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Palawan held up as model for fishing in Negros-Cebu strait

NON-GOVERNMENTAL organization Oceana Philippines is pushing for the monitoring of all commercial fishing vessels in the provinces along the Tañon Strait Protected Seascape (TSPS), covering the body of water between Negros and Cebu islands.

Oceana Philippines Vice-President Gloria E. Ramos told BusinessWorld on Friday that the Philippines has enough laws to protect the marine biodiversity and manage the fisheries but these are not well-implemented.

“[I]n Palawan, they crafted their own ordinance to limit the sale of species of fish which were vanishing. Of course, the [fishing] industry questioned that but the Supreme Court supported that, saying that it’s a valid exercise of power,” she added.

“There’s really no reason why these laws cannot be implemented. We don’t need more laws.”

The TSPS is the largest protected marine area in the Philippines and is considered one of the richest fishing grounds and a key biodiversity area in the country. Despite this, the TSPS is still considered overfished.

Last year the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources drafted vessel monitoring rules and started holding public consultations in a bid to achieve better compliance.

In November, the first charges related to the Tañon Strait were filed, leading the Department of Justice to designate a special prosecutor for the protected area.

The Philippines is part of the “Coral Triangle,” which contains 53% of the world’s coral reefs, providing livelihood to around 120 million people.

The Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources estimates that 75% of the country’s fishing grounds are overfished, leaving them vulnerable to becoming “dead zones” where fish cannot regenerate their populations. In 2017, there were 500 dead zones around the world.

Less than 1% of coral reefs in the Philippines are classified to be in “excellent condition,” according to the University of the Philippines Marine Science Institute and the Biodiversity Management Bureau. — Anna Gabriela A. Mogato

Peso to move sideways

THE PESO will likely move sideways against the dollar this week amid the greenback’s sustained weakness on the back of mixed US economic data as well as some tightening moves from the European Central Bank (ECB).

On Friday, the peso moved sideways against the dollar as it lost four centavos to close at P50.40. This was due to bargain-hunting seen in the afternoon session despite softer US producer prices data and hawkish remarks from the December meeting of ECB policy makers.

“The dollar might depreciate this week against the peso, sustaining its weakness last Friday evening amid speculations of some tightening moves from the European Central Bank (ECB) this year,” Guian Angelo S. Dumalagan, market economist of Land Bank of the Philippines, said in an e-mail over the weekend.

Minutes of the December meeting of ECB published on Thursday hinted that the monetary authority is preparing to gradually cut its stimulus program in line with increasing confidence amid the global economic recovery.

Mr. Dumalagan said the greenback might move downwards in the first three days of the week on the back of the mixed US economic data released on Friday night.

“While US core inflation picked up in December 2017, headline inflation and retail sales showed slower readings, supporting views of a gradual pace of US interest rate normalization in 2018,” Mr. Dumalagan noted.

The US consumer price index — the measurement used to calculate core inflation — rose 0.3% in December in a comparable month-ago period, topping analysts’ expectations.

However, US retail sales grew weaker than expected, standing at 0.4% in December from the 0.5% estimates. Stronger retail sales in December was due to strong consumer demands during the holiday season.

“Towards the end of the week, there might be sideways movement for the dollar amid mixed signals abroad,” Mr. Dumalagan added.

US Federal Reserve officials Robert S. Kaplan, Charles L. Evans Loretta J. Mester are expected to deliver speeches this week, which is in support to more interest hikes this year. However, Mr. Dumalagan noted that this upbeat news will be tempered by likely stronger 2017 Chinese economic growth data.

Last Thursday, Chinese Premier Li Kequiang said he expected the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) to have grown 6.9% in 2017, faster than the 6.8% forecast from analysts as well as 6.5% target of the government. This faster growth will likely be driven by construction boom and increased demand for Chinese imports, Reuters reported.

Meanwhile, another trader said corporate demand “specifically from oil companies” will drive the movement of the peso.

“Usually, we see them buying mid-month and with the world prices of oil continuing to trade higher. I guess there’s room for them to buy dollars for them to pay their requirements,” the trader said over the phone on Friday.

For this week, Mr. Dumalagan expects the peso to move between P50 and P50.60 against the greenback, while Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion, chief economist of UnionBank of the Philippines, gave a lower range of P50.30 to P50.80. — K.A.N. Vidal

Republican powerbrokers: The intensely private Mercer family

WASHINGTON — He is a reclusive hedge fund billionaire who made a fortune using complicated algorithms to bet on things other people could not see.

One of his gambles was on Donald J. Trump.

And his backing of the long-shot presidential candidate has made Robert “Bob” Mercer, the former co-CEO of Renaissance Technologies, the top powerbroker in Republican politics today.

The Mercer family is not nearly as well known as the industrialist Koch brothers or the Las Vegas casino magnate Sheldon Adelson when it comes to supporting right-wing causes in the United States.

And they are more than happy to keep it that way.

Mr. Mercer, 71, who worked as a computer scientist at IBM before joining Long Island-based Renaissance Technologies, has always shunned the limelight.

According to numerous accounts, Mr. Mercer is socially awkward and intensely private.

He is described in Michael Wolff’s bombshell new book Fire and Fury as “almost nonverbal, looking at you with a dead stare and either not talking or offering only minimal response.”

In November, Robert Mercer abruptly announced that he was stepping down as co-chief executive of Renaissance Technologies because of the unwanted press scrutiny brought about by his political activities.

In his resignation letter, Mr. Mercer also made his most expansive public comments to date, outlining the core principles of his libertarian philosophy.

ADVOCATE OF SMALL GOVERNMENT
“I believe that individuals are happiest and most fulfilled when they form their own opinions, assume responsibility for their own actions, and spend the fruits of their own labor as they see fit,” he said.

“This is why I support conservatives, who favor a smaller, less powerful government.”

In his book about the Trump White House, Mr. Wolff expanded further on what he claimed was the Mercer family doctrine.

He said they were attempting to build a “radical free-market, small-government, home-schooling, antiliberal, gold-standard, pro-death penalty, anti-Muslim, pro-Christian, monetarist, anti-civil-rights political movement in the United States.”

With the silver-haired Mercer patriarch remaining behind the scenes, it is up to Rebekah, 44, the second of his three daughters, to channel the family money to conservative causes and maintain the direct line to the White House.

While the Koch brothers and other Republican mega-donors sat out the 2016 presidential race because of a distaste for Mr. Trump, the Mercers threw their considerable resources behind the brash real estate tycoon after initially backing Texas Senator Ted Cruz.

They donated millions to Mr. Trump’s coffers and persuaded his then floundering campaign to take on board two figures seen as instrumental to his upset victory over Democrat Hillary Clinton — anti-establishment ideologue Steve Bannon and pollster Kellyanne Conway.

Robert Mercer, who reportedly has an abiding hatred of the Clintons, is a long-time patron of Mr. Bannon, who headed the right-wing website Breitbart News until becoming chief executive of Mr. Trump’s election campaign.

When President Trump angrily severed ties with Mr. Bannon recently over comments he made in the Wolff book, it was a damaging blow to his former White House chief strategist.

But the coup de grace to any remaining political ambitions Mr. Bannon may have had came a few days later, when the Mercer family pulled the plug on their long-time ally.

“I support President Trump and the platform upon which he was elected,” Rebekah Mercer said in a rare public statement.

“My family and I have not communicated with Steve Bannon in many months and have provided no financial support to his political agenda, nor do we support his recent actions and statements.”

The excommunication marked the end of the long-standing collaboration between the Mercer family and Mr. Bannon, who had been a fringe player in Republican politics until a $10-million investment by the Mercers turned his Breitbart News into a powerful conservative voice.

The Mercers are estimated to have contributed a total of more than $100 million to conservative causes over the past decade, including funding for the Government Accountability Institute (GAI).

Rebekah Mercer serves as chairwoman of the board of the Florida-based institute co-founded by Mr. Bannon whose stated mission is to root out “cronyism and corruption.”

GAI is perhaps best known for a 2015 book by its president, Peter Schweizer, that was highly critical of the Clintons: Clinton Cash: The Untold Story of How and Why Foreign Governments and Businesses Helped Make Bill and Hillary Rich.

Besides contributing to Breitbart and GAI, the Mercers also invested in Cambridge Analytica, a political data analysis firm whose efforts have been credited with helping Mr. Trump win the 2016 election.

While Mr. Bannon has been the Mercers’ frontman for their political activities for years, his departure from the scene would not appear to lessen their influence.

According to The Daily Beast, before repudiating Mr. Bannon, Rebekah Mercer held a telephone call with the White House, where she spoke with President Trump. — AFP

Kanlaon Volcano update

ALERT LEVEL 2 status remained over Kanlaon Volcano, according to Phivolcs’ update on Sunday which also noted five volcanic earthquakes during the past 24 hours. The bulletin also read: “The local government units and the public are strictly reminded that entry into the 4-kilometer radius Permanent Danger Zone (PDZ) is strictly prohibited due to the further possibilities of sudden and hazardous steam-driven or phreatic eruptions.”

We need an Alfred Kahn

Alfred E. Kahn is considered the “father of airline deregulation” in the United States. A former professor in economics of Cornell University, he was chair of the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) under former US president Jimmy Carter, and was in charge of regulating commercial airfares. He then he ordered the deregulation of airfares. Essentially, Kahn presided over the abolition of the CAB. He deregulated CAB out of its existence as a regulator of air fares by airlines to set their own fares.

Kahn’s impact on the US transportation industry was huge. His deregulation paved the way for low-cost airlines, such as People Express and Southwest Airlines, to enter the industry. In time, other countries followed Kahn’s policy, and the sheer variety of airlines with different business models, from low-cost, budget airlines like AirAsia, to premium ones, like Singapore Airlines, owe much to the legacy of Alfred Kahn.

Alfred Kahn comes to mind because the Department of Transportation and its related transport agencies like the Land Transport and Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB), seem to be stuck in pre-Kahn thinking that more regulation can solve transport problems. On the contrary, consumer welfare is sharply diminished with more regulation.

Take for example the LTFRB’s attempts to regulate Uber and Grab.

At first, it banned them, Uber in particular, citing the need for these companies to register their operations. After getting Uber to pay a hefty fine, however, it set a cap on the number of driver applicants it could process. The result is that demand exceeded supply, forcing the riding public to wait longer to get a ride, or even pay higher.

Meantime, complaints continue to pile up over the regulated taxi industry. Many riders complain about the refusal of taxi drivers to accommodate them if they refuse to pay fares in excess of the metered rate or if their destinations are far. The regulated taxi industry is also known for dilapidated vehicles, poor service, and rude, if not dangerous, drivers. In other words, regulation hasn’t produced the kind of service the commuting public expects.

The LTFRB’s ire over surge pricing is also misplaced. Surge pricing incentivizes Transport Vehicle Network (TVN) drivers from Uber and Grab to log in and thus increase the supply of transport vehicles for hire on the road. By banning surge pricing or capping it, riders are inconvenienced by the lack of rides when they most need it.

The problem is that transport authorities think like the old Soviet economic planners: they think they know everything — have all the information on hand to set the correct pricing — and can anticipate everything. One example of this is their PUV Modernization plan, a well-meaning but impractical plan to phase out the smoke-belching, diesel-guzzling jeepneys from the roads. Under the plan, current jeepneys are to be replaced by “environmentally friendly and safe” jeepneys. These modern jeepneys would have automated fare collection, speed-limiters, CCTVs, GPS equipment, and dashboard cameras, and would be PWD-friendly.

Fine. However, the rub is that it would cost jeepney drivers P1.2 million to P1.5 million acquire such a vehicle. The investment would be beyond what most jeepney drivers could afford. It’s also questionable whether the investment will yield a good return under the present regime of regulated jeepney fares. Understandably, the PUV modernization program was met with protests and strikes by jeepney groups.

The answer to the problem of lack of public transport, traffic congestion, rude taxi drivers, and even the jeepney modernization program is not for transport officials to act like Soviet apparatchiks but to deregulate the industry, i.e. transport fares should no longer be determined by LTFRB. Registration of public service vehicles should be as simple and as easy as possible.

What happens if the market is placed as the center of transport policy? Taxis may increase fares, but they would have to improve to get their share of the riding public. Various business models will arise, as had happened in the airline industry, from low-cost, no-frills transportation to premium services — all competing for their share of the affections of the commuting public. Transport companies, whether taxi operators, buses, or jeepney operators, will start developing and protecting their brands. Commuters will then know which kind of service they will get from the brands that these vehicles carry. Operators will then be more conscious of the service they are offering because the reputation of their brands and their market share could suffer if they give anything less than what they are purportedly offering.

Taxi and other transport operators may then start using technology, like what Uber and Grab are doing, to get more efficiency from their operations and to distinguish themselves in the marketplace. For example, clearly for parents, having the power under Uber and Grab to track and monitor the movement of the transport of their sons or daughters contribute to their peace of mind. That is something that taxis may also incorporate, but only if they are deregulated.

Jeepney operators will likely modernize on their own if they are also freed from regulation. Riders will naturally shift to jeepneys which are safe, clean, and provide a good service, and will boycott those that don’t. Jeepney operators therefore will upgrade and modernize their vehicles voluntarily, but only if they can charge what they want and get a good return on investment.

There should be no fear that deregulation will result in higher prices.

As we have seen in the airline industry, deregulation brought lower prices. It also brought wider choices, resulting in higher consumer welfare and satisfaction. An airline passenger, for example, can choose to bring only a backpack and pay a lower fare, while another one can choose to pay extra to bring for two bags. One can also choose to bring his own sandwich while another would pay for a full meal.

Dr. Kahn’s deregulation policy was an unqualified success. More people were able to travel by air. Dr. Alfred Kahn, an economist who only saw airplanes as “marginal costs with wings” died of cancer at the age of 93 in 2010. May his spirit descend on our transport officials.

 

Calixto V. Chikiamco is a board director of the Institute for Development and Econometric Analysis.

idea.introspectiv@gmail.com

www.idea.org.ph

Warriors hold off charging Raptors

LOS ANGELES — Klay Thompson delivered 26 points and Kevin Durant tallied 25 as the reigning National Basketball Association (NBA) champion Golden State Warriors held on to defeat the Raptors 127-125 in Toronto on Saturday.

The Warriors recorded their league-best 19th road win of the season as they won the battle against a Raptors team lying second in the Eastern Conference.

They didn’t make it easy, however, blowing a 27-point halftime lead before hanging on for the victory.

DeMar DeRozan helped spark Toronto’s rally with a 42-point performance for the Raptors, who lost to Golden State for an eighth straight time.

Two-time league MVP Stephen Curry scored 24 points for the Warriors after missing the last two games with an ankle injury.

Durant came up with some clutch baskets down the stretch to secure the win.

DeRozan’s layup moved Toronto to within 121-119 with just over two minutes left, but Durant countered to give the Warriors a four-point lead. DeRozan responded, cutting the Raptors’ deficit to 123-122 with 63 seconds remaining.

After Curry surprisingly missed two free throws with 45 seconds left, Durant’s basket with 21 seconds remaining made it 125-122. Curry then made amends by making two free throws with two seconds left.

Toronto’s Fred VanVleet nailed a three-pointer at the buzzer to round out the scoring.

After the game, Curry praised the Raptors for the way they fought back.

“They played amazing in the second half. You knew in this building they would make a run. I didn’t think it would be that big,” said Curry.

All the Raptors coaching staff and players wanted to talk about after the game was perceived poor officiating.

A frustrated DeRozan said it seemed like all three officials were against them.

“Being out there it felt like we played five on eight,” he said. “Some of those calls was terrible, period.”

Raptors coach Dwane Casey added: “There were some tough calls in the second half. It is mind boggling when you ask the officials, ‘Did you see it?’ ‘No I didn’t see it.’ ‘Wasn’t my call.’ I have got to have an explanation.”

Elsewhere, Zach LaVine scored 14 points in his first game in 11 months, rookie Lauri Markkanen added 19 points and the host Chicago Bulls edged the Detroit Pistons 107-105.

In Washington, John Wall scored 23 points and added 16 assists as the Washington Wizards beat the Brooklyn Nets 119-113 in overtime. — AFP

New products signal Lenovo’s shifting focus away from PCs

By Mira Catherine B. Gloria, Online Managing Editor

LAS VEGAS — At this year’s Consumer Electronics Show (CES), Lenovo showed off its latest PC arsenal, including a powerful 2-in-1 notebook and its latest range of ThinkPad laptops, but the ones that drew the most attention were products that Lenovo was hardly known for — smart home and health care devices.

On the first day of CES 2018 held on Jan. 9, the PC titan unveiled a wireless virtual reality (VR) headset, a touchscreen display powered by Google, and a health-tracking modular device that can be attached to a Motorola phone.

Lenovo, which has a 21.1% share of the global PC market (next to HP’s 22.7%), said this is the beginning of its strategy shift as it seeks opportunities in other growth areas such as Internet of Things (IoT) and artificial intelligence (AI).

“Generally speaking, I think the PC market is stable. From a revenue point of view, it is getting better. [The market] is growing and it really helped our performance,” Lenovo Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Yuanqing Yang told reporters at The Venetian Hotel Las Vegas, hours after Lenovo unveiled its products. Mr. Yang was referring to the company’s 5% revenue growth (at $11.8 billion) in the quarter ending in September last year, driven largely by growth in its PC business.

The latest reports from market research firms Gartner and International Data Corp. (IDC) show the global PC market continues to shrink with shipments declining since 2012. Both firms also expect the decline of traditional PC shipments to continue as consumers move to other platforms and prefer ultra slim and convertible notebooks.

These indicators drive PC makers to rethink their strategy and re-evaluate their product mix. Two years ago, Dell refreshed its product line to cater to the millennial work force, which meant developing more stylish XPS notebooks with millennials in mind. HP, Inc., which last year edged Lenovo as the world’s top PC vendor, said it is gearing up for a 3D printer push.

For Lenovo, however, the future is in AI.

In the interview, Mr. Yang reaffirmed the announcement he made last year that Lenovo is investing $1.2 billion in research and development (R&D) on AI and other emerging technologies in the next three years. The company also designated its campus in Morrisville, North Carolina, as one of its three AI-focused “innovation centers.” The others are in Stuttgart, Germany and Beijing, China.

“We’re all in with AI to make our business more adaptive to the intelligent era,” Mr. Yang said.

ENTERING THE VR MARKET
At this year’s CES, Lenovo also highlighted its efforts to expand into more technology segments outside of its core client PC business. For one, it introduced its first standalone virtual reality headset called Lenovo Mirage Solo with Daydream, which Lenovo developed with Google.

“VR and AR are a couple of new segments where Lenovo has been doubling down its effort to develop products and pursue growth,” Jason Low, analyst at market research firm Canalys, said in an e-mail interview. “Besides the standalone headsets, Lenovo also has gaming PCs that are VR-Ready, as well as its own VR headset running on the Windows Mixed Reality platform.”

In its Dec. 19 report, Canalys forecast that standalone smart VR headset shipments will pass 1.5 million this year and will reach 9.7 million units in 2021. It cited Lenovo, Facebook, and HTC — all launching new standalone headsets this year — as the main drivers of VR’s rapid market growth.

The VR market, which is currently dominated by Sony, Facebook, and HTC, may be tough for Lenovo to break in. But Mr. Low said the Lenovo’s Solo headset may have a shot. He compared the Solo with Facebook’s own standalone VR headset Oculus Go, which was announced October last year and is set for release this year.

“The key difference is that the Solo has built-in six-degree-of-freedom tracking (courtesy of Google’s WorldSense technology), which can track the position of the headset for better user experience. The Oculus Go, may cost only $199, but it lacks 6-DoF tracking,” Mr. Low said.

“While Lenovo will be able to leverage its resources for VR (marketing spend, go-to-market channel, R&D, etc.), it needs to have a coherent ecosystem strategy that ties everything together, a clear target audience in mind, and be able to align its overall business goals to drive revenue and growth,” he added.

10-inch-Lenovo-Smart-Display
The 10-inch Lenovo Smart Display — Photo: Lenovo

Aside from the VR headset, Lenovo also introduced an IoT device called Lenovo Smart Display that has built-in Google Assistant. The touchscreen display serves as command hub for connected smart home devices, from lighting to heating and more — controlled with the user’s voice or touch.

Lenovo’s mobile phone unit, Motorola, also welcomed two new mods made by developers, one of which was an innovative, health care device that can be attached to a Motorola phone. The Vital Moto Mod features advanced sensor technology which allows the user to easily measure his own five vital signs — heart rate, respiratory rate, Pulse Ox, core body temperature, and for the first time, accurate systolic and diastolic blood pressure — by pressing his finger on the device.

As Lenovo explores other growth opportunities, Mr. Low said the Chinese PC maker won’t be abandoning its PC business anytime soon despite the revenue potential that emerging technologies such as AI present.

“Client PC business will continue to be Lenovo’s top priority. It’s crucial for Lenovo to shift its strategy to incorporate and leverage AI in its portfolio of devices and services that it is offering. Lenovo will risk of becoming obsolete if it fails to catch the trend early, especially as competitors are also investing aggressively into AI. The challenge here for Lenovo, is to create significant value with AI for its customers, both individuals and enterprise users,” he said.

A response to Prof. Hilbay

“There are not a few comrades doing inspection work, as well, as guerrilla leaders and cadres newly in office, who like to make political pronouncements the moment they arrive at a place and who strut about, criticizing this and condemning that when they have only seen the surface of things or minor details. Such purely subjective nonsensical talk is indeed detestable. These people are bound to make a mess of things, lose the confidence of the masses and prove incapable of solving any problem at all.”

— Mao Zedong,
Oppose Book Worship
May 1930

Some quarters have asked me to react to Prof. Florin Hilbay’s polemical rejoinder to my BusinessWorld column titled “Assessing TRAIN,” dated Jan. 8. I oblige not because I like debating with a comrade but because I see the imperative of correcting mistaken ideas and clarifying the method of thinking.

Wrong thinking or mistaken analysis is as dangerous as fake news.

I am not a Lenin who wishes to demolish all his points, which will unnecessarily prolong the discussion. But here is the meat of what Prof. Hilbay wrote on his Facebook account on Jan. 10:

1. “The problem with this aggregate thinking is that it hides the distribution of the burdens — who gets squeezed with the P90 billion [the net amount that package 1 of TRAIN or the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion will yield], and more important, can the segment of the population that gets squeezed afford that burden.”

2. “TRAIN is a series of amendments to the tax code meant primarily to generate revenues, not a detailed budget of how that money will actually be spent. That is why one cannot separate corruption and inefficiency in the forms of billions spent on intel funds, the war on drugs, use of troll armies, funding for charter change, etc. from TRAIN.”

3. “To equate more revenues because of taxation with strengthened macroeconomic fundamentals is plain tautology.”

4. “Apart from the doubtful sufficiency of the transfers, we have to grapple with the size of the net cast by TRAIN. The breadth of cash transfers is much smaller than the net cast by TRAIN, which covers everyone because everything is affected by fuel increases.”

So what’s wrong with Prof. Hiblay’s thinking and method of thinking?

He talks about the people being squeezed, about “the distribution of burdens,” and the like, but he does not back up his assertions with data or evidence.

On the other hand, to inform our analysis, we have the Family Income and Expenditure Survey (FIES), the Labor Force Survey, the National Nutrition Survey, and the other data from the Philippine Statistics Authority, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), National Tax Research Center, Department of Trade and Industry, Department of Energy, Department of Health, etc.

To illustrate, we supply some figures below, drawn mainly from the latest FIES (2015).

The first graph clearly shows that the richer deciles, especially the richest 10% of households have the biggest fuel consumption. The following table (on fuel expenditure as a percentage of total expenditure and as a percentage of household income as well as taxes paid as percentage of fuel expenditure) similarly shows that the richer deciles spend more for fuel products and pay more fuel taxes than the poor.

The last table shows that despite the inflationary effect of the fuel taxes, the tax relief for the upper class, the middle class, and working class and the cash transfers for the poorer households result in a net gain in income or take-home pay for everyone. Only those with yearly income compensation of P8 million and above (or .01% of the population) will be adversely affected because the marginal rate for their compensation level increases from 32% to 35%.

In short, the data contradict Prof. Hilbay’s opinion. The data support our position.

Prof. Hilbay, too, misunderstands macroeconomics (although he quotes Keynes) when he says: “To equate more revenues because of taxation with strengthened macroeconomic fundamentals is plain tautology.” In a similar vein, he disparages “aggregate analysis.” For his enlightenment, sustained macroeconomic growth is a necessary condition to eradicate poverty. Sustained macroeconomic growth will also lead our country to prosperity in a generation. But macroeconomics is about aggregate demand. TRAIN’s import or relevance is expressed in the boost in consumption arising from the significant personal income tax relief and the unconditional cash transfers, the increase in government spending resulting from increased tax effort, and the rise in investments arising from the higher savings, credit upgrade, and lower interest rates.

Prof. Hilbay is also barking up the wrong tree when he blames TRAIN for the quality of government spending. TRAIN is about tax policy reform, not the General Appropriations Act. The point is, we must not throw out tax reform just because we fear the spending. The proper approach is to fight for the reforms on all fronts. Public opinion and collective action can also shape the expenditure side. For example, public pressure thwarted the attempt to reduce the budget of the Commission on Human Rights to one peso.

Prof. Hilbay sees the bad spending that of course we must oppose. But what about the good spending?

Without a good TRAIN, for example, we will not be able to fund the expansion of universal health coverage, which intends to secure 100% membership in PhilHealth, expand the primary care benefits, and reduce the out-of-pocket expenses of the poor. The cost is equivalent to an additional P90 billion in revenue annually for the medium term.

I admire comrade Hilbay for opposing extrajudicial killings. But blocking TRAIN means endangering the health and lives of the poor. As a close friend in the development work said, poverty is the main killer in the Philippines.

TRAIN has a safeguard to ensure that the revenue will be allocated to infrastructure, education, health and other social protection measures. National Academician Raul Fabella has argued that the soft earmarking for infrastructure and social protection is a form of credible commitment that the taxes will be spent wisely. Earmarking is acceptable under conditions of weak institutions.

Mr. Hilbay ends his argument by quoting Keynes’s most famous statement: “In the long run we are all dead….” I hope he is not suggesting that scholars like him are dismissive of the long run. Sustained growth and prosperity and building institutions are all about the long term. The reckless, the unwise, and the irresponsible are those who belittle the long run.

It is easy to Google Keynes’s statement and quote it. But does Mr. Hilbay understand it? Sadly, he misrepresents it. He distorts it.

When Keynes made that statement, he was railing against those who oppose reform; those who thought that intervention was unnecessary to address the problem of the conjuncture.

In Keynes’s time, putting in place activist fiscal and monetary policies was urgent to fight the stubborn recession. But the conventional view was that the economy or the market would eventually stabilize, its equilibrium restored, without policy intervention in the long run. In other words, Keynes wanted immediate action. He could not wait for the change to happen in the future precisely because by then, his metaphor that “we are all be dead” applies.

Keynes’s idea thus contradicts Prof. Hilbay’s argument. Mr. Hilbay does not want tax policy intervention like TRAIN, in spite of the tax’s system unfairness, complexity, and inefficiency. He does not want TRAIN despite the need to address the present financing constraints, provide the income tax relief, and finance AmBisyon 2040. Or does Mr. Hilbay want to deny our people AmBisyon 2040, a legacy of the Aquino III administration, which he was part of?

From this exposition, I show that Prof. Hilbay’s resistance to TRAIN lacks a “deeper explanation and a reasonable justification.” I can see why other groups or people are fighting TRAIN. Some are driven by ideology — either minimalist government and economic libertarianism or orthodox socialism — and by the politics of overthrowing Duterte. But whatever the motivation, my appeal is for comrades and professors to be guided by reason and enlightenment, and to be humble in the face of facts and evidence that disagree with them (see graphs).

Fuel Consumption

Fuel Expenditure

 

Filomeno S. Sta. Ana III coordinates the Action for Economic Reforms.

www.aer.ph

US resumes accepting DACA applications

US IMMIGRATION authorities said on Saturday that it will resume accepting requests under a program that shields young people brought to the United States illegally from deportation after a court order blocked a government decision to end the program.

The US Citizenship and Immigration Services said on its website that people who previously received a grant of protection under the Deferred Action of Childhood Arrivals (DACA) may apply for a renewal under the terms in place before it was rescinded in September.

The announcement comes after a US judge on Thursday temporarily blocked a decision by President Donald J. Trump to end DACA later this year. Congress is debating whether or not to write new legislation that would grant legal status to these immigrants that were brought to the US as children and remain illegally.

Former president Barack Obama enacted DACA to keep the undocumented immigrants, known as dreamers, from being deported.

The immigration office said that deferments under DACA do not confer legal residency but gives prosecutors discretion on enforcing immigration laws. — Reuters

UFC starts 2018 with Fight Night 124 in St. Louis

THE Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) starts its 2018 season today in St. Louis, Missouri, with “UFC Fight Night 124.”

Happening at the Scottrade Center, UFC Fight Night 124 is headlined by the featherweight clash between Jeremy “Lil Heathen” Stephens (#9) and “The Korean Superboy” Dooho Choi (#13) in the UFC’s first visit to St. Louis.

Mr. Stephens, sporting a 26-14 record, is coming off a unanimous decision win over Gilbert Melendez in his last fight in September.

The win halted for the American fighter a two-fight losing streak and something he hopes to build on coming into today’s fight.

“[He’s] facing a heavier puncher and a guy who’s got the skills to pay the bills and go the distance. He’s (Choi) in for a long night…” Mr. Stephens told MMAWeekly in the run-up to UFC Fight Night 124.

“I hit a little bit different, people fight me a little bit different. I feel like I’m a lot more diverse with my striking. I’m better on the ground. If I want to take it to the ground, I can. If I want to keep it up, I will,” he further said.

Mr. Stephens is set to face Mr. Choi (14-2), who lost by unanimous decision in his last trip to the Octagon against Cub Swanson more than a year ago.

He said that the long lull he had is not a problem for him, saying he has trained well and hard for this fight and that he is bent on going back on his winning run that saw him rack up 12 straight victories before dropping his fight in December 2016.

SCRAPPED
Meanwhile, what was supposed to be the co-main feature at UFC Fight 124 between Uriah Hall and Vito Belfort was scrapped as the former could not weigh in for a “variety” of reasons, including his body “shutting down” in training.

The fight was supposed to be Mr. Belfort’s farewell fight and it now remains to be seen if he still pushes through with one more fight after the cancellation or call it career outright.

In place of the scrapped Hall-Belfort fight is the women’s flyweight battle between Paige “12 Gauge” VanZant (7-3) and no. 10 contender Jessica-Rose Clark (8-4).

Other fights in the main card are welterweight Kamaru “Nigerian Nightmare” Usman (#10) against Emil “Valhalla” Meek and featherweight Darren “The Damage” Elkins (#10) versus Michael “The Menace” Johnson.

UFC Fight Night 124: Stephens vs. Choi will be shown live today beginning at 11 a.m. over Hyper Ch. 91 in SD or 261 in HD on Cignal TV. Encore telecast is at 7 p.m. later in the day.

In the Philippines, Cignal TV, the country’s foremost direct-to-home (DTH) company, is the home of the UFC after the two groups agreed to an extensive deal that will see the UFC beamed on various platforms. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Wells Fargo sees no end yet to scandal costs, gets tax boost

NEW YORK — Wells Fargo & Co. is not certain it has fully uncovered and fixed all problems related to a long-running sales scandal that has hurt the bank’s reputation and sideswiped its efforts to cut costs, Chief Executive Tim Sloan said on Friday.

The third-largest US bank by assets set aside a $3.25-billion reserve to cover litigation related to fake accounts and other customer issues in its fourth-quarter earnings on Friday.

The San Francisco-based company has been working to get to the bottom of its problems for more than a year, after reaching a $190-million settlement with regulators in September 2016 for employees creating phony bank and credit card accounts in customers’ names without their permission.

Since then, it has discovered other problems in businesses ranging from mortgages to foreign exchange trading, while the number of possibly made-up accounts swelled to 3.5 million.

Wells Fargo has tried to rectify the situation by changing how employees get paid, improving corporate reporting structures and ousting several executives. Sloan’s predecessor, John Stumpf, abruptly retired after the scandal came to light.

However, the bank is still scouring businesses for evidence of bad behavior, a process that will continue indefinitely, Sloan said on a conference call in response to an analyst who asked repeatedly why management could not give assurances that problems were resolved.

“I’d love to live in a world where I could give you an absolute guarantee and certainty, but it’s not just the world we live in,” Sloan said.

He later added: “We’re never going to declare victory.”

Shares of the bank were down 1% at $62.40 on Friday afternoon.

Despite that uncertainty, a new target management unveiled signaled that Wells Fargo’s effort to control costs are gaining traction.

The bank expects to spend up to $54.5 billion this year, in line with what analysts had generally expected. However, the $58.5 billion in expenses it reported for 2017 were well above the $54.62 billion non-interest expense analysts had predicted, on average.

Wall Street asked Wells Fargo to offer more detail on costs, which topped 60 cents per dollar of revenue in the aftermath of the sales scandal, a level Sloan has called “unacceptable.”

That figure, known as an efficiency ratio, is closely watched by Wall Street as a sign of how well a bank can manage extraneous costs. Elevated operating losses drove that ratio to 76 cents on the dollar for the fourth quarter, well above the 61 cents per dollar the bank had earlier predicted.

For all of 2017, the figure was 66.2 cents in costs per dollar of revenue, also higher than Wells Fargo’s target range of 55 to 59 cents.

Wells Fargo will provide more details at its investor day event in May, Chief Financial Officer John Shrewsberry said. The bank has already vowed to slash $4 billion in costs by 2019 through branch closures and other measures. Half of that will be reinvested into businesses.

ONE-TIME TAX BOOST
Overall, Wells Fargo’s fourth-quarter profit rose to $5.74 billion, or $1.16 per share, up from $4.87 billion or 96 cents per share, in the year-earlier period.

The quarter included a $3.35-billion one-time boost from writing down its deferred tax liabilities to reflect new US corporate tax rates.

While other banks will likely report one-time charges related to the tax law, passed in December, Wells Fargo gets a boost to its bottom line because it will owe less tax in the future on income from a set of businesses, including mortgage servicing, where revenues are recognized at different times.

Additionally, the 14 percentage point corporate tax cut will apply to income earned in the United States, and unlike lenders with a larger global footprint, Wells Fargo does very little business outside the US.

The new tax law is the first tangible evidence that President Donald Trump is making progress on plans to stimulate economic growth, more than a year after his election sent markets soaring, Shrewsberry said in an interview.

Wells Fargo was one of several major US companies to announce employee pay raises following the law’s passage. Shrewsberry expects that kind of extra income, plus increased business activity due to tax benefits, to have a positive effect on the US economy.

“The only piece of that pro-growth agenda people can really sink their teeth into is that tax reform that just occurred… I see a lot to like in it,” he said. — Reuters

China to step up banking oversight in ‘arduous’ fight on financial risks

CHINA will step up oversight in the banking sector this year to reduce financial risks, the country’s banking regulator said, stressing that long-term efforts would be needed to control banking sector chaos.

The China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC) said late on Saturday in a statement that its priorities included increasing supervision over shadow banking and interbank activities.

“Banking shareholder management, corporate governance and risk control mechanisms are still relatively weak, and root causes creating market chaos have not fundamentally changed,” the CBRC said.

“Bringing the banking sector under control will be long-term, arduous, and complex,” it said.

The regulator said violations in corporate governance, property loans, and disposal of non-performing assets will be punished more strictly, and that it would strengthen risk control in interbank activities, financial products and off-balance sheet business.

China has repeatedly vowed to clean up disorder in its banking system.

In recent months, regulators have introduced a series of new measures aimed at controlling risk and leverage in the financial system, with everything from lending practices to shadow banking under the microscope.

Already in January, the CBRC has published regulations that put limits on the number of commercial banks that single investors can have major holdings in.

President Xi Jinping has declared that financial security is vital to national security.

The government is particularly concerned about the massive shadow banking industry, lending conducted outside of the regulated formal banking system.

It fears that a big default or series of loan losses could cascade through the world’s second-biggest economy, leading to a sudden halt in bank lending. — Reuters