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Housing dep’t breaks ground for low-cost projects in 3 Western Visayas cities

DHSUD.GOV.PH

THE DEPARTMENT of Human Settlements and Urban Development (DHSUD) on Friday broke ground for housing projects in three cities in Western Visayas, a region in central Philippines.   

The housing units will be used for the relocation of informal settlers as well as offered to low-income families in the cities of Iloilo, Bacolod, and Roxas, DHSUD said in a statement on Sunday.    

DHSUD Secretary Jose Rizalino L. Acuzar said these projects are part of the Marcos administrations program to build one million units yearly to address the growing housing backlog.    

In our quest to build one million houses every year in the next six years, we hope to address the countrys housing backlog currently pegged at 6.5 million. This will not be easy but is definitely possible,said Mr. Acuzar.  

He added that the target can be achieved in partnership with local governments, private developers, and potential beneficiaries.   

DHSUD said an agreement has also been signed with Victorias City, also in the region, for a housing project.   

Talks have also started with Calape, Bohol in Central Visayas. MSJ

Free college entrance exam bill doesn’t provide access to higher education

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

A BILL that seeks to waive college entrance exam fees in private institutions for poor Filipino high school graduating students does not really ensure access to a higher education degree, analysts said over the weekend.

House Bill 5001 or the proposed Free College Entrance Examinations Act was passed on third and final reading last week.

The bill aims to provide free college entrance exam in private institutions for the top 10% of the poor Filipino high school graduating students.

“The proponents of the bill can just convince the private universities but not force them,” Dennis F. Quilala, a political science professor at the University of the Philippines said in an email.

“Since the bill targets poor students, they would require a scholarship after passing the entrance exam,” he added.

“The bill is pointless as it does not ensure more students to earn a degree,” Michael Henry Ll. Yusingco, a political analyst, said in a Facebook Messenger chat. “Not a lot of thinking and reflection was put into this bill.” — Kyanna Angela Bulan

Stampede, riot at Indonesia soccer match kill at least 174

A man is seen behind an Indonesia’s national flag in Jakarta, Indonesia in this file photo dated April 7, 2019. — REUTERS

MALANG — At least 174 people were killed and 180 injured in a stampede and riot at a soccer match in Indonesia, officials said on Sunday, in one of the world’s worst stadium disasters.

When frustrated supporters of the losing home team invaded the pitch in Malang in the province of East Java late on Saturday, officers fired tear gas in an attempt to control the situation, triggering the stampede and cases of suffocation, East Java police chief Nico Afinta told reporters.

“It had gotten anarchic. They started attacking officers, they damaged cars,” Mr. Nico said, adding that the crush occurred when fans fled for an exit gate.

Video footage from local news channels showed fans streaming onto the pitch after Arema FC lost 3-2 to Persebaya Surabaya around 10 p.m. (1500 GMT). Scuffles can be seen, with what appeared to be tear gas in the air.

Images showed people who appeared to have lost consciousness being carried away by other fans.

The head of one of the hospitals in the area treating patients told Metro TV that some of the victims had sustained brain injuries and that the fatalities included a five-year-old child.

Indonesian President Joko Widodo said authorities must thoroughly evaluate security at matches, adding that he hoped this would be “the last soccer tragedy in the nation.”

Jokowi, as the president is known, ordered the Football Association of Indonesia to suspend all games in the Indonesian top league BRI Liga 1 until an investigation had been completed.

TEAR GAS RULES, OVERCAPACITY
World soccer’s governing body FIFA specifies in its safety regulations that no firearms or “crowd control gas” should be carried or used by stewards or police.

East Java police did not immediately respond to a request for comment on whether they were aware of such regulations.

FIFA has requested a report on the incident from Indonesia’s PSSI football association, and a PSSI team has been sent to Malang to investigate, PSSI secretary general Yunus Nusi told reporters.

Indonesia’s human rights commission also plans to investigate security at the ground, including the use of tear gas, its commissioner told Reuters.

“Many of our friends lost their lives because of the officers who dehumanized us,” said Muhammad Rian Dwicahyono, 22, crying, as he nursed a broken arm at the local Kanjuruhan hospital. “Many lives have been wasted.”

On Sunday mourners gathered outside the gates of the stadium to lay flowers for the victims.

Amnesty International Indonesia slammed the security measures, saying the “use of excessive force by the state … to contain or control such crowds cannot be justified at all”.

The country’s chief security minister, Mahfud MD, said in an Instagram post that the stadium had been filled beyond its capacity. He said 42,000 tickets had been issued for a stadium that is only supposed to hold 38,000 people.

Many victims at Kanjuruhan hospital suffered from trauma, shortness of breath and a lack of oxygen due to the large number of people at the scene affected by tear gas, said paramedic Boby Prabowo.

WORST IN HALF CENTURY
Financial aid would be given to the injured and the families of victims, East Java Governor Khofifah Indar Parawansa told reporters.

There have been outbreaks of trouble at matches in Indonesia before, with strong rivalries between clubs sometimes leading to violence among supporters.

Indonesia’s football scene has been blighted by hooliganism, heavy-handed policing and mismanagement, largely preventing the country of 275 million people who pack stadiums from harnessing its potential in the sport.

Zainudin Amali, Indonesia’s sports minister, told KompasTV the ministry would re-evaluate safety at football matches, including considering not allowing spectators in stadiums.

The Malang stadium disaster appeared to be the deadliest since 1964, when 328 people were reported dead in a riot and crush when Peru hosted Argentine at the Estadio Nacional.

In an infamous 1989 British disaster, 96 Liverpool supporters were crushed to death when an overcrowded and fenced-in enclosure collapsed at the Hillsborough Stadium in Sheffield.

Indonesia is scheduled to host the FIFA under-20 World Cup in May and June next year. They are also one of three countries bidding to stage next year’s Asian Cup, the continent’s equivalent of the Euros, after China pulled out as hosts.

The head of the Asian Football Confederation, Shaikh Salman bin Ebrahim Al Khalifa said in a statement he was “deeply shocked and saddened to hear such tragic news coming out of football-loving Indonesia”, expressing condolences for the victims, their families and friends. — Reuters

Britain has ‘too many’ low-skilled migrants — new interior minister

REUTERS

LONDON — Britain has too many low-skilled migrant workers and very high numbers of international students, who often brought dependents with them, the country’s new interior minister Suella Braverman said in an interview with The Sun on Sunday newspaper.

Ms. Braverman said new Prime Minister Liz Truss’s government aimed to stick to a 2019 election pledge to lower net migration in an interview ahead of the ruling Conservative Party’s annual conference.

Finance minister Kwasi Kwarteng said on Sept. 23 that the government was looking to review immigration policy as part of an attempt to boost growth, following complaints from business groups that post-Brexit rules were too restrictive, especially for low-paid jobs.

However, Ms. Braverman said reducing migration was an aim shared by all of Truss’ senior ministers.

“What we’ve got is too many low skilled workers coming into this country,” she said. “We’ve also got a very high number of students coming into this country and we’ve got a really high number of dependents.”

“Those people are coming here, they’re not necessarily working or they’re working in low-skilled jobs, and they’re not contributing to growing our economy,” she added.

Since January 2021, most workers must be paid at least 25,600 pounds ($28,570) a year for an employer to sponsor a visa, causing problems for employers in sectors such as agriculture, hospitality and some manufacturing, where lower wages are common.

Numbers of European Union (EU) workers have fallen, but this has been offset by an increase in the number of non-EU workers, especially from India. Net migration to Britain totaled 239,000 in the year to June 2021, according to the most recent figures from the Office for National Statistics.

Ms. Braverman also said she wanted to restrict the ability of migrants to challenge deportation on the basis that they had been subjected to forced labor or human trafficking, known in Britain as “modern slavery”. — Reuters

Ukraine’s recapture of Lyman deals Moscow major setback

KYIV  — Ukrainian troops said they had taken the key bastion of Lyman in occupied eastern Ukraine, a stinging defeat that prompted a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin to call for the possible use of low-grade nuclear weapons.

The capture on Saturday came just a day after Mr. Putin proclaimed the annexation of nearly a fifth of Ukraine — including Donetsk, where Lyman is located — and placed the regions under Russia’s nuclear umbrella. Kyiv and the West condemned the ornate ceremony as an illegitimate farce.

Ukrainian soldiers announced the capture in a video recorded outside the town council building in the center of Lyman and posted on social media by Kyrylo Tymoshenko, deputy head of President Volodymyr Zelensky’s office.

“Dear Ukrainians — today the armed forces of Ukraine … liberated and took control of the settlement of Lyman, Donetsk region,” one of the soldiers says. At the end of the video, a group of soldiers throw Russian flags down from the building’s roof and raise a Ukrainian flag in their place.

Hours earlier, Russia’s defense ministry had announced it was pulling troops out of the area “in connection with the creation of a threat of encirclement”.

Russia had used Lyman as a logistics and transport hub for its operations in the north of the Donetsk region. Its capture is Ukraine’s biggest battlefield gain since the lightning counteroffensive in the northeastern Kharkiv region last month.

Seeking to capitalize on Ukraine’s recent gains, Zelensky promised more quick successes in the Donbas, which covers the Donetsk and Luhansk regions that are largely under Russian control.

“Over the past week, the number of Ukrainian flags in Donbas has increased. There will be even more a week’s time,” the president said in an evening video address.

US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin cheered Lyman’s capture, saying it would create new problems for Russia’s military. “We’re very encouraged by what we’re seeing right now,” Mr. Austin told a news conference on Saturday.

Mr. Austin noted that Lyman was positioned across supply lines that Russia has used to push its troops and materiel down to the south and to the west, as the Kremlin presses its more than seven-month-long invasion of Ukraine.

“Without those routes, it will be more difficult. So, it presents a sort of a dilemma for the Russians going forward.”

Mr. Austin did not say whether he thought Ukraine’s capture of Lyman might prompt Russian escalation, although US officials have widely denounced Russia’s nuclear rhetoric in recent days and President Joseph R.  Biden has publicly urged Mr. Putin not to use nuclear weapons.

Ukraine’s successes have infuriated Putin allies such as Ramzan Kadyrov, the leader of Russia’s southern Chechnya region.

“In my personal opinion, more drastic measures should be taken, right up to the declaration of martial law in the border areas and the use of low-yield nuclear weapons,” Mr. Kadyrov wrote on Telegram before Mr. Zelensky spoke.

Other top officials, including former President Dmitry Medvedev, have suggested Russia may need to resort to nuclear weapons, but Mr. Kadyrov’s call was the most urgent and explicit.

Mr. Putin said last week that he was not bluffing when he said he was prepared to defend Russia’s “territorial integrity” with all available means, and on Friday made clear this extended to the new regions claimed by Moscow.

Washington says it would respond decisively to any use of nuclear weapons.

Serhii Cherevatyi, spokesperson for Ukraine’s eastern forces, said before the capture that Russia had 5,000 to 5,500 troops at Lyman but the number encircled could be lower.

Reuters could not verify either side’s battlefield assertions.

Ukraine says taking Lyman will allow it to advance into the Luhansk region, whose full capture Moscow announced in early July after weeks of grinding advances.

“Lyman is important because it is the next step towards the liberation of the Ukrainian Donbas,” Cherevatyi said. “It is an opportunity to go further to Kreminna and Sievierodonetsk, and it is psychologically very important.”

The Donbas has been a major focus for Russia since soon it launched the invasion on Feb. 24 that Mr. Putin calls a “special military operation” to demilitarize and “denazify” its smaller neighbor. The areas Mr. Putin claimed as Russian — the Donbas regions of Donetsk and Luhansk and the southern regions of Kherson and Zaporizhzhia — form a swath of territory equal to about 18% of Ukraine’s total surface land area. Kyiv vowed to continue liberating its land of Russian forces.

Retired US Army General Ben Hodges said a Russian defeat in Lyman represented a major political and military embarrassment for Mr. Putin. — Reuters

‘French Spiderman’ climbs first skyscraper with son in Barcelona

BARCELONA — Alain Robert, the free climber dubbed the “French Spiderman”, scaled one of Barcelona’s highest skyscrapers on Saturday without a harness. And for the first time ever, the famous daredevil was joined by his son.

“This time is different. My son is not a climber so I feel responsible somehow,” Mr. Robert told Reuters while preparing for the climb. “I know he’s a big boy, 34. It’s his own decision, but at the end of the day I am his dad.”

Bystanders and Spanish police watched as the 60-year-old and his son, Julien, climbed the 144-meter Torre Glories, formerly the Torre Agbar, a glass-covered office building designed by architect Jean Nouvel and famed for its night-time illuminations.

“I feel very stressed. I’ve never been so scared in my life,” Julien told Reuters just before they started.

“I’ve done scary things in life, but this is… I’ve never been so afraid for my life. Fortunately, I have my father who will talk to me, will guide me.”

The pair completed the climb in less than an hour and were met at the top by police, who escorted them down the more traditional way — inside the building — and did not arrest them.

Julien, who spent eight years in the army and is a keen sportsman, prepared for his first climb by watching videos of his father’s previous ascents.

Alain Robert began climbing in 1975, training on the cliffs near his hometown of Valence in southern France.

He took up solo climbing in 1977, since when he has climbed more than 150 buildings, including Dubai’s Burj Khalifa — the world’s tallest building — the Eiffel Tower, and San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge.

Mr. Robert rarely gets permission and climbs without a harness, using only his bare hands, a pair of climbing shoes, and a bag of powdered chalk. — Reuters

Land consolidation is the answer

GABRIEL JIMENEZ-UNSPLASH

President Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos, Jr. (PBBM) says that he wants to be known as the “agriculture President.” In New York, when he was asked in an Asia Society forum what he wants to accomplish during his six-year term, he replied “for not a single Filipino to be hungry.”

This is a noble and exceptional aspiration because agriculture has been the sick sector of the Philippine economy for decades. Increasing the sector’s contribution to gross domestic product (GDP) growth and making food affordable to every Filipino, goals no president has achieved, will be a remarkable and fantastic achievement.

Achieving the goals will become more challenging because the country faces a near-term food crisis. The war in Ukraine, a changing global climate that has caused droughts in China, Europe, and California, higher oil and fertilizer prices, Typhoon Karding, and a possible rice cartel formed by rice exporting countries Vietnam and Thailand together with a rice export ban by India, threaten our food security and may drive food prices, including rice, higher in the last quarter.

It’s therefore not an easy task that PBBM has set up for himself.

However, if PBBM doesn’t take the bull by the horns, he is setting himself up for a gigantic failure.

What do I mean?

I mean that the primary binding constraint in the development of Philippine agriculture is land fragmentation. The answer to our agricultural woes is farm consolidation and modernization. Nothing else. All other efforts will fail.

More so if he relies on the government and the Department of Agriculture (DA) to solve problems. Experience and studies have shown that the DA is dysfunctional, inefficient, and corrupt. Therefore, increasing the DA’s budget or announcing new government-directed programs, like reviving the National Food Authority’s trading operations, won’t be the answer. It may be too late if he realizes this after six years because he would have failed by then.

The central problem of agriculture is that there are too many farmers marginally tilling small parcels of land (average of 1 hectare or less.) Many farmers are just producing enough for their consumption. Many farmers too are just part-time farmers because farming isn’t profitable and they have to earn non-farm income, such as driving tricycles.

That there are too many small farmers working on atomized farmlands causes other problems down the supply chain line. Volumes are just too small to ship economically. Ask domestic shipping companies and they will tell you that their prices are high because agriculture produce volumes are too low. There are indeed middlemen that can aggregate these small volumes but the transaction costs of dealing with many small farmers are too high.

Middlemen or traders have also inordinate power over the farmers and are criticized for exploiting them. With so many small farms, the power dynamics are skewed toward the trader.

Therefore, the government must promote land and farm consolidation to create bigger, better-managed farms. Commercial farming or agri-business, in other words. We need bigger farms that can use science, technology, capital, and management to increase agricultural production and produce for profit.

However, creating bigger and better-managed farms is impossible under the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Law (CARL). Successful farmers are not allowed to expand beyond five hectares. Often, farms get subdivided into ever smaller plots of land with each succeeding generation.

It’s good that PBBM has included debt condonation of agrarian reform beneficiaries as part of his legislative agenda. Most agrarian reform beneficiaries (ARBs) (at least 75%) don’t pay anyway. Debt condonation won’t affect government finances because it will just involve an accounting write-off in the government’s balance sheet.

More importantly, farmers will be free to sell or lease their lands because, under the law, they aren’t allowed to do so until their loans have been fully paid. The theoretical effect of debt condonation is a more vigorous and freer land rental market that will promote land consolidation through leasing.

Other reforms, such as removing the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) clearance for rural land transactions and transferring the monitoring of land retention limits to the Land Registration Authority rather than DAR, converting Certificate of Land Ownership Awards (CLOAs) into fee simple titles, and scrapping notices of coverage if the DAR fails to acquire lands within one year, can also help reduce transaction costs and create a more efficient and friction-less rural land market.

However, debt condonation won’t be a cure-all. Only mega-corporations like Dole or Del Monte can pay rent. Small- and medium-sized farmers prefer share tenancy although this isn’t allowed under the law. It’s being done anyway, according to Dr. Marife Ballesteros of the Philippine Institute of Development Studies (PIDS). Share tenancy rather than fixed rental makes sense for the small farmer without capital because of the vagaries of farm production, affected by weather, pests, and other unforeseeable factors.

Ideally, land consolidation through ownership must also be promoted. Farmer families would rather own the land rather than rent it so they can pass it to succeeding generations. Increasing the land retention limit to 24 hectares will lead to more family-owned agribusiness ventures.

Moreover, there’s another compelling reason why land consolidation through ownership should be promoted: lessees tend to overfertilize the land because they don’t own it, thereby degrading the quality of the soil, and its productivity, over the long term.

Why 24 hectares? Because that was the size allowed for homestead and agricultural patents under the 1935 Constitution. In other words, the 1935 Constitution fathers thought that that size would constitute a good-sized, economical family farm. Studies by the University of Asia and the Pacific economists led by Dr. Rolly Dy bear this out. Ideally, there should be no land retention limit because the market should dictate the limit, but this may be politically unfeasible at this time.

The government can’t shirk promoting land consolidation. To be sure, there will be some form of creative destruction with more efficient farmers displacing less efficient ones. Farmers who sell or lease their lands can earn higher incomes by becoming farm workers on much bigger but more productive farms, or as factory workers in secondary cities. In China, their industrialization took off because farmers and rural workers were encouraged to move to the cities to work in labor-intensive factories where their incomes were higher and more stable. Therefore, we need to amend our labor laws and ease our labor rigidities even as we promote land consolidation.

In the short term, the government has no choice but to liberalize food importation — the expansion or removal of quantitative restrictions on corn, sugar, chicken, pork, and fish because domestic production is far short of demand. It will also send a powerful signal to farmers to become more efficient. (An undervalued currency can protect them in the meantime.)

However, import liberalization must be accompanied by similar liberalization and deregulation of the rural land markets because, for example, sugar farmers can rightfully complain that unless they are allowed to bulk up, they can’t compete. Agricultural economist Dr. Karlo Adriano has shown that the bigger the size of the sugar farm, the lower its cost of production. Sugar farms of sizes 100 hectares or more produce sugar at costs close to Thailand’s. Ergo, size matters. Unfortunately, due to CARL, the bulk of sugar farms, about 85%, have become five hectares or less.

The Department of Agriculture under former Secretary William Dar was aware of the problem of land fragmentation weighing on agricultural productivity and sought to promote farm consolidation. However, it tried promoting it without removing the restrictions imposed by CARL, through block farming and cooperatives. It failed miserably.

A similar fate awaits President Bongbong Marcos’ aspiration to be the agriculture president if he doesn’t take the bull by the horns. True, his father imposed land reform, but only for rice and corn lands and without the restrictions on agricultural land imposed by the post-EDSA government of former President Cory Aquino.

The CARL succeeded as a land distribution program to quell the domestic insurgency. As a program to increase productivity, it has failed. Thirty-one years after CARL, our people remain hungry, and our farmers have become impoverished landlords.

The majority of Filipino voters elected PBBM to correct this “leftist-Yellow” historical economic policy error (“social justice” as asset distribution without economic freedom). PBBM cannot shirk that responsibility. He will either end up a great President who has redeemed his father’s name by fulfilling his dream of not a single Filipino going hungry, or give substance to his critics who see him as a dilettante.

Greatness comes from making tough, but right choices. In agriculture, PBBM will face these choices soon enough. We pray that he makes the right decisions.

 

Calixto V. Chikiamco is a member of the board of IDEA (Institute for Development and Econometric Analysis).

totivchiki@yahoo.com

Elsa Patriarca Agustin: A servant of the Filipino people

A FILE PHOTO of the Department of Finance showing former Finance Secretary Cesar V. Purisima administering the oath of office to Elsa P. Agustin as Acting Director IV.

(Action for Economic Reforms has collaborated with the Department of Finance for more than 25 years, and one of those who made the partnership durable was the late former Finance Undersecretary Elsa Agustin. Ms. Agustin passed away recently. AER thus requested her former Finance colleague and mentee Lyonel Tanganco to write a tribute for Ms. Agustin.)

“The President is wrong!” was the last thing I expected to hear an Undersecretary (USec) say in a meeting with the Office of the President. This happened a few years ago, when Usec. Elsa Agustin and our team from the Department of Finance (DoF) met with the President’s office on a policy reform concerning government finances.

“Oh crap!” were the first words that came to mind. What Usec. Elsa said might not have been the wisest thing to say, I thought. We needed the support of the President and his office for our reform. I was also afraid. We were meeting Malacañang, after all! I kept quiet, though. I was only there to support my principal.

“Ma’am Elsa,” as we fondly call her, entered the DoF as an economist in 1991. I first met her in 2017 when she was already the Director of the Fiscal Policy and Planning Office, which was in charge of projecting macroeconomic figures and government revenues. She played an instrumental role in reforms, such as the TRAIN (Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion) Law that secured our government’s financial position and paved the way for inclusive economic growth.

Ma’am Elsa was petite and soft spoken. She had short hair and wore a dark blazer. We often saw her hands inside her pockets or clasping the lapels of her blazer, with her elbows pulled close to her waist. She would get cold, she said. She was smart and kind. A good listener, but also a straight shooter.

In 2019, she served as an Alternate Executive Director in the World Bank Headquarters in Washington DC. She came back to serve as an Undersecretary in the DoF amid the COVID-19 crisis. She led the team previously headed by then-Undersecretary Karl Chua before he was appointed Socioeconomic Secretary. It was during Ma’am Elsa’s time as Undersecretary that I had the privilege of serving directly under her.

Having worked in the government for three decades, she had every reason to be jaded, hopeless, or compromised, but our experience working with her showed us that she was anything but those. Despite her seniority and a 30-year bout with diabetes, she was the energy of our team.

In every policy consideration that we had to study despite tight deadlines, she would drive us to pursue and present the best options for the sake of the Filipino people. She would measure our proposals against principles of good governance and fiscal responsibility to ensure that hard-earned taxpayer money was not wasted. She repeatedly motivated us to aim higher and fight for the right policies, even if they were not popular or easy.

She worked hard, too. She personally studied all the projects assigned to her. Some weekends and late nights, I would find her cursor moving in a shared document — she was scrutinizing our presentations for the week when most of us young staff were already asleep.

Her experience and expertise in the work showed in every conversation we had with her. Yet, she was down to earth. We could talk to her about our professional dreams and our personal lives. One minute, we would talk about tax reform, and in the next, we would be talking about who liked whom in the office.

She never got mad at us. I asked her once why she was never angry, even if we made mistakes. She said that she believed she just had to remind us of the expectations and maybe guide us more in our work. There was no need to get angry. We were all adults. She trusted us to do the right thing, she said. Nevertheless, we were afraid of disappointing her and letting her down. Such was her integrity. It inspired us to be the best civil servants we could be.

Looking back to that meeting with the Office of the President, I now think that maybe she did what was right. Government agencies need people like her who, despite political pressure, will speak the truth and aim for the best policies for the Filipino people. Often, the job of a civil servant is to present hard truths to decision makers.

Before she passed away a few weeks ago due to complications from her decades-long battle with diabetes, I was able to write to her thanking her for her leadership, for her inspiration, and for three things that I learned from her. I am glad that I was able to do so. I now share with you these three lessons:

From her, I learned to see things simply. Our work in the DoF involved proposing changes in policies, sometimes requiring changes in legislation, with the goal of improving the lives of fellow Filipinos. Opponents or losers from reforms would muddle the picture, but the path to take — if supported by evidence — is often clear. The challenge for us civil servants is sticking to it.

From her, I learned to be brave. It is nerve-wracking to propose policies that may be unpopular, especially to powerful decision makers, but we must do so. I learned to draw courage from principles and evidence instead of fearing criticism.

From her, I learned to be kind and selfless. Ma’am Elsa’s leadership was one of honesty, transparency, and selflessness. Her giving instructions and her providing encouragement to us were not about her being the Undersecretary. She wanted us to do our work and do what was expected of us for the country. She reminded us that true leadership is not about us, but about serving the Filipino people.

Ma’am Elsa, you are an inspiration to all of us who have been a part of your DoF life. I am sorry that we did not have the chance to eat at the buffet place we often talked about going to. I am forever grateful for the time you took us under your wing and mentored us. Enjoy all the food and comforts of eternal life up there.

 

Lyonel Tanganco  served as a director in the Department of Finance.

lyonel.t.tanganco@gmail.com

Women’s rights, hijabs and protests in Iran

HASAN ALMASI-UNSPLASH

I ran is among the most difficult places to live in for women. Whether it be in the manner by which women dress, their educational pursuits, their career paths, or their life choices, all aspects of women’s lives are dictated by the state.

Last month, a 22-year-old girl named Masha Amini was arrested by the Iranian morality police. Her crime? Not wearing her head scarf (hijab) properly and showing too much hair. Eyewitnesses claim that the young girl was accosted and brought inside a police van where she was beaten without mercy. The trauma to her body was so severe that she fell into a coma. She was brought to the hospital where she died on Sept. 16.

Amini’s death was the tipping point to decades of oppression of women. It triggered nationwide protests that spread to 80 towns and cities. Women are crying-out against cruelty, subjugation, discrimination, and maltreatment. The menfolk have supported the protests too, saying that such violence by the state is not reflective of Islam values. To this, effigies of Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and Iranian President Sayyid Ebrahim Raisolsadati (commonly known as Ebrahim Raisi) were set on fire along with women’s hijabs to demonstrate against Islamic extremism. The protests have resulted in violent clashes between civilians and security forces. As of this writing, some 50 people have been killed in the clashes.

Women who are unable to join the street rallies have taken their protests online. A trend has emerged where women appear without hijabs and cut their own hair on live stream for all netizens to view. The cutting of hair is a demonstration of solidarity with Amini. It is meant to say that woman are shedding their symbol of beauty to stand up for their rights. They are demanding more freedom, more respect, and better treatment.

The Iranian government has embarked on a cover up since the protests began. Initially, they claimed that the morality police never assaulted Amini and that she suffered heart failure while in custody. Days later, the police statement was censored and removed from all social media platforms.

Civilian protests are organized through social media apps like WhatsApp. So, to quell the rallies the Iranian government cut off internet service in many parts of the country. Elon Musk stepped in and made his Starlink satellite-based internet service available to Iranian netizens.

President Raisi has taken notice and ordered an investigation into Amini’s death. But the people are not convinced that it will be a fair investigation nor will reforms for better treatment of women be enacted. Raisi himself advocates even more stringent restrictions on what women can wear and what freedoms they can enjoy.

Raisi has always been a vocal critic of women’s campaigns against the laws on hijabs. He calls it a corruption of Islam tenets. He also said that protesters should be dealt with decisively.

As an observer in the other side of the continent, we condole with family and friends of Mahsa Amini and condole with the women of Iran who continue to suffer from the heavy hand of their own government.

Although we are fully aware that we cannot interfere in the internal affairs of this sovereign nation, we must point out that Iran is a member of the United Nations and a signatory to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR). It has ratified five core human right instruments. Even if the Organization of the Islamic Conference, of which Iran is a member, ratified an alternative Islam version of the human rights accord called the Cairo Declaration of Human Rights in Islam in 1990, Iran remains treaty treaty-bound to respect life and due process.

That said, we hope for a fair and objective investigation into Amini’s death and hope that a reasonable compromise will be reached towards the severe treatment of women.

********

Amid the increasingly violent protests at home, President Raisi was preoccupied with his forthcoming address to the United Nations General Assembly. His address took place on Sept. 21 and on that occasion, the Iranian chief executive appealed to lift economic sanctions on Iran.

It will be recalled that the United States imposed restrictions on economic activities with Iran under various legal authorities since 1979 following the seizure of the US Embassy in Tehran. Through the years, numerous sanctions were relaxed, re-imposed and/or intensified. This was due to a variety of reasons including Iran’s actions against foreign vessels in the Persian Gulf, its support of terrorism, its uranium enrichment program, and, lately, its failure to reach a nuclear deal. Iran was the most sanctioned country in the world until it was surpassed by Russia recently.

A nuclear deal was close to being signed two times this year but Iran backed out. President Raisi made two demands if he was to sign the deal. First, he wanted to make sure that the US will not pull out of the deal like US  President Donald Trump did in 2018. Raisi wants legal promises and guarantees that should the US back out again, Iran will be compensated. Second, that the United Nations atomic watchdog — the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) drop all new investigations into Iran. Raisi says all new investigavtions must be canceled and only those approved in the 2015 accord be pursued.

But there are two problems with Raisi’s demands. On the issue of guarantees, this is not a treaty so President Joe Biden cannot make guarantees since he has no control over how future presidents will act. If the next president is a Republican, the chances of the US pulling out of a nuclear deal with Iran is almost certain. On the issue of investigations, the IAEA does not report to the United States so the US cannot speak for them.

With the current state of affairs, the demands of President Raisi are impossible to meet. Thus, it seems the nuclear deal will reach a stalemate again and the economic sanctions on Iran will continue.

 

Andrew J. Masigan is an economist

andrew_rs6@yahoo.com

Facebook@AndrewJ. Masigan

Twitter @aj_masigan

Gatsby, the dollar, and staring blankly at the world falling apart: Bound for the Plaza?

TIMIS ALEXANDRA-UNSPLASH

(Part 1)

THOUGHTS in the currency market are turning toward the Plaza Hotel. The stately pile at the southeast corner of Central Park has a lasting place in American culture as the scene of Tom Buchanan’s confrontation with Jay Gatsby in The Great Gatsby; in the financial world, it has lasting fame as the place where world finance ministers and central bankers came together in September 1985 to agree on intervening to weaken the dollar against the West German deutsche mark and the Japanese yen. The effect was dramatic (if not as dramatic as Daisy Buchanan’s choice between her husband and her lover):

The ministerial intervention was successful and achieved what its backers wanted. The dollar has never regained its pre-Plaza highs from early 1985. But now, wishful thoughts are returning to the Plaza Accord once more. The dollar is still far below its 1985 high in nominal terms. On a real effective basis, taking account of inflation, Citibank’s index shows that it is almost back to its high since inception in 1989, after the accord was reached.

Some of the dollar cliches are true. Printing dollars does give the US “exorbitant privilege” (in the words of former French President Valery Giscard d’Estaing) and it is “our currency and your problem” (to quote President Richard Nixon’s treasury secretary, John Connally). And so it is that a succession of major economies have tried over the last week to rein in the US currency.

Japan’s Ministry of Finance intervened directly to avert the yen from falling beyond ¥145 per dollar; last Wednesday brought the Bank of England’s intervention in the gilts market, which also had the effect of arresting the pound’s descent toward parity; and on Thursday, the People’s Bank of China responded to the yuan’s weakest dollar exchange rate since 2008 by warning: “Do not bet on one-way appreciation or depreciation of the yuan, as losses will definitely be incurred in the long term.”

In all cases, sharp losses for the home currency were more or less halted. None of the interventions has as yet led to any kind of major reversal.

Interventions by three of the four largest economies outside the US in the space of a week show that the dollar’s strength is beginning to cause real stress. But there are at least two sides to any currency trade, and no meaningful limit to the dollar is possible without willing participation by the US. Hence the talk of a return to the Plaza. The logic is expressed as follows by Julian Brigden of Macro Intelligence 2 Partners.

“We’ve discussed the growing use of policy as a thumb on the economic scale. Now, with volatility rising and some markets threatening to seize up, policymakers appear to have seen the size of the economic shark they are fighting and had the thought that, with apologies to Jaws, they’re ‘going to need a bigger thumb.’”

If not a full-blown formal repeat of Plaza, there are at least hopes of a new version of the informal 2016 Plaza Accord, when dollar strength caused problems for China, and the Fed decided to hike rates only once during the year, rather than the four times it had previously guided the market to expect. The shifts in the financial tectonic plates are already causing alarm, while the Ukrainian conflict has driven a sharp devaluation for European currencies compared to the dollar. A strong dollar has also driven several emerging market crises in the past.

However, the story is more complicated. The Institute of International Finance (IIF) points out that the dollar has been far stronger with respect to the developed world than to emerging markets.

According to the IIF’s estimates of fair value, the euro and the pound are still overvalued and have further to fall, despite the damage they have already sustained. That might vitiate any Plaza-style attempt to limit the dollar. And it also confirms that this dollar surge is likely to create more pain in western Europe than in the emerging world.

Beyond that, the forces driving the dollar are strong, and not going away. To quote Fiona Cincotta of City Index:

“There’s nowhere to hide. There’s still some dollar strength to come. If we just think about what’s going on with the dollar, it’s being supported by safe haven flows, it’s been supported by a very hawkish Fed. It’s not showing any signs of really slowing down in that hiking cycle right now. And also, there’s no alternative… You don’t want to be going near the euro right now, given the energy crisis, the inflation troubles over the state of the economy… There’s nothing that’s appealing about the pound given the concerns over the outlook for the UK economy.”

Or, as Nick Carraway in Gatsby might have put it, the dollar is the pursued, and everyone else is pursuing, busy or tired. Weakening it would be hard. In any case, the US isn’t on board for doing so, for a list of reasons covered by Morgan Stanley’s economics team:

“First and most importantly, a weaker USD runs counter to what the Fed and Treasury are trying to achieve: lower inflation. A weaker dollar is, on net, inflationary in the US and deflationary abroad; foreign currency appreciation supports higher external demand. While US inflation is elevated, it seems difficult to countenance why the US would proactively participate in an inflationary dollar policy, and without US participation, we see little chance of success.”

Beyond that, they couldn’t do another Plaza if they wanted to, because of lack of ammunition:

“We think that policymakers are aware of a hard truth: They don’t have enough FX reserves to make a sustained difference. Back in 1985-87, the last time we had a coordinated intervention to weaken USD, daily FX turnover was near $200 billion per day (on a net-gross basis) but, as of the last reported BIS figure in 2019, daily turnover is over 40 times higher at $8.3 trillion per day. The G10 collectively has $2.8 trillion in FX reserve assets (deposits and securities, so excluding gold).”

The bottom line is that despite the growing problems the rising dollar is causing for the world, we won’t be returning to the Plaza any time soon. The non-dollar economies may have each other’s company, but in another pearl from Gatsby, they must feel like “they are watching their whole world fall apart, and all they can do is stare blankly.”

(To be continued.)

BLOOMBERG OPINION

GCash improves security for users, moves text messages to app inbox, removes all links in SMS and emails

New measures part of heightened efforts to combat scams, fraud

In line with efforts to combat scammers and fraudsters, leading Philippine financial app GCash further intensifies its security measures. It is migrating transaction confirmation messages to the app inbox and removes clickable links in all emails and text messages to users.

GCash is removing clickable links in official emails and text messages sent to customers followed by an aggressive information campaign that users will no longer receive messages from GCash that contain website links.

These come on the heels of the National Telecommunications Commission’s (NTC) order to block links in text messages which is seen as a significant deterrent against scammers. The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), for its part, also called on its regulated financial institutions to undertake several steps in cracking down on cyber fraud and other attacks to financial services.

“These changes are in line with our own #SafeWithGCash campaign that aims to ramp up investments, partnerships, as well as educational and awareness programs on keeping our services safe and secure for our 69 million users,” said Martha Sazon, President and Chief Executive Officer of GCash. “The safety of our users is our utmost priority and we continue to invest and implement world-class security measures to protect customer data”.

The confirmation SMS for the ‘Send Money’ service will be moved from text message inbox to users’ app inbox. It will be followed by ‘Buy Load’ and ‘Bank Transfer’ by October 12. These messages will also be available in the ‘Transactions’ button on the app. Customers have been informed of these changes through official text messages and in-app reminders.

“Migrating the transaction confirmation messages will help ensure users are getting only legitimate messages regarding their GCash transactions,” explained Ingrid Rose Ann Beroña, Chief Risk Officer of GCash.

The top Philippine e-wallet has been adamant in ensuring the protection of personal data and accounts of its customers by employing various security measures including cyber threat detection and analytics, vulnerability scanning, as well as incident response and forensics.

Just recently, GCash has also swiftly rolled out a feature update that anonymizes the names of recipients in the send money service to provide an added layer of customer protection. In the past, the name of the person is seen as an added measure of convenience and helps verify that the recipient is correct.

These initiatives are also in line with efforts of the Globe Group to combat scammers. Globe has announced that it will be blocking text messages with links, which is the common platform that scammers use.

Likewise, Globe has spent $20 million or about P1.1 billion to boost its capabilities in detecting and blocking scam and spam messages. Through aggressive 24/7 efforts, Globe has blocked 610 domains or URLs, 784 million scam and spam messages from January to July this year, deactivated 14,058 scam-linked SIMs as well blacklisted 8,973 others.

Amid all these efforts, GCash, with strong support from Globe, assures the public that it will remain a leading figure in the fight against ever-evolving threats that target the data and hard-earned money of its customers.

 


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BPI to merge with smaller Robinsons Bank

BW FILE PHOTO

The Philippines’ oldest lender said on Friday it is merging with a smaller commercial bank to expand its client base and fast-track growth.

In a disclosure, Bank of the Philippine Islands (BPI) said it will be the surviving entity merging with unlisted Robinsons Bank. Stockholders of Robinsons Bank will own around 6% of BPI, it added. — Reuters