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Not enough warm bodies for Build! Build! Build! program

By Raymond Franco

Oppositors to the tax reform bill being pushed in Congress, as embodied in House Bill (HB) 5636, are quite numerous. In addition, a good number of senators have voiced reservations with regard to one or more components of TRAIN (Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion).

Very few, however, have expressed reservations about the government’s P8.14-trillion infrastructure push. Indeed, my not too optimistic view on “Build! Build! Build!” is probably unique within the investing community. My doubts have less to do with the possibility that TRAIN will not raise enough additional revenue and more with the question of whether or not the country has the absorptive capacity to roll out all the railways, airports, roads, and other infrastructure from 2018 to 2022.

There are several constraints.

First, the country’s notorious bureaucracy can stall even priority projects. Agencies often find themselves at odds with each other, losing bidders regularly go to courts seeking injunctions and, of course, corruption is rampant.

Second, right-of-way issues can cause significant delays, running up to a year or more, for road projects.

Third, the domestic construction industry does not have the capacity to handle P8.2 trillion worth of projects over five years. DMCI, the largest construction firm in the country, recently said that it can only handle P50 billion worth of projects at any given time but this already includes commercial and residential buildings. Overall, local contractors don’t have a lot of spare capacity that can help roll out the government’s massive infrastructure binge. This is where Chinese construction companies will come in but a slew of other potential problems may arise because of this.

The fourth and, by far, most important constraint is manpower.

Sec. Pernia said during one forum that P8.14 trillion worth of infrastructure spending will create about 6.3 million jobs until 2022. We learned later that this figure was based on dated (circa 2006) input-output tables.

Given improved technology, we (at Abacus/MyTrade) estimate that the number of workers needed over the next five years is closer to 3.4 million. In either case, we should be ecstatic because millions of additional jobs would generate trillions in salaries and put a fire under consumer spending, right?

Unfortunately, no.

In fact, we believe that even our own conservative estimate is impossible to reach.

First, construction companies have long complained that there is a dearth of middle managers and foremen in the industry because many of them seek greener pastures in foreign lands.

More recently, they have also been hurt by a shortage of skilled workers. These include welders, electricians, painters, machinists, heavy equipment operators and others. The shortage is forcing contractors to pay a premium for skilled workers and/or recruit and train farmers and fishermen from far-flung provinces. The government’s planned infrastructure binge, they acknowledge, will worsen the shortage and probably push labor costs higher.

This all sounds counter intuitive given that so many Filipinos of working age are unemployed. But the fact is that the rate of labor force participation (LFPR) has actually been declining in recent years. This can be traced, in part, to the implementation of the K-12 program. Those who were supposed to graduate from high school two summers ago and who had no intention or capacity to go to college should already be in the labor force but are not.

With the recently signed law granting free education at SUCs, the dip in the LFPR may be prolonged. Meanwhile, one hypothesis (credit goes to an applicant I interviewed last year) is that many Pinoys are delaying their entry into the labor force because their finances are well taken care of by relatives who are OFWs. The attitude, it would seem, is why work when life is already comfortable with the dollars, rials, or euros that papa/mama/kuya/ate sends back home.

Whatever the reasons are, the fact is that LFPR is falling and the result is that an average of only 415,000 people have entered the labor force for the past five years. Given that half of these new laborers are women, only about a quarter million men are added to worker rolls every year. So where, again, will the government find the 3.4 million to 6.3 million (mostly male) workers?

A key problem is that the LFPR is inherently sticky and only moves a few tenths of a percent per year (most of the time).

It is practically impossible, therefore, for the country’s male LFPR to jump from 77.9% in October 2016 (latest available data) to more than 85.0% by 2022 if we use Pernia’s 6.3 million new jobs. This is especially true considering that of those who are of working age (15-65 years old) but are not in the labor force, only 30% are males and of these, many are students. The pool of potential recruits, therefore, is smaller than it appears.

Will OFWs return from places around the world to fill the gap? This is unlikely given that the monthly minimum in the Middle East is $500 (P25,500) per month or more than twice the monthly minimum here.

The final possibility is to import labor. Some, for example, have speculated that Chinese construction giants will bring their own workers here. China’s labor force, however, started shrinking a few years ago and wages there have been escalating by double digits annually as a result.

For construction jobs, in particular, there is a wide gap in wages between China and the Philippines. It may therefore be too costly to bring in Chinese laborers. For other reasons, we also believe that recruiting workers from other countries like Vietnam, Myanmar, Pakistan, or Bangladesh is also unlikely. Apart from the language barrier, assimilation would be unwieldy, at best, because of cultural differences. Housing hundreds of thousands of foreign workers, much less a million or more, would also be a logistical nightmare.

Bottom line, the government’s infrastructure program appears overly ambitious.

Even if P1.2 trillion in additional tax revenues can be raised, and even with promised support from China and Japan in the form of ODA, there may not be enough warm bodies to go around. It is also possible that the government will inadvertently crowd out the private sector in competing for a precious resource (labor) and stunt growth in other areas of the economy.

Our worst case scenario, however, is that the government will indeed be able to collect P1.2 trillion in incremental taxes over the next five years but that the money will be largely unspent because of all the constraints enumerated above. This will be a big, unexpected drag on growth.

Instead of pursuing all the projects encompassed in the P8.14 trillion spending program, it would probably be worth to consider which infrastructure need to be prioritized. Those with the most expansive impact to the economy should be greenlighted first.

For example, the number of foreign tourist arrivals has more than tripled since 2010. This has brought in foreign exchange and the private sector has responded by building tens of thousands of new hotel rooms. A weaker peso relative to the region should further enhance the Philippines’ attractiveness to tourists.

Our airports, however, are bursting at the seams and the tourism sector is likely to slow if gateways like NAIA are not expanded or even replaced. This is one area, therefore, where the government can get the biggest bang for taxpayers’ bucks. Not only would bigger and better airports make it more fun for foreigners to visit the Philippines, but Filipinos would benefit from a more robust economy.

Views and opinions expressed in this piece are those of the writer’s and do not reflect the policy or position of BusinessWorld. This piece is for information purposes only and should not be construed as a recommendation, an offer, or solicitation for the subscription, purchase, or sale of any of the security(ies) mentioned.

Raymond “Nicky” Franco is a Certified Public Accountant and received his Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) designation in 2000. He is the Head of Research of Abacus Securities and the head of its online trading arm, MyTrade (mytrade.com.ph).

IT firm Now Corp. gets green light for SC project

THE Supreme Court (SC) has given Now Corp. the go-signal to implement the P57.5-million Judiciary Email System project.

In a disclosure to the stock exchange, Now Corp. said it received the notice to proceed from the Supreme Court to install the e-mail system, after the contract was signed by both parties.

“The Project, with a contract price of P57,528,888.00, covers the installation of a private cloud-based, on-premise e-mail and collaboration system that will set up an initial 7,000 e-mail accounts for the judiciary,” the listed information technology firm said.

The company is undertaking the project with joint venture partner Accent Micro Technologies, Inc., using IBM’s Collaboration Solution portfolio.

Now Corp.’s five-year plan is anchored on a build-operate-transfer project for enterprises. Under this, enterprise clients will be provided with their own private communications network that is independent of public telcos, equipped with broadband connectivity, along with a cyber security plan and a collaboration software system.

Apart from IT, Now is also engaged in providing products and services related to media and telecommunications.

House panel to recommend charges vs those involved in Yolanda housing anomalies

THE HOUSE committee on housing and urban development has concluded its investigation on the slow implementation of housing relocation and resettlement projects for victims of the 2013 super typhoon Yolanda (international name: Haiyan) and will soon be forwarding its report to the Justice department. “It is so unfortunate that for close to four years after the devastation of Yolanda, we are still talking about the construction and completion of permanent shelter instead of support programs on how to help the victims move on with their lives,” said Negros Occidental 3rd District Rep. Alfredo B. Benitez, chair of the committee. Leyte 3rd District Rep. Vicente S.E. Veloso, for his part, said appropriate charges for those involved in the anomalous housing projects are estafa and violation of the anti-graft and corrupt practices act. Mr. Veloso and his fellow panel members said they are determined to hold accountable every individual who may be involved in the anomalies in the housing project implementation. Eastern Samar Rep. Ben P. Evardone, who filed the resolution for the House probe, said the substandard construction of houses is considered part of the anomalies, and that contractors should also be made answerable to this. The National Housing Authority-Region 8, meanwhile, had reassured Yolanda survivors in Eastern Visayas of the completion of the housing projects, showing its latest report that only 28.6%, or 13,997 out of 205,128 houses, remains to be constructed. — The Freeman

Wish 107.5 launches tilt for the ‘next singing sensation’ on YouTube

FM RADIO STATION, Wish 107.5, has launched its first online singing competition meant to find “the country’s next singing sensation” after having gathered 20 contestants from all over the country.

“Sometimes it takes another country to recognize the Filipino talent, and that’s only the time that they’re introduced to the Filipino people – and we do not want that to happen,” said Daniel Razon, chairman and CEO of Breakthrough and Milestones Productions, Inc. (BMPI), in a press release.

BMPI manages the station owned by Progressive Broadcasting Co.

The station then embarked on three-month search (both online and offline) for the 20 contestants and “has toured provinces from all over the country,” said Jay Eusebio, VP for Marketing of BMPI during the launch on Aug. 31 at Eastwood City, Quezon City.

He added that over a thousand aspirants joined the search.

The “Wishful 20” are: Al Fritz, Audrey Ranelyn Malaiba, Carmela Ariola, Charlene Hernandez, Chris Noel Bernalde, Daniel Briones, Danielle Joshua Supnet, Diana Tabitha Caro, Hacel Bartolome, Jenimay Mabini, John Harvey Magos, JM Bales, Kimberly Baluzo, Kristine Joy Peralta, Louie Ann Culala, Luka Bonol, Princess Sevillena, Vien King, Louise Ann Manuel, and Zekiah Jane Miller.

The 20 contestants will perform “only Original Pilipino Music (OPM)” and be filmed, on the station’s WISH 107.5 bus. The resulting videos will then be uploaded on the station’s YouTube channel.

WISH 107.5 currently has a running program called “Wishclusives” featuring local and foreign artists singing – including Luke Mejares and Journey frontman, Arnel Pineda – on the aforementioned WISH bus with videos uploaded on the YouTube channel.

The videos of the contestants singing will be judged by singer/songwriter Jungee Marcelo, Annie Quintos of the Company, and singer Jay R (Gaudencio Sillona III).

“The judges will watch the taped performances and react accordingly,” said Mr. Eusebio.

“And unlike usual singing contests where part of the final score will be from text votes (like American Idol), video views will contribute to the final score,” he added.

The video views will comprise 30% of the contestant’s score while the remaining 70% will be from the judges.

Every Saturday – Mr. Eusebio figures the contest will run for six months – a contestant will be eliminated until one reigns supreme.

The champion of the entire contest will win P2 million and a contract, a house and a lot, and a new car.

“This is our first season [of the competition] and we hope it won’t be last,” said Mr. Eusebio. – Zsarlene B. Chua

Hurricane damage leaves St. Martin ‘unreachable’

POINTE-À-PITRE — Hurricane Irma has caused “huge damage” to St. Martin, devastating its airport and port and leaving the Dutch part of the Caribbean island unreachable, Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said Thursday.

“Alas, the island is not reachable at this point because of the huge damage to the airport and the harbor,” Mr. Rutte told reporters, though he added there were no reports of deaths on the Dutch side so far. French authorities say at least nine lives have been lost on the French side.

The French part of the Caribbean island St. Martin is “95% destroyed” after hurricane Irma tore through the region, top local official Daniel Gibbs said late Wednesday.

“It’s an enormous catastrophe. Ninety-five percent of the island is destroyed. I’m in shock. It’s frightening,” said Mr. Gibbs, a former French lawmaker, speaking on Radio Caribbean International.

The island is in need of emergency assistance, he said. “I have sick people to evacuate, I have a population to evacuate because I don’t know where I can shelter them,” he said.

At least six people have been killed in the French part of St. Martin, Guadeloupe prefect Eric Maire said.

Hurricane Irma, one of the most powerful Atlantic storms on record, cut a deadly swath through a string of small Caribbean islands on Wednesday.

The French minister for overseas affairs, Annick Girardin, was to fly to Guadeloupe late Wednesday with emergency teams and supplies to assess the situation, the ministry said.

“It’s too soon for casualty figures (but) I can already tell you the toll will be harsh and cruel,” French President Emmanuel Macron said, adding that he expected damage on St. Barts and St. Martin to be “considerable.”

St. Martin (“Sint Maarten” in Dutch), located south of the island of Anguilla, is divided between the Netherlands and France.

St. Barts (“Saint Barthelemy” in French), which lies to the southeast of St. Martin, is administered with the status of a French collectivity, as is the French part of St. Martin.

‘TOTAL CARNAGE’
The Caribbean island of Barbuda is a scene of “total carnage” after the passage of hurricane Irma and the tiny two-island nation will be seeking assistance from the international community to rebuild, its prime minister said on Thursday.

Gaston Browne, prime minister of Antigua and Barbuda, told the BBC that about half of Barbuda’s population of some 1,800 were homeless while nine out of 10 buildings had suffered some level of devastation, many of them total destruction.

“We flew into Barbuda only to see total carnage. It was easily one of the most emotionally painful experiences that I have had,” Mr. Browne said in an interview on BBC Radio Four.

“Approximately 50% of them (residents of Barbuda) are literally homeless at this time. They are bunking together, we are trying to get … relief supplies to them first thing tomorrow morning,” he said, adding that it would take months or years to restore some level of normalcy to the island. — AFP

A sinister Pennywise returns with a big dose of nostalgia

MOVIE
It
Directed by Andy Muschietti

LOS ANGELES — It has been 27 years since a deranged killer clown terrorized a town on the small screen in It and ushered in a generation’s fear of clowns. Now, Stephen King’s Pennywise the child-eating clown is back, with bloodier teeth and a fresh set of victims.

It is the long-awaited movie version of King’s 1986 horror novel, rated “R” for gritty thrills, gory deaths and a Loser’s Club — the group of hero teenagers — not shy about cursing and making crude comments.

“There was still the feeling that It had not been faithfully adapted in all its glory and it’s been 27 seven years since 1990. So it’s about time,” director Andy Muschietti said.

Pennywise, first played by Tim Curry in 1990’s It television miniseries, preyed on the innocent and poisoned the sense of security of a small town.

It was part of a spate of 1980s films that made a phobia of clowns, known as coulrophobia, part of the zeitgeist and a horror movie staple.

Setting the new film in the late 1980s was a personal decision for Muschietti, who threw in a bevy of 1980s nostalgia with music and pop culture references for his cast of smart-mouthed teenagers.

“It’s also a time of your life where you basically stop being a child and… become being an adult, which is exactly precisely what happens to the Losers,” Muschietti added.

It begins with a very vivid homage to the 1990 miniseries as little Georgie Denbrough, clad in a yellow raincoat, chases a paper boat down the rain-soaked streets of the fictional suburban town of Derry, Maine, right to a storm drain.

There Pennywise, a supernatural demon clown, lurks underground and lures Georgie to a gory fate that kicks off a chain of deaths for the town’s teenagers and strange visions among the seven members of the Loser’s Club.

It scared so many people in the ’80s,” said actress Sophia Lillis, who plays Beverly, the sole girl in the Loser’s Club.

“Their childhood was based off of It … so it has this big fan base around it but I think the basis is nostalgia.” — Reuters


IT, the latest take on the Stephen King horror story about an evil demonic clown named Pennywise, whose history of murder and violence dates back for centuries, and a group of children who find themselves fighting it amidst adult indifference, has been very popular with the critics on the review aggregate site which gave the film a 90% rating. The film stars Bill Skarsgård as Pennywise, and Jaeden Lieberher, Bill Denbrough, Jeremy Ray Taylor, Sophia Lillis, and Finn Wolfhard.

Richard Roeper of the Chicago Sun-Times wrote, “When a film of this magnitude has so many young characters front and center in the lead roles, so much depends on the casting — and in this case, there’s not a single misstep,” and gave the film a full four star rating.

Brian Truitt of USA Today concurs, “The infamous clown is plenty freaky, though it’s the youngsters, bursting with hormones and one-liners, who make It one of the better Stephen King adaptations.”

MTRCB Rating: R-13

Fed sees limited wage pressures as labor market remains tight

ECONOMIC GROWTH was modest to moderate across the US in the past two months as labor markets stayed tight without much wage pressure and the auto industry emerged as one of the few possible sources of weakness, a Federal Reserve survey showed.

The central bank’s Beige Book report, based on anecdotal information collected by the 12 regional Fed banks from early July through August, said consumer spending, capital expenditures and manufacturing all were increasing. Employment growth “slowed some” even as worker shortages worsened.

There were mixed results for vehicle sales and auto production, the report said. “Contacts in many districts expressed concerns about a prolonged slowdown in the auto industry,” according to the report, released Wednesday in Washington.

Fed officials have been anxious to gather fresh economic information that could help them determine whether they should lift their benchmark interest rate a third time in 2017. They hiked in March and June largely in response to a robust labor market, but some policy makers have wavered in their commitment to another increase due to weak inflation.

The report only deepened the mystery over why a tightening labor market is failing to trigger higher wages and lift prices more generally.

Prices “rose modestly” across the country, the report said in language that was similar to the last Beige Book report released July 12. Input prices gained, particularly for freight, lumber and steel, the report stated. In response to those increases, however, many firms didn’t pass on those higher costs to their customers.

SUBDUED INFLATION
The Fed’s preferred measure of inflation, excluding food and energy components, was just 1.4 percent in the 12 months through July. Inflation has lagged below the Fed’s 2 percent target for most of the past five years.

With little inflation to worry about, Fed officials are rethinking how low the jobless rate can go before it starts to raise the cost of living.

“Employment growth slowed some on balance, ranging from a slight to a modest rate in most districts,” the report stated. “Labor markets were widely characterized as tight,” with worker shortages most notable in manufacturing and construction, it said.

Firms in Atlanta, St. Louis and Minneapolis were turning down business because of the dearth of people to hire, according to the report. Still, the majority of districts reported “limited wage pressures and modest to moderate wage growth.”

Unemployment has hovered at 4.3% to 4.4% since April.

The report also included a brief section on the economic impact of Hurricane Harvey, which flooded much of the Houston area. The energy and natural resources industries along the Gulf Coast were “generally positive” before the storm shut some production, the report said.

While it’s too soon to gauge the full extent of the economic fallout, freight prices jumped in the aftermath and the Port of Charleston in South Carolina expected increased volumes in coming weeks as shipments were routed away from the storm-ravaged region. — Bloomberg

Busan Rail calls for audit to validate MRT-3 defects

BUSAN Universal Rail, Inc. (BURI) yesterday called on the Department of Transportation (DoTr) to conduct a system audit to validate the cause of service  disruptions at the Metro Rail Transit (MRT)-3 commuter line.

BURI, the rail line’s maintenance provider, has rejected claims by the DoTr that the company is responsible for MRT-3.

Undersecretary for Railways Cesar B. Chavez earlier submitted to the legal office of DoTr a paper of his office recommending that the contract of maintenance with BURI be terminated.

His paper cited, among others, failure to maintain safe and reliable train availability, citing derailment incidents, 98 service interruptions and 833 passenger unloading incidents, covering the January 2016 to July 2017 period. DoTr and BURI entered into a contract for the maintenance of MRT-3 in January 2016.

BURI said that as of Aug. 15, 2017, BURI’s fleet availability level for MRT-3 was 91.67%, higher than LRT-1’s 74.82% and LRT-2’s 66.67%. The company said fleet availability was 55% when BURI took over the maintenance contract.

Charles Mercado, a spokesperson for BURI, said in a statement: “Considering the difference in interpretation of the factual circumstances being used by DoTr as grounds for the termination of its contract, the dispute must be resolved following the contract-provided procedure through mutual consultation [and] through appropriate meetings.

BURI said it has formally notified the DoTr of its intention to avail of mutual consultation.

Mr. Chavez said in a text message to reporters: “I have… officially recommended the termination of the maintenance contract as I cannot countenance the poor maintenance works on the MRT-3 system which have led to 649 service interruptions and passenger unloading in 2016 and 284 in 2017, and worse, five train derailments in April and May 2017.”

“We have accordingly penalized BURI for these service interruptions, failure to comply with its obligation to ensure required number of trains available and failure to procure necessary spare parts which BURI willingly paid, thus admitting its failure to comply with its contractual obligations. At any rate, we will give BURI the right to explain its failure to comply with its maintenance works if that is what it wants,” Mr. Chavez said.

Mr. Chavez also said in a text message to BusinessWorld that DoTr is in the process of conducting the requested audit: “We are doing that (audit initiative) even without their suggestion.” — Patrizia Paola C. Marcelo

Mayweather-McGregor superfight gate receipts well short of record

LOS ANGELES — Floyd Mayweather and Conor McGregor’s money-spinning superfight failed to break the record for gate receipts at a Las Vegas boxing bout, figures released by the Nevada State Athletic Commission revealed Wednesday.

The controversial Aug. 26 fight raked in $55,414,865.79, well short of the $72,198,500 generated by Mayweather’s 2015 “Fight of the Century” against Manny Pacquiao at the MGM Grand.

The Mayweather-McGregor bout, staged at the T-Mobile Arena, sold 13,094 tickets, well short of the venue’s 20,500 capacity. The Mayweather-Pacquiao fight sold 16,219 tickets.

A total of 137 complimentary tickets were given away for Mayweather-McGregor, won by Mayweather in a 10th-round technical knockout.

Face-value ticket prices for Mayweather-McGregor were among the most expensive in history, with cheapest seats going for $500 and the most expensive for as much as $10,000.

Although the fight failed to challenge the Mayweather-Pacquiao gate total, it becomes the second highest-grossing gate in Las Vegas history, surpassing the $20 million generated by Mayweather’s 2013 defeat of Canelo Alvarez.

The bout is also set to be one of the richest fights in history if the most bullish predictions of pay-per-view television sales are met.

Some predictions have suggested the fight could threaten the 4.6 million buys generated by Pacquiao-Mayweather.

Official numbers have not been released although executives from cable network Showtime Sports said they expected the bout would at least be second. — AFP

North Korea and defending the West Philippine Sea

It started out with what appeared at first to be an earthquake. Just that the earthquake, measuring 6.3 on the Richter scale and lasting around 10 seconds, was only 10 kilometers deep and took place at Kimchaek, a known area where North Korea conducts nuclear tests.

Then it became clear: the North Korean government congratulated itself on a successful hydrogen bomb detonation, the sixth, and against the expressed international proscription to do so.

The hydrogen bomb’s power can reach levels of thousands of kilotons, able to be detonated at high altitudes, and – with intercontinental ballistic missiles – reach mainland US.

More importantly, the components were reportedly indigenous, such that North Korea need not import, and thus able to produce any number of nuclear weapons it wants without foreign assistance.

International condemnation was swift and US Defense Secretary James Mattis warned that any attack on the US or any of its allies will be met with a “massive military response”.

While Japan’s foreign minister Taro Kono and the US State secretary Rex Tillerson called for fresh sanctions, Mattis dryly stated that while the US is not looking for the “total annihilation” of North Korea, it has “many options to do so”.

But this article is not about North Korea, of which the Philippines is bizarrely its third largest trading partner.

This is about the Philippines and our territorial sea.

Because the North Korean issue revealed something about the Philippines: that it practically no longer plays a significant factor in international calculations.

After all, with the US having longer ranged weaponry and other dependably wealthy allies, what does it need the Philippines for?

To back up a bit, last 19 August 2017 Supreme Court Associate Justice Antonio Carpio commented on an alleged “invasion” of Philippine territory:

“[China is now occupying Sandy Cay]. This is worse than what happened in Scarborough Shoal”. It was not even part of China’s “discredited historic nine-dashed line claim. Sandy Cay emerged within the territorial sea of a Philippine territory. If Sandy Cay becomes Chinese territory, it will reduce by a third or more Pagasa’s territorial sea. It will also prevent the Philippines from extending the territorial sea of Pagasa to include Subi Reef. By any yardstick, this is seizure of Philippine territory.”

Assuming such is true, what then can be done?

Calls for again suing China were made, of course. But in practical terms, such really doesn’t do anything.

The key assumption people always had is that the disputed Pacific areas are of military and economic importance to the US, such that it will not allow China’s dominance over the same.

But what if that assumption is wrong? What if that area and the Philippines are no longer as militarily, strategically important as it was back in World War II?

For one, during a workshop earlier this year, Australia-China Relations Institute James Laur¬ence¬son pointed out that:

“The $US5.3 trillion figure, which had then been repeated by numerous commentators, appeared to be a ‘considerable overestimate’. He said 70 per cent of global trade was carried by sea, with the world merchandise trade in 2011 amounting to $US17.8 trillion. This implied that around 43 per cent of total seaborne trade went through the South China Sea. Laurenceson said this claim was ‘extremely difficult to reconcile’ because many of the world’s most prominent bilateral trade relationships were domi¬nated by seaborne trade yet did not involve the South China Sea.”

Also, “Laurenceson said the US trade that might cross the South China Sea was that with ASEAN, yet the US Census Bureau listed this as only amounting to $US200 billion annually and included not just goods shipped by sea but also air trade”.

Australian National University Strategic and Defence Studies Centre’s Brendan Taylor then adds an interesting observation – that the disputed area as dangerous “flashpoint” is actually a myth: “First, East Asia’s traditional flashpoints—Taiwan, the Korean Peninsula, and the East China Sea—stand a significantly higher prospect of combusting into broader, region-wide conflict. Second, China’s interests in the South China Sea are often overstated, and Beijing will continue to favor options short of military force to advance what interests it does have in this region. Third, the balance of military power in the South China Sea is not shifting against the United States at the rate many pundits suggest, rendering overblown the prospects for Washington being drawn into war with China to defend the credibility of its Asian alliances.”

Finally, there’s also this: the US is far from being a spent force. From economics to demographics to politics (domestic or international), frankly, time is on the US’ side.

It doesn’t need a war with China, they can just wait it out and let China exhaust itself.

This leaves the Philippines on its own.

Now, how we develop a short and long-term foreign and security policy factoring the aforementioned possibilities requires sophistication undisplayed by the last and (so far) this administration.

Jemy Gatdula is a Senior Fellow of the Philippine Council for Foreign Relations and a Philippine Judicial Academy law lecturer for constitutional philosophy and jurisprudence.

jemygatdula@yahoo.com

www.jemygatdula.blogspot.com

facebook.com/jemy.gatdula

Twitter @jemygatdula

Encouraging fitness

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo
Reporter

IN THIS AGE of fast and processed food, picking up the lifestyle habits of eating a healthy diet and having a fitness routine are no doubt a challenge. But for healthy food chain SaladStop!, such can be achieved if one makes a conscious effort.

In line with its mantra of “eating wide awake,” SaladStop! recently launched its “Eat Wide Awake Movement” campaign with the mission of “helping individuals maintain a healthy diet and encourage a devotion to fitness.”

SaladStop! is known for high-quality fresh salads, wraps, and hearty snacks.

For the whole month of September, which SaladStop! refers to as “Salad Month,” the food chain will hold promos and activities all geared at its end-game of reinforcing the value of conscious eating and keeping a well-balanced lifestyle.

To help it in its campaign, SaladStop! has enlisted the help of fit and strong “movers” whom it considers to embody what the whole thrust is about because of the choices they have made to stay fit and strong.

The Eat Wide Awake movers are actress Coleen Garcia, celebrity hosts Raymond Gutierrez and Kim Atienza, volleyball player Michele Gumabao, and celebrity trainer Arnold Aninion, and they are tasked to inspire others with their respective fitness journeys and choices.

“The mantra of SaladStop! is ‘eating wide awake’ which is about the relationship between us people and the food we take. It’s more of being conscious of what kind of nutrition we put in our body and the effects of which it has. The movement is about the totality of well-being,” said Steven R. Sarmenta, executive vice-president and general manager of Specialty Foods Retailers, Inc., the company which handles SaladStop!, in an interview with BusinessWorld during the Eat Wide Awake Movement campaign launch last week.

While he underscored that, based on their experience with SaladStop!, Filipinos are more familiar with vegetables and know their importance in being healthy and fit. Still, the company hopes that through the campaign, that conversation would be sustained and, in turn, propel the healthy lifestyle and fitness movement.

“The Filipinos have become more informed on healthy living. They know their vegetables now. They create their own salads and it speaks of the maturity of the Filipinos. Hopefully this campaign of SaladStop! further enhances that and continue to instigate conversation on it,” said Mr. Sarmenta.

The campaign kicks off on Sept. 9 with a series of interactive and fitness activities at the Bonifacio High Street Amphitheater, to be highlighted by a live DJ ride cycling party care of Electric Studio.

On Sept. 16, there will be having an exclusive Hybrid Density Training class led by Mr. Aninion.

Also this month, the healthy food chain will be releasing two new featured items, namely the Ting Tong (Crazy) salad and wrap, and Yeobo Yeobo (Darling) warm grain bowl.

Ting Tong is a mix of romaine lettuce, Cajun shrimp, vermicelli, ripe mango, pomelo, cherry tomatoes, snow peas, shredded coconut, roasted peanuts and Thai Peanut Turmeric dressing. The Yeobo Yeobo warm grain bowl, meanwhile, is made with baby spinach, quinoa, roasted chicken, eggs, sweet corn, alfalfa sprouts, edamame, and Korean chili vinaigrette.

“Campaigns like this by SaladStop! are very important, especially nowadays where it seems everything is processed and made fast. You really have to choose to live healthy, invest in your heath, not only for now but for the future as well. It’s hard and challenging but it’s all worth it,” said Ms. Gumabao in an interview.

SaladStop! has branches at Central Square in BGC, Power Plant Mall, OPL Building in Legaspi Village, Greenhills, Glorietta 2, Ayala Tower One, Burgos Circle, Alabang Town Center, Salcedo Village, and Ayala Center Cebu.

San Miguel to build industrial estate in Mandaue

SAN MIGUEL Corp. plans to build an industrial estate in Mandaue City, Cebu together with the local government in a bid to increase manufacturing activity and create jobs in the country.

The diversified conglomerate said in a statement on Thursday that the project will include a processed foods plant, feed mill, and other manufacturing facilities. The project will also have its own port terminal.

“We look forward to growing our presence in Mandaue City. This major development is an important part of San Miguel’s current expansion in key regions nationwide,” SMC President and Chief Operating Officer Ramon S. Ang was quoted as saying in a statement. 

SMC is currently investing in new processing plants for its food business, with P56 billion allocated for capital expenditures over the next three years by its subsidiary, San Miguel Pure Foods Corp. (SMPFC).

“Our aim is to support and accelerate our country’s economic development by investing in strategic and emerging growth areas. With this investment, we hope to help accelerate the city’s and the region’s overall growth and bring more jobs to our countrymen here,” Mr. Ang said.

For his part, Mandaue City Mayor Luigi Quisumbing said the conglomerate’s investment in the city is a “strong validation of Mandaue City’s status as a premiere investment destination.”

SMC’s recurring profit grew 21% in the first semester to P27.6 billion, rising on the back of the 20% rise in revenues to P393.4 billion.

Shares in SMC lost P1.5 or 1.53% to close at P96.60 at the stock exchange on Thursday. — Arra B. Francia