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The internet says Kamala Harris is ‘brat,’ and her campaign is embracing it

NEW YORK — Kamala Harris is not yet the Democratic Party’s candidate for president but her status online is already clear: she is a meme.

In the latest testament to her viral presence among Gen Z, British pop sensation Charli XCX name-checked her in a weekend tweet that called the vice president a “brat.”

And Ms. Harris’ campaign is leaning into it.

Soon after the artist tweeted “kamala IS brat” on Sunday night — giving Harris the name of her latest album — the US vice president adopted the album’s lime green aesthetic for her “Kamala HQ” account.

Charli XCX was acknowledging something that had already taken off online, where viral memes were featuring video clips of Ms. Harris dancing and joking against Charli XCX tracks.

Brat, the singer has explained, is “that girl who is a little messy and likes to party and like maybe says some like dumb things sometimes, who like feels herself but then also like maybe has a breakdown… It’s brat, you’re brat, that’s brat.”

Her tweet on Sunday sent the trend soaring, a phenomenon that could help Ms. Harris’ outreach to younger voters that could play a pivotal role in the Nov. 5 election.

That contrasts not only with 78-year-old Republican rival Donald Trump, but with Ms. Harris’ 81-year-old boss, President Joseph R. Biden, who quit the race at the weekend and endorsed his vice president as his replacement at the top of the ticket.

A spokesperson for Charli XCX declined a request for an interview.

The ‘brat’ trend joins another Harris viral meme — audio from a 2023 speech that was pilloried before by critics, but is now embraced by Gen Z as a sort of existential philosophy.

“’You think you just fell out of a coconut tree?’” Ms. Harris asks in the speech, quoting what her mother used to say, before laughing and then growing serious. “You exist in the context of all in which you live and what came before you.”

The Internet hive mind has adopted a coconut emoji as an unofficial campaign symbol for Ms. Harris. TikTokers have used sound from the “coconut tree” speech in at least 3,000 videos, according to TikTok.

Ms. Harris’ membership in Alpha Kappa Alpha — the first Black Greek-letter sorority — at Howard University in Washington, D.C., is also sparking viral engagement online.

“Listening to the opposition knowing we have 22,190,813 members in the D9 abt (sic) to vote for Kamala!” says one video on TikTok featuring two women, one of which is in the AKA colors of pink and green. D9 refers to a group of nine historically Black fraternities and sororities.

To be sure, Ms. Harris has her share of haters online. Critics have pushed clips aimed at portraying her in a negative light, including compilations of her boisterous laugh, after Mr. Trump himself referred to her as “Laffin’ Kamala.”

Younger voters, who overwhelmingly vote Democratic, had so far been unenthusiastic about a presidential race between Mr. Biden and Mr. Trump, 78 years old.

“It’s very hard to understand Gen Z unless you’re Gen Z,” said Chris Mowrey, a Democratic social media influencer with 340,000 TikTok followers, referring to the generation born between 1997 and 2012.

Internet moments can translate to the ballot box, Mr. Mowrey added: “Young voters vote significantly more based on just personality and, like, vibes.” — Reuters

Business travel spending recovers in all regions but Asia and Europe

TRAVELERS walk with their suitcases at Beijing Daxing International Airport in Beijing, China April 24, 2023. — REUTERS

NEW YORK — Global business travel spending in 2023 recovered to pre-pandemic levels in North America, Latin America, the Middle East and Africa as companies resumed in-person gatherings and conferences, according to report released Monday by an industry association.

However, the Global Business Travel Association’s annual report also said business travel spending adjusted for inflation remains below 2019 levels and a full global recovery faces increased headwinds from geopolitical conflicts and a slower travel rebound in major markets like China.

Global business travel spending as a whole in 2023 increased 30% to $1.34 trillion from the previous year, but it was still about 7% below pre-pandemic levels, according to the report.

“We are now expecting to see continued solid spend growth in business travel, but at a more normal, moderate level as the world economies return to a more traditional cycle,” said Suzanne Neufang, the association’s chief executive officer.

The association predicts that spending will reach $1.48 trillion by the end of 2024, surpassing the pre-pandemic record of $1.43 trillion.

When adjusted for inflation, global business travel spending was 22% lower in 2023 compared to 2019 levels.

The Asia-Pacific region was the fastest-growing region in 2023 led by a rise in spending in South Korea and India, which increased 27% and 22% respectively year over year.

However, the region still lagged a full recovery as business travel spending in China increased 9% year over year, but still trails behind pre-pandemic levels.

Spending recovered to pre-pandemic levels in North America, Latin America, the Middle East and Africa.

Despite surpassing the pre-pandemic record of $346.8 billion, the growth in spending in North America decelerated to 25% year over year down from 73% the year prior.

Similarly, in Western Europe business travel spending increased 33% in 2023 compared to 109% in 2022 when spending surged as governments loosened travel restrictions. The region’s spending was 6% below pre-pandemic levels. — Reuters

France flaunts its baguettes with scratch-and-sniff stamps

LA POSTE

PARIS — Visiting Paris for the Olympics and want to share the enticing aroma of a fresh baguette? A scratch-and-sniff stamp on your postcard could be the answer.

The crunchy stick of fluffy white bread is a symbol of France around the world and has been a mainstay of its diet for at least 100 years.

Many would consider its scent of wheat and yeast unrepeatable. But not the French post office.

“You just have to rub the stamp here like this with your nails,” said postal worker Clarisse Briend. “You can smell the bread, the baguette.”

Just don’t expect France’s gastronomic purists to be impressed.

“Our yeast is gentle,” said Jeanne Barrere, manager of the Leonie Bakery near Paris’ Champs-Elysees boulevard. “This smells more like vanilla.”

Ms. Barrere’s chief baker Harlem Gbodialo smelled a “sugary, fruity aroma” that he couldn’t place.

Although baguette consumption has declined, France still makes around 16 million per day — or nearly 6 billion a year.

One legend has it that Napoleon Bonaparte’s bakers came up with the elongated shape to make it easier for his troops to carry. — Reuters

Digital tax talks in G20 spotlight as US tariff threat looms

REUTERS

RIO DE JANEIRO — Talks over a global tax deal are continuing well past a June 30 deadline and governments are now looking to a Group of 20 (G20) finance leaders meeting this week for progress on a stalled plan to reallocate taxing rights on large multinational companies.

The so-called “Pillar 1” arrangement, part of a 2021 global two-part tax deal, aims to replace unilateral digital services taxes (DSTs) on US technology giants including Alphabet’s Google, Amazon.com and Apple through a new mechanism to share taxing rights on a broader, global group of companies.

The stakes in the negotiations are high. A failure to reach agreement on final terms could prompt several countries to reinstate their taxes on US tech giants and risk punitive duties on billions of dollars in exports to the US.

Standstill agreements under which Washington has suspended threatened trade retaliation against seven countries — Austria, Britain, France, India, Italy, Spain and Turkey — expired on June 30, but the US has not taken steps to impose tariffs.

Discussions on the matter are continuing. An Italian government source said that European countries were seeking assurances that the US tariffs on some $2 billion worth of annual imports from French Champagne to Italian handbags and optical lenses remained frozen while the talks continue, including at the G20 meeting in Rio de Janeiro.

TOP PRIORITY
A European Union document prepared for the G20 meeting lists finalizing the international tax deal as a “top priority.”

It said the G20 should urge countries and jurisdictions participating in the tax deal “to finalize discussions on all aspects of Pillar 1, with a view to signing the Multilateral Convention (MLC) by summer end and ratifying it as soon as possible.”

Meanwhile, Canada in July became the eighth country to impose a unilateral digital services tax, with Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland saying it was “simply not reasonable, not fair for Canada to indefinitely put our own measures on hold” after the June 30 deadline passed without a Pillar 1 agreement.

The US maintains that such taxes are discriminatory because they specifically target the local revenues of US technology firms that dominate the sector.

“Treasury continues to oppose all tax measures that discriminate against US businesses,” a US Treasury spokesperson said in response to Canada’s move. “We encourage all countries to finalize the work on the Pillar 1 agreement. We are in active discussions on next steps related to the existing DST joint statements.”

A spokesperson for the US Trade Representative’s office added that the OECD/G20 negotiations “offer the best path to address challenges that digitalization of the economy poses to the international tax system.”

SMALLER FIRMS AFFECTED
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen told Reuters at a G7 finance meeting in May that India and China were hindering agreement on the alternative transfer-pricing mechanism known as “Amount B.”

This mechanism would apply to thousands of companies below the $20 billion annual revenue threshold for “Amount A”, and is aimed at delivering tax certainty to these firms through an objective way of calculating tax liability, said Danielle Rolfes, head of KPMG’s Washington National Tax Practice.

“It’s in the interest of all the countries around the table to try to keep it alive,” Rolfes said.

At the G20 meeting in Rio de Janeiro, Yellen will also face questions from counterparts over the continuity of US policy commitments in the wake of President Joseph R. Biden’s decision to end his re-election bid and growing international angst over a potential return of Donald Trump to the White House. — Reuters

Taiwan curtails annual war games as Typhoon Gaemi barrels towards island

A NAVY miniature is seen in front of displayed Chinese and Taiwanese flags in this illustration taken April 11, 2023. — REUTERS

HUALIEN, Taiwan — Taiwan curtailed its annual Han Kuang war games on Tuesday as Typhoon Gaemi barrelled towards the island and the government issued a land warning given the expected strong winds and torrential rain as it hits the coast.

Gaemi, the first typhoon of the season to affect Taiwan, is expected to make landfall on the northeast coast between sometime on Wednesday night and the early hours of Thursday, according to the island’s Central Weather Administration.

Currently categorized as a medium strength typhoon by Taiwan, it is then likely to move across the Taiwan Strait and then hit the southeastern Chinese province of Fujian in the early hours of Friday.

Taiwan’s government issued a land warning for the typhoon, centered on Taiwan’s east and northeast, meaning that is where it is most likely to make landfall.

Some mountainous central and southern Taiwan counties are expected to see total rainfall of up to 1,800 mm (70 inches) during the typhoon, the weather administration said.

Taiwan’s annual Han Kuang military drills taking place this week have been curtailed, including cancelling fighter jet exercises on the east coast, the defence ministry said.

“The impact from the typhoon at present on the east coast is rather obvious,” ministry spokesman Sun Li-fang told reporters at the Hualien air base. “So we will adjust some of the air and naval elements given the typhoon situation.”

Taiwan’s transport ministry said all ferries to Green Island and Orchid Island, which lie off the southeast coast, were cancelled on Tuesday. Four domestic flights were cancelled, but there was no disruption to international services yet.

Cities across Taiwan could also declare a typhoon holiday, which would shut financial markets, schools and offices, should they judge the risk from the bad weather to be severe.

Gaemi passed by to the east of the Philippines but did not make landfall, though still brought heavy rain.

While typhoons can be highly destructive, Taiwan also relies on them to replenish reservoirs after the traditionally drier winter months, especially for the southern part of the island. — Reuters

Grow your savings! Nuvali residents get special interest rate from Rural Bank of Sta. Rosa (Laguna)

Living in Sta. Rosa, Laguna, particularly Nuvali, just got a little more financially rewarding. The Rural Bank of Sta. Rosa (Laguna), Inc. is rolling out a fantastic interest rate program on time deposits, making it an ideal time to grow your savings.

The Rural Bank of Sta. Rosa (Laguna) is offering an enticing 8.88% interest rate per year for time deposits of over P500,000, which is especially beneficial for the residents of Nuvali in Sta. Rosa, Laguna and nearby areas. 

Salmon Co-Founder and Rural Bank of Sta. Rosa Chairperson Raffy Montemayor said its stellar 8.88% time deposit interest rate offer comes with no hidden fees or expiration. 

“Our 8.88% time deposit interest rate, available for a 12-month term, is one of the best ways to grow your money. By simply depositing more than P500,000, our customers can benefit from significant returns without any hidden fees or complex requirements, ensuring a straightforward and rewarding banking experience,” Mr. Montemayor said.

To avail of the 8.88% offer, simply visit or call the Rural Bank of Sta. Rosa Head Office at F. Gomez St., Poblacion, Barangay Malusak, City of Sta. Rosa, Laguna, with Edward Dela Cruz as the contact person at (049) 534-1126 or 0997-952-7783.

You can also visit the Bacoor Branch at Evangelista Street, Barangay Daang Bukid, Bacoor, Cavite with Arthur Castor as the contact person at (046) 434-6197 or 0955-861-7848. 

Last month, the Bank announced that its total deposits soared by 439% from PHP82 million to PHP440 million and its bank loans increased by 648% from PHP54 million to PHP400 million as of end of May 2024.

“We are making Rural Bank of Sta. Rosa a robust financial institution by infusing more capital in the bank through its parent company, which has attracted notable global investors such as the International Finance Corp. (IFC), Singapore-based private equity fund Northstar Group and Abu Dhabi’s sovereign wealth fund (ADQ),” Mr. Montemayor revealed.

 


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Founder of South Korea’s Kakao arrested for suspected stock manipulation

STOCK PHOTO | Image by rawpixel.com from Freepik

 – The billionaire founder of South Korean tech giant Kakao Corp., Kim Beom-su was arrested on Tuesday on accusations of manipulating stocks during the acquisition of a K-Pop agency last year.

The case is the latest legal twist for Kakao, which runs South Korea’s largest chat app, after the company and another executive went on trial last year for alleged wrongdoing during the same acquisition.

Mr. Kim, who is also known as Brian Kim, is seen as a visionary in South Korea’s digital industry for building Kakao’s group of affiliates – worth 86 trillion won ($62 billion) by assets – from the ground up since launching the chat app in 2010.

Any case against him could jeopardize Kakao’s investments into artificial intelligence as well as its overseas expansion plans, industry experts said.

Prosecutors say Kim was involved in manipulating the stock price of SM Entertainment in February last year to hinder a competitor, Hybe, from acquiring it.

Mr. Kim has denied the accusations, saying he never ordered or tolerated any illegal activity, the company said in a statement. He has so far not been formally charged. Kakao and Kim’s lawyer did not immediately provide further comment on Tuesday.

The high-profile tech entrepreneur is the largest shareholder of Kakao Corp., with a 24% stake that he and affiliated entities control.

Seoul Southern District Court approved the arrest warrant to prevent the potential destruction of evidence, and because Kim was a flight risk, a court official said on Tuesday.

Mr. Kim is being held at the Seoul Nambu Detention Centre, a prosecution spokesperson said. His arrest will last up to 20 days, during which the prosecutors will investigate further before deciding whether to indict him, according to South Korean criminal procedure.

The outcome of any case against Kim could jeopardize Kakao group’s control of online bank arm KakaoBank Corp., since the country’s financial rules restrict those convicted of financial crime from owning a more than a 10% stake in a bank.

Kakao is also likely to be subject to regulatory scrutiny, making it tougher for the company to make major decisions on investments in artificial intelligence (AI) and overseas business expansion, industry experts said.

The company plans to introduce new AI services this year. Kakao Corp shares dropped 3.4% during morning trade to the lowest since November, after falling 24% year-to-date. – Reuters

Harris secures delegates needed to become Democratic nominee for president

UNITED STATES VICE PRESIDENT Kamala Harris speaks at her Presidential Campaign headquarters in Wilmington, Delaware, US, July 22, 2024. — ERIN SCHAFF/POOL VIA REUTERS

 – US Vice President Kamala Harris secured support Monday from a majority of delegates to the Democratic National Convention, likely ensuring she will become the party’s nominee for president next month, according to multiple sources.

President Joe Biden threw his support behind Harris on Sunday when he withdrew from the race amid questions about his age and health. He pledged to remain in office as president until his term ends on Jan. 20, 2025.

An Associated Press survey of delegates showed Harris had the support of 2,538 delegates, well beyond the 1,976 needed to win the delegates vote in the coming weeks. Democratic National Committee Chairman Jaime Harrison said on Monday the party will deliver a presidential nominee by Aug. 7.

Delegates could still change their minds before Aug. 7, but nobody else received any votes in the AP survey, and 57 delegates said they were undecided.

In Harris’ first public appearance since the announcement, she rallied supporters on Monday with a debut campaign speech vowing to go after Republican nominee Donald Trump like the courtroom prosecutor she once was.

“I took on perpetrators of all kinds. Predators who abused women, fraudsters who ripped off consumers, cheaters who broke the rules for their own gain,” Ms. Harris told campaign workers 28 hours after President Joe Biden, 81, abandoned the 2024 White House race and endorsed her.

“So hear me when I say I know Donald Trump’s type. In this campaign, I will proudly, I will proudly put my record against his,” said Ms. Harris, who was attorney general of California and a US senator before serving as Mr. Biden’s vice president.

The Trump campaign responded to Ms. Harris’ comments. “Kamala Harris is just as incompetent as Joe Biden and even more liberal,” said Karoline Leavitt, the campaign’s national press secretary. “Not only does Kamala need to defend her support of Joe Biden’s failed agenda over the past four years, she also needs to answer for her own terrible weak-on-crime record in California.”

Mr. Trump is due to be sentenced in September after having been found guilty of falsifying business records to hide hush money payments to a porn star. He also faces criminal charges related to his efforts to overturn Biden’s 2020 victory. He falsely claims he lost in 2020 because of election fraud.

Recovering from COVID-19 at his home in Delaware, Mr. Biden called into Ms. Harris’ campaign event. He sounded hoarse but appreciative of his vice president.

Mr. Biden said he thought he had made the right decision by dropping out. The oldest person ever to occupy the Oval Office, Mr. Biden said on Sunday he would remain in the presidency until his term ends on Jan. 20, 2025.

Ms. Harris, 59, outlined a series of policies she promised to pursue including signing laws to protect abortion rights and ban assault rifles and said she would make rebuilding the middle class the focus of her presidency.

Within minutes of receiving Mr. Biden’s backing on Sunday, Harris began consolidating Democratic support for her presidential bid, securing commitments from hundreds of convention delegates, announcing a massive fundraising haul and earning endorsements from top party figures, Reuters was first to report.

These included former Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who has remained influential since stepping down as the party’s House of Representatives leader in 2022. The AFL-CIO labor union federation, which represents 12.5 million workers, said on Monday it had also endorsed Harris for president.

Ms. Harris’ campaign said it raised $81 million in the 24 hours following Mr. Biden’s exit, the most for a single day in the 2024 campaign for either party.

Virtually all of the prominent Democrats who had been seen as potential challengers to Harris have declared support for her, including Governors Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan, Gavin Newsom of California and Andy Beshear of Kentucky. Ms. Whitmer, in a post on X, on Monday said she would serve as co-chair of Ms. Harris’ campaign.

Mr. Biden’s departure was the latest shock to a White House race that included his disastrous June 27 debate performance against former President Trump and the July 13 near-assassination of Trump by a gunman during a campaign stop.

Ms. Harris lauded Mr. Biden for his service to the country. At a White House event to honor college athletes earlier on Monday, she said: “Joe Biden’s legacy over the last three years is unmatched in modern history.”

Ms. Harris will travel on Tuesday to Milwaukee, the largest city in the battleground state of Wisconsin, which last week hosted a Republican National Convention that offered a stark display of Trump’s dominance over his party.

 

NEW GENERATION

Ms. Harris, who is Black and Asian American, would fashion an entirely new dynamic with Mr. Trump, 78, offering a vivid generational and cultural contrast.

The Trump campaign has been preparing for her possible rise for weeks, sources told Reuters. It sent out a detailed critique of her record on immigration and other issues on Monday, accusing her of being more liberal than Mr. Biden.

It alleged that Ms. Harris favored abolishing the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency and decriminalizing border crossings, backed the so-called Green New Deal, supported the administration’s electric vehicle mandates and encouraged “defund the police” efforts.

Some of those were positions Ms. Harris adopted as an unsuccessful presidential candidate in the 2020 election when she was running on a more liberal agenda than Biden but were not ones that the administration assumed, particularly with regard to border security and law enforcement issues.

Eric Holder, who was US attorney general in the administration of President Barack Obama, and his law firm Covington & Burling LLP will conduct the vetting of Harris’ potential running mates, according to two sources familiar with the matter.

Mr. Trump, whose false claims that his 2020 loss to Mr. Biden was the result of fraud inspired the Jan. 6, 2021, assault on the US Capitol, on Monday questioned Democrats’ right to change candidates.

“They stole the race from Biden after he won it in the primaries,” Mr. Trump said on his Truth Social platform. – Reuters

Philippines to start winding down operations of offshore gaming hubs

REUTERS

 – The Philippines’ gaming regulator said on Tuesday it will cancel the licenses of offshore gambling firms and work with law enforcement agencies to implement President Ferdinand Marcos Jr’s order of a total ban on the industry.

In his State of the Nation address on Monday, Mr. Marcos said he was banning Philippine Offshore Gaming Operators (POGOs), an industry dominated by Chinese firms, and ordered the regulator to wind down the sector by the end of the year.

“No problem in closing down POGOs because I can invoke national security and the president’s order,” Alejandro Tengco, chairman of state gaming regulator Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp (PAGCOR), told Reuters.

The 42 licensed POGOs directly and indirectly employ around 40,000 Filipinos, PAGCOR data show, while nearly 23,000 foreigners worked in the industry as of end-2023.

The challenge for law enforcers was to prevent these firms from going underground, Mr. Tengco said, adding the government stood to lose around 23 billion pesos ($400 million) of license fees and taxes annually from the licensed POGOs.

The finance and labour ministries will assist displaced Filipino workers through safety nets and training programs, Finance Secretary Ralph Recto said in a statement.

A separate crackdown on hundreds of illegal POGOs, home to scam farms and other crimes such as human trafficking and torture, will continue, the Presidential Anti-Organized Crime Commission said in a statement.

Foreign nationals working in these companies will be deported, the commission said.

The online gaming industry emerged in the Philippines in 2016 and grew exponentially as operators capitalized on the country’s liberal gaming laws to target customers in China, where gambling is banned.

The POGO industry, which at its peak prior to the pandemic involved 300 firms, boosted demand for apartments, offices, and transportation services. – Reuters

 

Blinken, Austin to shore up US-Asia ties amid political uncertainty at home

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken. Official White House — CAMERON SMITH VIA FLICKR

 – Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin head to Asia this week to reassure allies and partners of US support, the State Department’s top official for East Asia said on Monday, as the November U.S. presidential election casts uncertainty over Washington’s foreign policy.

US tensions with China will provide the backdrop to the trip. Mr. Blinken is expected to meet his Chinese counterpart Wang Yi on the sidelines of regional meetings in Laos, Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Kritenbrink told reporters.

Mr. Blinken and Mr. Austin will hold security talks with US allies Japan and the Philippines. Mr. Blinken will also visit Singapore and Mongolia, and stop in Vietnam for the funeral of Nguyen Phu Trong, head of the ruling Communist Party, who died last week.

The trip follows a tumultuous month in Washington. President Joe Biden announced on Sunday he will not run for reelection, and endorsed his vice president, Kamala Harris, to replace him. The Republican nominee, former President Donald Trump, earlier survived an assassination attempt.

Asked what Mr. Blinken will say to allies about Mr. Biden’s decision to step aside and whether that could bring changes in policy, Mr. Kritenbrink said the message would be that America is “all-in on the Indo-Pacific.”

“We do try to reassure allies and partners that there are certain fundamentals, I think, about America’s engagement that are not going to change that have been consistent,” he said, citing American investments and bipartisan support in Washington for the administration’s approach to the region.

Mr. Trump, who has been leading in the polls ahead of the Nov. 5 election, launched a trade war against China while in the White House, and as a candidate has suggested he would impose tariffs of 60% or higher on all Chinese goods.

He has also signaled he would demand Taiwan boost its defense spending in the face of potential Chinese aggression. Allies of the former president have assured Japan and South Korea he would continue Mr. Biden’s engagement with them aimed at countering China and North Korea.

 

REGIONAL SECURITY

In Laos, Mr. Blinken will attend meetings of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) on Friday and Saturday, where China’s Wang and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov are also expected to attend. A North Korean official would also likely be in attendance, Mr. Kritenbrink said.

In Laos, officials are expected to discuss the conflict in Myanmar after the military seized power three years ago. The US expects Myanmar to be represented by a nonpolitical official as it has been at previous meetings since the coup, Mr. Kritenbrink said.

Mr. Kritenbrink said Washington welcomed an announcement by Manila on Sunday that it had reached an understanding with China on the resupply of a Filipino naval ship beached on the Second Thomas Shoal.

In Tokyo, Mr. Blinken and Mr. Austin will meet Japanese counterparts on July 28 and focus on implementation of agreements reached at an April Washington summit between Mr. Biden and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida.

There, the allies announced plans to upgrade their military alliance, including the US military command in Japan and more joint development of defense equipment, amid shared concerns about China and Russia.

Tokyo wants a four-star US commander in Japan to match the rank of the head of a new Japanese headquarters that will oversee all of Japan’s military operations from 2025. Experts say that could lay the groundwork for a future unified Japanese-US command.

The US has said it would commit to match Japan’s planned command upgrade, but experts say there have been questions as to where a four-star US commander for Japan would be based.

Mr. Kritenbrink said “command and control” would be discussed, and added: “there’ll be discussions about our roles and missions and capabilities; how the alliance is postured to meet those challenges.”

“The United States and Japan are going to demonstrate in a responsible way how we will stand up and ensure not just the defense of Japan, but also our contribution to regional security.” – Reuters

Philippines to still assert South China Sea rights after resupply deal with China

FILE PHOTO of BRP Sierra Madre taken March 29, 2014. — REUTERS

 – The Philippines will keep asserting its rights in the South China Sea after it reached a “provisional arrangement” with China about its resupply missions to the contested Second Thomas Shoal, the foreign ministry said on Monday.

While neither the Chinese foreign ministry nor the Philippines‘ Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) provided details of the arrangement, Manila said it “will not prejudice our respective national positions.”

“In our desire to de-escalate the situation in the South China Sea to manage differences in a peaceful manner, we emphasize that the agreement was done in good faith and the Philippines remains ready to implement it,” the DFA said in a statement.

“We urge China to do the same.”

The Chinese foreign ministry confirmed the “temporary arrangement” with the two sides agreeing to jointly manage maritime differences and de-escalate the situation.

China claims nearly all of the South China Sea, including the Second Thomas Shoal, where the Philippines maintains a rusty naval ship, the Sierra Madre, that it deliberately grounded in 1999 to reinforce its maritime claims.

Manila regularly sends supply missions to sailors stationed at the shoal, turning it into a flashpoint with Beijing.

The Chinese foreign ministry reiterated its demand for the Philippines to tow away the grounded warship, and said it would not accept Manila shipping large amounts of building materials to the shoal.

“Between now and when the warship is towed away, should the Philippines need to send living necessities to the personnel living on the warship, China is willing to allow it in a humanitarian spirit if the Philippines informs China in advance and after on-site verification is conducted,” it said in a statement.

Washington welcomed diplomatic efforts to deescalate tensions in the South China Sea, Assistant Secretary of State Dan Kritenbrink told reporters.

“I think the key now from our vantage will be to ensure that it is implemented number one, and number two that China‘s ceases its provocative and destabilizing activities around Second Thomas Shoal that we’ve seen in recent weeks,” he said.

The Philippine has previously said it was against informing China in advance about its resupply missions, which it maintains are lawful, and said this had not changed under the new deal despite the statement from the Chinese ministry.

“The principles and approaches laid out in the agreement were reached through a series of careful and meticulous consultations between both sides that paved the way for a convergence of ideas without compromising national positions,” the Philippines‘ DFA said.

“The spokesperson’s statement therefore regarding prior notification and on-site confirmation is inaccurate,” it added.

China rejects a 2016 ruling by the Permanent Court of Arbitration in the Hague that Beijing’s expansive claims had no basis under international law. The case was brought to the court by the Philippines. – Reuters

Marcos orders total ban on POGOs

PRESIDENT Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. delivers his third State of the Nation Address during the joint session of the 19th Congress at the Plenary Hall of the House of Representatives, Quezon City on Monday, July 22. — PHILIPPINE STAR/KJ ROSALES

By Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza, Reporter

PRESIDENT Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. on Monday announced a total ban on all offshore gaming operations in the Philippines, saying these have been linked to illegal activities including money laundering and financial scams.

“Effective today, all POGOs are banned,” he said during his State of the Nation Address (SONA), referring to Philippine offshore gaming operators (POGOs).

He also ordered the Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp. (PAGCOR) to wind down and end the operations of all POGO facilities by the end of 2024. He also ordered the Labor department to find new jobs for POGO workers that will be displaced.

“We hear the loud cry of the people against POGOs… The grave abuse and disrespect to our system of laws must stop,” Mr. Marcos said.

Mr. Marcos received a standing ovation after announcing the ban in his third SONA, which analysts said lacked details on the reform agenda and failed to discuss medium-term economic goals.

POGOs have been “disguising” as “legitimate entities” but their operations have ventured into illicit areas, he said.

He linked POGOs to financial scams, money laundering, prostitution, human trafficking, kidnapping, brutal torture and “even murder.”

The reputational risk from POGOs, which mostly involve Chinese nationals and cater to Chinese markets, could cost the government P55.36 billion in forgone investments due to crimes linked to them, and P29.01 billion in forgone revenues in tourism, the Finance department earlier said.

Several business groups led by the Makati Business Club recently called for a total ban on POGOs, saying their investments accounted for just 0.2% of the Philippines’ gross domestic product (GDP) in 2023 and pointed out significant social costs.

Over 50% of kidnapping cases in 2022 were POGO-related, according to Philippine National Police (PNP) data.

Even Senator Ana Theresia Hontiveros-Baraquel, the highest elected official among opposition personalities, joined the crowd in applauding Mr. Marcos’ announcement.

“This was something people were expecting, thus the standing ovation,” Maria Ela L. Atienza, a political science professor at the University of the Philippines, said in a Viber message. “Hopefully, this can bolster his popularity and trust ratings.”

Mr. Marcos’ performance and trust ratings dropped in the latest Pulse Asia Research, Inc. poll, which was released as he completed his second year in office.

Ms. Atienza noted that POGOs are viewed by many in the government as “negligible” because they are no longer bringing in much revenues.

Foundation for Economic Freedom, Inc. President Calixto V. Chikiamco also expressed support for the phaseout of all POGOs.

“This will help reduce criminality and corruption and even improve our relations with China, which has called for dismantling of POGOs,” he said.

Finance Secretary Ralph G. Recto said the President’s decision to ban POGOs would not lead to major revenue losses for the government.

“When you look at the cost-benefit analysis done by the DoF (Department of Finance), we are spending more than we are earning from POGOs,” he told BusinessWorld after the SONA.

Mr. Marcos began his third SONA speech, which was longer than last year’s, with a discussion of government efforts to address rising prices, touting his executive order that further reduced tariff rates for rice and other key commodities until 2028, as well as the temporary price cap on rice in October.

The Philippine leader said his government had seized more than P2.7 billion worth of smuggled agro-fishery products through modernized Customs procedures and heightened enforcement, “preventing them from entering the market and negatively influencing prices.”

Mr. Marcos said the government would soon enforce a pre-border technical verification and cross-border electronic invoicing of imports. “This will send a strong signal that we mean serious business.”

He also focused on his administration’s “aggressive” infrastructure development program, which he said is key to making the Philippines an upper middle-income economy.

“With the results that we have seen two years into this administration, we can claim that despite challenges, we are steadily progressing towards our targets in the medium term,” he said.

The Marcos administration targets a 6-7% gross domestic product (GDP) growth this year. Under the Philippine Development Plan (PDP) 2023-2028, GDP annual growth target was set at 6.5-8% until 2028.

By 2028, the country also aims for a gross national income (GNI) per capita of $6,044-$6,571, a 3% deficit-to-GDP ratio, and debt-to-GDP ratio of 48-53%.

“To sustain the country’s economic gains, we are promoting investment-led growth. We have set in motion policies and programs to create an environment conducive for businesses to thrive, like reforms in the capital markets, and implementation of ‘green lanes,’” Mr. Marcos said.

Fiscal analyst Zy-za Nadine M. Suzara said Mr. Marcos’ third SONA heavily focused on the government’s accomplishments in the implementation of existing programs that were mostly initiated during previous administrations.

“He did not detail a reform agenda on improving bureaucratic efficiency and sound fiscal management even if these two are part of his eight-point socioeconomic agenda,” she said in an e-mail.

“It appears that these are not among his governance priorities even if these are actually at the core of achieving the rest of his socioeconomic agenda.”

On industrial policy, Mr. Marcos said the IT and creative sectors are burgeoning industries, “knowing no territorial bounds, and holding great promise for our talented and hardworking people.”

Cielo D. Magno, a professor at the University of the Philippines School of Economics, praised Mr. Marcos for touching on the creative and IT sectors, but said he should have discussed a “comprehensive industrial policy.”

“I appreciate clear instructions regarding human capital,” she added.

Mr. Marcos said in his speech that “schools will serve as the preeminent incubators of the innovative and creative energies of all Filipinos.”

He said the government would bank on Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) to address joblessness, which hit a four-month high in June.

“Eight out of 10 graduates of TVET ultimately land decent jobs. So with its high employability rate, TVET will definitely be instrumental in capacitating our people.”

Jesus Felipe, director of the Angelo King Institute for Economic and Business Studies at De La Salle University, noted that the manufacturing sector accounts for only about 8% of the country’s employment share, making it more impossible for the country to produce jobs that are tech-driven.

“Look at the jobs that this economy generates — people riding motorcycles for delivery, etc.,” he said in a phone call. “Do you really believe that you can have a high-income economy?”

PHL ‘CANNOT WAVER’
Mr. Marcos gained a standing ovation after saying that the Philippines would not yield or waver in defending its features in the South China Sea.

Philippine officials “continuously try to find ways to de-escalate tensions in contested areas with our counterparts without compromising our position and our principles,” he said.

“The Philippines cannot yield, the Philippines cannot waver.”

Mr. Marcos, who has visited over 20 countries since his presidency in June 2022, said a substantial number of investment pledges have already commenced operations, “with many more at various stages of development.” These could create over 200,000 jobs for Filipinos, he added.

Among the administration’s priority bills, Mr. Marcos only mentioned the proposed amendments to the Electric Power Industry Reform Act of 2001 and the Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprises Act of 2021, which significantly lowered taxes on domestic and foreign corporations. 

“While it’s good to hear promises and instructions, it is important for the public to continuously monitor and engage the government to hold them accountable,” Ms. Magno said. “Promises can dissipate once the spotlights on his speech are turned off.”

Diwa C. Guinigundo, a former central bank deputy governor, said Mr. Marcos’ headline messages were sound “although we need to dissect them.”

The President should have disclosed why the Philippine Health Insurance Corp. needed to remit P80 billion to the National Government “when this amount could have secured wider and higher health coverage for its members,” he said in a Viber message.

British Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines Executive Director and Trustee Christopher James Nelson told BusinessWorld in a phone call that was pleased to hear the President discuss agriculture policies, and hoped for Congress’ swift passage of the Anti-Agricultural Smuggling Act.

He said the real issue for foreign investors is whether the Philippines will continue to open up markets and remove foreign restrictions.

Senate President Francis G. Escudero told reporters on the sidelines of the President’s address to Congress that Mr. Marcos’ speech showed that he was serious about improving public transportation, agriculture and dealing with crimes linked to POGOs.

However, the POGO ban could also negatively affect the country’s real estate market, Albay Rep. Jose Ma. Clemente “Joey” S. Salceda, who heads the House ways and means committee, told BusinessWorld. 

“We just have to find the lost revenues, lost employment [due to the POGO ban],” he said after Mr. Marcos’ SONA. “And of course, it will dampen the real estate market.”

“I hope they make a differentiation with IGLs (internet gaming license), [so that] when they ban POGOs it will not lead to a banning of the entire IGL, because that’s P43 billion [that could be lost],” he added.

Philippine Exporters Confederation, Inc. and Employers Confederation of Philippines President Sergio R. Ortiz-Luis told BusinessWorld by telephone that a less than six-month transition for licensed POGOs to wind down operations would mitigate immediate joblessness within the industry.

“The problem is whether we like it or not, there are a lot of investments and contracts, services that revolve around legal POGOs, and I’m sure they are hoping for a way to find an extension (to wind down operations).”

“One area I was hoping he would stress on is the ease of doing business. Although he mentioned the CREATE More bill, it is important to make this point with local governments to reduce the bureaucracy and make it easier for businesses to expand here,” Philippine Chamber of Commerce Chairman George T. Barcelon told BusinessWorld by telephone.

He said legal POGO firms affected by the ban could get back on their feet by pursuing other legitimate businesses that would hire Filipino workers instead of Chinese immigrants serving a Chinese market. — with Chloe Mari A Hufana, Kenneth Christiane L. Basilio and John Victor D. Ordoñez