blatche, Christian Standhardinger and Stanley Pringle.

Also included in the 19-man pool is Filipino-American National Basketball Association guard Jordan Clarkson.

ABS-CBN Convergence seeking to extend legislative franchise

A LAWMAKER filed a bill seeking to extend the franchise of ABS-CBN Corp.’s telecommunications unit by another 25 years, as ABS-CBN Convergence, Inc. looks to focus on the wireless broadband business.

Pwersa ng Bayaning Atleta Party-list Rep. Jericho Jonas B. Nograles filed House Bill 3064, which proposes to extend ABS-CBN Convergence’s current franchise which expires in 2022.

“ABS-CBN Convergence sees a lot of opportunities in the wireless market, especially in the wireless broadband segment… Wireless broadband service is seen by ASB-CBN Convergence as the preferred choice of service due to its ease in use and mobility,” Mr. Nograles said in the bill’s explanatory note.

“As such, ABS-CBN Convergence decided that it will expand its current wireless business by introducing more products and partnerships,” he added.

Mr. Nograles said the extension of the company’s franchise will allow it to continue providing telecommunications services “at rates affordable to the consuming public.”

ABS-CBN Convergence, then known as Multi-Media Telephony, Inc., was first granted a franchise under Republic Act no. 8332 in 1997.

The company was given a public mobile telecommunications systems license by the National Telecommunications Commission in 2005, allowing it to start a mobile phone service.

ABS-CBN Convergence in 2015 signed a five-year, network sharing deal with Globe Telecom, Inc. ABS-CBNmobile was launched as a mobile virtual network operator offering text, call and data services using Globe’s network.

The company shuttered ABS-CBNmobile in November 2018, saying the business model was “financially unsustainable.”

ABS-CBN Convergence also operates a digital terrestrial television service under ABS-CBN TV Plus.

Parent company ABS-CBN Corp. is also awaiting the renewal of its legislative franchise, which expires next year.

Amid uncertainty surrounding its franchise renewal, the Lopez-led media giant has been beefing up its digital media business. — VACF

Japan, Australia top FIBA 3×3 U18 Asia Cup; Philippine women’s team ends up third

THE 2019 edition of the FIBA 3×3 U18 Asia Cup concluded at the weekend with teams from Japan and Australia topping the men’s and women’s divisions, respectively, while the Philippine women’s squad fashioned out a podium finish at third place.

Took place from Aug. 22 to 24 at Cyberjaya, Malaysia, teams Japan and Australia proved their mettle against solid competitions on their way to the top.

Japan concluded its campaign by beating Kazakhstan, 21-13, in the final of the men’s division.

It enjoyed an unbeaten campaign although it survived a fright in the semifinals, forced to overtime before defeating Australia, 18-17, in a tightly fought contest.

Qualifier Australia claimed bronce after beating number one seed China, 21-17, in a tight game.

Seishin Yokochi was named most valuable player after a game-high nine points in the final. Daniel Foster from Australia and Kazakhstan’s Arsentiy Kushniruk joined the Japanese rising star on the team of the tournament.

In the women’s side, Australia had a perfect 5-0 record and dominated Japan in the final with a decisive 21-10 victory.

Australia’s Shyla Heal bagged the MVP award after leading her team in scoring and hitting a game-high eight points in the final. Japan’s Saori Yasue also made the team of tournament after leading all scorers with 42 points and was joined by Kristine Cayabyab from the Philippines.

Cayabyab, along with teammates Camille Clarin, Ella Fajardo and Angelica Surada, for their part, managed to carry the Philippine team to a bronze finish by beating number one seed China, 14-11, in the fight for third place.

The Philippine women’s team finished with a 3-2 record overall, capped by their victory over the Chinese with Surada and Cayabyab finishing with five points each with Clarin adding three and Fajardo one point, respectively.

The team beat Malaysia and New Zealand in the earlier rounds before falling to eventual champion Australia in the semifinals, 15-12.

Its counterparts in the men’s division, meanwhile, finished fifth in the 17-team field with a 2-1 record.

The team, composed of Gerry Abadiano, Terrence Fortea, Karl Quiambao and Carl Tamayo, topped its pool to reach the knockout stage before falling to China, 21-17, in the quarterfinals.

The final standings at the FIBA 3×3 U18 Asia Cup were: (Men’s) Japan, Kazakhstan, Australia, China, the Philippines, New Zealand, Mongolia, Turkmenistan, Kyrgyzstan, Vietnam, Malaysia, Sri Lanka, India, Thailand, Chinese Taipei, South Korea and Maldives; (Women’s) Australia, Japan, Philippines, China, New Zealand, Thailand, India, Mongolia, Kazakhstan, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Turkmenistan, Chinese Taipei and Maldives. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Ford extends Truck Month, Big Deal offers

FORD PHILIPPINES is extending its Truck Month and Big Deal offers until the end of this month, allowing more customers to own a Ford Ranger, Ford EcoSport or Ford Explorer with bigger cash discounts and all-in low down payment deals.

TRUCK MONTH DEALS FOR THE RANGER
All Ranger XLT variants are offered with a P70,000 cash discount or an all-in low down payment offer of P68,000.

Meanwhile, all Ranger Wildtrak variants are offered with a P60,000 cash discount, or an all-in low down payment offer of P98,000 for the Wildtrak 4×2 AT and MT variants or an all-in low down payment offer of P128,000 for the Wildtrak 4×4 AT variant.

Customers who will test-drive a Ford Ranger during the weekends of the month will still get an exclusive Ford merchandise, while those who will partner with EastWest Bank for their financing requirements will get an additional P20,000 financing discount on top of the Truck Month deals.

BIGGER CASH DISCOUNTS FOR ECOSPORT AND EXPLORER
Customers getting an EcoSport 1.5L Trend AT or MT can take advantage of a bigger cash discount of P70,000 or an all-in low down payment of P48,000. The EcoSport 1.5L Ambiente MT, on the other hand, comes with P45,000 cash discount and is also available in an all-in low down payment of P48,000.

Meanwhile, the Explorer 2.3L EcoBoost Limited variant and Explorer 3.5L V6 EcoBoost Sport AWD AT are now available with a P200,000 cash discount, twice bigger than last month’s offer. For the first time ever, the Explorer 2.3L EcoBoost Limited variant is also available on a financing promo that offers 0% interest up to 2 years.

Visit the Ford Philippines web site or any Ford dealership to know more about the Ford Truck Month and Big Deal offers available until Aug. 31 only.

Federal Reserve’s commitment to act upstaged by Trump’s furor

JACKSON HOLE, WYO. — Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said the central bank would “act as appropriate” to keep the US economy healthy in a deteriorating global economy, but stopped short of committing to rapid-fire rate cuts and drew fire from President Donald Trump.

Powell had barely completed a key Friday morning speech when Trump ratcheted up his war of words against both the Fed chair he appointed, and with China, which earlier on Friday had retaliated to US tariffs with its own import taxes on American crude oil, agricultural products and small aircraft.

The rapid escalation, which tanked stock markets and drove bond yields lower even before Trump raised the ante with additional tariffs on China, could force the Fed to cut rates to keep the 10-year expansion under way.

Indeed, data reported as Powell was speaking on Friday showed further deterioration in the US housing market, on the heels of figures earlier in the week showing weakness in the manufacturing sector.

But the message from both Powell and his second in command, vice chair Richard Clarida, was that while the Fed may be willing to cut to protect the recovery, it made no promises.

“We take our policy decisions one meeting at a time,” Clarida said late Friday afternoon, after Wall Street trading had closed with key indexes down from 2% to 3%.

The Fed cut rates for the first time in more than a decade last month, backing Powell’s verbal commitment to sustain the expansion with action. Powell on Friday made clear that commitment is still in place in a speech he gave at an annual Fed retreat at a Jackson Hole valley resort set against the Grand Teton mountains.

He said there are “significant” risks to the economy, including the trade dispute, the chaotic British exit from the European Union, tension in Hong Kong and signs of a global economic slowdown.

But he also said the domestic US economy is in a “favorable place” now and he stressed limits to the Fed’s ability to respond to the trade issues. He also said officials need to “look through” short-term turbulence, and stopped short of endorsing or signaling the pace and depth of rate cuts markets widely expect and that Trump has demanded.

There are “no recent precedents to guide any policy response to the current situation,” Powell said, adding that monetary policy “cannot provide a settled rulebook for international trade.”

The US president fumed about the Fed doing “NOTHING” in a series of tweets and asked who is “our bigger enemy” between Powell and China’s President Xi Jinping. Markets swung when he added that “our great American companies are hereby ordered to immediately start looking for an alternative to China.”

Global stock markets fell, with the US S&P 500 index closing down more than 2%. US benchmark Treasury yields fell to their lowest level in a week and the dollar declined broadly.

Later on Friday Trump announced he was raising tariff rates on a range of Chinese goods by an additional five percentage points.

Fed officials say tariffs and trade tensions are causing businesses to put off spending.

“It’s pretty clear to me that Powell was sending a message that if you are so concerned about the economy, lowering rates is not going to help you,” said Craig Bishop, lead strategist of the fixed income group at RBC Wealth Management. “You need to do something about trade. That’s not a message Trump gets.”

DIVIDED FED, ANGRY TRUMP, A NERVOUS WORLD
The trade war has left world central bankers here on edge as they also try to navigate a global slowdown many attribute to Trump’s trade tactics, which they worry may have lasting repercussions.

“Without question the euphemism of ‘trade tensions’ does not do justice to the scale of the impact of recent trade actions, actual and potential, and to some extent the fundamental challenge to the nature of the trading system,” Bank of England Governor Mark Carney said during a luncheon speech here.

Renewed US-China trade tensions and pressure from the White House complicate the Fed’s job going into its Sept. 17-18 rate-setting meeting. Policy makers were already divided over whether to head off economic fears with significant further rate cuts or to stand pat because people are still finding jobs, taking home fatter paychecks and spending money.

No matter what course Powell chooses, it is clear from the minutes of the Fed’s most recent meeting released Wednesday and from the range of comments from policy makers also in attendance here that the chair lacks a broad consensus among his colleagues about the appropriate course of action.

Earlier on Friday, St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank President James Bullard told Bloomberg TV the policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee would have a “robust debate” about cutting US interest rates by a half percentage point at its next policy meeting in September.

Bullard, who has long advocated for lower rates to counteract tame inflation, said he is troubled by signs of a slowdown coming from the bond market. He is referring to the relative decline in long-term bond yields, called an “inversion” of the Treasury yield curve, that has preceded recessions.

He said he is “not interested” in testing the theory “that this time is different” with regard to interpreting the bond market’s signal.

Meanwhile, Cleveland Federal Reserve President Loretta Mester, who did not support the Fed’s rate cut last month, said she is not yet convinced of the need to cut rates further.

“At this point, if the economy continues where it is, I would probably say we should keep things the way they are,” Mester told CNBC. “But, I am very attuned to the downside risks to this economy.”

The Bullard-Mester divide is emblematic of the wide range of opinion inside the Fed’s rate-setting committee, which voted 8-2 to cut rates on July 31 for the first time in a decade. That tally did not fully capture the disapproval of the move by those without a vote at the meeting, including Mester.

And, of course, there is Trump. He has been unrelenting in his demands that the Fed cut rates, in part to help take some of the wind out of a strong US dollar that he sees hurting US exports. — Reuters

Trump administration considers boost to biofuel mandates to ease farmer anger

NEW YORK/WASHINGTON — The Trump administration is considering ramping up biofuel blending quotas in the coming years to assuage anger in the Farm Belt over its recent broad use of waivers for small refineries, but is not planning to rescind any of the exemptions it has granted so far, four sources familiar with the matter said.

The approach would mark a mixed result for the agriculture industry and its backers who had been pushing the administration to revoke some of the exemptions, which they argue hurt demand for corn-based ethanol by freeing refiners from their obligation to blend biofuels into their products.

The proposals emerged a day after US President Donald Trump on Thursday summoned his Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue and Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Andrew Wheeler to the White House to discuss ways to boost biofuel demand.

The meeting was set after Trump’s decision this month to allow the EPA to grant 31 biofuel waivers to oil refiners caused an uproar in farm states key to the Republican president’s re-election bid in 2020.

In the meeting, Trump rejected a proposal from the Department of Agriculture to rescind some of the recently approved waivers, according to the sources and a list of items that were largely agreed upon at the meeting’s conclusion.

Instead, the administration is considering lifting its proposed 2020 annual corn-based ethanol mandate by 500 million gallons and 2021 biodiesel mandate by 250 million gallons. It is also looking to reallocate volumes expected to be waived going forward.

The sources said work was still needed to hammer out a plan before end-November, when the mandate is due to be finalized.

“Most of the issues outlined are going to be finalized as we move toward November 30,” one industry source with knowledge of the discussions said. “Apart from the rescinding of waivers, conversation on the other items will continue,” he said.

The EPA in July had proposed setting the volume of biofuels refiners must blend into their fuel at 20.04 billion gallons in 2020, up from 19.92 billion gallons this year. That included 15 billion gallons of conventional biofuels like ethanol, unchanged from 2019. The EPA also proposed setting the 2021 biodiesel volume at 2.43 billion gallons, unchanged from 2020.

Any redistribution of waived volumes or lifting of the annual biofuel mandates will upset the oil industry, another key constituency for Trump, illustrating his difficult balancing act in accommodating the rivaling corn and oil industries.

US regulations require refiners to blend biofuels into their gasoline or buy credits from those that do.

Small refiners can seek exemptions if they can prove economic hardship, but Trump’s EPA has granted waivers to refineries owned by the likes of Exxon Mobil Corp, Chevron Corp and billionaire Carl Icahn.

‘RUSHED POLICY’
US farmers have already been suffering due to a slump in crop prices and exports shrinking following Trump’s trade war with China. But Trump’s latest decision to exempt 31 oil refineries from biofuel laws infuriated American farmers, triggering a mobilization of trade and farm groups piling up pressure on the White House earlier this week.

Refiners and some academics dismiss the argument that waivers undercut demand and say the financial burden of compliance puts thousands of refining jobs at risk. They have fought hard to keep the waiver program unscathed.

On Friday, the American Petroleum Institute (API) said it hoped the administration would not go ahead with the proposal to boost blending quotas. “This rushed policy is arbitrary, cuts against precedent and further pushes us toward E15, a fuel that nearly 70 percent of vehicles on the road today were not to designed to run on,” Frank J. Macchiarola of API said.

E15 is a gasoline containing 15% ethanol, a product that would become more common if blending volumes mandates rose much higher.

Throughout the 2016 campaign that brought him to power, Trump championed ethanol but also courted the oil industry.

The backlash from agricultural and biofuel trade groups has been particularly strong in Iowa, the largest producer of corn and ethanol, and a swing state won twice by former Democrat President Barack Obama but which voted for Trump in 2016.

Democratic presidential hopefuls have spent a lot of time in Iowa because it holds an early nominating contest, and they have used the refinery issue as a cudgel.

Renewable fuel credits for the current year fell during Friday’s session, trading at 15.5 cents each, down from 16.5 cents apiece on Thursday, traders said. — Reuters

Rustan’s affair with Morocco

THE love affair between Morocco and Rustan’s began with the founders of the retail giant, Gliceria Rustia Tantoco and Bienvenido Tantoco, Sr. Their daughter, Marilen Tantoco, Vice-President for Home Merchandising recalls that her parents lived in Morocco at the invitation of then-King Hassan II, sometime after the EDSA Revolution of 1986.

The retail store is holding its second Moroccan festival, which is ongoing until Sept. 1 at Rustan’s Makati and Shangri-La.

Ms. Tantoco goes to Morocco a lot on buying and business trips — she serves as the country’s honorary Consul-General there. Of the many items on sale at the Rustan’s Moroccan Festival, Ms. Tantoco recommends the mosaic fountains. “That’s why I bought big and small.”

Other houseware finds include embellished tea sets, plates, bowls, saucers, and tagines; rugs and carpets, and poufs and pillow covers; embellished lanterns and lamps and tables.

Fashionistas can choose from bejeweled shawls, slippers, kaftans and d’jellaba, and that beauty favorite argan oil.

Among the events related to the festival are a tablescapes workshop with Rachelle Wenger at the Grand Atrium, Shangri-La Plaza on Aug. 30; and a belly dancing performance at Rustan’s Makati on Aug. 31. Get front-row seats with a minimum single-receipt purchase worth P10,000 of Moroccan merchandise.

Megaworld says exposure to online casinos will stay small, manageable

MEGAWORLD Corp., the largest Philippine office landlord, says China’s ban on Manila-based online casinos servicing gamblers in the mainland will have no impact on its home sales and office leasing business.

Exposure to online casinos and residential sales to Chinese buyers are “small and manageable” and will stay that way in the next two years, according to Kevin Tan, chief strategy officer.

“While we are the biggest lessor of office spaces in the Philippines, the (online casino) issue won’t affect both our office and residential businesses because our exposure remains small and manageable,” Mr. Tan wrote via text message.

Megaworld shares have been punished as China pushes for a crackdown on so-called POGO or offshore gaming operators based in the Philippines that cater to mainland online gamblers. The stock has tumbled 22% this month and almost P43 billion ($822 million) was wiped out in market value amid speculation a ban will hurt Megaworld’s residential sales and office rentals.

Chinese nationals account for 13% of Megaworld’s P215-billion residential sales take-up in the 18 months through June 2019 and its impact will be seen only when the projects are completed, Tan said.

Homes sold in 2018 will be booked as revenues in 2020 and “only” 4% of Megaworld’s P40-billion estimated home sales next year will be accounted for by the Chinese nationals, he said. Should these buyers back out, the units will revert to inventory while related payments will be part of the company’s earnings, he said.

Online casinos, which now account for 12% of Megaworld’s total rental gross leasable area, will contribute about 8% of total leasing income and earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization in 2020, Mr. Tan said. In 2018, online casinos rented 7% of Megaworld’s total leasable area and made up 5% of its total rental income.

“We are quite comfortable with this exposure and we don’t see ourselves increasing the percentage contribution of POGO to our business in the next two years,” Mr. Tan said. — Bloomberg

Kaya rolls to fourth win in a row; GAU triumphant

KAYA FC-Iloilo sustained its winning run in the Philippines Football League on Saturday, defeating Stallion Laguna FC, 1-0, at the Aboitiz Pitch in Lipa, Batangas.

Jordan Mintah scored the lone goal of the match early in the contest which proved to be enough to stretch their winning streak to four.

Earlier in the day, Green Archers United FC got the better of Philippine Air Force FC, 4-1.

Missing the services of Marwin Angeles in the middle of the pitch, Kaya still managed to control the proceedings from the get-go of the physical match.

Kenshiro Daniels made his first start since returning to the club, proving a threatening option on the left flank. It was on his side where the opening goal came about.

Under pressure from Mr. Mintah, Stallion’s right back coughed up the ball, allowing the Ghanaian forward room to measure a lovely chip over the goalkeeper in the 17th minute.

Stallion had a chance to equalize shortly before the final whistle, but Ruben Doctora could only hit the crossbar with his header from a long throw.

The win improved Kaya to a record of 11-1-2 with 34 points, three points behind league-leader and defending champion Ceres-Negros FC (12-1-0).

Stallion (6-3-4), for its part, dropped to fourth place at 21 points.

Meanwhile, GAU swung back to winning with its victory over Air Force.

Floriano Pasilan (42’ and 54’) had a brace while Paulo Bugas (17’) and Tonaldo (44’) had a goal each to book the win over the Air Men, whose lone goal was care of Darl Poderoso (63’).

With the victory, GAU (6-4-5) went up to third in the standings with 22 points with Air Force (2-1-12) remaining at sixth place with seven points. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Carney says world needs to end reliance on dollar

JACKSON HOLE, WYO. — Bank of England (BoE) Governor Mark Carney took aim at the US dollar’s “destabilizing” role in the world economy on Friday and said central banks might need to join together to create their own replacement reserve currency.

The dollar’s dominance of the global financial system increased the risks of a liquidity trap of ultra-low interest rates and weak growth, Carney told central bankers from around the world gathered in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, in the United States.

“While the world economy is being reordered, the US dollar remains as important as when Bretton Woods collapsed,” Carney said, referring to the end of the dollar’s peg to gold in the early 1970s.

Emerging economies had increased their share of global activity to 60% from around 45% before the financial crisis a decade ago, Carney said.

But the dollar was still used for at least half of international trade invoices — five times more than the United States’ share of world goods imports — fuelling demand for US assets and exposing many countries to damaging spillovers from swings in the US economy.

Carney — who was considered a candidate to be the next head of the International Monetary Fund but failed to secure backing from Europe’s governments — said the problems in financial system were encouraging protectionist and populist policies.

Earlier on Friday, US President Donald Trump said he was ordering US companies to look at ways to close their operations in China, the latest escalation of mounting trade tensions between Washington and Beijing.

Carney warned that very low equilibrium interest rates had in the past coincided with wars, financial crises and abrupt changes in the banking system.

As a first step to reorder the world’s financial system, countries could triple the resources of the IMF to $3 trillion as a better alternative to countries protecting themselves by racking up enormous piles of dollar-denominated debt.

“While such concerted efforts can improve the functioning of the current system, ultimately a multi-polar global economy requires a new IMFS (international monetary and financial system) to realize its full potential,” Carney said.

China’s yuan represented the most likely candidate to become a reserve currency to match the dollar, but it still had a long way to go before it was ready.

The best solution would be a diversified multi-polar financial system, something that could be provided by technology, Carney said.

Facebook’s Libra was the most high-profile proposed digital currency to date but it faced a host of fundamental issues that it had yet to address.

“As a consequence, it is an open question whether such a new Synthetic Hegemonic Currency would be best provided by the public sector, perhaps through a network of central bank digital currencies,” Carney said.

Such a system could dampen the “domineering influence” of the US dollar on global trade.

“Even a passing acquaintance with monetary history suggests that this center won’t hold,” Carney said. “We need to recognize the short, medium and long-term challenges this system creates for the institutional frameworks and conduct of monetary policy across the world.” — Reuters

China to impose extra tariffs on US soy, beef and pork

BEIJING — China said on Friday it will impose an extra 5% tariff on US soybeans from Sept. 1, and additional 10% duties on US wheat, corn and sorghum from Dec. 15, in Beijing’s latest retaliatory trade measures against Washington.

China will also levy extra 10% tariffs on US beef and pork from Sept. 1, according to lists published by the commerce ministry on its website.

The latest tariffs, which follow US duties on $300 billion worth of Chinese goods, threaten to prolong a trade war between the world’s top two economies that has raised concerns about slowing global growth.

China last year imposed retaliatory tariffs that remain in place on imports of a range of US farm products, including soybeans and pork. Those duties slashed the export of US crops and prompted the Trump administration to offer as much as $28 billion in federal aid to compensate American farmers for losses.

“Any escalation in the trade dispute with China is a major concern to US pork producers,” the National Pork Producers Council said in a statement.

The previous tariff on US pork had been 62%.

China’s commerce ministry said on Aug. 5 that Chinese companies had stopped buying US farm products, heating up the trade war between the countries.

Soybean futures were slightly lower after China said it would add another 5% to the 25% tariff it imposed in July last year.

“To me, it’s totally political and all psychological,” said Dan Basse, president of consultancy AgResource Co in Chicago. “A ban was more destructive than raising tariffs.” — Reuters

Toilet Talk

SOMETIMES, a girl’s gotta do what a girl’s gotta do.

Earlier this month, transgender individual Gretchen Diez was told to use the men’s room by a janitor at a Quezon City mall. Ms. Diez allegedly retaliated by taking a Facebook Live video of the janitor — a livestream that has since been seen by a lot of people, including Rep. Geraldine Roman, the country’s first transgender individual in congress. The incident between Ms. Diez and the female janitor led to Ms. Diez’s arrest. They were subsequently released.

The incident has opened up a lot of questions, the most basic being — if you identify differently from the gender assigned from your birth, where should you pee?

There are two sides to the story. First, individuals like Ms. Diez are expressing their right to use bathrooms as any other individual. Furthermore, it’s also a safety issue: the world isn’t always nice to people who are different, so for transgender individuals, there is a fear of being harassed in a bathroom meant for something that they no longer relate to. On the other hand, people outside the LGBTQ+ spectrum cite safety concerns of their own — on internet comment sections and pronouncements by various personalities, including Senate President Vicente Sotto III they bring up possible scenarios of harassment against straight, cisgendered people sharing those bathrooms with trans individuals. Furthermore, it becomes an issue about gender: for these people, transwomen are not women, simply by virtue of whatever is in between their thighs.

BusinessWorld attended a meeting last Saturday called by Philippine LGBT Chamber of Commerce chair Brian Tenorio called “Usapang Banyo” (Bathroom Talk). Also present was fashion designer and transgender individual Mara Chua, who says, “It’s a very real reminder of the harsh realities that a lot of other transpeople experience.”

Ms. Chua had strong points on the scenario that men might disguise themselves as women and use the transgender card to gain access to women while they use the bathroom. “It’s an imagined scenario. Men don’t need to pretend to be women to harass women. They do it so easily every day.” A CNN article states that “70% of [transgender and gender non-conforming American] respondents reported being denied access, verbally harassed, or physically assaulted in public restrooms.” On the flipside, the cases of voyeurism and harassment committed by people claiming to be transgender are far rarer, with one case each from Idaho and Seattle.

“I kind of liken two-gendered bathrooms as outdated technology,” said Ms. Chua. “Education is very important. They’re very hard-set on the biological aspects of gender.”

Meanwhile, celebrity and actor Addy Raj, who identifies as an LGBTQ+ ally, cited an incident where his former manager went inside a men’s room to assist him with his hair and makeup. “You could see that they were not comfortable with her being there with me, and I could see there was judgment in the air.”

“People are tolerated, but not accepted,” he said, citing what he observes as a general attitude by Filipinos towards LGBTQ+ individuals. Noting that he works a lot with transgendered people in fashion, beauty, and showbiz, he points out that gender and sexuality can close off many opportunities for individuals. “How many transgender doctors and lawyers do you know?”

A solution proposed by both Ms. Chua and Mr. Tenorio would be changing the signage outside the bathroom doors, and reassigning bathrooms as all-gender bathrooms. Ms. Chua, citing studies in the field of semiotics, said, “That is the only thing that defines it as a male and female bathroom.” As for Mr. Tenorio, the proposal of the Chamber includes changing the purpose of PWD-restrooms, reclaiming them as all-gender bathrooms with PWD access.

A solution cited by others is to build a separate bathroom, but then, Amadeus Pagente, Supervising Health Program Officer for Mental Health under the Depatment of Health (DoH) said, “We’re trying to change mindsets, not trying to give solutions by creating another structure.”

“The long-term goal is to educate people about what it is to be trans. At the same time, you have to accept that it’s a design problem,” said Ms. Chua.

Quite literally, changing the sign of the bathrooms sounds like a band-aid solution, in that you unstick one old sticker and replace it with another. Mr. Tenorio says, “At least for now, as we move forward. It will solve a few things.”

“These are solutions for the beginning of the day, and as we progress. A lot of the solutions can begin developmentally, they happen in phases. It’s hard to implement everything in one shot… but you want to start with what’s easy to pass first, and then build from that.

In a later text to BusinessWorld, Mr. Tenorio said: “I think changing the signage of some comfort rooms is the workable solution for now because you don’t have to change infrastructure that much. But with changing signages, you can change how people interact with these spaces and eventually you get to influence too their ideas of how they are and how they interact with other people. Later on, this can be a way to design a better society that is just more considerate and accepting .” — JLG

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