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Ildefonso officially unvieled as Asian import of Suwon

DAVE Iledefonso, son of PBA legend Danny Ildefonso is coming off a championship with the Blue Eagles in the UAAP — PHILIPPINE STAR/RUSSELL PALMA

FORMER Ateneo stalwart Dave Ildefonso has been officially unveiled as the Asian import of Suwon KT Sonicboom in the ongoing Korean Basketball League (KBL).

Mr. Ildefonso arrived in Korea earlier this week and has been training with Suwon before the team finally launched his acquisition yesterday midway through the regular season games.

The son of PBA legend Danny  Ildefonso is coming off a championship with the Blue Eagles in the UAAP to cap his illustrious collegiate career.

He was also a member of the UAAP Season 85 Mythical Five behind averages of 12.07 points, 8.29 rebounds, 2.64 assists and 1.14 steals, which he is expected to carry over to Suwon with a 13-15 card for seventh place so far.

Since playing his last game for Ateneo last month, Mr. Ildefonso has been linked up with Suwon before the official announcement that stretched the list of local collegiate standouts taking their talents to the KBL.

He joined the likes of NCAA Rookie-MVP Rhenz Abando of Letran now playing with Anyang KGC, former Ateneo teammate SJ Belangel (Daegu), ex-FEU ace RJ Abarrientos (Ulsan) and College of St. Benilde product Justin Gutang (Changwon)

Filipino-American Ethan Alvano is also playing for Wonju while Justine Baltazar, after a short Japan B. League stint with Hiroshima, is reportedly set to play for Seoul. — John Bryan Ulanday

KC Chiefs blast Raiders, clinch No. 1 seed in AFC

KANSAS City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes — REUTERS

THE KANSAS City (KC) Chiefs repeatedly harassed Raiders quarterback Jarrett Stidham while their offense built a big lead en route to a 31-13 win in Las Vegas on Saturday, clinching the top seed in the AFC playoffs.

In the regular-season finale for both teams, the Chiefs’ Patrick Mahomes threw for 202 yards and a touchdown while setting an NFL record for total offense by a quarterback in a single season.

The top seed assures Kansas City (14-3) a first-round playoff bye and a home game in the division round.

Kansas City’s defense made big play after big play in the first half, sacking Mr. Stidham four times, one of those leading to a fumble, and intercepting him once. Mr. Stidham, making just his second NFL start after the Raiders benched Derek Carr, threw for 219 yards and a touchdown. He also rushed for 50 yards.

The Raiders (6-11) trailed 14-3 early in the second quarter when they drove 74 yards to the Chiefs’ 2-yard line. However, consecutive incompletions by Mr. Stidham gave the ball back to the Chiefs on downs.

Kansas City then drove 98 yards on 12 plays, capped by Kadarius Toney’s 11-yard run for a 21-3 lead with 47 seconds before halftime.

On the Raiders’ next possession, Mr. Stidham fumbled on a sack by Mike Danna, and two plays later, Harrison Butker kicked a 44-yard field goal as time expired to move the halftime score to 24-3.

Las Vegas opened the third quarter with a 13-play drive but had to settle for Daniel Carlson’s 38-yard field goal to make it 24-6.

Isiah Pacheco scored on a 1-yard run early in the fourth quarter for Kansas City, and Mr. Stidham found Hunter Renfrow for an 11-yard touchdown with 6:37 to play.

Mr. Mahomes completed 18 of 26 passes and also rushed for 29 yards. In the first half, he surpassed Drew Brees (5,562 in 2011) for the most combined yards rushing and passing in one season. Mr. Mahomes finished at 5,608.

The Chiefs held the NFL’s leading rusher, Josh Jacobs, to 45 yards on 17 carries.

The Raiders moved it to 7-3 on Mr. Carlson’s 54-yard field goal, but on their next possession, Juan Thornhill picked off Mr. Stidham at the Las Vegas 44. The Chiefs needed only three plays to score, capped by Ronald Jones’ 2-yard touchdown run. — Reuters

Silver and bronze for PHL fencing team in Malaysia

THE PHILIPPINES added another silver and bronze medals to its loot in the in the Southeast Asian Fencing Federation Championships in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia over the weekend.

The men’s epee team of Jian Miguel Bautista, Lee Eigran Ergina, Noelito Jose, Jr. and Rex dela Cruz, Jr. tried but failed to wrest the gold and settled for the silver after falling to the mighty Vietnamese in a heartbreaking 45-42 result.

The women’s foil squad of Mariel Flores, Hannah Dominique Belarmino, Janna Allysah Catantan and Miyake Capina, for their part, copped the bronze after they ran into the unflappable Thais, 45-21, in the semfiinals.

Vietnam then routed Thailand in the finale, 45-41, and seized the mint.

The Filipinas actually started strong as they sideswiped Brunei, 45-22, and Indonesia, 45-32, before Thailand eliminated the former.

The pair of medals came a day after Noelito Jose, Jr. and Wilhelmina Lozada struck gold in senior men’s and women’s epee, respectively. — Joey Villar

Jayson Tatum (34 pts), Celtics hold off undermanned SA Spurs

JAYSON Tatum scored 34 points and had the game-winning jumper with 33.7 seconds to play as the visiting Boston Celtics outlasted the short-handed San Antonio Spurs 121-116 on Saturday.

The Spurs were playing the second game of a home back-to-back and were without three regular starters but hung tough with Boston, the team with the best record in the NBA.

The Celtics led by 15 points late in the second quarter but led just 114-113 after Romeo Langford’s layup with 1:12 to play. Robert Williams III’s alley-oop dunk on the ensuing possession put Boston back up by three points but Josh Richardson canned a 3-pointer with 37.4 seconds left for San Antonio to tie the game.

After a timeout, Mr. Tatum’s step-back jumper in the lane on Derrick White’s 11th assist of the game gave the Celtics the lead. San Antonio’s Jeremy Sochan then missed a 3-pointer and Mr. Tatum hit a free throw with 4.9 seconds remaining to push the lead to three points. He missed the second attempt, but Al Horford grabbed the offensive rebound before Malcolm Brogdon was fouled and closed out the game with two free throws.

Jaylen Brown added 29 points for Boston, with Mr. Brogdon scoring 23, Mr. Williams hitting for 10 points and grabbing 11 rebounds and Mr. Horford taking 11 rebounds.

Zach Collins racked up a career-high-tying 18 points and 12 rebounds for San Antonio. Richardson and Tre Jones added 18 points apiece while Mr. Langford had 14, Doug McDermott scored 13, Sochan tallied 11 and Stanley Johnson and Malaki Branham each contributed 10 points for the Spurs.

San Antonio was without Devin Vassell, who will have arthroscopic surgery on his left knee next week, leading scorer Keldon Johnson, who strained his left hamstring in Friday’s win over Detroit and Jakob Poeltl, who was out with left Achilles bursitis.

The Celtics led 33-30 after the first quarter. San Antonio was within 57-49 after a 3-pointer by Mr. Richardson with 4:15 to play in the second quarter before Boston reeled off an 11-4 run to build a 15-point lead with 1:04 left in the half. Baskets by Mr. Branham and Mr. Jones pulled San Antonio to 68-57 at the break.

Mr. Brown led the Celtics with 18 points before halftime with Mr. Tatum hitting for 17 and Mr. Brogdon adding 11. Mr. Collins and Mr. Richardson paced San Antonio with 10 points each at halftime. — Reuters

Eye-popping scores

For fans who like their games to be replete with scoring outbursts, the turn of the year has been a bountiful of blessings. Given the increased frequency with which leather and nylon meet, 40 has become the new 30. There was Luka Doncic’s 51-point masterpiece on the very first day of 2023, actually the third time he would hit the half-century mark in his last five outings. It coincided with Paul George’s 45-point effort in a losing cause. Two nights later, 38-year-old LeBron James followed up a 47-point performance with 43 piece. And his wasn’t even the highest. His and Joel Embiid’s 42 were topped by Klay Thompson’s 54 and DeMar DeRozan’s 44.

There would be more scoring binges in the interim. Giannis Antetokounmpo’s 55 was followed by Kevin Durant’s 44, Lauri Markkanen’s 49, and Zach LaVine’s 41. To date, however, the 2022-23 season’s crowning number is the 71 put up by Donovan Mitchell to eclipse DeRozan’s aforementioned mark in the same contest. Naturally, the Cavaliers celebrated as if they claimed the championship, in large measure also because they had to go through the wringer to get the W. The celebrator had to miss the second of two free throws with 4.1 seconds left in regulation, grab the rebound, and then bank in the game-tying shot to force overtime. He then scored 13 more to clinch victory.

Needless to say, social media exploded in the aftermath. Mitchell’s pop-a-shot-like showing is the eighth-best in the annals of the National Basketball Association, and the highest since Kobe Bryant went for 81 16 years ago. Because it came off a close match, however, a Last Two Minute Report was issued by the league office. And guess what? The post-mortem deemed him guilty of a lane violation prior to his carom-score combine to trigger an extra period. In other words, his production should have stayed at 56, by sheer happenstance the same marks posted by James and Kyrie Irving as Cavaliers records.

In any case, Mitchell came down to earth the very next time he burned rubber. Although the Cavaliers won again, he posted a very mortal 20 on six-of-20 shooting from the field. Nothing to crow about, and certainly not in this day and age of eye-popping figures on the board. That said, no front-office retrospective — or prospective on-court bombs — can take the luster off his milestone. Even at the breakneck speed with which points are being churned out, his remains a stratospheric achievement. He is right to be proud of it.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and human resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

China reopens borders in final farewell to zero-COVID

Travelers queue up at Hong Kong’s Lok Ma Chau border checkpoint on the first day China reopens the border amid the coronavirus pandemic in Hong Kong, China, Jan. 8, 2023. — REUTERS

HONG KONG/SHANGHAI — Travelers began streaming across land and sea crossings from Hong Kong to mainland China on Sunday, many eager for long-awaited reunions, as Beijing opened borders that have been all but shut since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.

After three years, the mainland is opening its border with Hong Kong and ending a requirement for incoming travelers to quarantine, dismantling a final pillar of a zero-COVID policy that had shielded China’s people from the virus but also cut them off from the rest of the world.

China’s easing over the past month of one of the world’s tightest COVID regimes followed historic protests against a policy that included frequent testing, curbs on movement and mass lockdowns that heavily damaged the second-biggest economy.

“I’m so happy, so happy, so excited. I haven’t seen my parents for many years,” said Hong Kong resident Teresa Chow as she and dozens of other travelers prepared to cross into mainland China from Hong Kong’s Lok Ma Chau checkpoint early on Sunday.

“My parents are not in good health, and I couldn’t go back to see them even when they had colon cancer, so I’m really happy to go back and see them now,” she said, adding that she plans to head to her hometown in eastern China’s Ningbo city.

Investors hope the reopening will eventually reinvigorate a $17-trillion economy suffering its lowest growth in nearly half a century. But the abrupt policy reversal has triggered a massive wave of infections that is overwhelming some hospitals and causing business disruptions.

The border opening follows Saturday’s start of “chun yun,” the first 40-day period of Lunar New Year travel, which before the pandemic was the world’s largest annual migration of people returning to their hometowns of taking holidays with family. Some 2 billion people are expected to travel this season, nearly double last year’s movement and recovering to 70% of 2019 levels, the government says.

Many Chinese are also expected to start traveling abroad, a long-awaited shift for tourist spots in countries such as Thailand and Indonesia, though several governments — worried about China’s COVID spike — are imposing curbs on travelers from the country.

Travel will not quickly return to pre-pandemic levels due to such factors as a dearth of international flights, analysts say.

China on Sunday also resumed issuing passports and travel visas for mainland residents, and ordinary visas and residence permits for foreigners. Beijing has quotas on the number of people who can travel between Hong Kong and China each day.

Videos posted on Chinese social media showed workers at Shanghai’s Pudong airport overnight taking down bright blue boards marking routes through its international terminal to enforce a regime that required travelers from abroad to quarantine for up to eight days upon arrival.

Other videos showed people hugging emotionally upon reuniting at the airport gate.

At Hong Kong’s Lok Ma Chau checkpoint, a driver who only gave his surname Yip, said he was among those who could not wait to travel to the mainland.

“It’s been three years, we have no time to delay,” he said. — Reuters

Moscow ends ceasefire; vows to press ahead in Ukraine

UKRAINE and Russian flags are seen through broken glass in this illustration taken March 1, 2022. — REUTERS

RUSSIA’s overnight bombing of regions in eastern Ukraine killed at least one, local officials said on Sunday, after Moscow ended a self-declared Christmas ceasefire and vowed to push on with combat until it reaches a victory over its neighbor.

President Vladimir Putin ordered on Friday a 36-hour ceasefire along the line of contact to observe Russia and Ukraine’s Orthodox Christmas, which fell on Saturday. Ukraine had rejected the truce, and there was shelling along the frontline.

A 50-year-old man died in the northeastern region of Kharkiv as a result of Russia’s shelling, Oleh Sinehubov, the governor of the region said on the Telegram messaging app. The news came minutes after midnight in Moscow.

Most Ukrainian Orthodox Christians have traditionally celebrated Christmas on Jan. 7, as have Orthodox Christians in Russia. But this year, the Orthodox Church of Ukraine, the country’s largest, allowed also for a Dec. 25 celebration. Still, many observed the holiday on Saturday, flocking into churches and cathedrals.

The Kremlin said that Moscow will press ahead with what it calls a “special military operation” in Ukraine and which Kyiv and its Western allies call an unprovoked aggression to grab land.

“The tasks set by the president (Putin) for the special military operation will still be fulfilled,” the Russian state TASS agency quoted Mr. Putin’s first deputy chief of staff, Sergei Kiriyenko, as saying.

“And there definitely will be a victory.”

There is no end in sight to the war, now in its 11th month, which has killed thousands, displaced millions and turned Ukrainian cities into rubble.

Ukrainian officials also reported blasts in regions that make up the broader Donbas region — the war’s frontline where fighting has been raging for months.

Pavlo Kyrylenko, governor of the Donetsk region in Ukraine, said that there were nine missile strikes on the region overnight, including seven on the battered city of Kramatorsk. According to preliminary information, there were no casualties.

Blasts were also heard in the city of Zaporizhzhia, the administrative center of the Zaporizhzhia region, a local official said, without giving any immediate report on damage or casualties.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Wednesday that Russia is planning a major new offensive. The Pentagon said on Friday that Mr. Putin’s aim of seizing Ukrainian territory has not changed, even if his military continues to suffer blows.

There’s been growing concerns that Belarus — a staunch backer of Moscow — could be used as a staging post to attack Ukraine from the north after increasing military activity in the country and fresh transfer of Russian troops there.

Unofficial Telegram channels monitoring military activity in Belarus reported late on Saturday that some 1,400-1,600 Russian troops arrived from Russia into the northeastern city of Vitebsk in Belarus over the past two days.

Reuters was not able to independently verify the information. — Reuters

Abortion, China, big government: Republicans gear up to flex US House muscles

SAMUEL SCHROTH-UNSPLASH

WASHINGTON — Hours after Republican leader Kevin McCarthy finally clinched the US House speaker role, his party was already rolling out its initial legislative steps: the creation of committees to investigate China and the “weaponization of the federal government,” and a bill that could potentially limit abortion care nationwide.

Mr. McCarthy won the election for speaker of the US House in the 15th round of voting in the early hours of Saturday, after four solid days of negotiation with a group of hardline conservatives in his caucus — the longest speaker’s election in 160 years.

After a weaker-than-expected performance in the November midterm elections, Republicans control the House with a narrow majority of 222-212, giving just a few hardline members outsized leverage to force through their political and legislative goals.

The protracted intraparty battle highlighted the deep rifts between mainstream conservatives and hard-right members of the Republican caucus, and was resolved only after Mr. McCarthy agreed to major concessions that will severely curtail his power compared with the previous speaker, Democrat Nancy Pelosi.

Highlights of the new rules of the House, which will get a vote on Monday, include a 72-hour waiting period before the introduction of a bill and a vote on it; and allowing any member to trigger a vote of confidence in the speaker.

“My father always told me: It’s not how you start, it’s how you finish,” Mr. McCarthy said in a speech on Saturday morning, after winning the gavel. “I think at the end of the day, we’re going to be more effective, more efficient.”

The efficiency was on full display as his office almost immediately issued a list of bills to be voted on as soon as the rules package is approved on Monday. These include the creation of a committee to investigate competition between the United States and the Chinese government, as well as a committee investigating “the weaponization of the federal government.”

A bill that would “prohibit a healthcare practitioner from failing to exercise the proper degree of care in the case of a child who survives an abortion or attempted abortion” will also get introduced next week.

Both applause and caution poured in from Democrats after the election, including from President Joseph R. Biden, who congratulated Mr. McCarthy on his win.

“As I said after the midterms, I am prepared to work with Republicans when I can and voters made clear that they expect Republicans to be prepared to work with me as well,” Mr. Biden said in a statement. “Now that the leadership of the House of Representatives has been decided it is time for that process to begin.”

The House will reconvene on Monday to pass the rules package. At least one Republican has said he will not support it. — Reuters

US, South Korea to partner on advanced air mobility dev’t

WASHINGTON — The US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said on Saturday it had agreed to partner with the Korea Office of Civil Aviation (KOCA) future Advanced Air Mobility aircraft development and operations.

The two nations signed a declaration to collaborate and share information on advanced air mobility projects and work together to promote the safety oversight of advanced air mobility projects, the US regulator said.

“Collaborating with our international partners on safely integrating these new technologies will create more efficient, sustainable and equitable transportation options,” said Acting FAA Administrator Billy Nolen.

The announcement comes as companies around the world are racing to develop and eventually win regulatory approval to deploy low-altitude air taxis known as electric vertical takeoff and landing aircraft (eVTOL).

The FAA has previously announced similar partnerships with Japan, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia and New Zealand in the National Aviation Authorities Network to harmonize certification and integration plans for advanced air mobility projects.

Airlines and others are looking at developing transport services using battery-powered aircraft that can take off and land vertically to ferry travelers to airports or on short trips between cities, allowing them to beat traffic.

Last month, the FAA issued the airworthiness criteria that Archer Aviation will need to meet for its M001 air taxi to be certified for use.

The FAA released the criteria for public comment of Archer’s eVTOL after it made a similar announcement in November for Joby Aviation’s JOBY.N Model JAS4-1 eVTOL. — Reuters

Journalists detained over footage appearing to show South Sudan president wet himself

NAIROBI — Six journalists in South Sudan have been detained over the circulation of footage showing President Salva Kiir appearing to wet himself at an official event, the national journalists union said on Saturday.

The footage from December showed a dark stain spread down the 71-year-old president’s grey trousers as he stood for the national anthem at a road commissioning event. The video never aired on television but subsequently circulated on social media.

The journalists, who work with the state-run South Sudan Broadcasting Corporation, were detained on Tuesday and Wednesday, said Patrick Oyet, president of the South Sudan Union of Journalists. They “are suspected of having knowledge on how the video of the president urinating himself came out,” he told Reuters.

South Sudan Information Minister Michael Makuei and National Security Service spokesperson David Kumuri did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Mr. Kiir has been president since South Sudan gained independence in 2011. Government officials have repeatedly denied rumors circulating on social media that he is unwell. The country has been embroiled in conflict for much of the past decade.

The detained journalists are camera operators Joseph Oliver and Mustafa Osman; video editor Victor Lado; contributor Jacob Benjamin; and Cherbek Ruben and Joval Toombe from the control room, Mr. Oyet said.

“We are concerned because those who are detained now have stayed longer than what the law says,” he added. By law, South Sudanese authorities are allowed to detain suspects for only 24 hours before bringing them before a judge.

The incident “matches a pattern of security personnel resorting to arbitrary detention whenever officials deem coverage unfavorable,” said the sub-Saharan Africa representative for the Committee to Protect Journalists, Muthoki Mumo. — Reuters

Tribute to a Life: Maria Victoria Carpio-Bernido

The Carpio and the Bernido families gathered together in Jagna, Bohol to commemorate the first death anniversary of Maria Victoria Carpio-Bernido (Marivic) on Jan. 6. I was fortunate to join them. I wondered whether the physical death of that one remarkable candle also spelled the death of the dreams and the garden that it sowed and jealously nurtured. Or whether the seeds she sowed will rage against the dying of the light? And will this rage postpone for a meaningful moment the entropic wave we call the Second Law of Thermodynamics that is ultimately in store for all dreams and dreamers?

In one family dinner, we invited the Central Visayan Institute Foundation’s (CVIF) latest Science Corps visiting scientist, Swastika Issar, an evolutionary biologist with a recent PhD from the University of Cambridge via the Tata Institute, India, and the Max Planck Institute, Konstanz, where she was a postdoctoral fellow.

The Science Corps program sends new PhD volunteers to share new scientific knowledge and technologies with students and tutors in host communities. The program was conceived by Ben Rubin, now a postdoctoral fellow at the lab of 2020 Nobel laureate and CRISPR discoverer Jennifer Doudna’s lab in the University of California Berkeley, while he was a volunteer visitor at CVIF, the secondary school in Jagna, Bohol which Marivic and her husband Chris embraced and built up to some renown.

CVIF attracted a parade of curious visitors from other schools. Ben became aware of CVIF through Dr. Baldomero Olivera, a corresponding member of the National Academy of Science and Technology – Philippines (NAST-PHL) and winner of the 2007 Harvard Foundation Scientist of the Year Award for his work on conotoxin peptides, who had heard Marivic and Chris’ talk in the 2004 NAST Annual Scientific Meeting on the revolutionary pedagogy, Dynamic Learning Program, that they introduced in CVIF. Dr. Olivera collected samples of cone snails, genus conus, in Bohol Island, and eventually donated lab equipment to the CVIF science lab. Ben, with his dad Prof. Edward Rubin (leader of the team that mapped the human genome) eventually organized the now global program from private donations.

The Science Corps-CVIF nexus will surely bear Marivic’s dream into the meaningful future.

The dinner conversation that December evening was spirited, with Dr. Issar talking about the surprising power of evolutionary biology and her own work on the behavior of Cichlids (fish) in Zambia. I became even more convinced that biology, especially evolutionary biology, should become the template for all the social sciences and economics in lieu of Physics.

The Dynamic Learning Program (DLP) is the heart of Marivic and Chris’ pedagogy. At its core are the “no homework policy” (students complete all requirements at school premises and are encouraged to help in chores at home), and “learning by doing.” “Learning by doing” is where students, on their own, complete the learning activity sheets (LAS) for each topic, prepared and evaluated by the faculty (Marivic herself spent the last few months of her life furiously perfecting LASs) and in lieu of costly textbooks. The completed LASs are gathered by students into their personalized portfolios at the end of the course, serving as references for future college courses. Thus, the student, as it were, compiles his/her own proto-textbook rather than just be handed a textbook at the start. There is also the use of an “expert teacher” for a scientific area such as Chemistry, where the teaching is assigned to most competent; and the use of parallel classes to optimize expert teachers’ time. So entrenched was the “learning by doing” philosophy that most of CVIF’s successful annual theatrical plays were researched and co-written by the students themselves. Chris and Marivic would just provide guidance on the finer points of the theater arts.

The Magsaysay Foundation recognized these advantages of the DLP by presenting a Magsaysay Award to Chris and Marivic. The PLDT-Smart Foundation, led by Esther Santos, took up the task of spreading the pedagogy to interested private schools. Despite the widespread interest and some highly encouraging results, the educational establishment itself has proven oblivious of DLP, continuing instead to celebrate comfort zone programs of more school rooms, more textbooks, and more teacher training in same tired pedagogy.

For as long as the Philippines continues to bottom-dwell in the education league tables, DLP will continue to be a living testament that we lag behind not because we don’t know any better but because we cannot break out of the comfort zone of business as usual.

Every high school has posters of alumni who have made good. Two of CIVF’s were particularly interesting: Ronald Lloren who is now at ETH Zurich, Einstein’s alma mater, in Switzerland, getting his PhD in Marine Science via Marine Science UP; and Madeleine Nayga, who is doing her PhD at the Max Planck Institute Dresden in Physics via the National Institute of Physics at the University of the Philippines (UP). When pre-pandemic entry to the UP system was determined by the entrance test, UPCAT (UP College Admissions Test), the passing rate of CVIF takers was close to 20% while the overall UPCAT passing rate hovered around 5% (UPCAT stopped with the 2020-21 pandemic). Forty-two CVIF graduates got Department of Science and Technolgy (DoST) scholarships in 2022 for their tertiary education.

Competing pedagogies are a dime-a-dozen but natural selection should weed out inferior ones by comparing relative performance based on measured outcomes.

There are national aptitude exams at the secondary level but educational authorities seem intent that the data is beyond the reach of researchers interested in comparative performance. If the Philippines is to extricate itself from the bottom of the educational performance ladder — as shown again and again by cross country surveys (PISA rankings among them) — letting go of the data is a priority. Adding years to bad pedagogy (the K-12 program) will not help but may even harm Philippine education outcomes.

The Research Center for Theoretical Physics (RCTP) is CVIF’s answer to poor research and science education in the Visayas and Mindanao. But why theoretical? Few even in the Philippine science community know that the concept “double ring-shaped oscillator” in quantum physics still employed today in quantum dots was first introduced by Marivic in 1989. Numerous graduate students in Physics first found their sea legs in research and publication through the triennial RCTP conference where they meet frontier concepts and network with living research leaders, in the process finding research topics and fellowships abroad. The success of Mindanao State University-Iligan Institute of Technology physics research and science capital build-up has become the regional template of RCTP-derived collaboration.

The first RCTP conference in 1995 was held in the Bernido compound in Jagna, Bohol, and I served tables to help extend the magnificently shoestring budget. At one table I served were two physicists, Frank Wilcek from Princeton University and Gerard ’t Hooft from the University of Utrecht, Holland. They must have wondered at how basic were the appointments, so alien to the five-star hotel accommodations they were normally accorded. I wondered, too, how intrepid were Chris and Marivic to host these august visitors in these humble surroundings.

But Marivic insisted that for true seekers of knowledge, a blackboard and a spirited exchange of ideas among the discerning is suffice to, as it were, transport them to Plato’s netherworld of forms and essences oblivious of immediate surroundings. And it must have been so because the American Institute of Physics published the proceedings of three other RCTP Conferences. World Scientific also published three more! In 1998, Gerard ’t Hooft was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for work on the renormalization of Yang-Mills model, while in 2003, Frank Wilcek was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for the asymptotic freedom of quarks. Such strong foundations will no doubt catapult the edifice of dreams long after the dreamer has left the stage.

To further Marivic’s legacy of excellence in science, CVIF has inaugurated the “Maria Victoria Carpio-Bernido Lectures” which is hosting science lectures by established scholars. The first lecture was given by Prof. Eduardo Mendoza of the Max Planck Institute for Biochemistry in Munich, Germany and a corresponding member of NAST-PHL. This column’s writer — a NAST member and National Scientist — gave Lecture 2 on Jan. 5 on why manufacturing has eclipsed in the Philippines and on how to engender a turn-around.

In November 2022, Marivic’s birthday, and 10 months after her death, a paper she co-authored with her doctoral student was accepted for publication, one of many. Those gathered to commemorate her death are resolved that Marivic will be as salient in death as in life.

 

Raul V. Fabella is a retired professor of the UP School of Economics, a member of the National Academy of Science and Technology and an honorary professor of the Asian Institute of Management. He gets his dopamine fix from bicycling and tending flowers with wife Teena.

Policymaking in 2023

ESKAY LIM-UNSPLASH

What can we expect from Ferdinand Marcos, Jr.’s administration in terms of policymaking in 2023?

We can second-guess how the administration will conduct itself this year in two ways. The first is by examining how current conditions, global and national, will influence policy. The second is by reviewing actual behavior and performance of the Marcos administration in the previous year.

Let us first look at the global outlook. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) expects that a third of the world economy will be in recession. This stems from the slowing down of the biggest economies, namely the US, European Union, and China. Note that according to economist Stephen Roach, these three biggest economies constitute about half of the world’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP), based on purchasing-power parity.

The Ukraine war and the persistent pandemic, among other events, have created myriad problems resulting in supply problems and high inflation, which in turn have led to a steep increase in interest rates. Both the rich and developing countries are not spared from this phenomenon.

The IMF’s managing director Kristalina Georgieva has a blunt summary: 2023 is going to be “tougher than the year we leave behind.”

The World Bank (WB) echoes the IMF outlook. An abstract for the forthcoming WB’s “Global Economic Prospects” says that global growth “is expected to decelerate sharply, reflecting synchronous policy tightening aimed at containing very high inflation, worsening financial conditions, and continued disruptions from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.”

In an earlier statement (Sept. 15, 2022), the WB said that “the currently expected trajectory of interest-rate increases and other policy actions may not be sufficient to bring global inflation back down to levels seen before the pandemic.”

But what about the situation in Asia? The lockdowns in China (which has been reversed, but which has now led to a surge in COVID-19 cases), the Russian invasion of Ukraine, and the global growth slowdown have led the Asian Development Bank (ADB) to make a downward revision of its regional growth forecast in 2023. The Asian Development Outlook says that it has revised its previous 2023 forecast in the region from 4.9% growth to 4.6%. That is a slight downward revision. And a growth rate of 4.6% when the rest of the world is edging towards recession is a relief.

The ADB forecast for the Philippines is brighter. The ADB estimates a GDP growth of 6%, down from its previous forecast of 6.3%. That still looks impressive. Even the WB’s estimate of 5.7% Philippine growth in 2023 is nothing to sneeze at.

The relatively bright forecast for the Philippines comes on the back of a surge as expressed in the average 7.76% growth in the first three quarters of 2022.

What can possibly explain the Philippine economic growth despite the strong global headwinds?

One reason can be explained by Milton Friedman’s plucking model. Plucking is a metaphor. Take a string of a guitar or a violin. The deeper and harder it is pulled or plucked down, the quicker it returns to its former state upon releasing the string.

This model basically defines a situation wherein after demand plunges, the economy bounces back quickly to its pre-crisis level. This suggests that regardless of policy, the economy would revert rapidly to its former condition.

The pandemic makes an interesting case for the plucking model. The onset of the pandemic severely disrupted economic activities, leading to employment and output falling way below the potential. But now that economic activities have normalized as society has learned to dance with the virus, the recovery has been swift.

The plucking model describes an economy strongly bouncing back after a deep recession. But it does not show the mechanism of how the recovery can take place. For instance, being in a bad equilibrium before the pandemic or poor interventions during the pandemic can delay the recovery. For that matter, even as the economy has recovered, government must decisively address new or emerging binding constraints.

The Marcos Jr. administration is fortunate to have inherited a sound macroeconomy, thanks to a series of critical reforms undertaken by previous administrations. The high-growth momentum took off during the Noynoy Aquino administration. The momentum was disrupted by the pandemic-induced recession, but the economy has rebounded.

While it was responsible for inflicting terror and violence and allowing intolerable corruption and inefficient public spending, the Rodrigo Duterte administration put in place a series of transformative reforms. The tax reforms, the relaxation of foreign investment rules, the lowering of barriers to meet the supply of affordable rice, the legislation of universal healthcare, inter alia, have strengthened the foundation for longer-term growth. Thus, the Philippines is on the cusp of getting the much-desired “A” credit rating that will demonstrate high creditworthiness and becoming an upper middle-income country.

But here’s the thing: The current high growth can be explained by the plucking model (regardless of policy, the economy will grow) in combination with the crucial reforms undertaken before Marcos Jr.’s presidency.

Perchance, President Marcos Jr. and his economic managers have been lulled into complacency. Worse, they have become overconfident. One of the administration’s first acts was to loosen health protocols like dropping the mask mandate even though COVID-19 persists. It has not appointed a Health Secretary, which has made the Department of Health ineffective in adopting or implementing policies. It has not appointed an Agriculture Secretary, either, reducing the Department of Agriculture to a servile agency that dishes out platitudes and silly propaganda.

Worse, in this environment of institutional drift, the administration has made policy blunders, marked by incoherence and zigzags. This is demonstrated by its bungling of food and trade policies (our sugar and onions are the most expensive), resulting in stubbornly high inflation.

Further, the administration has dismissed the most critical elements of the sound fiscal consolidation program that the Department of Finance has prepared for the new administration. Revenues have nominally grown, but tax revenues in real terms must respond to the pressure for higher but efficient spending to protect the country from global threats like the long war, the pandemic, and climate change.

Amid these challenges, the administration is fixated on a bad, irrelevant proposal: the Maharlika Investment Fund. The bill has been met with widespread and vigorous opposition not only from technocrats, civil society, academics, and the media, but also from the general populace. This is a sorry instance where the administration has squandered its political capital.

Surely, growth will happen in 2023. But given the way that administration is performing, the growth that will happen cannot be attributed to its performance. Moreover, in a world of extreme uncertainty and volatility, a bad black swan can destroy the current growth.

But let’s hope that the leadership will wake up. We do not want the hope or optimism of our people to vanish. How the current administration can shape up, neither the plucking model nor standard economic theory can explain.

 

Filomeno S. Sta. Ana III coordinates the Action for Economic Reforms.

www.aer.ph

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