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Rizumu Ono, Val Jaca lead first Bato Cup champions

RIZUMU ONO, Val Stephen Jaca and the Hua Ching Foundation led all the champions in the 1st Chief Philippine National Police (PNP) Bato Cup Battle of the Champions Table Tennis Championships presented by San Miguel Corp. recently at the Garden Square in Harrison Plaza in Malate, Manila.

Ono of the Jay Omila Sports Academy beat former national player Arlene Borja also of Omila Sports Academy, 3-1, to win the women’s open singles title of the three-day tournament supported by the Philippine Sports Commission and the Table Tennis Association of the Philippines.

Ono is considered to qualify in the 2020 Tokyo, Olympics.

Jaca outlasted Zoren Mendiola of Hua Ching Foundation, 3-1, to capture the men’s singles event open crown of the tournament sponsored by the three-day competition is supported by PSSLAI, AMWSLAI, Emperador, Trust Trade, Armscor, PRO Regional Directors and PNP Finance Service.

Meanwhile, Hua Ching Foundation composed of Zoren Mendiola, Stephen Andrew Timson, Dannel Jay Tormis, Nikko Oliva, Joseph Cruz, Francis Bendebel and Chen Ying took home the Battle of the Champions trophy and the P100,000 cash prize after beating Table Tennis Association of North District (TATAND) in the finals, 3-1.

LTC Lawrence Naldoza of Philippine Air Force beat PSUPT Bonnie Chua of PNP Table Tennis Club, 3-0, to pocket the Law Enforcement event trophy, while Arnie Uy of TATAND blasted Marcus De Jesus also of TATAND, 3-0, to cop the Executive event crown.

The other champions in the tournament supported by the PNP were University of Cebu (men’s school/government agencies team event); University of the East (women’s school/government agencies team event) and Lube N’ Drive (Liha team event).

“We are glad that the tournament has achieved its goal of promoting a competitive table tennis nationwide and we are so thankful to all who participated locally and internationally. We are targeting a better tournament and more participants next year,” said chairman of organizing committee PSSupt. Michael John Dubria.

LeBron James carries Cavaliers, Clippers edge Wizards, 113-112

LOS ANGELES — LeBron James posted his third triple double of the season and 58th of his career as the Cleveland Cavaliers defeated the Philadelphia 76ers, 105-98, on Saturday night.

James had a hand in Cleveland’s final 22 points of the game as he finished with 30 points, 13 rebounds and 13 assists in 39 minutes.

James’ late-game productive streak is the most points scored or assisted on for any player this season to close out a game.

“That’s a crazy stat,” said James. “I didn’t know that, that’s for sure.

“I don’t need to score to be productive and to help win a game. I just stay with it. I was able to get to the freethrow line tonight. I was able to get some rebounds and my teammates made some huge shots for me.”

Jeff Green, Kyle Korver, and Dwyane Wade all came off the bench to score 13 points each. Jae Crowder tallied 12, including a clutch three-pointer from James with 40 seconds left for a 104-98 lead.

J.J. Redick and Robert Covington led Philadelphia with 19 points each. Covington was hurt trying to save the ball out of bounds with 68 seconds remaining and did not return.

J.R. Smith moved ahead of Kobe Bryant (1,827 three-pointers) for 12th place on the NBA’s all-time three-point list by draining two from beyond the arc Saturday for Cleveland.

Elsewhere, Lou Williams’ three-pointer was the final dagger in the Los Angeles Clippers’ wild 113-112 triumph over the Washington Wizards.

A frenetic finish saw the lead change hands three times in the final 13 seconds, but Williams had the last word with a 30-foot jump shot made over the outstretched arms of Washington’s Bradley Beal.

A potential game-winning basket from the baseline by Beal came just after the buzzer sounded.

WILD ENDING
Officials ruled the clock had, in fact, started too soon and replayed Washington’s final possession — on which Marcin Gortat’s jump shot bounced off the front of the rim.

Williams scored 35 points for the Clippers, who snapped a three-game losing streak.

He leads the league in points off the bench at 17.8 per game and after becoming the 96th player to amass 1,000 three-pointers in his career on Thursday added four more to take his tally to 1,007.

Danilo Gallinari added 25 points in his second game since returning from a hip injury and Austin Rivers added 16 points for Los Angeles, who notched their first win since losing Blake Griffin to a knee injury in a game against the Los Angeles Lakers.

In Mexico City, Goran Dragic scored 20 points as the Miami Heat beat the Brooklyn Nets, 101-89.

Tyler Johnson also scored 20 points for the Heat to follow up his season-high 25-point showing in Wednesday’s loss at San Antonio. He helped Miami stay close by scoring 18 points in the first half.

James Johnson added 17 while Justise Winslow contributed a season-high 15 points and hit a career-best four three-pointers.

Rondae Hollis-Jefferson led the Nets with 18 points and Spencer Dinwiddie contributed 15 and nine assists, but it was not enough as Brooklyn appeared fatigued in the fourth quarter by Mexico City’s 2,250 meter (7,382-foot) altitude.

The Nets were held under 100 points for the fourth time this season and finished with just 17 points in the final 12 minutes. Brooklyn also shot seven of 27 from three-point range. — AFP

Sin tax review, TRAIN package 2 among DoF’s legislative priorities

LOWERING corporate taxes, rice tariffication, the national identification system, and the sin tax law review will be the Finance department’s focus areas in legislation next year.

Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III said that he has met with leaders of Congress regarding the bills the Department of Finance (DoF) wanted to push.

“We told them that we will be really focusing on package two which is lowering corporate income taxes together with reviewing fiscal incentives. We will also support review of the sin tax law for both alcohol and tobacco. Tariffication of rice, those would be our areas of focus,” Mr. Dominguez told reporters on Thursday.

“The other one that we want to push also is the National ID that is very key to the whole mobilization of the Philippine society,” he added.

Those already in the legislative mill are the Amendments to the Agricultural Tariffication Act of 1996 and the Unified National Identification System Act — which both were identified as priority bills by the Legislative-Executive Development Advisory Council for the 17th Congress.

The lifting of the quantitative restriction system on rice and its replacement by a set of tariffs, which would require amendments to Republic Act 8178, is currently awaiting a report from the Committee on Agriculture and Food at the House of Representatives.

The measure, filed as House Bill 4904, authorizes the President to set import duties on the staple grain upon the expiry of the country’s waiver for the special treatment on rice granted by the World Trade Organization on July 1.

Such a move would make domestic prices more competitive, while revenue from the tariffs will go to farmers to improve their productivity or shift to high-value crops.

The Philippine National Identification System under House Bill 6221 on the other hand has been approved by the lower chamber of Congress on September, and is currently undergoing committee-level discussions in the Senate.

The ID will help plug the leaks in the government’s social welfare programs, identifying qualified beneficiaries for cash transfers, discounts of transportation, and health care, among others.

The DoF also aims to submit to Congress the second package of the comprehensive tax reform program.

It will consist mainly of a cut in corporate income tax  to 25% from 30% currently, in order to encourage companies to spend more and to improve the country’s attractiveness to foreign investors.

At the same time, it will rationalize income tax incentives for firms given by a number of investment-promotion agencies such as the Board of Investments (BoI) and the Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA), making the measure revenue-neutral.

Meanwhile, the Senate filed a resolution in February for the mandated legislative review of Republic Act 10351, or the sin tax law, to assess the effectiveness of a unitary tax system in reducing alcohol and cigarette consumption before considering any amendments to the law.

The Finance department has scheduled the reform of tobacco and alcohol excise taxes for the fifth package of the comprehensive tax reform program, due in the second half of 2018. — Elijah Joseph C. Tubayan

Indonesian ride-hailing firm confronted by law vs motorbikes as public transport

By Patrizia Paola C. Marcelo

INDONESIAN MOTORBIKE-HAILING company Go-Jek may encounter challenges in its plan to operate in the Philippines, given legislation prohibiting motorcycles to be used as public transport.

The Indonesian firm said it plans early next year to expand to the Philippines, in what should be its first country of operation outside its home base of Indonesia.

Other countries are also being considered besides the Philippines. The company would first test some of Go-Jek’s core services such as transportation, and then its payments services.

Established in 2010 as a motorcycle ride-hailing phone service, Go-Jek now also provides other transportation and payments and lifestyle services. These include the original motorcycle-hailing service (Go Ride), as well as car-hailing (Go Car), digital payments service (Go Pay) and massage bookings (Go Massage).

Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) Chairman Martin A. Delgra III said they will still implement the law when it comes to motorcycles as public transport.

Jurisdiction of motorcycles is under the Land Transportation Office (LTO), but their use as public transport falls under the local government unit or the LTFRB, Mr. Delgra said.

Republic Act 4136 or the Land Transportation and Traffic Code states that private motorcycles are not allowed to transport passengers.

Under the law, motor vehicles should be registered under one of the following classifications: private passenger automobiles; private trucks; and private motorcycles, scooters, or motor wheel attachments. Motor vehicles registered under these categories “shall not be used for hire under any circumstances” and should not be used to solicit, accept, or be used to transport passengers or freight for a fee.

“If the lawmakers would think that public motor bikes may be considered a safe mode of public transport, we just comply, we just execute the laws that will be put in place. But (for) now, the law says, it is not a safe mode of public transport,” Mr. Delgra told BusinessWorld in a chance interview during a Department of Transportation (DoTr) event.

Angkas, which provides a platform for passengers to book motorcycle rides, started operating last year. Last month, authorities cracked down on its operations, apprehending 19 Angkas riders. The city government of Makati also ordered the closing of the company office, which was allegedly operating without a permit.

The LTFRB and legislators will hold a dialogue with Angkas drivers on Tuesday, Dec. 12, to “listen to their sentiments.” The regulator also previously said it will hold a job fair for riders who have lost their jobs given the closing of Angkas, which the agency said is the best the government can do while awaiting a possible amendment regarding the use of motorcycles.

EDSA HOV lane dry run starts today

THE HIGH Occupancy Vehicle (HOV) lane along EDSA, which will be for the use of private vehicles with at least two people will be put through a dry run this week, starting today, Dec. 11, at 6 a.m. The HOV Lane is the fifth and left-most lane along EDSA. Motorcycles can also use the HOV lane aside from the motorcycle lane on the fourth lane. Private car drivers with no passenger can still use the 2nd (also marked) motorcycle and third lanes. The Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA) announced last week that the policy was approved by the Metro Manila Council (MMC) during its meeting on Dec. 5. The MMC, the policy making body of the MMDA composed of the seventeen Metro Manila mayors, has deferred action on the other proposed traffic management schemes such as odd-even scheme and the two-day number coding scheme.

Angels celebrate Ohtani’s arrival

LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles Angels rolled out the red carpet for prized Japanese acquisition Shohei Ohtani on Saturday.

In an introductory press conference worthy of Hollywood — located not so far north of the Angels’ Anaheim home — the 23-year-old two-way threat was feted by Angels manager Mike Scioscia and general manager Billy Eppler.

“I look forward to playing in front of all you fans and hopefully we can bring a championship back to Anaheim,” Ohtani said through an interpreter.

Ohtani, whose 100 mph (161 km/h) fastball and explosive presence at the plate made him a target of myriad Major League Baseball clubs, plumped for the Angels on Friday.

He agreed to a contract worth some $2.3 million. It wasn’t the absolute most he could have made, but Ohtani, who narrowed his potential clubs to a short list of seven before choosing the Angels — said he felt a “strong connection with the Angels and that was pretty much the biggest reason why I decided to sign with the Angels.”

An ankle injury hampered him in 2017, but the year before he dazzled for the Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters, batting .322 with 22 homers while going 10-4 with a 1.86 earned run average on the mound.

Ohtani wants to become the first two-way player in Major League Baseball since Babe Ruth pitched in 17 games in 1919.

“I’m honored to be compared to Babe Ruth, but in no way do I think I’m at his level,” said Ohtani, who donned his new number 17 Angels jersey for the first time.

Scioscia said the Angels do intend to use Ohtani as a two-way player, but just how that will take shape remains to be seen.

Eppler said the club is “open-minded” to the idea of a six-man pitching rotation, which would give Ohtani more recovery time. But Eppler said he wouldn’t be playing in the outfield in the coming season. — AFP

Iraqi PM declares ‘end of war against IS’ in Iraq

BAGHDAD — Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi on Saturday declared victory in a three-year war by Iraqi forces to expel the Islamic State jihadist group that at its height endangered Iraq’s very existence.

“Our forces are in complete control of the Iraqi-Syrian border and I therefore announce the end of the war against Daesh (IS),” Mr. Abadi told a conference in Baghdad.

“Our enemy wanted to kill our civilization, but we have won through our unity and our determination. We have triumphed in little time,” he said, hailing Iraq’s “heroic armed forces.”

As the authorities announced a public holiday on Sunday “to celebrate the victory,” Mr. Abadi said in a speech at the defense ministry that Iraq’s next battle would be to defeat the scourge of corruption.

IS seized vast areas north and west of Baghdad in a lightning offensive in 2014.

With Iraq’s army and police retreating in disarray at the time, Ayatollah Ali Sistani, spiritual leader of the country’s majority Shiites, called for a general mobilization, leading to the formation of Hashed al-Shaabi paramilitary units.

Iraq’s fightback was also launched with the backing of an air campaign waged by a US-led coalition, recapturing town after town from the clutches of the jihadists in fierce urban warfare.

The US State Department hailed the end of the jihadists’ “vile occupation” but cautioned that the fight was not over.

“The United States joins the Government of Iraq in stressing that Iraq’s liberation does not mean the fight against terrorism, and even against ISIS (IS), in Iraq is over,” State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said.

The coalition, meanwhile, tweeted, using an Arabic acronym for IS: “Congratulations to the government of Iraq and the Iraqi security forces on the liberation of all Daesh-held populated areas in Iraq.”

Hisham al-Hashemi, an expert on jihadist groups, warned that IS still posed a threat by retaining arms caches in uninhabited desert zones.

Iraq’s close ally Iran already declared victory over IS last month, as the jihadists clung to just a few remaining scraps of territory.

But Mr. Abadi said at the time he would not follow suit until the desert on the border with Syria had been cleared.

The jihadists’ defeat is a massive turnaround for an organization that in 2014 ruled over seven million people in a territory as big as Italy encompassing large parts of Syria and nearly a third of Iraq.

On the Syrian side of the border, IS is under massive pressure too.

On Thursday, Russia’s defense ministry said its mission in support of the Syrian regime to oust IS had been “accomplished” and the country was “completely liberated.”

In the border region, pro-government forces and US-backed Kurdish-led forces are conducting operations to clear IS fighters from the countryside north of the Euphrates valley after ousting them from all Syrian towns.

However the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights on Saturday said IS fighters had managed to seize territory in Syira’s Idlib province after clashes with rival jihadists, four years after being expelled from the region.

The head of Iraq’s Joint Operations Command set up to fight IS, General Abdel Amir Yarallah, gave an update on Saturday to announce that the desert valley of Al-Jazira was under the control of Iraqi troops and the Hashed all the way from Nineveh province in the north to Anbar in the west.

Federal forces “now control the border with Syria from Al-Walid border crossing to that of Rabia,” covering a distance of 435 kilometers (270 miles), he said.

Despite the victory announcements, experts have warned that IS retains the capacity as an insurgent group to carry out high-casualty bomb attacks using sleeper cells.

Mr. Abadi’s victory announcement came the same day as Iraqi forces said they killed 10 IS members in a tunnel near the northern city of Kirkuk and recovered armaments.

IS also retains natural hideouts in the deep gorges of Wadi Hauran, Iraq’s longest valley stretching from the Saudi border up to the Euphrates River and the frontiers with Syria and Jordan.

The fightback in Iraq kicked off with the “liberation” of Tikrit, north of Baghdad, that had been under IS control for nearly 10 months.

The operations have involved both Tehran, through Iranian-trained Shiite militias in the Hashed al-Shaabi coalition, and Washington as head of the anti-jihadist coalition.

The western cities of Ramadi and Fallujah followed in 2016 before the turning point of the recapture of Iraq’s second city of Mosul in July this year after a nine-month offensive led by a 30,000-strong federal force.

Mr. Abadi said the battle for Mosul that left the city in ruins and thousands of its residents displaced marked the end of the jihadists’ “caliphate.” — AFP

Sustaining the Lead, Beating the Heat

By Diwa C. Guinigundo

Exactly 21 years ago, in a speech delivered on Dec. 5, 1996, then US Fed chairman Allan Greenspan used the term “irrational exuberance” to warn investors that the spectacular rally in stock prices during the period could potentially signal that global stock markets were overheating. After these words were spoken, stock markets all over the world dropped simultaneously and yes, precipitously. Greenspan became some kind of a prophet; his speech, an explicit warning about market overheating.

Nowadays, the Philippine economy has been subject to a similar concern. We are all aware that the Philippine economy has been growing at an incredible pace. The recently released economic data showed that country’s gross domestic product (GDP) grew by 6.9% in the third quarter of 2017, bringing the economy to 18 years of consecutive and uninterrupted growth.

This growth momentum has been accompanied by a substantial rise in credit growth. As a consequence, concerns were expressed that the Philippine economy is going “too hot” and may now be displaying signs of overheating.

In particular, the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) Article IV Consultation with the Philippines flagged that the “combination of high credit growth, buoyant private investment and fiscal expansion without tax reform could lead to an overheating of the economy,” even as the country’s overall economic outlook remained favorable in the medium term.

Is the Philippine economy getting too much of a good thing?

Unlike Allan Greenspan’s speech though, we argue that our economy has entered a period of “rational exuberance” rather than an irrational one.

In my view, the Philippines’ growth story is that of a mature structural expansion of economic activity, profits, and employment that probably has many more years to run.

GETTING THE TERMS RIGHT
But first how does one appreciate overheating?

Overheating occurs when an economy’s capacity to supply goods and services is not able to keep up with demand. During an economic boom, overheating materializes when there are high levels of aggregate demand (for consumption, investments, government expenditures and net exports) that exceeds what suppliers can produce on a long-term basis.

To meet excess demand, producers overemploy their resources, i.e. by extending working hours or using machineries beyond their capacity. If demand is not met, prices adjust upwards in the short run until such time that supply matches demand. This will hardly become sustainable if producers’ capacity (and the economy’s capacity as a whole) to produce does not expand and results in, among others, machine breakdown or workers getting sick. This condition ultimately slows down the entire production process and may at the same time accelerate both inflation and inflation expectations.

In short, overheating is seen when output rises unreasonably above its potential level, followed by unanticipated acceleration in inflation due to prolonged high growth rate. The rapid rise in inflation diminishes consumers’ purchasing power. This may subsequently and abruptly sink confidence, as both consumers and businesses realize the relative mismatch in production and demand.

This is certainly not the case for the Philippines.

EVERYTHING IS RELATIVE
First, credit expansion in the country is accompanied by solid economic growth. While bank loans have been expanding at double-digit levels, the rise in lending activity has been based on solid demand for loans across key economic sectors and households.

In other words, there is sustained demand for loans because the economy continues to grow.

One does not, however, have to take loan growth numbers at face value (registered year on year at 21.1% in September 2017). Credit can be better assessed relative to the size of an economy (as indicated by the level of GDP), resulting in a metric called credit-to-GDP ratio.

This credit-to-GDP measure may be evaluated relative to its gap or difference over its long-term trend performance. This gap relative to its long-run trend performance indicates that credit expansion has been within statistically desirable limits.

This bank lending growth in turn leads to around 14.5% domestic liquidity (or M3) growth (year on year) in September 2017.

Depending on the size of the economy, credit growth may need to be faster or slower. Small developing economies may aptly experience higher credit growth as creditors meet the requirements of faster business expansion and consumers’ or households’ greater access to financial services.

It is not surprising that domestic credit performance (whether in terms of credit or credit-to-GDP ratio) shows that, despite its already rapid expansion, credit has room to accommodate further growth.

The Philippine credit-to-GDP ratio (of 63.6%) remains one of the lowest in the region, second only to Indonesia’s (40.6%). And the Philippines’ total output continues to grow and grow according to its increasing potential. More on this in the third and fourth arguments.

NUMBERS SPEAK LOUDER THAN WORDS
Second, our set of monitoring tools and surveillance systems indicates that there is very little evidence of overheating.

Based on the results of the Q3 2017 Senior Loan Officers’ Survey (SLO), universal and commercial banks (UKBs) have continued to maintain their sound credit standards for corporate and consumer loans. This reflects banks’ prudent lending practices even in the face of sustained strong loan demand from enterprises and households.

Moreover, potential overheating may also be seen from the lens of the real property sector. But the trend in this sector shows general alignment with its fundamental values. The Residential Real Estate Price Index (RREPI), a measure in assessing the trends in housing prices, has been on a general decline in 2017, which reflects an easing in the build-up of price pressures in residential property.

SUSTAINING THE LEAD WITH SOLID FOOTING
Third, and perhaps the most important argument, the country’s macroeconomic fundamentals have remained solid and robust for the past 18 years. This growth story of 75 consecutive quarters demonstrates how income and economic growth does not have to come as magic.

There could be a clear case of overheating if such growth comes with surging price movements. But in the case of the Philippines, growth has been accompanied by a benign inflation environment. Inflation (headline, core and alternative measures) remains close to the midpoint of target range in 2017 while inflation projections show annual average inflation settling within the target range of 3% ± 1.0 percentage until 2019. It is also important to emphasize that while we see risks to inflation such as the impact of the impending tax increase, both the outlook and expectations continue to be well-anchored to the inflation target over the policy horizon.

These macroeconomic improvements have not been lost to third party analysts including credit rating agencies which have upgraded the Philippines to investment grade on account of such achievement. Government is committed to continue strengthening institutions, promoting greater transparency and enhancing competitiveness.

We must also make the point that the inflation rate for the bottom 30% of the population has trended lower than the overall headline inflation.

Poverty incidence, based on the statistics compiled by the Philippine Statistics Authority, has also illustrated that rapid economic growth has started to benefit the middle income and the poorer segments of society. Indeed, high real GDP goes beyond media, it is something that can be eaten and enjoyed; it is both enabling and empowering.

The current economic performance is, therefore, not a product of unintended drivers that bubble up growth. The country’s ability to post remarkable growth against domestic and external headwinds did not manifest overnight nor did it pop out instantly after getting exposed to some microwave excess demand.

In other words, ours is not a popcorn economy.

Sustainable growth is built on a long history of purposeful structural reforms and string of policies.

In the Philippines, this is precisely the case because we have on record almost 25 years of policy and structural reforms ranging from dismantling telecom monopoly, deregulation of the power sector and the oil industry, liberalization of the banking industry and restructuring of public revenues. Its position of strength is characterized by an accelerating growth, a benign inflation environment, a sound banking system, resilient external payments position, adequate buffers and responsive macroeconomic policies.

BEATING THE HEAT BY EXPANDING CAPACITY
Fourth, in combination with the improving macroeconomic environment, the structural reforms we have pursued have indeed been translated into higher potential output for the economy. The country’s potential output has recently risen to 6-7% following: i) the recent climb in economic efficiency as indicated by the declining incremental output ratio; ii) increasing total factor productivity; and iii) favorable labor market dynamics given the young population and improvements in the education and skill sets of those in the labor force. Moreover, with the recent policy of the government to strengthen both hard and soft infrastructures, the country’s potential output could definitely further increase.

WHEN WORRYING IS A GOOD THING
In view of these arguments, overheating concerns may indeed be misplaced. Nonetheless, these concerns are not necessarily bad. In fact, policy makers are paid to always worry about the economy.

Sustaining the lead and beating the heat require us to remain watchful and attentive. There can be no room for complacency or benign neglect. We have a stable of analytical tools, early warning systems, and stress tests that should be useful to guide us when to move the lever of monetary policy if the risks are widely spread or deploy macroprudential measures to deal with sector-specific concerns.

It’s not bad to be exuberant but we should remain rational.

(This piece originally contained several footnotes and charts that were removed for purposes of brevity. They are available upon request.)

 

Diwa C. Guinigundo is the Deputy Governor of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas.

Designing for pleasure

Timothy Jacob Jensen
The Jacob Jensen Design Studio’s CEO and CDO Timothy Jacob Jensen

DESIGN evolved as a response to make things easier for people. With the ease of technology and the sea of knowledge around us now, an easier life (for some, at least), is well within reach.

So design today has to give something else. If it made life easier before, maybe it can make life better now. More than an experience of convenience, perhaps design can now contribute to an experience of pleasure.

Jacob Jansen was an important Danish designer whose work forms a major part of the school of Danish modern design. His minimalist style is best seen in his work with electronics company Bang & Olufsen, for whom, in the latter part of the 20th century, he designed appliances such as telephones, radios, and speakers. In 1958, Mr. Jansen set up the The Jacob Jensen Design Studio which his son, Timothy Jacob Jensen, took over in 1990. The elder Mr. Jensen departed this world in 2015, leaving behind a legacy of functional and aesthetically pleasing products.

BusinessWorld met his son, Timothy, last week at the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) International building. Just like his father, the younger Mr. Jensen is well-known as a designer, bringing that tres-chic and tres moderne industrial-minimalist aesthetic to a variety of products, from television sets to mobile phones — even coffins, bowls, and jewelry.

“I’m the youngest from the first marriage. When you’re the youngest in the family, you have to make more noise to get attention,” he said on following his father into design, and the course of action to achieve this was to invent and innovate. “The other thing was, that I didn’t like school, or school didn’t like me,” he recounted, which led to his apprenticeship at 16.

Mr. Jensen was in the country as he is in talks to build one of his design studios in the Philippines — there are currently studios in Denmark, Shanghai, and Bangkok. Asked why he plans to build in the Philippines, he said: “I’ll turn the question to around. What’s wrong with the Philippines?”

“You have 100 million wonderful people living on these exotic islands in the Pacific Ocean, in this almost-perfect climate. You have all the resources — except self-confidence,” he said.

He said that he wasn’t going to be here to make money, or exploit cheap labor. “A nation of maids? Christ, you can do better than that, right?” he said in response to business associates in Shanghai when he asked them what they associated with the Philippines, and they answered “Maids.”

“We’re here to try to enable and enhance young talents here to build great ideas and great brands, so you can pay more in taxes, and get the majority of your people out of poverty,” he told BusinessWorld.

Coming from Scandinavia — consisting of Denmark, Norway, and Sweden, Finland, Iceland, among other territories — Mr. Jensen follows a legacy of great products: think Ikea, Bang & Olufsen, and H&M. Asked why the region has such a saturation of great design, he boasts that he considers the region the design center of the world. “It’s because of the values we have.” He talked about the equality and equity present in the country: excellent health care and education accessible to all, for example. When asked how these bleed into design, he said: “If you have a really good platform, built on some [good] values, you can create a lot of good things out of that.

“If people are beautiful inside their minds, maybe they’ll make beautiful things also.”

One of the big debates of design is if an object should be functional first, and beautiful second, This is in line with the German Bauhaus school of thought, that an object’s function should come first, and its form (preferably appealing) should follow. Mr. Jensen said: “It is banal, and does not apply anymore.” According to Mr. Jensen, this thought came about when the Bauhaus school was established in the late 1910’s — “That was when it was difficult to make [something] function.”

“Rubbish now! You can say form, and feelings. It is banal to think things should work… come on! It has to do something else. You can say feeling, or emotions.”

Of course, he says, an object should be functional and sustainable, but it has to be more.

“You’ve got to add something, another dimension to it. It has to be sexy, it has to be appealing, it has to be reassuring, caring, exciting — and it has to be inspiring. If you make a solution that contains these attributes, then you have good design,” he said. “It’s got to turn me on, or make me happy.”

Natalie Portman, acting as Jacqueline Kennedy in the 2016 movie Jackie said: “Objects and artifacts last far longer than people. And they represent important ideas. History; identity. Beauty.” Asked what place objects, and their design, occupy in this world, Mr. Jensen points to evolution. “You can say design is the cultural world for evolution. It’s making things hopefully better.”

As animals adapt to the world, one can look at changing design in much the same process.

As for if objects do matter, he said: “It depends. To some it does, to some it doesn’t. There’s a few people… sitting on a stick, with a big sack of rice and saying they don’t care about stuff. But to the rest of us, we care about it.

“Of course objects matter.” — Joseph L. Garcia

Filipino MMA fighters had it rough in Thailand

A SUCCESSFUL ONE Championship event was held in Thailand last Saturday which unfortunately proved to have been rough for Filipino mixed martial arts fighters that saw action in it.

Strawweight Rabin Catalan, featherweight Jimmy Yabo, women’s strawweight fighter April Osenio and women’s atomweight Rome Trinidad all competed at “ONE: Warriors of the World” at the Impact Arena in Bangkok and all wound up on the raw side of things.

Mr. Catalan lost by technical knockout due to strikes in the second round to hometown bet Kritsada Kongsrichai while Mr. Yabo was knocked out by Sagetdao Petpayathai just 1:32 minutes into the opening round.

Ms. Osenio, meanwhile, was TKO’d (strikes) by Chinese fighter Xiong Jingnan in the first round just as Ms. Trinidad was submitted by rear-naked choke by Rika Ishige in the second round.

Mr. Catalan (4-4) has now lost three straight in ONE while Mr. Yabo has dropped four in a row.

For Ms. Osenio (2-3), it was her second straight defeat. She was submitted in her previous fight a year ago.

A member of Team Lakay, Ms. Osenio returned to the cage after completing her criminology studies.

Unfortunately for her, Ms. Jingnan (10-1) proved to be too big for her as she slumped to the loss upon her return.

Ms. Trinidad, for her part, made her promotional debut against Ms. Ishige.

While the former showed flashes of form in striking early on, she eventually succumbed to the more experienced Ishige when the fight went to the mat.

Both Filipino fighters vowed to learn from the lessons of their latest fights and come back better next time round.

Meanwhile in the main event, Brazilian Alex Silva became the new strawweight champion after seizing the belt from erstwhile champion Yoshitaka Naito by unanimous decision.

Next for ONE Championship is “Kings Of Courage” in Jakarta, Indonesia, in January as it kicks off a new year. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Global brewers line up bids for Vietnam’s Sabeco sale

SINGAPORE/LONDON — Brewing groups including Thai Beverage, Anheuser-Busch InBev and Kirin Holdings are gearing up to bid for a stake in Vietnam’s largest brewer, Sabeco, people familiar with the matter said, with the $5-billion sale process by the government opening this week.

The auction of up to 54% of Sabeco, in what is set to be Vietnam’s biggest privatization, offers brewers access to a fast-growing market with a youthful population and beer drinking culture.

Thai Bev, controlled by tycoon Charoen Sirivadhanabhakdi, is shaping up as a strong contender, the people said, as it is familiar with the Vietnam system and sees Sabeco as key to expanding outside its home market.

“They have been around this situation for many years and are very keen to get this asset,” said one of the people, none of whom wanted to be named as they are not authorised to speak to the media.

Last month, a Thai Bev unit bought a 49% stake in a Vietnamese company which, the people said, could be used as a vehicle to bid for Sabeco as a domestic player, giving it an advantage over international rivals.

Thai Bev had no immediate comment, but said in October it was keen to grow through acquisitions in markets such as Vietnam. Firms controlled by Sirivadhanabhakdi also hold a 19% stake in Vietnam’s Vinamilk.

A spokeswoman for AB InBev, the world’s biggest brewer, said the company was committed to Vietnam and to growing its business for the long-term. A spokesman for Japan’s Kirin said it was carefully considering its options.

Other potential bidders include Asahi Group Holdings, San Miguel and Heineken, though several people said Heineken already had a strong business in Vietnam and could sit out an expensive auction that values Sabeco at about 36 times core earnings — more than double the trading multiples of around 15 for some global brewers, according to Reuters data.

Heineken, which already owns 5% of Sabeco, did not respond to requests for comment.

Asahi could not be immediately reached for comment, but the Japanese firm’s president told Reuters in September it was studying Sabeco.

San Miguel’s President Ramon S. Ang said the Philippine conglomerate was interested to bid for Sabeco. Kirin owns around half of its affiliate San Miguel Brewery.

The Sabeco auction is on Dec. 18, and bidders who are keen to own a stake equal to 25% or more of Sabeco’s shares need to inform local authorities a week before the auction.

OWNERSHIP CAP
Foreign ownership in Sabeco is limited to 49%. That means overseas bidders can only bid for a minority stake of as much as 39% as foreign entities already own 10%.

Lack of control could put off some possible bidders, the people said.

“Having control of the business is very important for these international brewers because the multiple is very high. If you’re going to pay that much you want to be able to institute your plans,” said one of the people, who expected international firms to sell their own premium beers like Budweiser, Heineken and Kirin through Sabeco’s distribution network, in addition to Sabeco’s beers, which include the Bia Saigon and 333 brands.

Vietnam’s Ministry of Industry and Trade, which represents state shares in Sabeco, said foreign investors can link with Vietnamese firms to buy Sabeco shares, but have to comply with local laws and regulations.

Sabeco’s share price has nearly tripled since its listing a year ago, with analysts citing a small float as inflating its market value.

The brewer’s sky-high valuations and a complicated sale process could pose challenges for some potential bidders, the people said.

The Sabeco sale could also set the pace for peer Habeco, in which Danish brewer Carlsberg A/S owns 17.3%. — Reuters

Thousands of Indonesians again protest Trump’s Jerusalem move

JAKARTA — Thousands protested outside the US Embassy in the Indonesian capital on Sunday against US President Donald J. Trump’s decision to recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, many waving banners saying “Palestine is in our hearts.”

Leaders in Indonesia, home to the world’s largest Muslim population, have joined a global chorus of condemnation of Mr. Trump’s announcement, including Western allies who say it is a blow to peace efforts and risks sparking more violence.

Thousands of protesters in Muslim-majority countries in Asia have rallied in recent days to condemn the US move.

Israel maintains that all of Jerusalem is its capital. Palestinians want East Jerusalem as the capital of a future independent state and say Mr. Trump’s move has left them completely sidelined.

Palestinian people were among the first to recognize Indonesia’s independence in 1945, Sohibul Iman, president of the controversial Islamist opposition Prosperous Justice Party which organized the rally, told protesters.

Indonesia should be more proactive in “urging the Organisation of Islamic Conference (OIC) member states and UN Security Council and the international community to respond immediately with more decisive and concrete political and diplomatic actions in saving the Palestinians from the Israeli occupation and its collaborator, the United States of America,” Iman said.

“Indonesia as the world’s largest Muslim country has the largest responsibility toward the independence of Palestine and the management of Jerusalem,” he told reporters, adding that he hoped Indonesia would take a leading role within the OIC on the matter.

“Trump has disrupted world peace. It’s terrible,” one protester, Yusri, told Reuters.

The decision was “a major disaster for the Palestinian people, while the Palestinian’s own rights have been taken away for a long time,” said Septi, a student at the rally.

Violence erupted for a third day in Gaza on Saturday in response to Mr. Trump’s decision, which overturned decades of US policy towards the Middle East.

Indonesia’s foreign minister left for Jordan on Sunday to meet the Palestinian and Jordanian foreign ministers “to convey Indonesia’s full support for Palestine.” — Reuters