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Only Murders in the Building is a loving parody of the whodunit

ONLY Murders in the Building (2021) -IMDB.COM

ONLY Murders in the Building, starring Steve Martin, Martin Short, and Selena Gomez, has returned for a third season. The popular series follows the whodunit mystery formula, beginning with a murder in the apartment building the characters live in, the perpetrator of which the three sleuths must work out by the series’ end.

Much of the innovation of Only Murders in the Building lies in its incorporation of the true crime podcast with the familiar whodunit formula.

The whodunit is not easily combined with the true crime format. True crime narratives search for their killers in communities of thousands, whereas the whodunit works with a strictly limited number of suspects. True crime stories often turn on an accident or chance events, which would feel unsatisfying within the structure of a cozy detective novel. And true crime narratives always involve difficult ethical implications, whereas the fictional whodunit often works to represent murder as artistically pleasing.

Another way of putting this is that while true crime is tragedy, the whodunit is comedy. It often makes use of irrational situations and explanations. Its detectives are sometimes ridiculous figures who use their absurdity (or, in the case of Only Murders in the Building, are simply absurd) to disarm suspicion and physical violence is downplayed. Most importantly, in a whodunit everything is resolved — we know the killer will be caught.

In his essay “The Guilty Vicarage” (1948), the poet W. H. Auden argues that the whodunit actually resembles a tragedy in the way it offers readers a cathartic experience of violence. But this transgression is neutralized by the eventual identification of the murderer, an act which not only provides narrative closure but also implies the innocence of the rest of the cast.

But more recent criticism has challenged this reading of the genre, arguing that the resolutions of whodunits inevitably have loose ends, or leave tricky ethical questions unanswered.

Although the plot of Only Murders in the Building borrows the tropes of the whodunit, it is far from a conventionally cozy crime caper.

In 1929, the critic Ronald Knox devised his 10 commandments for the detective writer.
Knox’s rules were satirical, poking fun at the cliches of the interwar whodunit (for instance, his rule that “no Chinaman must figure in the story” satirized the tendency of interwar popular fiction to include depictions of Asian villainy). But Only Murders deliberately breaks many of Knox’s injuctions.

For instance, Knox rules that “not more than one secret room or passage is allowable.” Of course, the Arconia — the building the murders happen in — is riddled with such passages.

The rules likewise state that the murderer “must not be anyone whose thoughts the reader has been allowed to follow,” a law broken in season two when the (spoiler ahead) murderer is one of the people investigating the murder and from whose perspective we get an insight into.

Perhaps most comically, Knox’s injunction against the cliched use of identical twins in detective fiction is subverted in Only Murders by the appearances of Charles’ stunt double Sazz Pataki (Jane Lynch), who even in everyday life never fails to be coincidentally wearing exactly the same outfit as Charles.

Knox’s rules, though tongue in cheek, reinforced a sense of the importance of “fair play” between author and reader. The murderer must be someone we know, with clues fairly displayed so that the reader might have a chance of reaching the conclusion before the detective.

The fact that Only Murders gleefully undermines these rules reflects the fact that its real pleasure is not in the mystery itself, since viewers cannot compete with Charles, Oliver, and Mabel. We don’t have the information required to decode the meaning of the victim’s last words “14 Savage” in season two, for instance. But, whereas in the traditional whodunit this might considered a weakness, in Only Murders it becomes an advantage because we realize it is the genre itself being parodied.

The appeal of the show is not, then, in trying to work out whodunit, but in enjoying its convoluted plots.

The finale of season two, for instance, provides a dizzying succession of twists, identifying three potential murderers in rapid succession. When the real murderer is revealed, we gasp not because we overlooked some vital clue but at the audacity of the plotting.

For all its postmodern self-referential trappings and awareness of contemporary fan cultures, Only Murders’ main use of the whodunit is as a historical reference to the early 20th century. The popularity of Agatha Christie was, after all, contemporary with the rise of the kind of Broadway musical Oliver attempts to direct in season three. The clash of genres in Only Murders is self-consciously reflected in Oliver’s decision to transform his play Death Rattle from a psychological thriller to a musical.

The theatrical setting of season three also looks back to a tradition of interwar whodunits set in the theater. Novels such as Ngaio Marsh’s Vintage Murder (1937), Margery Allingham’s Dancers in Mourning (1937), and Ellery Queen’s The Roman Hat Mystery (1929) take place on, or around, the stage. The theater setting makes explicit what is implicit in the whodunit: that we are watching a performance that is not entirely truthful. These references to early 20th century culture emphasize the importance of the Arconia itself to the show. Like the whodunit form, it is an early 20th century structure the characters find themselves getting lost in. Only Murders in the Building season three is a loving tribute to this golden age of mystery and eccentric theatricality of it. — The Conversation via Reuters Connect

Christopher Pittard is a Senior Lecturer in English Literature at the University of Portsmouth. He has received funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council.

UBS to cut 3,000 Swiss jobs as it slashes costs by $10 billion

ZURICH — UBS Group plans to cut 3,000 jobs in Switzerland in the next couple of years, as it offered the first glimpse of how it plans to achieve more than $10 billion in cost savings after taking over Credit Suisse.

UBS also announced it would be keeping Credit Suisse’s domestic bank — and the ensuing job losses are expected to result in a backlash in Switzerland.

The world’s largest wealth manager could have spun off the business and floated it in an initial public offering but the domestic bank has been a solid profit-maker for Credit Suisse and last year it was the only division in the black.

“Our analysis clearly shows that a full integration is the best outcome for UBS, our stakeholders and the Swiss economy,” Chief Executive Sergio Ermotti said in a statement.

He wrote in a memo to staff to said that 1,000 jobs redundancies will result from integrating Credit Suisse’s domestic bank, while another 2,000 would result from the need to profoundly restructure Credit Suisse.

The prediction of over $10 billion in cost-savings by end 2026 compares with an earlier estimate of $8 billion by 2027. Most savings are set to come from reducing headcount.

Hanging on to existing Credit Suisse clients is seen as key if UBS is to successfully pull off the Herculean deal.

Credit Suisse reported net asset outflows of 39 billion Swiss francs ($44.4 billion) in the second quarter, underscoring that the rescue has failed to stem the loss of confidence in its franchise.

But UBS said the outflows took place at a slower pace compared with previous quarters and turned positive in June.

UBS’ global wealth management reported net new money of $16 billion, its highest for the second quarter in over a decade.

The shotgun marriage to its fallen rival at the behest of Swiss authorities — the first-ever merger of two global systemically important banks — has created both opportunities and risks for UBS.

On one hand, analysts note that UBS acquired Credit Suisse for a song — just three billion Swiss francs — while gaining a large asset base, good client relationships and talented employees.

At the same time, analysts warn that the complexity and the hasty nature of the deal brings significant execution risks as UBS must aggressively cut jobs, shrink Credit Suisse’s investment banking operations and manage outflows as clients seek to spread risk.

UBS booked net profit of $29 billion for the second quarter. Groupwide UBS results include just one month of Credit Suisse earnings as the deal only closed in June.

The bumper profit is due to a huge one-off gain that reflects how the acquisition costs were far below Credit Suisse’s value. It was somewhat under a consensus estimate of $33.45 billion from a poll conducted by the bank. — Reuters

NLEX Corp. set to finish part of Pampanga road project this year

NLEX Corp. on Thursday said it expects to complete the preliminary works of the 200-meter portion of San Simon road in Pampanga by yearend.

“The goal is to enhance safety, accessibility, and mobility of motorists especially during the rainy season. We aim to complete the project as soon as possible with minimal disruption to the motorists,” NLEX President Jose Luigi L. Bautista said in a statement.

NLEX, a unit of Metro Pacific Tollways Corp. (MPTC), said it is undertaking preliminary works to fast-track the elevation of the portion of San Simon road.

The works will include the completion of the detailed engineering design for the pavement raising, which will cover both the north and south bounds of the 200-meter portion of the Tulaoc overpass, and the design for the flood walls.

The company also said it would work to raise the pavement of the San Simon ramp and improve the drainage system following events of massive flooding in Central and North Luzon, which affected a portion of the NLEX San Simon.

“The problem is the flood level outside the NLEX has overflowed to the lowest area of NLEX in San Simon. We asked the DPWH (Department of Public Works and Highways) to raise the Tulaoc overpass so we can also elevate this portion of the expressway,” Mr. Bautista said.

MPTC is the tollways unit of Metro Pacific Investments Corp., one of three key Philippine units of Hong Kong-based First Pacific Co. Ltd., the others being Philex Mining Corp. and PLDT Inc.

Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has a majority stake in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls. — Ashley Erika O. Jose

Entertainment News (09/01/23)


Red rerun this weekend

THE TWO-MAN play Red, which tackles a period when the American painter Mark Rothko worked on a series of paintings for a major restaurant, will have its final shows on Sept. 1 to 3 at the PETA Theater Center. The play stars Bart Guingona, who also directed, and JC Santos. The play will have performances on Friday, Saturday and Sunday at 8 p.m., and on Saturday and Sunday at 3:30 p.m. There will also be a theater talkback with Gang Capati with Guingona and Santos who will talk about “Mental Health through Red” on Sept. 1, and another called “Artist at Work” with guest Leeroy New along with Mr. Guingona and Mr. Santos at the 3:30 p.m. performance on Sept. 3.


ABS-CBN top TikTok entertainment account in SE Asia

ABS-CBN was the most viewed TikTok entertainment account in Southeast Asia for the first half of 2023. According to data from TikToktainment, ABS-CBN’s official TikTok account @abscbn generated a total of 2,850,148,520 video views in the first half of the year or an average of 898,817 video views per video. Among the most watched videos of @abscbn on TikTok are clips from the revenge drama series Dirty Linen. The teleserye has amassed over 2.3 billion views on TikTok. In addition, highlights from other ABS-CBN shows like It’s Showtime and FPJ’s Batang Quiapo among others,also contributed significantly to the total video views of @abscbn on TikTok, which currently has 5.3 million followers and 274.7 million likes. Meanwhile, the ABS-CBN PR account @abscbnpr on TikTok was the overall top performer, amassing 81.9 million views, from April to June and the number one account during the month of May and first half of August in both the entertainment info category.


TAN set to do mall shows in the Philippines

K-POP group TAN is coming to Taguig, Quezon City, and Cagayan de Oro this September for a series of mall shows produced by Universal Records Philippines, SBTown, Think Entertainment, and Kumu. The male group, composed of Changsun, Jiseong, Sunghyuk, Taehoon, Hyunyeop, Jooan, and Jaejun, is known for hit singles like “DU DU DU,” “FIX YOU,” and their latest song “HEARTBEAT.” The mall shows will be held on Sept. 8 at the Market! Market! Activity Center, Sept. 9 at the TriNoma Activity Center, and Sept. 10 at SM City CDO Downtown. For more details, follow Universal Records PH on their social media pages.


Dog movie and adult comedy Strays opens Sept. 13

THE LIKES of Will Ferrell, Jamie Foxx, Isla Fisher, Park Randall, Josh Gad, and Sofia Vergara return to the big screen as a powerhouse comedic voice cast for the R-16 live-action dog movie Strays, which opens on Sept. 13. It follows the misadventures of Reggie, an abandoned, naive Border Terrier voiced by Will Ferrell (fresh off his CEO stint in Barbie), who learns to survive on the streets with his newfound pals while trying to find his way back home. His friends include the fast-talking, foul-mouthed Boston Terrier named Bug (voiced by Oscar-winner Jamie Foxx), the smart Australian Shepherd named Maggie (Isla Fisher from Now You See Me), and the anxious Great Dane named Hunter (Randall Park from Always Be My Maybe). After production wrapped, director Josh Greenbaum adopted the main dog Reggie. “I decided to adopt one of them and asked my kids to name him. They immediately said we’ve got to name him Reggie because he played Reggie in the movie,” he said.


Ogie Alcasid showcases his greatest hits

FILIPINO singing icon Ogie Alcasid is gearing up for his one-night jam session Ogieoke The Concert, on Sept. 29, 8 p.m., at the Newport Performing Arts Theater. His songs include “Nandito Ako,” “Kailangan Kita,” “Bakit Ngayon Ka Lang,” and “Ikaw Lamang,” which he will perform live with special guests like the star of Ang Huling El Bimbo The Musical Gian Magdangal and world-class soprano Lara Maigue. Mr. Alcasid was last seen at the Newport stage last year with multi-hyphenated star Ian Veneracion in the KilaboTitos concert. To sing along to the best of his hits this September, book tickets at any TicketWorld or SM Tickets outlet. Tickets are priced from P1,000 to P7,800.


a1 releases new single to kick off Asian tour

BRITISH-Norwegian boy group a1 returns with a new single, “Call Me When You Land,” which celebrates their 25th anniversary as a band. It is about treasuring moments with loved ones, written by all the band members — Ben Adams, Christian Ingebrigtsen, Mark Read, and Paul Marazzi — during the pandemic. Musically, the track is a throwback to their earlier ballad hits from the 1990s like “Everytime,” “Like a Rose,” and “One More Try.” The song was also released at the start of their Asian tour ai TWENTY FIVE, which has a Philippine leg in October. The shows will be held on Oct. 12 at the SMX Convention Center in Davao, Oct. 13 at the Waterfront City Hotel and Casino in Cebu, and Oct. 14 and 15 at the New Frontier Theater in Quezon City. Tickets, priced from P850 to P5,565, are available at all SM Ticket outlets nationwide or via www.smtickets.com.


Scorsese film to be released globally in October

APPLE Original Films has revealed that Killers of the Flower Moon, the newest feature film of award-winning director Martin Scorsese, will have a global theatrical release date of Oct. 18. The wide release, in partnership with Paramount Pictures, will be followed by a digital debut on the streaming platform Apple TV+. The film was directed by Mr. Scorsese and written for the screen by Eric Roth and Mr. Scorsese, based on David Grann’s best-selling book of the same name set in 1920s Oklahoma. It depicts the serial murders of members of the oil-wealthy Osage Nation, a string of brutal crimes that came to be known as the Reign of Terror. Killers of the Flower Moon premiered earlier this year at the 76th Cannes Film Festival, where it was met with critical acclaim.


Netflix drops teaser for David Fincher’s next film

THE TEASER trailer for the new Netflix film The Killer starring Michael Fassbender has been released ahead of its Nov. 10 release date. The crime thriller is directed by David Fincher (Se7en, Fight Club, and Gone Girl). The film follows a solitary and cold assassin (played by Mr. Fassbender) who battles both his employers and his inner demons while on an international manhunt. The teaser trailer shows a glimpse of his methodical mind and way of life as he repeatedly narrates to himself to “stick to the plan,” all while the action seemingly escalates and threatens to push him off his axis. The Killer will premiere on Netflix on Nov. 10.

 

Fed ramps up demands for corrective actions by regional banks

US REGULATORS are quietly demanding that regional lenders shore up their liquidity planning, part of a ramp-up in efforts to tighten supervision in the wake of three bank failures earlier this year.

The US Federal Reserve has issued a slew of private warnings to lenders with assets of $100 billion to $250 billion, including Citizens Financial Group, Inc., Fifth Third Bancorp and M&T Bank Corp., according to people with knowledge of the matter. The wide-ranging notices have touched on everything from lenders’ capital and liquidity to their technology and compliance, the people said, asking not to be identified discussing confidential supervisory information.

The onslaught of such warnings — known as matters requiring attention and matters requiring immediate attention, or MRAs and MRIAs — comes as examiners look for other signs of stress in a system already strained by the collapse of First Republic Bank, Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank this year. It’s part of a wider increase in scrutiny impacting banks of all sizes after Michael Barr, the Fed’s vice chair for supervision, vowed to “improve the speed, force and agility” of oversight earlier this year.

These nonpublic admonitions generally require a board-level reply that includes a time line for corrective action. For lenders on the receiving end of these MRAs and MRIAs, rectifying such actions can be costly. If left unaddressed, they can escalate into harsher public orders that can take years to resolve.

“The bigger concern is the time frame we’re talking about for resolution,” said Gary Bronstein, who leads the financial-services team at the law firm Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton LLP. “We’re going to start seeing the supervisory staff impose tight deadlines on resolution. If banks are not resolving these issues pretty quickly, then we’ll see enforcement actions.”

A Fed spokesperson and representatives for Citizens, Fifth Third and M&T all declined to comment.

REGULATORY SCRUTINY
With their latest efforts, regulators have focused on Category IV banks, which are in the same size range as the three banks that failed this year. Supervisors had previously taken a lighter touch to regulating that category after Congress passed legislation in 2018 that raised the bar for which firms would face more stringent oversight from $50 billion to $250 billion.

The group also includes KeyCorp, Huntington Bancshares Inc., Regions Financial Corp. and First Citizens BancShares, Inc., according to the people familiar with the matter. Representatives for KeyCorp, Regions and First Citizens also declined to comment, while Huntington didn’t respond to multiple requests for comment.

All US lenders park a portion of their money in Treasuries and other bonds, and those assets dropped in value last year amid the Fed’s aggressive push to raise interest rates. While the country’s largest banks are required to recognize those unrealized losses in their regulatory capital, Category IV banks are exempt from that rule.

That’s why regulators have grown increasingly concerned that a surge in these paper losses won’t be adequately reflected in Category IV banks’ capital ratios, which demonstrate the health of their balance sheet.

TECHNOLOGY FOCUS
Regulators are also more closely examining lenders’ information-technology systems and compliance functions. In some cases, those reviews lead examiners to demand fixes for shortcomings.

In other cases, examiners have ordered lenders to ensure they have swift access to the Fed’s discount window, a capability that neither Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank had at the ready. That ultimately hastened their demise. They have also demanded lenders provide proof that they can easily liquidate their portfolios of available-for-sale securities if they need to raise cash in a pinch.

The existence of MRAs and MRIAs at any given firm isn’t uncommon: as of June of last year, there were 157 supervisory findings across 18 firms larger than $100 billion, excluding the global systemically important banks, according to Fed data. But for regional lenders, a litany of warnings could force them to hire more workers to handle compliance and risk management. If the matter is escalated to an enforcement action, banks could face monetary penalties.

“Recent stress in the banking system shows the need for us to be vigilant as we assess and respond to risks,” Barr said in May in prepared remarks for a Congressional committee. “Accordingly, supervisors are redoubling their efforts to assess banks’ preparedness for emerging credit, liquidity and interest rate risks.” 

In the wake of Silicon Valley Bank’s failure, an April report by the Fed revealed shortcomings in the central bank’s supervisory process. After realizing the firm was sitting on billions in paper losses on its balance sheet, customers yanked nearly all of the bank’s deposits. That forced California regulators to seize the bank.

But examiners at the Fed had uncovered those issues months earlier. As part of a series of MRAs and MRIAs they issued to Silicon Valley Bank in 2022, regulators had already ordered the bank to improve its process for tracking interest rate risks. The Fed ultimately said that supervisors responded too late and didn’t demand prompt enough action from the bank.

“Supervisors did not fully appreciate the extent of the vulnerabilities as Silicon Valley Bank grew in size and complexity,” the Fed said in a the report. “When supervisors did identify vulnerabilities, they did not take sufficient steps to ensure that Silicon Valley Bank fixed those problems quickly enough.”

Increased regulatory scrutiny isn’t limited to smaller firms: Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., for its part, is hiring hundreds of staffers to fix issues raised by supervisors. Discover Financial Services, bracing for a consent order from regulators at the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., announced the abrupt retirement of its chief executive officer and has also been hiring more personnel to deal with authorities’ concerns.

“There’s just been a very noticeable and heightened regulatory focus on anything liquidity, deposits or funding related,” James Stevens, the co-leader of the financial services industry group at the law firm Troutman Pepper. “I can’t think of ever experiencing such an acute focus on deposits, liquidity and funding risk. That’s manifesting itself in a lot of rule-making and a lot of on-site examination questions.” —  Bloomberg

Nokia deploys its latest antenna for Globe

NOKIA Corp. is deploying its latest interleaved passive active antennas  (IPAA+) for Globe Telecom, Inc. to help advance 5G deployment in the Philippines.

“We are thrilled that Nokia’s state-of-the-art products will be deployed in the Philippines. Our enduring pain points in site acquisition and TCO efficiency are being addressed by the features,” said Joel Agustin, senior vice-president and head of network planning and engineering of Globe, in a statement on Thursday.

An IPAA+ is an antenna developed by Nokia for 5G to support other legacy cellular technologies like 4G, 3G, and 2G.

The deployment of IPAA+ will allow Globe to accelerate and streamline its 4G and 5G rollouts and will help deliver a higher level of network efficiency and performance, Nokia said.

Nokia has identified the finding of additional space on towers and rooftops as among the problems faced by service providers in the rollout of 5G, it said, claiming that its antennas will address this issue.

“We are delighted to partner with Globe Telecom on this deal that will see our state-of-the-art IPAA+ products being deployed in the Philippines. These products are lighter, more modular and cover all sub-6GHz 5G frequency bands. We look forward to collaborating closely with Globe on this important deployment,” Jeciel Nuyda, president of Nokia Shanghai Bell Philippines, said.

In 2022, Globe invested P101.4 billion in its network and exceeded its rollout targets with 2,267 new 5G sites and more than 13,600 mobile sites upgraded to 4G.

At the stock exchange on Thursday, shares in the company fell by P12 or 0.66% to end at P1,802 apiece. — Ashley Erika O. Jose

Three lessons in monetary policy

I know him and have served as co-panelist with him in seminars organized by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) many years ago. As central bank governor of the South African Reserve Bank, Lesetja Kganyago could not have been clearer in putting in the public domain the typical but compelling issues that emerging markets like South Africa and the Philippines face today. This is all about “keeping inflation from drifting above our targets, resisting demands for lower interest rates to lift short-term economic growth, and financing unsustainable fiscal positions.”

In the Philippines, some have proposed, and in some instances, directed, that we use all legal tools to control the prices of rice and ensure that it is always available. In the past, rice could drive the consumer price index to dizzying heights. Some quarters have also proposed more sales of the US dollar by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) to keep the peso strong and inflation under check. The Philippines is a net importer of goods and services, so they expect that a strong peso is good for inflation management. Without adjusting the BSP policy rate, that measure will not be sustainable. We would simply dissipate our gross international reserves (GIR) for nothing. Fundamental reforms in our production and trade are obviously critical; our problems are definitely systemic.

Others would even advise the monetary authorities to refrain from doing anything because we are facing inflation that is mainly cost-push. It is driven by the short supply of goods and services and an imperfect value chain. Logistics would just have to be sorted out. Inflation pressures are considered temporary. In hindsight, we are wiser to realize that the US Fed bought into this idea and Chairman Jim Powell had to catch up in a big, perhaps disruptive, way. We were also a victim of this misguided thought, keeping our hands tied while inflation was clearly on an inexorable ascent last year. The BSP was compelled to do an unprecedented 75 basis points increase in an off-cycle meeting of the Monetary Board to make up for such a monetary slippage.

What were the key areas of experience in inflation management that Governor Kganyago share in his article published by the IMF’s Finance and Development in March? The article is entitled “A Road Well Traveled.” His contribution stressed that in a period of high inflation, emerging markets have lessons to share with advanced economies.

Managing supply shocks is the first lesson that Kganyago shared. Unlike in advanced economies, which debated on how to achieve their inflation targets given interest rates that were close to zero and inflation that was already too low, the issue in emerging markets could be as plain as the central bank having to explain to the public why it must move even when supply shocks are dominant. Kganyago admitted that in his 12 years with his bank’s Monetary Policy Committee, he was more absorbed in measuring the impact of supply shocks and explaining to the public how they differentiate between transitory and persistent effects. Demand pressures lend themselves more to monetary policy.

The South African governor argued that at least in his country, even with moderate inflation, price and wage setters do monitor inflation and index their prices accordingly. We don’t have to remind ourselves about the Philippines’ price tag law which requires appropriate tags or labels to indicate the prices of consumer products. Without such, constant re-pricing could happen. Profiteering gives birth to higher and more persistent inflation.

However, if central banks choose to be passive in dealing with persistent supply shocks like bad harvests, it is possible price pressures could magnify and inflation expectations upset. As argued in our previous columns, this would render monetary policy very much behind the curve. What could have been more transient ends up more persistent with second round effects.

Thus, if we hear economists arguing that we refrain from doing anything about those supply shocks which dissipate over time, beware. In many emerging markets, we see very volatile pricing and in Kganyago’s language, less tolerance for real income losses. Since current inflation is likely to persist in the future, policy responses from the central banks should be done more often as necessary. Inflation matters to both households and firms, and the quarterly business and consumer expectations surveys of the BSP should prove that.

The second lesson is all about the mandate of the central bank. We love how Kganyago explained that monetary policy can be distorted by fiscal policy, as many central bankers from emerging markets would have experienced. This is evidenced by the increasing concerns about fiscal dominance. Since it is the central bank’s balance sheet that is bound to be hit, we share Kganyago’s point that central bank mandates “remain simple and direct.” This means governments should implement a broader macroeconomic strategy that would promote economic growth and other social goals including fiscal sustainability. Heavy lifting by the central banks, like what they did during the Global Financial Crisis, has its limits.

Governor Kganyago cited the South African experience in the 1990s when they started to implement three-pronged macroeconomic reforms that permitted it to reap a consistent period of economic growth. They decided to float their exchange rate, freeing them from years of costly and ineffective exchange rate intervention. They shifted to market-friendly inflation targeting as a monetary policy framework, resulting in lower interest rates and more stable prices. They exercised fiscal restraint that brought about fiscal sustainability that helped avoid incurring too much debt that could have crowded out the private sector from the capital markets.

Of course, he admitted that there were very difficult challenges in doing public policy and South Africa was not spared from episodes of low growth in the process. During those times, it was monetary policy that “held the line, but monetary policy is not everything.”

In the Philippines, we should expect that tight monetary policy could have a depressing impact on economic growth. But it is important that we don’t blame monetary policy that addresses high inflation because high inflation could also depress private consumption and discourage private investment, leading to lower growth. Instead, the other branches of government should also do their share, especially in managing supply shocks. The primary mandate of the BSP is price stability.

The final lesson shared by the South African governor is “how to maneuver when making policy and… how to strike a balance between acting resolutely and remaining open to new ideas and information.”

He observed that advanced economies face the problem of groupthink. We share his view that in emerging markets, there could be different levels of opinions, ranging from whether policy rates should be adjusted, or to do nothing, to how much to adjust. Different views are held not only on the policy board but even beyond. In the larger society, there might be thousands who would keep some other variants of monetary policy views.

To promote effective public policy, Kganyago proposed that divergent views on tactical issues should be welcome, but consensus should prevail on what he called the grand strategy.

We admire the singularity of his commitment to the central bank mandate laid out in the South African Constitution, and that is to protect the value of the currency in the interest of balanced and sustainable growth. Making an issue out of the central bank’s role in the economy is a non-starter. It’s been decided by the framers of the Constitution.

“Diversity of opinions is important, but not everything needs to be pulled apart.”

On this basis, central banks should stay the course when making monetary policy, reiterating as necessary their strategic goals. Any kind of support from civil society should be nurtured and expanded. Expect that critics would ignore the challenges of central banking, that when the central banks decide, they decide with uncertainty as to future and attendant risks.

Kganyago advised that when it comes to tactical operations, central banks should be more open minded. Changing their mind should always be an option. It is important that the governor of the central bank should be the sole policy spokesperson. Not any of his deputies, who could be entrusted with explaining the data and the results of econometric exercises behind the policy choice. Not any of the members of the policy board, who might even hold a contrary view.

The South African Reserve Bank governor concluded his article with the need for governments to avoid high levels of indebtedness and to use available financing more efficiently to achieve higher levels of economic growth.

In keeping with his tone, we should recall what former Bank of England Mark Carney wrote in his book, Value(s), about humility. He wrote that humility matters because it is an attitude to leading and governing. It should not be an impediment to taking action. Humility, among others, is recognizing that there could be surprises that need to be dealt with.

In central banking, there could indeed be many surprises.

 

Diwa C. Guinigundo is the former deputy governor for the Monetary and Economics Sector, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP). He served the BSP for 41 years. In 2001-2003, he was alternate executive director at the International Monetary Fund in Washington, DC. He is the senior pastor of the Fullness of Christ International Ministries in Mandaluyong.

Venice jury chief says art must triumph over content in Hollywood

VENICE — Amid the glitz of the Venice Film Festival, jury president Damien Chazelle said on Wednesday he wanted to draw attention to strikes by Hollywood writers and actors that have brought much of the US entertainment industry to a standstill.

“It is a difficult time obviously in Hollywood for working actors and writers, and also for crews,” Mr. Chazelle told reporters as the world’s oldest film festival got underway.

The actors and writers are striking together for the first time in 63 years, demanding curbs on the use of artificial intelligence (AI) and higher pay as streaming becomes prevalent.

“There is a basic idea that each work of art has a value unto itself and is not just a piece of content, which is Hollywood’s favorite word right now,” said Mr. Chazelle, director of La La Land and Whiplash.

“It comes down to each person being remunerated for each piece of art that is made, and how to find a way to maintain and get back that idea of art over content.”

The major US entertainment studios have said they are committed to reaching “an equitable agreement” to end the long-running stoppage. Writers have been on strike since May with actors off the job since July.

The strike has shut down both television and movie productions and has prevented actors from promoting big studio movies as well as films made by streamers like Netflix.

However, the festival’s artistic director, Alberto Barbera, said that just three of the 23 films in the main competition — The Killer, Maestro, and Poor Things — would be impacted by the strike, with their actors not coming to Venice.

That means the likes of Emma Stone, Michael Fassbender, and Bradley Cooper, who both stars in and directs Maestro, will not hit the red carpet. However, Mr. Barbera said the strike could have had a much bigger impact.

“When the strike was announced, for a few days we really risked losing the US component of the festival, which instead, as you know, came,” he said. — Reuter

BPI looking to add more features to its new mobile app

A view of a bank building in Manila, July 1, 2014. — REUTERS/ROMEO RANOCO

BANK of the Philippine Islands (BPI) is looking to add more features to its new mobile application, including goal-setting and an expense tracker, among others.

“(You) should be able to input your goals relative to where you want to be in one, five, 10, or 20 years from now, even up to retirement, and use those goals to be able to generate insights to guide you,” BPI Senior Vice-President for Consumer Marketing and Platforms Mariana Zobel de Ayala said in an event in Makati City on Thursday.

“Each of those goals will have different needs and guidance around them. In the next few drops, you can see that come to life,” she added.

BPI earlier this year launched its new mobile app that features AI-powered personal finance management through tracking and insights.

BPI Creatives and Communications Lead for Platforms Marketing Amanda Cruz said the bank is also working on a feature that will allow users to track their expenses.

“(This) groups expenses intelligently into categories so you know exactly what your money is doing,” she added.

Fitzgerald Chee, BPI vice-president and head of Consumer Platforms, said they are also studying a feature that will guide users in decision-making.

“Beyond budget tracking, you’ll see more relevant insights based on your usage. If you paid for a plane ticket, then certain insights can come out to (prompt) what you would need next, maybe a travel insurance and the like,” Mr. Chee said.

“On the other side of it, let’s say your balances were higher than normal, the call to action would be an investment. We may be able to prompt…we can help you with the types of products to guide clients, this is another thing to look forward to,” he added.

BPI users have until Sept. 30 to download the lender’s new mobile app.

The bank’s net income went up by 4.5% year on year to P13 billion in the second quarter, bringing its first-half profit to P25.1 billion, up by 23% year on year.

Its shares went up by P2.10 or 1.95% to close at P110 apiece on Thursday. — L.M.J.C. Jocson

Metro Retail maintains safety standards at Metro Alabang Town Center 

LISTED retailer Metro Retail Stores Group, Inc. has maintained the safety standards in its Metro Alabang Town Center after an annual visit from a certification body.

In a stock exchange disclosure on Thursday, Metro Retail said that certification body British Standards Institution (BSI) Group Philippines granted the good manufacturing practices (GMP) and hazard analysis and critical control point (HACCP) certifications following its annual routine visit to Alabang Town Center.

“We take immense pride in the successful annual routine visit for the maintenance of Metro Alabang Town Center’s GMP and HACCP standards. This accomplishment significantly underscores our enduring commitment to prioritizing the safety, health, and satisfaction of our valued customers,” Metro Retail President and Chief Operating Officer Manuel C. Alberto said.

“As a company, we consistently strive to uphold the highest standards in every facet of our operations, and this maintenance effort stands as a tangible manifestation of those unwavering efforts,” he added.

Metro Retail claimed that it was the first retailer that secure both GMP and HACCP certifications. Currently, four Metro Retail stores have achieved the two standards.

Following the annual visit, the company said that it will continue to demonstrate its commitment to uphold GMP and HACCP standards in Metro Alabang Town Center, ahead of the recertification in 2025 and after 11 years since its initial certification.

“Our journey towards maintaining these standards involved rigorous assessments and stringent audits to ensure that every aspect of our operations aligns with the highest safety standards. The annual routine visit for the maintenance of Metro Alabang Town Center underscores our commitment to delivering safe and quality products to our customers,” Metro Retail Quality Assurance Manager and HACCP Team Leader Florence Josephine Jorge said.

On Thursday, shares of Metro Retail at the local bourse fell seven centavos or 5.34% to close at P1.24 apiece. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

Twixt a rock and a hard place

PRESIDENT Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. visited the NFA warehouse on Dec. 17, 2022. — PHILIPPINE STAR/KRIZ JOHN ROSALES

I am pleased to share with readers, the political section of our Aug. 29 Quarterly Economic Outlook Report, “Losing momentum.” Christine Tang, Shane Sia, and I wrote this for GlobalSource Partners (globalsourcepartners.com), a New York based network of independent analysts in emerging markets.

NOBODY said that the job would be easy. Now onto his second year in office and with popularity ratings intact, President Ferdinand Marcos, Jr. has some delicate balancing acts to do if he wants the economy to return to a higher economic growth path.

The most immediate task is to find a win-win solution for the military and uniformed personnel (MUP) pension reform. Here, he is caught between his finance secretary, who has been quoted as saying that business as usual would lead to fiscal collapse, and his new defense secretary who is opposed not only to having all soldiers contribute to retirement income but to non-indexation of retirees’ pension benefits, two key features of the current system that help cause ballooning pension liabilities.

But perhaps a more urgent task, given the political stakes and macroeconomic implications, is rice policy, rice being the most important staple crop in the Philippines. Here, like his predecessors, he is caught between consumers to whom he promised a P20/kilogram retail price, about half of market price then, and 2.4 million farmers, many of whom are marginal farmers. The dilemma was supposed to have been addressed under the 2019 Rice Tariffication Law (RTL) where rice trade was left to private importers who have better incentives to plan and time import volumes to prevent the historically high local prices and sharp price fluctuations under government’s failed rice monopoly. Government’s traditional rice procurement arm, the National Food Authority (NFA), was left with the job of maintaining nine days’ worth of inventory, sourced from local rice farmers, as emergency buffer stock for relief distribution.

The system seemed to be working well until the Russia-Ukraine war that sent global food prices soaring and rice producing countries to start considering export controls. International rice prices began to increase in Q4 last year and by July this year was up 20-30% year on year, with India’s latest decision to ban the export of specific rice varieties due to the El Niño weather disturbance exacerbating rice inflation. Having campaigned on P20/kg rice and in the face of the general rise in food prices, the President used the remaining policy lever he had, i.e., open up NFA warehouses to consumers and sell the stocks at a subsidized price of P25/kg (vs. a market price of about P40-P50/kg) in Kadiwa stores. With rice the staple food of the majority of Filipinos, government quickly ran out of supplies, and with harvest season to start next month yet, the NFA said that it is now holding less than two days’ worth of rice stocks. Private importers meanwhile, uncertain about the trajectory of global rice prices, appear reluctant to buy at current high prices, leading to a reported fall in imports last month.

The current situation may be a temporary one, going away once local harvests reach markets, but will likely recur given the turmoil in the global grains market. Given how politically sensitive the issue is, the President probably needs policy levers to address instances of similar market failure. However, current calls to hand the NFA back its old power to import is a bad idea. Rather, expert commentators are pushing for cash transfers, either to consumers or producers built on the existing platform, as perhaps the most direct form of assistance with minimum leakage. Multilaterals seem to share this view with the ADB piloting a $3-million food stamp program.

A third issue is one of international diplomacy, how not to get trampled in the current US-China rivalry for influence in the region. In this case, given the Philippine’s own territorial dispute with China, the President is caught between standing his ground on the country’s rights over portions of the West Philippine Sea/South China Sea, which led him to bolster the defense alliance with the US, and wanting to strengthen economic ties with China which other countries with similar disputes have shown is possible. Although the rhetoric on both sides is that the dispute is not the be-all and end-all of bilateral ties, recurring confrontations on the high seas have made it difficult to build trust. Moreover, it has not escaped notice that the last administration’s experiment of drawing close to China failed to bring in the billions of dollars of promised investments.

Although the President’s pivot back to the US has won him broad domestic support, including his critics’, similar questions are now being raised about what the Philippines stands to gain economically. Among pragmatists’ economic calculus are not just the possible repeat of adverse consequences of displeasing China (e.g., banana exports failing phytosanitary standards, unfavorable travel advisories keeping Chinese tourists away) but also the worry that locating the new US military bases so close to Taiwan exposes the Philippines to an attack or at least a blockade in the event of a hot war, a risk that may further deter foreign investments from more risk-averse investors. With the Philippines now needing fresh economic growth drivers, will the US and its western and QUAD (Quadrilateral Security Dialogue) allies step up?

A quip from Former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger shared over social media seems to capture current apprehensions: “It may be dangerous to be America’s enemy, but to be America’s friend is fatal.”

 

Romeo L. Bernardo was finance undersecretary from 1990-1996. He is a trustee/director of the Foundation for Economic Freedom, the Management Association of the Philippines, and the FINEX Foundation. He is the principal Philippine Adviser of Globalsource Partners (globalsourcepartners.com). He also serves as a board director in leading companies in banking and financial services, telecommunication, energy, food and beverage, education, real estate, and others.

romeo.lopez.bernard@gmail.com

Workers, employers given oversight of jobs plan

PHILSTAR

THE Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE) told the Senate on Thursday that worker and employer representatives will be granted oversight of its jobs plan recently presented to the Cabinet.

“We will follow up on our labor and employment plan through strategic action planning, where our tripartite partners have oversight over who will benefit from our labor roadmap,” Labor Secretary Bienvenido E. Laguesma said during a Senate Finance Committee hearing on DoLE’s proposed budget for 2024.

“DoLE’s actions are always in line with the demands of our social partners because each sector has its own responsibility to follow.”

Under the proposed P5.76-trillion national budget for 2024, DoLE has been allocated funding of P39.6 billion.

Mr. Laguesma presented DoLE’s roadmap to the Cabinet earlier this month, which called for  increased collaboration with other agencies in creating sustainable jobs and ensuring that workers enjoy social protections.

The jobs plan aims to upgrade worker skills, raise the quality of teachers, and modernize training institutions, Mr. Laguesma told an employer conference last month.

President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. in his second address to Congress urged government agencies to continue improving the employability of the workforce.

Labor groups have urged the government to take the lead by creating more public-sector jobs.

At the same hearing, Senate President Pro-Tempore Lorna Regina B. Legarda urged DoLE to enhance its temporary employment program for displaced workers, adding that it should cover more of the jobless poor.

“We must ensure that the funds we allocate to the agency help generate jobs, reduce poverty and provide assistance to our people in sustaining their needs,” she said.

The unemployment rate in June fell to 4.5% from 6% a year earlier. Job quality worsened that month to 12% from 11.7% in May, but it was lower than the 12.6% recorded in June last year.

“We hope that by the end of President Marcos Jr.’s term, this plan will have brought down poverty levels, increased quality jobs, and allowed our countrymen to play a part in improving the economy,” Mr. Laguesma said. — John Victor D. Ordoñez

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