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Marcial books 2024 Paris Olympic ticket, vies for Asian Games gold

EUMIR MARCIAL, bronze medalist in the Tokyo Games, dominated Mr. Ghousoon in their semifinal bout at the Hangzhou gymnasium, twice decking the Syrian in the second round. — POC-PSC MEDIAL POOL

HANGZHOU, China — Eumir Marcial hit two birds with one stone in the 19th Asian Games on Wednesday.

The Filipino southpaw made it to the gold medal round of the men’s 80-kg class after demolishing Ahmad Ghousoon of Syria and earned an outright berth in the 2024 Paris Olympics.

Mr. Marcial, bronze medalist in the Tokyo Games, dominated Mr. Ghousoon in their semifinal bout at the Hangzhou gymnasium, twice decking the Syrian in the second round, including a left jab which set him up for a smashing right hook that served as the coup de grace in the rousing victory.

Official time was 1:49 of the second round.

When everything was over, Mr. Marcial went to his corner and cried on the shoulders of coaches Ronald Chavez and Don Abnett as reality quickly set in that he’s bound for another shot at the Olympics.

Boxing is among the few sports in this edition of the continental meet that serve as qualifier to next year’s Paris Olympiad.

Emotional Mr. Marcial, who initially doubted he’d be able to compete in the Olympiad again after his weight class of 75 kg had been scrapped in the Paris Games.

But upon the prodding of his family including his wife Princess, Mr. Marcial gave it one more shot, moved up in weight, and briefly set aside his pro boxing career for the Asiad.

Now, he’s just a win away from winning that gold.

“That’s Eumir (Marcial), he’s very focused and dedicated and he has trained well not only for the Asian Games but also for his Olympic qualification,” said Philippine Olympic Committee (POC) President Abraham ‘Bambol’ Tolentino, one of the many people Mr. Marcial thanked in his quest for another Olympic stint, along with ABAP (Association of Boxing Alliances in the Philippines) chairman Ricky Vargas, and boxing legend and promoter Manny Pacquiao.

Mr. Marcial vies for Philippine boxing’s first Asiad gold since 2010 as he faces Tanglatihan Tuohetaerbieke of China, a 4-1 win over Turabek Khabibullaev of Uzbekistan in the other semifinal bout.

The gold medal round is set on Thursday at 8:45 p.m. — POC-PSC Medial Pool

UP Fighting Maroons and NU Bulldogs share UAAP basketball lead

MALICK DIOUF — FACEBOOK.COM/WEARETHEUAAP

Games Saturday
(Smart Araneta Coliseum)
11 a.m. — AdU vs Ateneo (Men)
1 p.m. — NU vs UP (Men)
3 p.m. — UST vs DLSU (Men)
5 p.m. — FEU vs UE (Men)

NATIONAL University (NU) and the University of the Philippines (UP) zoomed to a joint leadership after contrasting wins in the UAAP Season 86 men’s basketball tournament yesterday (Oct. 4) at the Mall of Asia Arena in Pasay City.

The Bulldogs fended off a late-game uprising by the Far Eastern University (FEU) Tamaraws, 71-65, as the Fighting Maroons cruised to an 84-69 win against University of the East (UE) Red Warriors for similar 2-0 cards on top of the league so far.

NU, after slaying reigning champion Ateneo de Manila University (ADMU) with a 77-64 win last weekend, led by as many as 18 points but needed one last stand to repel FEU in a gritty six-point win behind the efforts of Kean Baclaan.

The 5-foot-8 floor general stood tall against the charging Tamaraws with near triple-double of 15 points, 11 rebounds and seven assists plus four steals to spearhead another Bulldogs’ scattered onslaught.

Like their win against the Blue Eagles, a bevy of Bulldogs rose to the occasion with Mike Malonzo (10), Nash Enriquez (9), Omar John (9) and Jake Figueroa (8) manufacturing key support.

“We’re lucky enough to get this win because we really played a bad game. FEU is a dangerous team. Lucky for us, we got this win,” said Mr. Napa as the Bulldogs allowed the Tamaraws to strike within 47-49 in the third quarter.

Both teams traded blows and with the Bulldogs clinging to a 67-62 cushion in the last two minutes, Mr. Baclaan brought them home with a fadeaway jumper that pretty much sealed the deal.

Earlier, reigning Most Valuable Player (MVP) Malick Diouf continued his dominance with 19 points, 16 rebounds, two assists, two steals and three blocks as UP banked on a searing 32-9 start for its second straight blowout win after clobbering Adamson University, 68-51.

“We started out strong which is good for us but one thing coach Goldwin (Monteverde) would always emphasize is to be consistent in all four quarters,” said deputy Christian Luanzon as UP allowed multiple fightback attempts from University of the East after leading by as many as 26 points.

“That’s one thing that was lacking today and as coaches would say, it’s back to the drawing board for us. It’s always a process for us.”

NU and UP will slug it out for the solo lead on Saturday at the Smart Araneta Coliseum to headline another four-game bill.

Meanwhile, Precious Momowei, with 12 points and 22 rebounds, led host UE, which slid to 1-1 after an 80-70 debut win over University of Santo Tomas (UST). Cholo Anonuevo (16) paced the winless Tamaraws (2-0) after an 87-76 loss to De La Salle University (DLSU), which is still playing rival Ateneo as of press time. — John Bryan Ulanday

The Scores:

First Game

UP 84 – Diouf 19, Cansino 17, Lopez 9, Torculas 8, Alarcon 8, Abadiano 6, Cagulangan 5, Torres 5, Briones 3, Belmonte 2, Alter 2, Felicilda 0, Pablo 0, Gonzales 0, Gagate 0.

UE 69 – Momowei 12, Remogat 11, Sawat 10, Gilbuena 9, Fikes 8, Galang 6, Cruz-Dumont 5, Lingolingo 3, Tulabut 2, Spandonis 2, Langit 1, Manalang 0, Maglupay 0, Wilson 0.

Quarterscores: 32-9, 49-28, 62-49, 84-69.

Second Game

NU 71 – Baclaan 15, Malonzo 10, Enriquez 9, John 9, Figueroa 8, Lim 5, Yu 4, Palacielo 4, Manansala 4, Parks 3, Jumamoy 0, Padrones 0.

FEU 65 – Anonuevo 16, Gonzales 15, Torres 14, Sleat 8, Bagunu 5, Alforque 2, Ona 2, Faty 2, Bautista 1, Tempra 0.

Quarterscores: 14-8, 43-30, 57-51, 71-65.

Philippine cycling team ready for men’s road race

PHILIPPINE CYCLING TEAM (from left) coach Virgilio Espiritu, Joshua Pascual, Jonel Carcueva, Ronald Oranza and Reinhard Gorantes — POC-PSC MEDIA POOL

HANGZHOU, China — Three Filipino riders who have racked thousands of kilometers at home but who are racing for the first time on the Asian Games stage make their own medal bid in cycling’s men’s road race on Thursday in Chung’an.

Ronald Oranza, Jonel Carcueva and Joshua Pascual will carry the fight for the PhilCycling team headed by Philippine Olympic Committee (POC) President Abraham “Bambol” Tolentino over an out-and-back 210-km route starting at 10 a.m.

The three Filipinos will be racing against 63 athletes from the 19-nation field where Kazakhstan, Mongolia and Japan are ranked high on the start list.

“Our riders are raring to go, regardless of how tough the race is,” said head coach Reinhard Gorantes from the Athletes Village in Chun’an. “What our riders lack in experience racing outside of the Philippines they’ll make up with their big fighting heart.”

Mr. Gorantes and fellow coach Virgilio Espiritu in Chun’an surveyed the route the past two days and described the terrain as relatively flat and winding with its major climb set at no more than three kms with an elevation that rises to under 350 meters.

“This will be a race of speed and endurance — it’s a one-day race, no tomorrow,” said Mr. Espiritu, who acknowledged the support of the POC and the Philippine Sports Commission’s (PSC) support for the riders and their teams — Philippine Navy-Standard Insurance for Mr. Oranza, Excellent for Mr. Pascual and Go for Gold for Mr. Carcueva.

Cycling contributed a bronze medal to the Philippine coffers early this week through Patrick Coo in men’s BMX racing.

Victor Espiritu, considered as perhaps the most complete Filipino cyclist — he packs power in both spring and climb — clinched the country’s last medal in Asian Games cycling, a bronze, at the 1998 edition in Bangkok, Thailand.

Mr. Oranza is no stranger to international competitions having clinched bronze medals in road and criterium in his most previous Southeast Asian Games in Cambodia last May, but vowed to go all out against a field that features riders who are continental team regulars in the UCI Asia Tour.

“This is for flag and country,” Mr. Oranza said. “We will ride as a team and compete as a team.”

Mr. Carcueva, the reigning national champion for road, had experiences as a continental team rider but also is aware what a one day race requires.

“We’ll give everything we have in four- or five hours of racing,” he said.

Mr. Pascual, on the other hand, was plucked from the 7-Eleven Road Bike Philippines — where he’s on loan from Excellent — that raced in the recent Le Tour de Langakawi and flew back to Manila middle of last week to join the road squad in its flight to here Thursday.

“Like what my teammates said, we’ll give everything we have … this is not a stage race, there’s no stage two tomorrow,” Mr. Pascual said. — POC-PSC Media Pool

Weightlifter Sarno will go for broke in women’s 76kg

VANESSA SARNO — PHILIPPINE STAR/JUN MENDOZA

HANGZHOU, China — Weightlifter Vanessa Sarno, gold medalist in the 2020 Asian Championships and the reigning, defending SEA Games champion, will go for broke in the women’s 76kg Thursday at the 19th Asian Games here.

The cheerful 20-year-old, who as a child in Tagbilaran, Bohol lifted barbells as a hobby, will seek a medal in the weight class that’s five kilos more than her normal weight of 71kg.

Monico Puentevella, president of the Samahang Weightlifting ng Pilipinas, rued the organizers’ decision to scrap the women’s 71kg class where Ms. Sarno also won the silver in the 2023 Asian Championships.

Mr. Puentevella is not losing hope that Ms. Sarno, still trying to shake off a minor elbow injury sustained early this year, can win a medal here like Elreen Ando, who bagged the bronze medal in the 64kg last Monday.

Tokyo Olympics gold medalist Hidilyn Diaz finished fourth in her new weight of 59kg but said the real objective here is to size up her opponents. Then she will seek a ticket to Paris when she competes in the 2023 WFP World Cup in Qatar in December and its 2024 edition in Thailand in April.

Mr. Puentevella said Ms. Sarno, who just turned 20 last month, can pull off a surprise against the field that includes the mighty North Koreans. — Abac Cordero

Hernandez, Mapua Cardinals outlast CSB Blazers, 75-71

PAOLO HERNANDEZ — NCAA

Games Thursday
(Filoil EcoOil Arena)
2 p.m. — LPU vs AU
4 p.m. — Letran vs San Beda

PAOLO Hernandez put on his superman cape in the fourth quarter as Mapua University outlasted College of St. Benilde (CSB), 75-71, yesterday to boost its NCAA Season 99 stock at the Filoil EcoOil Arena.

The sweet-shooting Mr. Hernandez came and saved the day for the Cardinals after a heroic 12-point performance in the final five minutes en route to finishing with a game-high 22 points.

Mapua Cardinals’ last seven points also came from Mr. Hernandez — a clutch jumper and five pressure-packed foul shots — as it claimed its third victory in four outings that was good enough to keep it inside the magic four.

And it was because Mr. Hernandez played Mapua’s man of steel to the hilt.

“He was just clutch,” said Mapua coach Randy Alcantara referring to Paolo Hernandez.

But it took Mapua time to get its game going after struggling painfully in the first half when it trailed by as much as 11 points before it managed to trim it down somehow to a more manageable 37-30 deficit.

And then the Cardinals got it going and kept the game close before they finally caught up on the Blazers by snatching the former’s first lead of the game at 59-58 courtesy of an Hernandez three-point play with a little over five minutes to go.

Mapua also got a big break after Will Gozum fouled out in that same stretch.

It was a heartbreaker for the CSB Blazers, who managed to snatch a 71-70 lead after Miguel Oczon sank a thunderous triple with 35 seconds to go.

It proved to be CSB’s last as Mapua held it scoreless the rest of the way while Mr. Hernandez hammered in the final nail in the coffin with a bucket and three free throws. — Joey Villar

 

CSB sputtered to 1-3.

The scores:

First Game

Mapua 75- Hernandez 22, Escamis 12, Soriano 12, Recto 8, Cuenco 7, Bonifacio 6, Fornis 4, Rosillo 2, Bancale 2, Igliane 0, Asuncion 0, Dalisay 0

CSB  71- Cortez 15, Oczon 14, Gozum 11, Nayve 8, Turco 8, Cajucom 6, Carlos 4, Sangco 4, Marcos 1, Marasigan 0, Mara 0, Jarque 0

Quarterscores: 11-18; 30-37; 50-54; 75-71

Kaya suffers second straight loss in AFC Champion League

KAYA FC Iloilo tumbled to its second straight loss in the AFC Champions League with a 0-4 away beating from Korea’s Incheon United Tuesday night at the Incheon Football Stadium.

The Philippine champs gave up two quickfire goals to Montenegrin striker Stefan Mugosa in the first 19 minutes that set the tone for the K League 1 side’s comprehensive second win out of two en route to a leading six points in Group G.

Kaya, which debuted in the ACL with a 1-3 home defeat to China’s Shandong Taishan FC last Sept. 19, fell to the bottom of the group. It trails second-running Yokohama F. Marinos of Japan and No. 3 Shandong, which carry three points apiece on identical one-win, one-loss records. Yokohama nipped Shandong, 1-0, in the other Match Day 2 pairing.

Mugosa, a legend for Incheon, took only six minutes after kickoff to put the host on the scoreboard with his header off a Min Kyun-Hyung cross from the right flank. He doubled the lead from a spot kick 13 minutes later after drawing a foul from Kaya defender Mar Diano inside the box.

Hernandes Rodrigues made it 3-nil with his 36th minute strike then Congolese Paul-Jose M’Poku sent his free kick into the Philippine net at the 74th to complete the four-goal rout.

Incheon had the lion’s share of possession at 72.6 percent, manufacturing 16 shots, of which 10 were on target. Iloilo managed only one shot on target out of their five total attempts.

Kaya continues its search for an ACL breakthrough on Oct. 25 in another away assignment against Yokohama. — Olmin Leyba

South top seed Bacoor City braces for tough trek to the MPBL title

BACOOR City is locked and loaded to strike against any opposition in the way as it braces for a big target on its back in the 2023 Maharlika Pilipinas Basketball League (MPBL) playoffs.

The Strikers formalized their No. 1 seed finish in the South Division with a 93-65 demolition of also-ran 1Bataan Risers on Tuesday night at the Marikina Sports Center, getting a much-needed morale-booster for an anticipated tough trek to the title.

At 23-5, Bacoor claimed the summit in the South for a homecourt advantage the rest of the way in the division playoffs starting with a best-of-three quarterfinal duel against No. 8 Iloilo United Royals at the Strike Gym this weekend.

All but two players racked up the scoring board for the Strikers with 10 players hitting at least six points in a balanced attack led by Mark Angelo Montuano with 12 points and four rebounds in only 13 minutes of play.

JM Nermal (12) and Alwyn Alday (10) also produced twin figures as Jimboy Pasturan (9), James Kwekuteye (9), Kraniel Villoria (8), Chito Jaime (7), Rocky Acidre (7), Jammer Jamito (6) and Aaron Jeruta (6) contributed for the wards of coach Alex Angeles.

The Strikers’ No. 1 seed finish is an improvement by leaps and bounds from a  seventh-place finish in the South Division last season en route to a quarterfinal finish as they head home with pride and honor for the Bacooreños for the bigger picture more than just contending for the national title.

And the Strikers, indeed, will be in a for a serious business starting on Saturday at its own turn in Strike Gym with an expected rousing home crowd for Game 1 of the quarterfinals against the visiting Royals.

There, Bacoor is determined to show sharper fangs as the No. 1 defensive team in the league after limiting the Risers to just 65 points in their final regular season match.

“We take pride in our defense. That’s our bread and butter,” vowed head coach Alex Angeles, who hardly needed the service of team captain Mark Yee against Bataan. — John Bryan Ulanday

LinkedIn pilots new tools for streamlining tasks as HR, marketers turn to AI

JOB SEEKERS attend the mega job fair organized by the Public Employment Service Office at the Universidad de Manila (UDM) covered court. — PHILIPPINE STAR/EDD GUMBAN

Human resources (HR) leaders and marketers are seeking artificial intelligence (AI) tools to streamline routine tasks, according to employment-focused social media platform LinkedIn Corp.

In LinkedIn’s 2023 survey, HR professionals in the Philippines said AI would assist them in improving relationships with candidates and colleagues (39%) and concentrating on creative and strategic tasks (42%).

It also said that six in 10 local marketers are currently using the technology, with 55% experimenting.

In response to the demand, LinkedIn is starting to roll out new generative AI tools in its Recruiter and Learning platforms, alongside Accelerate, its new automated business-to-business marketing campaign creation experience.

“We view AI as a tool. For workers, AI can help us do the work we most enjoy — and are best at — with more of our time,” said Atul Harkisanka, head of growth markets and country lead for the Philippines at LinkedIn, in an interview with BusinessWorld.

“For companies, AI can help teams manage routine tasks more easily while creating the space and support for teams to think more innovatively,” he added, shifting the focus to valuable people-centric work, such as connecting and building relationships with candidates and fostering a strong company culture.

Mr. Harkisanka also said that LinkedIn’s use of AI in its new tools is combined with insights gained from over 950 million professionals, 63 million companies, and 40,000 skills on its own platform.

“This can help our customers find that short list of qualified candidates faster,” he added.

LinkedIn’s Recruiter 2024 opens opportunities for hirers to use natural language search prompts to receive higher-quality candidate recommendations from the platform.

Meanwhile, its Learning product features AI-powered coaching for specialized answers regarding leadership and management queries, which constitute the most in-demand skills across any job, according to LinkedIn.

“Instead of giving you a one-size-fits-all answer, it will ask you clarifying questions to understand your specific situation and experience better,” it said. “And then offer advice, examples, and feedback based on hundreds of hours of content.”

For marketers using the platform, Accelerate recommends an end-to-end campaign with automatic optimizations and adjustable creative assets to reach the right B2B audience.

Automated performance summary reports will also be provided to help marketers understand campaign analytics and performance for future strategy.

Recruiter 2024 is currently in the pilot phase with a small handful of customers, with plans to roll it out to English-only global customers throughout the year.

AI-powered coaching will expand to all customers by the end of the month, while Accelerate will be available in the coming year. — Miguel Hanz L. Antivola

Pangasinan sets sights on growing MSME exports

PHILIPPINE STAR/EDD GUMBAN

The province of Pangasinan wants to expand the range of products offered by its small and medium-sized businesses for the global market, moving beyond just salt exports, its governor said on Wednesday.

The local government mentored and funded ten entrepreneurs to participate in Manila FAME, a trade show for home, fashion, and lifestyle.

“Since the province is abundant with other natural resources and local talent, there are actually more products we can produce,” Ramon V. Guico III, governor of Pangasinan, told BusinessWorld at the Manila FAME launch. 

“We have to transcend beyond what we are known for — salt, bagoong, tinapa, bangus, alamang, patis,” he added on the province being a major producer of salt, crops, and milkfish. “We have to give a different perspective.”

Mr. Guico said that the province would like to promote the use of its indigenous materials and technology for the “international marketability” of its micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs). Such materials include corn husks, buri, rattan, and bamboo.

Pangasinan saw 13,981 MSMEs in 2020, a decrease from 14,480 in the previous year, according to the Pangasinan Provincial Planning and Development Office. This consisted mostly of microenterprises with an income of less than P3 million, it said.

It also noted that manufactured products such as furniture, wood products, and metal crafts are considered leading industries by the province, with an export value of $168,000.

“We have to double or triple [our MSMEs] in the coming months and years,” Mr. Guico said on continuing support for the province’s MSMEs, alongside other initiatives for economic development and job creation.

“Championing MSMEs shouldn’t be an option,” he said. “It should be part of the local government’s agenda — to invest in their MSMEs.”

The Pangasinan Polytechnic College, which is fully owned and run by the provincial government, is set to offer free educational and vocational courses upon opening, including programs of the Technical Education and Skills Development Authority.

Mr. Guico noted that the institution can be an arm of the local government to sustain programs for MSME growth.

“We are in serious talks with major investors to establish more economic zones in the province,” he said on expanding beyond the North Luzon Aero Industrial Park-Special Economic Zone in Binalonan, Pangasinan.

Mr. Guico also noted the local administration’s plans to establish an international seaport and airport in the province to position itself as an accessible industrial hub.

He will sign a joint venture agreement on Oct. 19 with San Miguel Holdings Corp. for the first phase implementation of the Pangasinan Link Expressway, connecting Binalonan to the province capital Lingayen.

The first phase will be completed in 48 months, he said. — Miguel Hanz L. Antivola

Thailand vows to restore tourist confidence after mall shooting

A POLICE OFFICER is seen inside the luxury Siam Paragon shopping mall after Thai police arrested a teenage gunman who is suspected of killing foreigners and wounding other people in a shooting, in Bangkok, Thailand, Oct. 4, 2023. — REUTERS

BANGKOK — Thailand will restore confidence in its critical tourism sector, officials said on Wednesday, a day after a shooting spree at a luxury shopping mall in which two foreigners were killed clouded hopes for a recovery in overseas visitors.

Police have arrested a teenager suspected to have entered the Siam Paragon mall in Bangkok’s commercial heart on Tuesday and unleashed a volley of gunfire, killing two women, one from China and the other from Myanmar, and wounding five people.

The shooting came as new Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin is trying to bolster tourism, a key driver of Southeast Asia’s second largest economy that has been slow to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic.

China is vital to that effort as the biggest source of foreign visitors to Thailand in pre-COVID years.

Mr. Srettha’s administration last month introduced visa-free entry for Chinese nationals to facilitate travel and help overcome what Thailand had said were unfounded concerns about safety.

Thapanee Kiatphaibool, governor of the Tourism Authority of Thailand, said government agencies would do even more to restore confidence.

“We need to improve security in all areas for Thai and foreign tourists,” she told reporters without outlining any specific steps.

Mr. Srettha, a property developer who was elected prime minister in August, said in a social media post late on Tuesday that his government would “implement the highest safety measures” for tourists.

Although gun violence and gun ownership are common in Thailand, security checks in public areas, including shopping malls and transport systems, are typically relaxed.

“This will impact tourism confidence and will affect our reputation,” said Somsong Sachaphimukh, vice president of the Tourism Council of Thailand industry group.

“In the past, there were complaints about safety from China but this was something unthinkable.”

‘SHOCKED’
Chinese visitors accounted for 11 million of a record 39.9 million foreign tourists to Thailand in 2019, before the pandemic.

But their return to Thailand, and elsewhere in Southeast Asia, has been sluggish, prompting the government’s decision on the visa waiver ahead of the main tourism season.

Thailand recorded 20 million foreign tourist arrivals in the January to October period, who spent 839 billion baht ($22.58 billion). Its target is 29 million visitors this year.

At the re-opened Siam Paragon mall, on a typically gridlocked thoroughfare, crowds were trickling back. A bouquet of flowers was propped up next to one entrance to the mall.

Dong Peijian, a 34-year-old Chinese tourist, said he was unsettled by the shooting.

“I’m quite shocked,” he said, “These sort of shooting incidents … would make Chinese people re-consider and opt for holidays in other countries.” — Reuters

Europe navigates US-China rivalry amid increasingly choppy waters

MARKUS SPISKE-UNSPLASH

AT A World Trade Organization (WTO) event in September, former British prime minister Gordon Brown voiced out loud the fear that has quietly started to echo in the halls of power across Europe.

“Europe does not want to end up squeezed between America and China, either a Chinese colony or an American colony,” he said of a scenario in which rivalry between China and the United States could lead to a world of two hostile power axes.

“For even if Europe would always choose America, upon whom its security depends, it also knows that its lifeblood, far more so than for the USA, is trade,” added Mr. Brown, who since quitting UK politics has taken senior UN roles on global issues.

The fracturing of the rules and bonds tying the global economy together — so-called “geo-economic fragmentation” — seemed implausible only a few years ago. Now, it is a headline topic at the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) annual meeting of economic leaders in the Moroccan city of Marrakech next week.

Nowhere is it more pressing than for Europe, whose wealth has always relied on trade, from its rapacious colonial history through to its reinvention as self-styled champion of WTO rules.

Together, the 27 countries of the European Union (EU) make up the world’s biggest trade bloc, accounting for 16% of world imports and exports. That also makes them highly reliant on goods from elsewhere, ranging from critical raw materials to blood plasma.

But tariffs and other trade curbs are rising as governments seek to counter populist rivals who have snapped up the votes of those left behind by two decades of rapid globalization including China’s entry into the global trading system.

Both the United States and Europe have been hardening their stance towards Beijing while stressing the rules of world trade must be fairly applied. But Washington, some observers argue, is already testing how far those rules can be stretched.

“Europe’s clear belief in holding to WTO principles in a world where the other two big powers don’t really hold to them limits, in some ways, its opportunities for cooperation with the United States,” Brad Setser, a trade veteran who has advised the Biden administration, told a Brussels audience last month.

One sign of that was the strain in talks on a US-Europe “green steel” club erecting trade barriers to box out China. The main EU concern is that the U.S. proposals could break WTO rules by discriminating against third parties.

‘BADLY PREPARED’
Back in 2020 there was a sigh of relief among most European governments when Joseph R. Biden replaced Donald Trump as president. But they now recognize that any US consensus for free trade has long gone and that they must adapt — preferably before a 2024 US election that might return Mr. Trump to the White House.

“(European) firms need to be prepared for extreme scenarios in which the US forces them to leave China,” warned a discussion paper presented to EU finance ministers last month entitled “Dealing with Europe’s Economic (In-)security.”

While such aggressive sanctions on China are not current US policy, the EU paper seen by Reuters noted the bloc was “badly prepared for a world of geopolitical rivalry and great power competition” that could create such spillover effects.

Europe’s leaders meet in Spain later this week to start sketching out an economic security plan to address the region’s vulnerabilities, with a goal of reaching agreement by yearend.

It won’t be easy.

On the one hand, countries must agree which technologies should be subject to stronger export controls and screening of outbound investments, in some cases weighing security interests against national commercial benefits.

On the other, EU capitals may have to stump up billions of euros of new money to help local industry develop in yet-to-be-confirmed strategic technologies.

They will do that in the knowledge that any measures could incur the ire of Beijing – with German China-focused exporters, for example, standing to lose more in such a case than others.

Wang Huiyao, president of the Beijing-based Center for China and Globalization think tank said Europe should factor in the longstanding cultural ties and commercial interests it has with China in formulating its policy.

“Of course the EU should approach China differently to how the US does,” he said, arguing that differences on human rights and ideology could be worked through.

Ultimately, however, realpolitik might force Europe’s hand.

An IMF analysis this year concluded that, if the world economy split into US-centred and China-focused axes, Europe would fare best by remaining open to both, but noted it “might face heavy costs if such a policy approach significantly raises the possibility of barriers between itself and the US.”

Petra Sigmund, a German official who co-authored Berlin’s China strategy, noted Europe and Washington did not always see eye-to-eye on China but told a recent think tank event the Biden administration showed “great willingness to sort it out”.

“And we really hope … that after the election in the United States this is going to continue.” — Reuters

Malaysia to ask ASEAN’s main rice supplying nations to prioritize members

FARIS MOHAMMED-UNSPLASH

KUALA LUMPUR — Malaysia will call on ASEAN’s main rice supplying nations to prioritize the bloc’s member countries amid concerns over rising prices and supply shortages, state news agency Bernama reported.

Malaysia may hold talks with Thailand or Vietnam on rice supplies, Deputy Agriculture and Food Security Minister Chan Foong Hin said on Wednesday, as agriculture ministers from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) gather in Kuala Lumpur this week.

“At the bilateral sessions, we will raise it, just like how we want to further strengthen ties between two countries so that priority is given to exporting rice to ASEAN countries,” Mr. Chan said.

Thailand and Vietnam are the world’s second- and third-largest exporters of rice after India.

Malaysia imports about 38% of its rice needs and is among several countries affected by export restrictions imposed by producers like India.

Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim on Monday threatened legal action against anyone found hoarding rice as rising costs and lower supplies have led to consumers stockpiling local grains.

Malaysia also announced subsidies and other measures to try to cool rice prices and ensure sufficient supply of locally produced white rice in the market. — Reuters

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