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P170-M project planned to address perennial flooding in Tacloban

THE DEPARTMENT of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) is now preparing for a P170-million flood control project for Tacloban City, the most urbanized city among those devastated by supertyphoon Haiyan (local name: Yolanda) in 2013 and continues to suffer from perennial flooding. DPWH-Region 8 Director Edgar B. Tabacon, in a statement, said planning and design engineers have been ordered to assess the major waterways and drainage and prepare a flood control master plan for the city. “This long-term solution to solve perennial flooding will be tailored fit with the Study conducted by Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) for the Waterways Master Plan in Tacloban City,” Mr. Tabacon said. The project will be funded by the national government under the 2018 budget.

New Mactan airport terminal to open in June

THE Department of Transportation (DoTr) said the construction of the new Mactan Cebu International Airport (MCIA) terminal is 89% complete, and is set to open in June.

Godess Libiran, director of public information at DoTr, told reporters in a message that the agency and its private partner, the consortium of Megawide Construction Corp. and GMR Infrastructure Ltd., plan to open Terminal 2 in June.

The new terminal building in MCIA will have a capacity of about 13 million passengers annually, and will serve domestic and international operations.

Megawide-GMR won in 2014 the 25-year public private partnership (PPP) contract to build, operate and maintain the new MCIA terminal for some P17.52 billion.

In June 2017, the Megawide-GMR consortium submitted a P208-billion unsolicited proposal for the 50-year development of MCIA.

The consortium also bagged the contract for the construction of the Clark International Airport (CIA) new terminal project. — Patrizia Paola C. Marcelo

Stepping up its game

HEALTH AND fitness aficionados in the country who are on the lookout for more smartwatch capabilities to accompany their journeys have another one to consider as Fitbit recently launched locally a new version of the Fitbit Ionic.

Building on its health and fitness expertise that has allowed it to become the leading global wearables brand, Fitbit has stepped up its game with the Ionic that features innovations which company officials said could provide new dimensions to the needs of those who want to go deeper in the “health performance space.”

Equipped with a new relative SpO2 sensor, the Ionic makes it possible to track deeper health metrics, including estimating blood oxygen levels.

This is on top of its extensive and industry-leading GPS and improved heart rate tracking which one can use while running and doing gym work, as well as on-device dynamic workouts that adapt to each user’s needs.

It is also water resistant to 50 meters.

Other features include on-board music, smart notifications, and a variety of popular apps and clock faces, something company officials said they would add to as the year progresses.

The Ionic also boasts of Fitbit staples like long battery life (five days), automatic activity and sleep tracking, and cross-platform compatibility.

Design-wise, the Fitbit Ionic makes use of new processes and materials that improve weight, fit, durability, breathability, and daily wear, resulting in an extremely lightweight, ergonomic design which makes it comfortable to wear all day long.

RELEVANT TO THE MARKET
In the formal launch of the Ionic last week, Louis Lye, Fitbit regional lead for Southeast Asia, Hong Kong, and Taiwan, said they are expecting the Ionic to do well in the country considering the Philippines has been a good market for their products.

“We first launched in the country in November of 2015, so it has been a journey of two and a half years for us. And I would say we have been doing well here as we have seen a year-on-year growth of 36%. It shows that we have products that are relevant to the market,” said Mr. Lye in an interview with BusinessWorld at the sidelines of the Ionic launch.

“It’s our first smart watch and we believe it’s a game-changer with the many new features that have been put in it. People who are entering the performance space and those who are already in it can you use the Ionic. If they want to check everything and they want to have all those fitness trackers, this has it and more,” he added.

Mr. Lye went on to say that among the new features they are pushing to introduce in the country via the Ionic is Fitbit Pay, which would allow for effortless payment for items through one’s device wherever contactless payments are accepted.

Expansion of its roster of apps is also planned which would also involve local developers.

“Fitbit Pay is one thing we are pushing for here and we have to sit down with Philippine banks for that and increase our level of partnership. We have yet to initiate any talks but we are planning to soon. We also want to engage Filipino developers for other apps to be featured on the Ionic,” Mr. Lye said.

The Fitbic Ionic is now available at major retailers across the Philippines, including Digital Walker and Beyond the Box stores, for P15,690.

It is available in three color combinations: a silver gray tracker and clasp with a blue-gray band, a smoke gray tracker and clasp with a charcoal band, and a burnt orange tracker and clasp with a slate blue band.

Also to be made available soon are Fitbit’s wireless headphones, the Fitbit Flyer, and the Fitbit Aria 2 Wi-Fi Smart Scale, which will be sold for P6,790 and P7,690, respectively. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Navotas spoils Muntinlupa; Batangas survives Valenzuela

EXPECTING a tough outing against host Muntinlupa, Navotas relied on the hot shooting of Yves Sazon, who hit 24 points to steer the Navotas Clutch to an exciting 82-76 triumph over the Muntinlupa Cagers in the resumption of the Maharlika Pilipinas Basketball League (MPBL) Anta Rajah Cup at the Muntinlupa Sports Complex.

The dead shot swingman from Philippine Christian University became the scourge on the Cagers as he hit timely baskets, including a long jumper inside the final minute, allowing the Clutch to survive the match.

Mr. Sazon hit six three-point as the Cagers were clueless that he could torched the hoops.

“He is licensed to shoot. He’s been doing that for our team before and we expect him to do it here in MPBL,” said Navotas coach Elvis Tolentino. “We expected a grind out game because we’re the visitors, but I’m confident we’re going to win.”

Nearly overshadowed by Navotas’ win was Batangas Athletics-Tanduay’s 73-65 victory.

Former PBA champions Val Acuña and Lester Alvarez conspired in a big Batangas run early before they outlasted the Chris Gavina-mentored Valenzuela Classic.

Rarely given opportunity to play in the PBA, Messrs. Acuña and Alvarez were part of San Mig Coffee’s championship teams.

Traded by the Coffee Mixers at the height of their grand slam campaign, Mr. Acuña has found himself bouncing in and out of different leagues.

His role with the Athletics is different as he is one of the team’s go-to-guys and he proved it last Saturday.

The 6-foot-3 Acuña scored 18 points, hitting four triples, to lead his squad’s production.

“We treat everybody equally, no seniority. Whoever is playing good out there, gets to play,” said Mr. Acuña.

His long-time teammate, Alvarez, a member of the grand slam squad of San Mig Coffee in 2014, was fortunate to find a spot in the MPBL.

“It’s good that we were able to share our experience to our new teammates, experience we learned in the PBA,” added Mr. Alvarez. “We pushed ourselves hard during practice and tried to be in good condition because we know we’re gonna be relied on more.”

Batangas raced to a 38-19 lead at the half, but was outscored, 29-18, in the third period, Valenzuela simply ran out of time. — Rey Joble

Cebu provincial government steps in as traffic woes hound Metro Cebu area

Cebu traffic 2

THE CEBU provincial government is stepping in to help address the growing traffic congestion not just in Cebu City, but in most of the Metro Cebu area that is composed of seven cities and six municipalities. “I will be meeting again sa tanan na nga mga (with all of the) traffic managers sa LGUs (local government units), especially sa Metro Cebu where traffic is very bad, all the stakeholders para we can come up with a unified traffic system to ensure the smooth flow of traffic and on how to address accidents roads,” Governor Hilario P. Davide III said in a statement. Earlier this month, Mr. Davide met with traffic officials of Talisay City and Minglanilla, both part of Metro Cebu, to discuss possible solutions to traffic congestion. In the same statement, Mr. Davide expressed support to Mayor Tomas R. Osmeña of the independent city of Cebu on his proposed stricter penalties for drivers who worsen traffic gridlock by counter-flowing. The governor also said that there should be more tow trucks that can immediately respond to vehicular accidents as well as traffic enforcers who are trained to work fast in resolving accidents so as not to cause further traffic buildup.

Curry scores 49 as Warriors hold off pesky Celtics

SAN FRANCISCO — Stephen Curry scored a season-high 49 points and the defending champion Golden State Warriors outlasted the Boston Celtics, 109-105, Saturday in an NBA showdown of conference leaders.

The Celtics sought a third win in as many seasons on the Warriors’ home court and could have become the first team since the 2013-2014 season to sweep a season series from Golden State.

But Curry seized command in the second half, outbattling Celtics star Kyrie Irving in a game that could be a preview of June’s NBA Finals.

Curry went 16-of-24 from the floor, including eight-of-13 from 3-point range, while Irving led Boston with 37 points on 13-of-18 shooting, making five-of-six 3-pointers.

“We bring the best out of each other,” Curry said. “He’s an amazing type of player who can do some crazy things on the floor. That’s what the NBA is all about every night.”

The Celtics, down 10 points in the fourth quarter, rallied to lead briefly before Curry took charge.

Curry sank a 3-pointer to put Golden State ahead, 98-95, and after an Irving miss, sank a layup for a 100-95 Warriors’ edge with 68 seconds remaining.

Late free throws by Curry put the Warriors ahead, 105-101, but Terry Rozier’s 3-pointer pulled Boston within a point with 7.7 seconds remaining, forcing Curry to sink four more in the final seconds to seal the triumph.

“This is like a playoff-type game,” Curry said. “This prepares us for what it’s going to be like in April, May and June.

The Warriors are trying to reach the NBA Finals for the fourth consecutive season and capture their third crown in four tries.

Kevin Durant had 20 points and Draymond Green added 15 points and 11 rebounds for Golden State while Jaylen Brown had 20 points and Al Horford contributed 15 points and 13 rebounds for the Celtics.

Boston led, 54-50, at halftime but Curry scored 18 points in the third quarter and the Warriors outscored Boston, 30-19, in the period to grab an 80-73 edge.

“We played defense,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said in explaining the surge. “Finally started getting some stops so we could get out in transition.

“They made a ton of shots early. We just stayed with it and got going.”

Boston opened 6-of-7 and 10-of-13 from the floor against the NBA’s top defensive club, Irving starting out 7-for-7.

TRIPLE DOUBLE FOR WESTBROOK
Russell Westbrook had a triple double with a game-high 31 points plus 11 rebounds and 13 assists in Oklahoma City’s 121-108 victory at Detroit.

Paul George added 26 points and Carmelo Anthony had 21 for the Thunder. Anthony became the 21st player in NBA history to reach the 25,000 career-point mark.

Victor Oladipo scored a game-high 24 points and the host Indiana Pacers rallied from a 21-point deficit to defeat Orlando, 114-112.

The Magic had their chances late but Aaron Gordon, who led Orlando with 22 points and 11 rebounds, missed two free throws with 7.9 seconds remaining and Jonathon Simmons missed a final 3-point attempt.

Markieff Morris scored 23 points and Mike Scott had 19 to lead Washington over host Atlanta, 129-104.

Miami, powered by 19 points from Josh Richardson and 17 from Wayne Ellington, closed the game with an 8-1 run to beat visiting Charlotte, 95-91.

Richardson followed back-to-back layups with a free throw to give the Heat a 92-90 lead. Kemba Walker, who scored a game-high 30 points, made 1-of-2 free throws to pull the Hornets closer but Ellington sank a 3-pointer with 4.6 seconds to play to seal the victory.

Jimmy Butler and Andrew Wiggins each scored 21 points to lead Minnesota over visiting Brooklyn, 111-97, and Gary Harris scored 24 points to lead host Denver over Dallas, 91-89. — AFP

Kabul in shock after ambulance bomb attack

KABUL — Kabul reacted in despair and fear on Sunday, a day after a suicide bomb in the center of the city killed and wounded more than 250 people in the worst attack seen in the Afghan capital in months.

With security officials warning that more attacks were possible after an ambulance packed with explosives blew up in a crowded city street on Saturday, there was a mix of helpless anger at the seemingly endless wave of attacks.

“How are we to live? Where should we go?” asked shopkeeper Mohammad Hanif, who was in his shop near the site of the explosion when it went off.

“We have no security, we don’t have no proper government, what should we do?” he said.

At least 95 people were killed and 158 wounded in the blast, which was claimed by the Taliban, a week after they claimed a deadly attack on the city’s Intercontinental Hotel.

It was the worst attack seen in the Afghan capital since a truck bomb near the German embassy killed 150 people in May.

“People were running everywhere to escape, there were wounded people lying on the ground, people with wounds to their arms, legs, heads,” Mr. Hanif said.

After a deadly week in which an office of the aid group Save the Children in the eastern city of Jalalabad was also attacked, President Ashraf Ghani’s Western-backed government has faced growing pressure to improve security.

Despite a major tightening in checks following the May 31 attack, the ambulance was able to get through the checkpoints, apparently without difficulty.

“People don’t have work, there’s no life for people in Afghanistan, people have to look for a life somewhere else, there’s nowhere,” said shopkeeper Sameem.

The attack, described as “an atrocity” by the head of the UN mission in Afghanistan, drew universal condemnation from allies and neighboring countries.

US President Donald J. Trump, who last year sent more American troops to Afghanistan and ordered an increase in air strikes and other assistance to Afghan forces, said the attack “renews our resolve and that of our Afghan partners”.

US officials have said that the new strategy is putting pressure on the Taliban. Following a recent visit to Kabul, the US ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, said the strategy was working and pushing the insurgents closer to peace talks.

However, the Taliban have dismissed any suggestion that they have been weakened by the US approach and say they will only agree to talks when international forces leave Afghanistan.

In a statement, US Secretary of State Rex W. Tillerson insisted there can be “no tolerance for those who support or offer sanctuary to terrorist groups.”

“The Taliban’s use of an ambulance as a weapon to target civilians represents inhumane disregard for the people of Afghanistan and all those working to bring peace to the country,” he said, adding the attack breached “the most basic international norms.”

“All countries who support peace in Afghanistan have an obligation to take decisive action to stop the Taliban’s campaign of violence.”

Although Mr. Tillerson did not name any specific countries, Washington has repeatedly accused Pakistan of neglect in cracking down on militant groups such as the Taliban or their Haqqani allies.

The attack, in one of the most heavily protected parts of the city, close to foreign embassies and government buildings, demonstrated that their ability to mount deadly high profile attacks that undermine confidence in the government remains undiminished. — Reuters and AFP

Why low or zero income tax can mean more development

“The people are hungry: It is because those in authority eat up too much in taxes.

When the government is too intrusive, people lose their spirit.”

— Lao Tzu, or Laozi
(6th-5th century BC)

The good news about the new tax law called TRAIN (Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion) is that overall personal income tax (PIT) rates have declined. The bad news is that the high rates of 30% and 32% were retained, and an even higher rate of 35% was introduced for incomes P8 million a year or higher.

In a period of growing global tax competition, growing decentralization if not disintegration by big governments and countries, economies should introduce low taxes.

Currently, Asian economies with low, flat income tax rates are Mongolia with only 10%, Macau with 12%, and Hong Kong with 15%.

Currently too, there are 10 countries and/or jurisdictions around the world that have zero income tax policy.

Eight of them are in the table below, the two others, Bermuda and Cayman islands, have no available data in the IMF and WEF reports. Hence, they are not included in the table. The global rank and score in the World Economic Forum’s (WEF) annual Global Competitiveness Index (GCI), pillar #1 — Institutions, would represent or proxy for the rule of law of countries included in the report (see table).

GDP per Capita

These numbers show the following:

1. Citizens of zero income tax countries on average are actually richer (except Bahamas) than people of countries that impose and collect income taxes.

2. Zero income tax countries on average have high scores and rank in the WEF’s GCI (except Kuwait), in institutional strength. The same pattern is also observed for developed Asia except South Korea.

3. Developing and emerging Asia like the ASEAN 5 in the above table have lower scores and global ranking, except Malaysia.

One lesson here is that it is the rule of law, the stability and predictability of institutions, public and private, that largely determine an economy’s wealth and prosperity. Not higher taxes and welfarism, not more regulations and endless subsidies.

These countries like Qatar, Brunei, and United Arab Emirates, even Singapore and Hong Kong, are not known for their big mountains and waterfalls, many white sand beaches and sprawling golf courses. They are known for their liberal and secure investment policies that properly respect and protect private property rights, especially big investments and projects, and non-intrusive tax policies.

Currently, the Department of Finance (DoF) is preparing TRAIN 2, focus on lowering the corporate income tax (CIT) rate from 30% to 25% but with fewer fiscal holidays and exemptions. The goal of DoF is to have a “revenue neutral” law, reduce revenues on one side to be compensated by additional revenues on the other side.

Since the Duterte administration is gung-ho on federalism, this will be a good opportunity for them to drastically cut CIT — only 10%, or 15%, little or no exemptions — then allow the regional or state governments to have their own CIT.

The advantage of this setup is that it instills tax and investment competition among the regions and states.

Thus, the future state of southern Luzon for instance will have a CIT of 15%, the state of western Visayas will have a CIT of 10%, the state of northern Mindanao will have a CIT of only 6%, another state will have zero CIT, and so on.

The DoF should align its fiscal priorities with the political priorities of Malacañang and Congress.

TRAIN 1 was lousy because it raised many national taxes or created new ones even if the DoF is aware that soon there will be less national government departments, bureaus, and welfarism to be compensated by more state government departments and welfarism.

Let TRAIN 2 compensate for the short-sightedness of TRAIN 1. Let the national and soon federal government step back as the regional and state governments step forward.

 

Bienvenido S. Oplas, Jr. is President of Minimal Government Thinkers, a member-institute of Economic Freedom Network (EFN) Asia.

minimalgovernment@gmail.com.

Film and television director Maryo J. delos Reyes, 65

ACCLAIMED film and television director, Maryo J. delos Reyes passed away Saturday night at the age of 65 after suffering a heart attack in Dipolog City, Zamboanga del Norte.

“It is with deep sadness that we inform everyone that our beloved Maryo J. delos Reyes passed away at 10 p.m., Jan. 27, 2018. Details of his wake and funeral services to follow,” said Mr. Delos Reyes’ manager, June Rufino, in a statement posted on Twitter by ABS-CBN’s MJ Felipe.

“We have loved him in life, let us not forget him in this time of sorrow,” Ms. Rufino added.

Mr. Delos Reyes, who directed films for almost four decades, was the man behind two films that made a big impact on young people.

His first movie, Viva Films’s coming-of-age movie Bagets (1984) — which starred William Martinez, J.C. Bonin, Herbert Bautista, Raymond Lauchengco, Aga Muhlach, Eula Valdez, Yayo Aguila, and Jobelle Salvador — became a touchstone for that generation.

Then in 2003 he directed Magnifico (2003), a drama about an inspiring, determined boy. The film won the Crystal Bear in the 2004 Berlin Film Festival Children’s Category and Deutsches Kinderhilfswerk Grand Prix for Best Feature Film in the same festival.

Magnifico also won seven of the major FAMAS awards that year (Best Film, Supporting Actor, Supporting Actress, Child Actor, Child Actress, Director, and Story) and another seven awards from the Gawad Urian including Best Film (tied with Ang Babae sa Breakwater by Mario O’ Hara), Direction, Actor, Supporting Actor, Supporting Actress, Screenplay, and Sound. The film was also given the Best Film of the Decade award by the award-giving body.

Mr. Delos Reyes’ Naglalayag (2004), also won the Special Jury Award in the international competition category at the Brussels International Independent Film Festival held the same year.

His first films were Disco Fever in 1978 and Annie Batungbakal in 1979.

His last film was The Unmarried Wife, released in 2016 from Star Cinema.

Beyond making films, Mr. Delos Reyes also directed a number of TV series including ABS-CBN’s Mga Anghel na Walang Langit (2005-2006) and GMA’s Rosalinda (2009), and Gumapang Ka sa Lusak (2010). He got his start in television in the 1970s, directing Ang Makulay na Daigdig ni Nora.

He was signed on to direct Hindi Ko Kayang Iwan Ka which is set to premiere in February in GMA network’s Afternoon Prime lineup.

Mr. Delos Reyes was the festival director of the ToFarm Film Festival — now going into its third year — which is dedicated to highlighting the plight of the Filipino farmer.

Born on Oct. 17, 1952 in Santa Cruz, Manila, Mr. Delos Reyes was the son of a professor and a civil engineer. He started directing plays in high school at the Our Lady of Guadalupe Minor Seminary and went on to work with the Philippine Educational Theater Association (PETA), directing a number of its plays in the 1970s including Tatlong Manyika, Limot at Ligaya sa Rhumbacita, and Artista sa Palengke, aside from working with other groups.

“Thank you so much for the love and trust you gave me and Ice (Aiza Seguerra),” wrote Mary Liza Diño-Seguerra, Film Development Council of the Philippines (FDCP) chairwoman and CEO, in a Facebook post. “Since I started being one of your actresses way back in 2003 and even until now, you have always been there supporting me. When I became FDCP chair, you gave me even more support… You don’t know how much I was strengthened by your support. I learned so much from you every time we talk. It’s sad Direk, we had so many plans in developing the film industry,” she wrote in the vernacular. “This is a big loss. I still can’t believe it. Thank you for everything. Love you, direk. But I know you’re happy because you’re with the people you love,” she added.

“It is a sad day today for Philippine cinema to see the passing of another great movie director, Maryo J. delos Reyes,” wrote actor/politician Richard Gomez on his Facebook page.

“He was my first director in the movie Hindi Mo Ako Kayang Tapakan (1984) that top billed Ms. Charo Santos under Via Hoffman Productions. Direk Maryo shot my first scenes in the movie when I was a young boy together with Anjo Yllana and Nadia Montenegro.

“We will miss you direk. We were just reading a beautifully written script that was sent to me and Pia Campos by your office to consider a part. Sayang I thought we will be able to do one more movie together. We will miss you.” — ZBC

Weighing Alcala’s rice self-sufficiency program

The rice self-sufficiency program of former secretary Proceso Alcala was the banner program of the Department of Agriculture. No less than former president Aquino bragged about it twice in Congress in his state of the nation addresses in 2012 and 2013. He announced in 2013, “in all likelihood, even the private sector will no longer have to import rice because we are still on track to becoming self-sufficient in rice.”

Most of previous DA administrations typically allocated the bulk of resources set aside for agriculture and fisheries modernization to raising the productivity of rice, hoping that if they are successful the country may move closer to the goal of self-sufficiency.

The explicit targeting of zero rice imports first figured in the FIELDS program of the Arroyo government. Immediately after the 2008 rice price crisis, former Agriculture secretary Arthur Yap came up with the program to attain “rice self-sufficiency in three years.” He failed. In 2010, the third year of FIELDS, the country imported 2.4 million tons of rice.

When former secretary Proceso Alcala replaced him in 2010, the “three years” target stuck in his mind. He circulated his administration’s rice self-sufficiency plan and targeted zero imports by 2013, giving himself 3 years to do the work. But he may fail, so he gave himself a second chance, another 3 years for the country to be self-sufficient in rice in 2016.

THE PLAN
The DA planned for the country to produce 21.12 million tons of palay in 2013 to meet the country’s palay requirement, or 22.5 million tons in 2016.

The DA identified the following sources of incremental production: gains in area harvested; higher farm yields; research, development and extension service; farm mechanization; post harvest loss reduction; and organic fertilizer application. The largest contributor of the targeted additional production is irrigation: expanding the area harvested, and 65% of the program’s cost went to repair existing and to constructing new irrigation facilities.

The estimated cost of the plan was P141.98 billion over a period of six years, or approximately nearly P23.67 billion a year. The actual cost may have varied through the years.

ACCOMPLISHMENT
The DA failed to attain both targets.

In 2013, the country harvested 18.44 million tons of palay, 2.67 million tons short of target. In 2016, the shortfall was larger, 4.86 million tons.

Former secretary Alcala acknowledged the failure but claimed credit in pushing the self-sufficiency ratio (SSR) to 96% and blaming supertyphoon Yolanda for the failure.

He said to Rappler reporter Ranada (2014) of the DA’s performance in 2013: “The Philippines is currently 96% self-sufficient in rice. It did not meet its target of 100% self-sufficiency in 2013 because of damage caused by typhoons, notably supertyphoon Yolanda.”

Let me deal first with the damage of Yolanda.

Yolanda destroyed 143,774 tons of palay planted in 77,476 hectares of land (Rappler, 2013). If this loss was added to the actual output of the country in 2013, the country would still be about 2 million tons short of target output in that year.

What SSR did Alcala use?

Secretary Alcala claimed his administration pushed the SSR to 96.82% in 2013 from 81.27% in 2010. He used the index of the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA), which measures the percentage of the country’s actual rice output in a year to its actual use. Getting 100% of PSA’s index sounds good, i.e. we produce every rice ton we use in that year.

Not necessarily.

Even if we produce as much as we consume, it would still be bad policy to have zero imports or exports.

Instead of expensive storage, it is more efficient to export when domestic prices are seasonally low and import when they are high. The world can be our warehouse.

But there is even more fundamentally wrong with the index. In 1994, the index hit 100% because the NFA did not import rice saying that we don’t need to do so due to excellent production in northern Mindanao. But the country needed to import rice in that year; output in Mindanao was overestimated. True enough in 1995, rice queues formed at the gates of NFA warehouses, and the late Agriculture secretary Sebastian had to resign for the rice shortage.

The PSA’s self-sufficiency index is the wrong SSR to use.

If assessing the DA’s performance relative to its plan is the purpose, the appropriate score ought to be the actual output to requirement ratio. Using this, the 2013 SSR should be 87.33% not 96.82%.

The Alcala DA administration may nonetheless claim an accomplishment.

In 2010, this index was 77.88%, and moved up to 87.33% in 2013.

But the score was still 13.67 percentage points below target of 100%. Even if we adjusted the rice output due to supertyphoon Yolanda, the 2013 accomplishment would only be 90.5%.

The 2016 performance was slightly better, 78.38%.

FAKE RICE SELF-SUFFICIENCY
With the PSA’s SSR, former secretary Alcala was the judge of his administration’s performance. The PSA index is 100 times actual output divided by actual output plus net imports. So we have not been exporting rice, so the index can go up to 100% by not importing rice as what happened in 1994. Secretary Alcala had a conflict of interest situation in this.

As the Secretary of Agriculture, he chaired the NFA Council, which decides how much rice import to recommend to the President for approval.

But deliberately eliminating imports of rice as in 1994 increased the rice price and caused hunger in 1995. Head of the Social Science Division at IRRI in the 1980s and 1990s and presently a Scientist Emeritus also at IRRI, economist Dr. Randy Barker used to say: “It’s easy to achieve rice self-sufficiency; just stop importing. But the people will suffer.”

Let us look at the movement of the rice price during the Aquino government. After spiking in 2008, international rice price represented by the price of rice in Thailand fell. However local price of rice in the Philippines continued its climb. The data show that local shortages of rice in the country were inadequately relieved by local harvest and imported rice.

If the country were to be truly self-sufficient in rice, it would have to be at stable, affordable price of rice. If prices move up with the PSA’s SSR, that rice self-sufficiency gain is fake.

The PSA reported the increase in rice prices in 2013 in various regions of the country.

For the entire country, the agency reported that the rice price index jumped to 4.1% in 2013 from 0.9% in 2012. In the National Capital Region (NCR), the index rose to 4.9% from -1.5% in 2012, while in other regions other than the NCR, the corresponding figures were 4% from 1.2%.

The PSA further reported that the highest annual average uptick was noted in Region V (Bicol) and Region X (northern Mindanao) at 6.1% while the lowest was in Region XI (Davao) at 1.7%.

Higher rice prices immiserize the poor, further.

In 2008 when global rice prices spiked, Mapa et al. (2015) reported that the CPI spiked from 2.9% in 2007 to 8.3% in 2008. The authors reported that the CPI for the bottom 30% of the population, who spends about 40% of their consumption basket on rice, was 67% higher than the headline CPI.

Self-rated hunger indicators by the Social Weather Station likewise increased in the first quarter of 2013 to nearly a fifth of the household population from 16.3% in December 2012. In Mindanao in the same period, the proportion of households experiencing involuntary hunger rose from 20% to 29.2% as reported by UNWFP and FAO (2013).

NFA IMPORT MONOPOLY
As we discuss these days what to do with the NFA following the end of our rice waiver in the WTO, all the above could not have happened if we did not have rice import monopoly in NFA.

Consider these mistakes in our history, errors that could have been avoided if there was a decentralized rice import policy with the private sector participating in rice imports on their own: 1994, the Ramos government did not import to court the support of rice farmers for the election in 1995; 2008, the Arroyo government panicked in the global rice crisis, importing over 2.4 million tons of rice in the first half of that year when world rice prices hit roof, and we wasted the extra rice at NFA warehouses and NFA’s liabilities ballooned to P133.3 billion in 2008 from only P68.6 billion in 2007; and the government of former president Aquino through his Agriculture secretary Alcala showing, at the expense of the poor, that he can get hold of rice self sufficiency. He failed, blamed supertyphoon Yolanda for his failure, but claimed credit for pushing the SSR to 96.2%. Unfortunately, his rice self-sufficiency gain is fake.

(Owing to space constraints, citations were removed but are available upon request. — Ed.)

 

Ramon L. Clarete is a professor at the UP School of Economics.

ramon.clarete@econ.upd.edu.ph

Putin’s top enemy calls on rallies in show of defiance against ‘pseudo-elections’

MOSCOW — Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny and his supporters geared up for a showdown with authorities on Sunday as Vladimir Putin’s top enemy urged nationwide rallies to protest “pseudo-elections.”

The 41-year-old charismatic politician called on Russians across the country to defy authorities and stage rallies calling for an active boycott of March 18 presidential elections despite the prospect of mass arrests.

Ratcheting up tensions, Mr. Navalny urged Russians to show up at unsanctioned rallies in the centre of Moscow and Saint Petersburg with placards and leaflets, a move that will likely lead to confrontations with police.

Rallies were planned in more than 100 cities across the country. In most cities, permission to stage rallies had been received, Mr. Navalny said.

“Your life is at stake,” he told supporters in a video address.

“How many more years do you want to live with these thieves, bigots and perverts in power? We’ve already endured this for 18 years.”

Mr. Navalny also warned that authorities planned to clamp down on his youngest supporters, tweeting a screenshot of a text message sent around ahead of the rallies.

RAIDS ARE POSSIBLE
The message urged parents to make sure their children do not attend the Sunday protests. “Raids are possible,” it said.

Mr. Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov warned that unsanctioned rallies would lead to “certain consequences”, a thinly-veiled promise of punishment.

Ahead of the rallies, police raided Mr. Navalny’s Moscow headquarters and regional campaign offices and detained members of his staff and supporters.

Mr. Navalny — seen as the only politician with enough stamina to take on Mr. Putin — has built a robust protest movement despite constant police harassment, tapping into the anger of a younger generation yearning for change.

He says the upcoming election will be little more than a coronation of Mr. Putin who is widely expected to win a fourth presidential term and extend his Kremlin power until 2024.

Last year Mr. Navalny mounted a forceful bid to run for president but officials ruled him ineligible due to a criminal conviction which he says is politically motivated.

Mr. Navalny has said he would use the full force of his campaign — including more than 200,000 volunteers — to organize “voters’ strikes” and encourage Russians to stay away from polling stations on election day.

After 18 years of leadership — both as president and prime minister — Mr. Putin fatigue is spreading across the country.

The Kremlin’s biggest headache is the possibility of a low turnout which will harm Mr. Putin’s hopes for a strong new mandate, analysts say.

Mr. Navalny seeks to take the shine off Mr. Putin’s expected victory and highlight voter apathy in his crusade against the 65-year-old Russian leader.

“Turnout at these elections is extremely important for Putin,” Lev Gudkov, head of the Levada Centre, an independent polling group, told AFP.

“He needs to create the impression of not just a convincing victory but unanimous nationwide support, a plebiscite.” — AFP

MPTC to raise P35 billion for 2 projects

METRO PACIFIC Tollways Corp. (MPTC) plans to raise P35 billion during the first quarter to fund its Cavite-Laguna Expressway (CALAX) and the C-5 South Link project.

“For C-5 South Link and CALAX, we expect to have financial close in the first quarter,” MPTC chief financial officer Christopher Daniel C. Lizo told reporters in a recent interview.

Mr. Lizo said the tollways arm of the Metro Pacific group allotted P11 billion for South Link and around P25 billion for CALAX .

MPTC earlier said it is planning to spend P10 billion this year for its projects located in the south of Metro Manila, including CALAX and South Link.

In June 2017, the Metro Pacific group broke ground on the P35.43-billion CALAX project, which involves the construction of a 44.6-kilometer four-lane toll road between the Manila-Cavite Expressway (Cavitex) in Kawit, Cavite and the South Luzon Expressway (SLEx) — Mamplasan Interchange.

MPCALA Holdings, Inc., a unit of Metro Pacific, received the notice of award for the 35-year contract to build, operate, and maintain the planned expressway on June 8, 2015, but right-of-way issues for the project site delayed the start of construction.

MPCALA tapped DM Consunji, Inc. for the construction of the Laguna segment, and Leighton, a unit of Australia’s CIMIC Group Ltd., formerly Leighton Holdings, for the Cavite segment.

CALAX is scheduled to open in 2020 or early 2021, but Metro Pacific may open some portions ahead.

The C-5 South Link Expressway is a 7.7-kilometer, six-lane project which will connect C-5 road to Cavitex. The first phase of the project, worth P2.5 billion and covering 2.2 kilometers including a flyover above the SLEx and Skyway from C-5 Road in Taguig to Merville in Sucat, Parañaque, is now under construction.

The whole alignment of the C-5 South Link will be operational in 2020, but will be opened in phases starting next year.

MPIC is one of three key Philippine units of Hong-Kong based First Pacific Co. Ltd., the others being Philex Mining Corp. and PLDT, Inc. Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has a majority stake in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls. — Patrizia Paola C. Marcelo