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Philippine team wins global crowdsourcing tilt for disaster-resilient housing solutions

The field test trial of the University of the Philippines Diliman’s Institute of Civil Engineering team's Column Footing Grade Beam Monolith.

By Patricia Mirasol 

A team from the University of the Philippines-Diliman’s Institute of Civil Engineering (UP Diliman ICE) has won Habitat for Humanity’s crowdsourced competition for retrofitting houses with unsafe foundations. Besting more than 81 submissions from 24 countries, the group’s solution uses a load-bearing support mechanism and a reinforced concrete beam that increase a home’s resilience to earthquakes and typhoons. 

The Column Footing Grade Beam Monolith is the brainchild of Dean Ashton Plamenco, Diocel Harold Aquino, Fernando Germar, and Ammiel Barros. Their winning entry has isolated reinforced concrete footings placed on four corners of a structure, with each side connected by a reinforced concrete beam called a plinth. Said to withstand the required gravity and special loads from earthquakes and strong winds, the method can also be applied for future incremental builds — like a second story — in the existing structure.  

“(I am firmly convinced that) the solutions presented at today’s event will excite and inspire actors in the Philippine housing sector. We have the collective responsibility to reduce disaster risks and protect vulnerable communities in the Philippines and all over the world,” said Luis Noda, Habitat for Humanity International’s Asia Pacific vice-president, in the Sept. 29 awarding ceremony.  

A panel from SeaFreight Labs, BASE Bahay Foundation, Habitat for Humanity International, and Habitat for Humanity Philippines selected four finalists, further whittled down to three in the field test phase, after the solution presented by one was found to be difficult and expensive to install. 

The field test done in Bignay, Valenzuela City employed a lateral load test, which simulates the lateral forces of earthquakes and typhoon winds, on each of the three remaining solutions. Judging was based on four criteria: resilience against typhoons and earthquakes; availability of materials needed; ease of installation among masons and homeowners; and affordability among low-income households. 

“Equally important is if the homeowners like the solution,” said Jessan Catre, Philippine country lead at Habitat for Humanity’s Terwilliger Center for Innovation in Shelter, at the virtual event. “Would they actually use it?”  

The Column Footing Grade Beam Monolith, which won over Charles Bunch’s Foundation-Fit System and Leonard Duffy’s Perimeter Concrete Reinforcement Retrofit for Concrete Hollow Block Structures, exceeded the structural code requirements in terms of resiliency, and also got top scores in a community acceptability survey.  

The winning UP team will receive $25,000. The two other finalists, South Korea-based Mr. Bunch and US-based Mr. Duffy, will receive certificates of participation. 

The Habitat for Humanity Challenge was launched in the Philippines in October 2020 to source cost-effective ways to retrofit houses to withstand a 6.5 Richter scale earthquake and a typhoon with 200-kph winds. Apart from the Philippines, three other challenges were launched in Kenya, Mexico, and India through InnoCentive, an open innovation and crowdsourcing company.  

According to Mr. Catre, Habitat for Humanity will work with UP Diliman ICE to pilot the Column Footing Grade Beam Monolith for scale. It will also work with partners like Holcim Philippines to develop business solutions, as well as the Department of Human Settlements and Urban Development to create programs that support innovation.

China’s regulators tighten scrutiny of FX dealers

REUTERS

SHANGHAI – China’s regulators are tightening control over the inner workings of its currency market, pressuring banks to trade less and in smaller ranges, two banking sources told Reuters, as part of a sweeping push to curb speculation.

The moves follow recent efforts at curtailing financial risks that include dampening commodity price rises, banning cryptocurrency transactions and restricting property speculation. And they bring the campaign deeper into day-to-day operations on the dealing desks of a $30 trillion market.

It is also the latest example of scrutiny focused on foreign exchange, which analysts said might be aimed at tightening the leash on the yuan at a sensitive time when U.S. policymakers prepare to withdraw monetary stimulus and China seems poised to add more.

Reuters reported earlier in September that brokers have dropped currency forecasts following regulatory pressure and reports the scrutiny of the interbank market for the first time. Authorities have also been hinting that banks and companies should prepare for volatility.

In recent months many banks have also withdrawn individual FX trading products, closing another avenue for speculation.

Recently, representatives of China’s State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) have embedded themselves on currency trading floors from commercial banks to major state-owned lenders, said the two sources at separate market-making banks.

They said the officials stayed for months, far longer than supervisory visits previously, and urged them to price customer deals faster and in tighter ranges, or spreads.

The bid-ask spread is the difference between the price the bank charges clients and price in the market, so narrowing it reduces trading banks’ profit. It could also help hem the yuan in a tighter trading range, but at the same time moves risk from customers to the bank while a deal is being executed.

One source said the regulator reminded them their role is to keep things steady or “smoothen fluctuations without pushing the yuan to either side”. They added that regulators had not visited foreign banks this year. Banks in Hong Kong do not participate in China’s onshore interbank market.

The other source said they were told to cut volumes to reduce the turnover of interbank trades – once a badge of honor for so-called market makers who provide liquidity to each other and the wider trading pool.

“(Now) you get calls from regulators if you trade too much,” he said. Both requested anonymity as they are not authorized to talk to the media about the matter.

SAFE told Reuters by fax it has “always supported” market participants in trading “reasonably”, and to promote the integrity, fairness, order and efficiency of the foreign exchange market.

The scrutiny comes at a delicate time for China’s currency, which sits near multi-year highs but faces headwinds as markets prepare for the United States to begin tapering pandemic-era policy support just as China seems ready to step in and ease as its economy slows.

The People’s Bank of China has pumped a net 750 billion yuan ($116 billion) into the banking system since mid-September as markets have been rattled by fears of contagion from a debt crisis at China Evergrande and economic damage from power cuts.

“Policymakers would rather maintain a loosening bias in the cash conditions, but one side-effect is that too much cash could prompt speculation,” said Ken Cheung, chief Asian FX strategist at Mizuho Bank in Hong Kong, noting that is something the latest crackdown might curb.

“The central bank has said multiple times not to bet on currency appreciation or depreciation,” he said.

MORE INTENSE
As President Xi Jinping makes his case for a third term, the country’s most powerful leader since Mao Zedong is driving what some observers describe as a mini revolution, curbing the excesses of capitalism and returning China to its socialist roots.

Crackdowns on tutoring and on tech firms have unnerved investors and hammered share prices in those sectors. But regulators have also been changing the way markets operate.

“(It’s) certainly becoming more intense this year,” said one currency trader at a mid-sized bank, noting extra training sessions, stricter scrutiny from compliance and even chatter among peers that was becoming more guarded.

Since SAFE head Pan Gongsheng warned in June against laying bets on the yuan’s direction, brokers in China have shied away from publishing once-routine currency forecasts.

Around the same time a handful of banks also began quietly closing foreign exchange trading businesses that had let individual clients bet on non-yuan currency pairs.

Turnover in such accounts was small and has now all but vanished, with the Bank of China, Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, and China Merchants Bank among those to post public statements about restricting access to trade.

SAFE said it had not offered any guidance to commercial banks regarding personal foreign exchange businesses, and nor did the banks provide clear reasons for their decisions.

Yet all used similar language in their explanations.

Huaxia Bank, which said it will suspend its personal FX business in December cited market changes, while ICBC and China Merchants bank both said the move was necessary “to respond to changes in market conditions.”  — Reuters

China seeks to calm power supply fears as crunch bites

REUTERS

BEIJING China’s all-powerful economic planning agency waded into the country’s power crunch on Wednesday, attempting to reassure residents and businesses in areas hardest hit by shortages that it has the coal use and supply situation under close watch.

The state planner, the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), said it has asked local governments to closely monitor coal use and stocks at power plants and to improve fulfilment of medium- and long-term contracts to supply thermal coal.

The move comes as electricity shortages continue to paralyze parts of the world’s no. 2 economy in various regions, particularly the northeast. A shortage of coal supplies, toughening emissions standards and strong demand from manufacturers have pushed coal prices to record highs, sparking widespread curbs on usage while dimming economic growth outlook.

China has already called for an increase in imports and ramping up domestic production of coal, a key fuel used for the majority of its power generation. 

Northeastern China is one of the hardest-hit regions with news reports and social media posts flagging problems in cities like traffic lights and 3G communications networks being down, fear of water supply disruptions and shops operating by candlelight.

Officials have sought to reassure citizens coal supply will be adequate ahead of the upcoming winter and rising demand for fuel for heating.

The main state grid operator has also attempted to calm customers twice this week, saying it would work to guarantee coal supply and strictly control power use by high-energy consuming and polluting sectors, ensuring power supply to residents during the October holidays and winter heating season.

On Wednesday the People’s Daily reported coal resources for heating and power generation in the northeastern provinces of Jilin, Heilongjiang and Liaoning had been ensured as some suppliers and producers signed medium and long-term coal contracts recently. — Reuters

Singapore sends vaccines to neighbors as region seeks to reopen

REUTERS

Singapore is contributing vaccines to its neighbors amid a regional effort to reopen its economies.

Thailand and Indonesia each received 122,400 doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine from the city-state this week, according to Singapore’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs in statements. It also sent 100,000 doses of the Moderna vaccine to Brunei Darussalam, in exchange for the same quantity back at a later date, according to the ministry on Wednesday.

Higher vaccination rates are seen as key for many of the Southeast Asian countries seeking to reopen their tourist-dependent economies, though they continue to grapple with limited supply. The Thai cabinet approved this week an additional purchase of 60 million shots of AstraZeneca. Meanwhile, Indonesia’s vaccination rate is lagging behind almost every major economy in the region, with less than 20% of its population fully inoculated.

Thailand is eying a reopening of its tourism economy in November, while Indonesia is seeking to welcome vaccinated tourists back to Bali’s beaches next month. Singapore’s foreign affairs minister Vivian Balakrishnan recently said that relaxations of travel curbs with its neighbors are being “actively discussed,” though the country’s priority is to control the pandemic at home, according to a report in The Straits Times. — Bloomberg

FDA leans toward authorizing Moderna booster at a half dose

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is leaning toward authorizing half-dose booster shots of the Moderna Inc. coronavirus vaccine, satisfied that it’s effective in shoring up protection, people familiar with the matter said.

The authorization would set the stage to further widen the U.S. booster campaign after earlier authorization of the Pfizer Inc.-BioNTech SE shot. About 170 million fully vaccinated people in the U.S. received the Moderna or Pfizer shots, or 92% of the total inoculated so far.

The people spoke on the condition of anonymity, before a potential announcement. It’s not clear when an announcement will come.

Any authorization would also introduce different dosage levels for boosters. Moderna’s initial inoculations contained 100-microgram doses, and the company’s submission to regulators amounted to a push to authorize a half-dose booster, which would allow Moderna to produce more. Pfizer’s shot, for comparison, has 30-microgram initial doses and a 30-microgram booster.

Moderna declined to comment on Tuesday night. The White House and the FDA declined to comment.

The U.S. is rolling out boosters to head off what President Joe Biden’s health advisers warn are a pair of concerning trends: Hints that vaccine efficacy wanes over months, and that the two-dose regiments are weaker generally against the delta variant. The U.S. has dealt with a summer and fall wave of new cases, hospitalizations and deaths, driven by spread among unvaccinated people but increasing the exposure risk for the vaccinated.

The FDA had been seeking information about the effectiveness of a full third dose of the Moderna vaccine, but is now ready to move forward and consider the half-dose booster Moderna has proposed, the people said.

Biden, who got his Pfizer booster on Monday, has said this remains a pandemic of the unvaccinated.

Anthony Fauci, the head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, has said he believes Pfizer and Moderna will eventually be considered three-dose vaccines.
As the vaccination campaign widens, sites that administer them will have to juggle different versions. In addition to Moderna potentially adding a half-dose booster, Pfizer is seeking authorization of a vaccine for children ages 5 to 11, with a 10-microgram dose — one-third the strength given to those 12 and up.

Fauci has indicated that there’ll be progress soon on booster shots for Moderna as well as Johnson & Johnson’s one-dose vaccine. “I believe it will be weeks and not months,” he told NBC’s “Meet the Press” earlier this month. — Bloomberg

Toktok’s ride towards growth

Founder and CFO Carl Macadangdang (left), and Founder and President Jonathan So (right)

Starting a business is not always a walk in the park, especially in the middle of a global health and economic crisis. But this is when the journey of toktok began.

Launched only in December last year, toktok is a proudly Filipino-made delivery application headed by Jonathan So and Carlito Macadangdang. Its ride from the start towards growth is fueled by the determination to meet the needs of Filipinos, particularly as the crisis pushed them to get most essentials via digital ways.

But before being a top go-to delivery app serving across the Philippines, toktok’s journey first began in-house — a lockdown response to delivery challenges faced by the Siomai King business of Mr. So and Mr. Macadangdang.

With their respective knowledge of computer application programming and computer science, plus the solutions of their software development company Cloud Panda PH, the two decided to create their own delivery app.

Starting with 100 riders, toktok initiated to run in-house, supporting its sister companies Siomai King, JC Premiere, and CopperMask in their delivery needs.

Shortly some months later, upon the realization of increasing delivery demand and lay-offs, toktok was opened to the public. It provided the means to safely deliver packages at an affordable rate for customers as well as opportunities to earn extra income for a rider, franchisee, or operator.

The progress of toktok is swift since then — jumping from 100 to over 20,000 riders, having one million downloads in the Play Store and App Store, and reaching several places nationwide. But toktok’s growth also went beyond numbers.

Aside from package delivery, toktok constantly added more to its services.

Just less than half a year in the market, toktok has already expanded its capacity by offering ‘Pabili Service’ that lets users request riders to buy essentials like foods and medicines. Currently, toktok is in partnership with SM Malls and Robinsons Malls for this service.

toktok further grew by the end of May through the establishment of its online mall. A digital space for merchants, the ‘toktok mall’ is a gateway for consumers to access most of their needs, including apparel, electronics, appliances, and grocery items.

Two months later, toktok also began to deliver in four wheels ranging from sedans, vans, and trucks to cater to the heavier parcels needed by customers.

Soon, ‘toktok food’ will roll out to further satisfy a craved delivery service of Filipinos.

“These expansions of toktok is to provide more options to the customers and more bookings for the riders,” Mr. So said.

“The result in those eight months is two or three times of the expectations that we planned to have,” Mr. Macadangdang added. “We have a very good team in software development and marketing.”

Local and foreign personalities and companies also start looking to invest and join toktok in its growth journey. Some banks also push the business to go public.

Currently, toktok has yet decided on how to leverage these opportunities. Nonetheless, Mr. So shared, they are grateful for the recognition that toktok received.

“We are still studying how investors can enter. If we allow them to, we want them to be happy and at the same time be helpful for the customers, riders, and operators,” Mr. So explained. “In case it will happen, we can definitely push our ideas and development faster.”

“Whether IPO or other means, our major goal is to scale up the app in terms of development, presence, and talents,” Mr. Macadangdang added. “Having an investor or going public is an opportunity not only for the company but for all parties involved.”

While toktok has already made several improvements for its growth, its creators continue developing the platform to encompass a whole ecosystem — from online shopping and payment to delivery. The toktok executives consider that constant development, along with aggressive marketing, can support toktok in staying as a top player in the game.

toktok also continues striving for its vision to become the locally patronized app made by Filipinos for their fellow countrymen.

“Our partnership with the customers is what we continue to improve,” Mr. So said. “Since toktok is Filipino-owned, everything we do should be custom-fit for Filipinos.”

“Rest assured that all the development and features to be added on toktok, we want them to be part of Filipinos’ everyday life,” Mr. Macadangdang continued.

 

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Building smarter homes and businesses

While digital technologies are not new for several homes and businesses, their usage and significance accelerated. Essentially, they support humans to accomplish tasks easier and faster, making them much functional amid the ongoing quarantine impositions.

As almost everyone stays at home for safety reasons, digital technologies provide the people means both for remote work or learning. Beyond these, recent technological advancements bring home various sources for entertainment and easier ways of doing tasks through a range of “smart” appliances.

Televisions, for instance, do not always rely on cable television service, video players, and DVDs to let homeowners watch films or shows. With the rise of smart TVs, people can connect the device to the internet, which can lead them to different video streaming services like Netflix, Disney+, and Prime Video, as well as audio platforms like Spotify. Additionally, people can browse the Web using smart TVs.

Such streaming services, which are also accessible through smartphones, tablets, and desktops, have also transformed media consumption and have become ultimate sources of entertainment for many people amid the lockdown.

In fact, the BBC reported that during the first three months of 2020, Netflix experienced a surge in subscribers as nearly 16 million people created accounts. As of the second quarter this year, according to Insider Intelligence, the service has roughly 209 million global paid memberships.

But aside from opening up households to several entertainments, digital technologies have also helped them making life at home more at ease and secure.

With the support of artificial intelligence (AI), several homes are equipped with virtual assistants like Amazon’s Alexa, Apple’s Siri, and Google Home. These technologies respond to various voice commands, say being instructed to play music or turn the lights on or off.

Millions of voice assistants have been helping households in the United States alone. Such technology in American homes has grown to 25 million units since 2017 and is anticipated to increase to 275 million by 2023, a Tech Wire Asia report stated in January.

Materials for cooking and cleaning at home have also recently undergone some enhancements. Amazon’s Smart Oven, for instance, has a voice control function through Alexa, which notifies the household when the food is ready. Another efficient device more used at home nowadays is the robot vacuum cleaners like iRobot’s Roomba, which automatically guide itself in cleaning the house floorings.

Aside from helping the household with different tasks, some technologies have also made home living conveniently secured through the emergence of smart locks and smart doorbells.

Some locks nowadays are controllable via mobile applications. An example is the smart locks of Yale that are controllable via the Yale Access App. It lets the user lock and unlock the door, grant access to others, and keep track of visitor access through one’s mobile phone.

Meanwhile, smart doorbells can provide an extra layer of security for the household. This device, as described by a CNBC report, usually notifies homeowners through a mobile phone when someone wants to access their property. It also allows the homeowners to see and even speak to the person.

These advancements vow to make home living easier for individuals, along with the many possibilities in their smartphones and desktops that allow them to communicate, work or study remotely, and do shopping. 

Thus, as consumers use electronic devices for their needs at home, this means that businesses continuously employ advanced technologies in their operations. Such technologies like AI also seek to improve the customer experience.

AI, as defined in an article published by the University of Queensland (UQ) on its website, is “used to describe machines that mimic cognitive functions that humans associate with other human minds, such as learning and problem-solving.”

Many businesses use AI to create an online chatbot, which functions as a tool for customer service. “Tools such as Chatbots can simultaneously respond to many customer enquiries all at once, at a much faster rate than a human can,” Dr. Ida Someh, a business information systems expert at UQ Business School, was quoted as saying.

Furthermore, such technology can also significantly support sales and marketing. “AI will work with Customer Relationship Management programs to aggregate and interpret raw data in real-time. Lead times for sales will be a lot more efficient and customer journey mapping will be more granular,” explained Sarah Kelly, an associate professor at UQ Business School. Hence, this can recognize the preferences of a customer even before entering the store, whether online or offline. 

Another technology helpful for businesses in presenting their products are the virtual and augmented realities (VR and AR). 

“[VR and AR] are a great value-add to help consumers gain a more enriched experience of a product or service, which can help customers reduce a risk of uncertainty and therefore boost brand preference and sales,” Ms. Kelly said.

Thus, while giving a realistic sample before procurement, VR and AR allow an immersive and interactive shopping experience for a customer even at the comforts of home or anywhere else. — Chelsey Keith P. Ignacio

Greenfield City: An Inspired way of living

Zadia was created with the spirit of fusing modern living with a nature-inspired lifestyle.

Greenfield City, the brainchild of Greenfield Development Corporation, is one of the most iconic townships in Sta. Rosa, Laguna. Located at the heart of the “Lion City of the South,” Sta. Rosa, Laguna, Greenfield City is a 400-hectare self-sustaining network of residential, commercial, industrial and recreational communities. Patterned after a park-living concept, Greenfield City puts a premium on open spaces and nature, and offers a refuge for those who are looking for a refreshing shift in scenery and lifestyle outside of Metro Manila.

Zadia and Trava are just two of Greenfield’s exciting developments that look toward the future. Zadia was created with the spirit of fusing modern living with a nature-inspired lifestyle. It is for that reason that the property has devoted 80% of its area to roadways, parks, outdoor amenities and green open spaces — a comfort practically unfounded in Metro Manila. While Trava, a 33-hectare residential development, dedicates 45% of the property to expansive green meadows, playgrounds, & tree-lined wide roads. Aside from its lush surroundings, Trava incorporates sustainable concepts such as underground utilities, solar-powered green roofs, and the use of eco-friendly building materials to create a peaceful, sustainable and luxurious haven of suburban living.

Trava

Greenfield Development Corporation believes that the concept of building offices, condominiums, supermarkets and restaurants within one community satisfies the homebuyer’s demand for greater mobility and convenience — features only a master-planned community could provide. Greenfield City is a fine example, as it is strategically located just a few kilometers away from the South Luzon Expressway via the Greenfield City-Unilab interchange and the Cavite-Laguna Expressway — making it easily accessible from Metro Manila. Furthermore, retail outlets and al fresco dining in Paseo Outlets, Laguna Central and Arcadia provide a wide variety of choices for shoppers and foodies while residential establishments in Greenfield City are well within reach of landmark business, commercial and industrial centers.

For Greenfield Development Corporation, creating lasting, sustainable living spaces is at the core of everything they stand for. Its mantra, “Building for Generations,” exemplifies the company’s commitment to contribute to the progress of the country by pioneering future-proofed, master-planned communities with environmentally friendly and architecturally sound homes that can be inherited by many more generations to come.

 


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Delta clouds PHL growth outlook

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

THE WORLD BANK on Tuesday cut its economic growth outlook for the Philippines once again to 4.3% this year as it estimates 60% of the population will be vaccinated against the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) by the second quarter of 2022.   

The Delta-driven surge in infections and continued lockdown restrictions have constrained economic activity, further delaying the Philippine economy’s return to pre-pandemic output to 2023 or later, the multilateral lender said in its East Asia and the Pacific (EAP) regional economic update report released on Tuesday.

“The uneven recovery in the EAP region is now facing a setback… While China, Indonesia, and Vietnam have already surpassed pre-pandemic levels of output, Cambodia, Malaysia, and Mongolia will only do so in 2022, and the Philippines, Thailand, and many Pacific Islands will remain below pre-pandemic levels of output even in 2023,” the World Bank said in the report.

The World Bank expects the Philippine gross domestic product (GDP) to grow by 4.3% this year, lower than its previous forecasts of 4.7% in June and 5.5% in April. This is also at the low end of the government’s downgraded 4-5% target for this year.

If realized, a 4.3% GDP growth would be a turnaround from the steep 9.6% slump in 2020, but is still lower than the pre-pandemic 6.1% expansion in 2019.

For 2022, the World Bank trimmed its GDP growth projection to 5.8% from the 5.9% estimate in June and 6.3% in April. It also sees Philippine economic growth slowing to 5.5% in 2023.

These latest projections are slightly below the government’s targets of 7-9% growth in 2022 and 6-7% in 2023.

World Bank estimates also showed the Philippines and Indonesia are expected to fully inoculate 60% of their populations against COVID-19 by the second quarter of 2022.

As of Sept. 26, the Philippines has fully vaccinated 18.3% of its population, according to Our World in Data’s website. Despite the sluggish vaccine rollout, the Philippine government is keeping its target to administer COVID-19 vaccines to 70% of its population by end-2021.

Other Southeast Asian neighbors are expected to achieve 60% vaccination coverage earlier, such as Malaysia (third quarter of 2021), Thailand (fourth quarter of 2021) and Vietnam (first quarter of 2022).

“The Philippines had a problem of vaccine hesitancy; it had not acquired enough vaccines [and] it was a late entrant to the vaccine market. But the good news is, we project that the Philippines, by the middle of next year, will have a high level of coverage,” Aaditya Mattoo, chief economist for the East Asia and Pacific region at the World Bank said at an online press briefing on Tuesday.

“[However], we must not think of vaccines as a miracle, vaccines are one weapon in our arsenal which we will need to deal with COVID, [along with measures in] continuing precautionary behavior, stronger testing, and preparing the health system,” he added.

The World Bank also noted the sharp reduction in the Philippines’ budget for social protection this year, which is estimated to only account for less than 1% of GDP.

Economies with reduced spending for cash transfers and other financial assistance this year are also those that are expected to report the “weakest recoveries,” it said, identifying the Philippines, Myanmar and Timor-Leste.

The World Bank estimated the government’s budget shortfall to reach 7.6% of GDP by year’s end, lower than the Philippines’ official deficit ceiling of 9.3%.

The World Bank also warned that up to eight million more people may be trapped in poverty in Indonesia and the Philippines until 2023, if policies addressing inequality are not put in place.

Income shocks especially to poor families will have adverse long-term consequences as debts pile up and food insecurity affects children’s development, it said. Learning losses from online schooling can also result in reduced future productivity for students.

“The adverse effects of the pandemic are likely to dampen long-term economic growth. In Indonesia, Mongolia, and the Philippines, firms lost on average at least 40% of their typical monthly sales and cut jobs… These negative effects on growth are likely to be stronger than any benefits of creative destruction induced by the crisis,” it added.

To boost growth, the multilateral bank said the country should focus on passing the pending bills that will ease restrictions on foreign investments.

Mr. Mattoo said the country should also prioritize reforms that will strengthen its fiscal position and generate more funds to support infrastructure projects deemed as growth drivers.

The Philippines should also focus on improving the educational sector, adoption of new technologies to develop the services sector and boost participation in manufacturing global value chains.

“More could be done, however, to broaden the scope and accelerate the pace of reform… The Philippines could do more to guarantee the rights of foreign investors and to simplify the complex and long negative list of still restricted sectors,” the bank said. — B.M.Laforga

Philippine GDP expected to return to pre-pandemic levels by 2023 or later

Retailers support VAT on digital transactions

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS
Philippine retailers are supporting the measure that would impose value-added tax on digital transactions, as they see increasing competition from foreign e-commerce companies. — PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

By Jenina P. Ibañez, Reporter

PHILIPPINE RETAILERS are calling for the immediate approval of a bill that would impose a 12% value-added tax (VAT) on digital transactions in the country as the industry sees increasing competition from foreign e-commerce companies that are not subject to local taxes.

The Philippine Retailers Association (PRA) in an e-mail on Saturday said the lack of taxes on foreign e-commerce firms has created an unfair playing field for retailers and distributors registered in the Philippines.

“While we pay VAT and customs duties, foreign sellers on digital platforms are able to get their products or services to the customers on a door-to-door basis without tax and Customs laws,” PRA Vice-Chairman Roberto S. Claudio said.

The industry group’s objections are directed at foreign online sellers that are able to deliver goods to the Philippines without being registered in or having business operations in the country and do not pay proper Customs duties and VAT.

Such foreign online retailers, he said, are able to sell to the local market without bringing in foreign investment or local employment.

Mr. Claudio is calling on the Department of Finance to validate the sales revenue of online foreign transactions.

“The retail industry will eventually lose revenue for the uneven playing field, competing with foreign online suppliers who do not pay (duties according to) our Customs laws. Eventually, government tax revenues from (local) retailers will be reduced over time,” he said.

The House of Representatives last week approved House Bill No. 7425, which amends sections of the National Internal Revenue Code of 1997, on third and final reading.

Gabriela Party-list Rep. Arlene D. Brosas voted against the approval of the measure, saying it is a tax burden on ordinary Filipinos who are struggling amid the prolonged pandemic.

In supporting the tax measure, PRA’s Mr. Claudio also recommended that “strong” implementing rules and regulations would be drafted to make sure that all digital transactions have receipts. He cited issues surrounding counterfeit products, false advertising, and product warranties have continued to persist.

“The bill can be further refined and this can be addressed in the (Implementing) Rules and Regulations as to who can be exempted. How it will be monitored and how compliance can be achieved, as well as penalties to be imposed,” he said.

PRA last month asked for expedited vaccine deliveries as the industry loses sales and cash reserves after three major lockdowns declared to curb the spread of the coronavirus pandemic.

Contact center industry set to rebound this year

A call center agent talks to a client at an office in Makati City. — REUTERS
A call center agent works in an office in Makati in this Feb. 6, 2012 file photo. — REUTERS

THE PHILIPPINE contact center industry expects to grow its full-time employee headcount by as much as 9% this year, which it says is higher than the global average, despite continued challenges amid the prolonged pandemic.

The Contact Center Association of the Philippines (CCAP) in a statement on Tuesday said that the local industry outpaces the 6-7% growth seen globally.

The revenue growth target for the year is 9%, against the global 6-7%. The industry group has not yet shared 2020 base data.

“The story of our industry was a really tough 2020 for many of us, still tough in 2021. But the market is rebounding. The Philippines is rebounding together with the market, but because we are highly differentiated we are enjoying faster growth than the global market, and fueling our business growth is the creation of jobs,” CCAP Chairman Benedict C. Hernandez said.

Noting flat revenues in global outsourcing during the pandemic last year, he said that pent-up demand is supporting growth this year.

“Some of it — in the countries that release fiscal stimulus by their particular governments — that’s allowing them to fund these investments,” Mr. Hernandez said.

Around 80% of CCAP member companies that responded to a survey said they expect double-digit growth this year, compared with 11% projecting growth in the single digits.

Most contact center employees are able to continue working, with an average of 40% working on site.

“Half a percent of all employees is unable to work due to various reasons. One out of three companies are providing financial support to these employees,” CCAP said.

Around 73% of the on-site employees and 97% of the work-from-home employees of CCAP member companies have received extra pay and allowances.

Overall outsourcing revenues inched up 1.4% after the pandemic disrupted operations last year. — Jenina P. Ibañez

BSP rate hikes could come sooner due to inflation surge

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THE CENTRAL BANK may push for rate hikes sooner next year if inflation remains elevated, Moody’s Analytics said.

At the same time, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Benjamin E. Diokno said while there are signs of a gradual rebound, the vaccine rollout and the healthcare system’s capacity are crucial to sustaining the growth momentum.

“The challenges of the pandemic may stay with us for a while, but we are hopeful that we will get back to where we were before the pandemic by the second half of next year,” Mr. Diokno said in an online speech on Tuesday.

The central bank kept the key policy rate steady at a record low of 2% last week to maintain support for economic recovery, saying that the elevated inflation in recent months is mainly due to low supply.

Officials said inflation is expected to return within the 2-4% target by 2022 and 2023.

Moody’s Analytics economists Katrina Ell and Dave Chia said the baseline expectation is for a rate hike by late 2022, although it warned policy tightening could happen sooner if inflation remains elevated.

“Ideally, monetary policy would remain on hold and firmly accommodative until late next year to support the recovery, but the BSP may be forced to act earlier if inflation does not cool,” the Moody’s economists said.

Inflation in August reached 4.9%, the highest since the 5.1% in 2018 as food prices spiked due to recent typhoons. This brought inflation year to date to 4.4%.

The BSP last week further raised its inflation forecast for 2021 to 4.4%, from 4.1% previously. By 2022 and 2023, inflation is expected to return within target at 3.3% and 3.2%, although also higher than the 3.1% forecast earlier given for both years.

Moody’s Analytics noted that there was a precedent incident of the BSP “tightening interest rates when inflation accelerates beyond comfort levels.” It cited the rate hikes in late 2018 when inflation reached multi-year highs.

To recall, the BSP during that year raised interest rates by 175 basis points in a bid to soothe inflation caused by higher food prices.

Amid the prolonged pandemic, Mr. Diokno has constantly assured that the accommodative policy will be kept for as long as necessary, given the economy’s recovery remains fragile amid the risks from the Delta-driven coronavirus surge.

In its note, Moody’s Analytics also noted that the Philippines continues to see sluggish domestic demand, citing the relatively “more subdued” core inflation of 3.3% in August, although still faster than the 2.9% in July.

“Output remains approximately 9% below pre-pandemic levels and is not forecast to surpass pre-pandemic levels until late 2022, ranking the Philippines the last country in the Asia-Pacific region to recover lost ground,” the economists added.

Meanwhile, Moody’s Analytics said the Philippines appears to be “less vulnerable” compared with emerging markets in case of another “taper tantrum” once the US Federal Reserve normalizes its policy settings through reduction in asset purchases and rate hikes.

“While inflation is elevated and the economy is carrying a decent negative output gap, the economy is generally seen as less vulnerable. It helps that the Philippines hasn’t been a recipient of hefty foreign inflows,” it said. — Luz Wendy T. Noble