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NCR logs record daily infections under lockdown

PHILIPPINE STAR/MICHAEL VARCAS
RESIDENTS of Caloocan line up for their vaccine at A. Bonifacio Elementary School on Aug. 6. — PHILIPPINE STAR/MICHAEL VARCAS

By Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza, Reporter

METRO Manila hit record daily coronavirus infections at the weekend while under a strict lockdown according to researchers from the county’s premier university.

The OCTA Research Group from the University of the Philippines on Sunday said 2,823 people got infected on Saturday, the highest since May 2, when it was also under an enhanced community quarantine amid a fresh surge in cases.

The virus reproduction rate  in Manila the capital and nearby cities increased to 1.8 from 1.56 a week ago, it said in a report.

“The strong upward trend and level of new cases resemble the situation in March 9 to 15, two weeks before the National Capital Region (NCR) was placed under an enhanced community quarantine,” OCTA said.

The rapid growth rate strongly suggests that the more contagious Delta coronavirus variant was now the dominant strain in the region, it said.

The researchers said 31% of the Health department’s sampled cases had the Delta variant, higher than 16% two weeks ago.

The intensive care unit (ICU) occupancy rate in the region was still safe at 59% though it increased by an average of 11 a day in the past two weeks, OCTA said.

The hospital bed occupancy in the region was also safe at 53% though it increased by 94 a day in the past two weeks.

“With the current trends, ICU occupancy will be above 70% in two weeks,” OCTA said. “Hospital bed occupancy will be above 70% in three weeks.”

OCTA said the virus positivity rate in Metro Manila had increased to 14% from 10% a week ago.

If the decision to place Metro Manila under a strict lockdown had been delayed to Aug. 15, the region would have breached 4,500 new cases daily, “which would likely extend the lockdown and cause more negative impact on people and the economy,” OCTA said.

President Rodrigo R. Duterte placed Metro Manila under a strict lockdown for two weeks starting Aug. 6 after OCTA said the Delta variant from India might be freely roaming in communities.

Coronavirus infections in Metro Manila would continue to increase even if authorities extend the two-week lockdown in the region, Health Undersecretary Maria Rosario S. Vergeire said on Saturday.

Active coronavirus cases in Metro Manila were expected to reach tens of thousands, Ms. Vergeire said.

The Health department on Friday said Delta cases had been detected in all 17 cities and one municipality in the capital region. It said 119 more people had been infected with the Delta variant, bringing the total to 450.

The Health department reported 9,671 coronavirus infections on Sunday, bringing the total to 1.65 million.

The death toll rose to 29,122 after 287 after more patients died, while recoveries increased by 8,079 to 1.56 million, it said in a bulletin. 

There were 77,516 active cases, 93.2% of which were mild, 2.8% did not show symptoms, 1.7% were severe, 1.20% were moderate and 1% were critical.

The agency said 96 duplicates had been removed from the tally, 92 of which were recoveries. Three recoveries were reclassified as active cases, while 149 recoveries were reclassified as deaths.

The presidential palace on Saturday said Bataan province would be under an enhanced lockdown from Aug. 8 to 22 to contain rising infections. The northern Philippine province was earlier placed under a modified enhanced quarantine until Aug 15.

On Thursday, Mr. Duterte put Iloilo City, Laguna and Cagayan De Oro under an enhanced community quarantine.

OCTA researchers earlier traced the fresh infection surge to the Delta variant, which was also spreading rapidly in Malaysia, Thailand and Indonesia.

The Philippines on Saturday posted more than 10,000 infections for the second straight day and more than 100 deaths for the third day in a row.

Pandemic response will be a key issue in 2022 elections

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

By Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza, Reporter

RECOVERY from a coronavirus pandemic would take center stage in the campaign for the 2022 elections, according to political analysts.

The opposition might have a chance of winning if it can present a viable pandemic recovery plan, they added.

“The government’s pandemic response and economic downturns as a result of the crisis are two issues that would take center stage in the campaign season,” Maria Ela L. Atienza, a political science professor at the University of the Philippines, said in an e-mail.

President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s political opponents might try to win voters by citing his administration’s mishandling of the health crisis, she added.

Poverty, hunger and joblessness as well as rising commodity prices are key issues that will be in the minds of voters next year, Victor Andres Manhit, president of think tank Albert del Rosario Institute for Strategic and International Studies said in a Facebook Messenger chat.

The 2022 elections would become a referendum on the Duterte administration’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic, he said.

Nine of 10 Filipinos thought government response to the pandemic has been inadequate, according to a poll by Pulse Asia Research in June. Filipinos cited the lack of financial aid, slow and inefficient vaccine rollout and failure to enforce health protocols. Jobless Filipinos rose to 3.76 million in June from 3.73 million a month earlier, according to the local statistics agency. About 6.409 million Filipinos were underemployed.

A strict lockdown in Metro Manila from Aug. 6 to 20 would increase the number of poor people by 177,000, the National Economic and Development Authority has said. It added that 444,000 Filipinos could become jobless.

Mr. Duterte risked his political capital when he failed to outline his game plan against the coronavirus pandemic in his last address to Congress last month, said Dennis C. Coronacion, who heads the University of Santo Tomas Political Science Department.

“Since President Duterte has failed to do this, I expect most of the presidential aspirants to fill the gap and craft their own economic recovery programs,” he said in a Viber message. 

“The upcoming election will not just be a referendum on President Duterte’s pandemic response but also on his entire platform of government,” he added.

Mr. Duterte’s popularity might not get severely eroded given how loyal his core followers are, media research expert Jay G. Bautista said in an e-mail.

“The recent political surveys have shown how strong his equity is by ranking in the top three regardless of who among the major opinion polling agencies had conducted the research,” he said. “His followers believe he has done all he can and he is not to blame.”

The tough-talking leader’s popularity is rooted in his consistent rhetoric, which makes people believe that other people are the problem and not his administration or his policies, Jean S. Encinas-Franco, a UP political science professor said in a Viber message.

Gerardo V. Eusebio, a political science professor at De La Salle University, traced Mr. Duterte’s popularity to a weak and divided opposition.

“The real challenge for the opposition is how to break the overwhelming support for Duterte from two interlocking voting blocs — the Mindanao and class E voters scattered on the country’s three major islands,” the campaign strategist said in a Viber message.

The trend may change if the country’s economic situation worsens up to the fourth quarter or extends into the first quarter of 2022, Mr. Bautista said.

Michael Henry Ll. Yusingco, a research fellow at the Ateneo de Manila University Policy Center, said public disappointment about the government’s pandemic response could weaken Mr. Duterte’s popularity and galvanize support for opposition candidates.

“Voters’ disappointment should be enough motivation to vote for change in 2022,” he said in a Facebook Messenger chat. “But the key here is that the vote must be based on evidence and fact.”

Mr. Duterte last month threatened to keep people who refuse to get vaccinated against the coronavirus at home. He also threatened to have them arrested.

Critics have said vaccine shortage, not vaccine hesitancy, is the biggest problem in the government’s vaccination program.

DoE appeals to electricity firms to suspend disconnections in areas under strict lockdown 

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

THE ENERGY department has asked power distributors to suspend disconnection activities in their respective franchise areas that are under strict lockdown levels.  

In an advisory issued on Aug. 6, Department of Energy (DoE) Secretary Alfonso G. Cusi encouraged power providers serving Metro Manila, Laguna, Aklan, Apayao, Cebu City, Cebu Province, Iloilo City, Iloilo Province, Cagayan de Oro, Gingoog, Ilocos Norte, Bataan, Lapu Lapu City, and Mandaue City to implement the “no disconnection” policy to all consumers with unsettled dues.  

“The DoE recognizes the potential difficulty of all electricity consumers to settle their bills on time,” Mr. Cusi said.  

He also advised all electricity end-users to immediately coordinate with their distribution utility for “amicable” payment arrangements” once the strict quarantine levels are lifted.   

Mr. Cusi urged electricity consumers who can pay and settle their bills to continue doing so within their original due dates to help manage the cash flow in the energy supply chain, and ensure the unhampered operations of power utilities.  

This comes shortly after Manila Electric Co. (Meralco) announced it is holding off on disconnection activities in areas under strict lockdown, including Metro Manila, Laguna, Cavite, Rizal and Lucena City.  

Amid the halt in disconnections, the utility giant said that it will push through with vital operations like meter reading, bill delivery and will “work around the clock” to serve its customers.  

Meralco’s controling stakeholder, Beacon Electric Asset Holdings, Inc., is partly owned by PLDT, Inc. Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., which has interest in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls. — Angelica Y. Yang 

Iloilo lifts ban on returning residents, overseas workers 

ILOILO CITY GOVT

THE ILOILO City government has lifted the ban on returning residents, overseas workers, and other persons on essential travel starting Aug. 8 even as the city remains under a strict lockdown level.  

“In no case shall travel for leisure be allowed,” reads an executive order signed by Mayor Jerry P. Treñas on Aug. 7.   

The order also reiterates that mass gatherings remain prohibited until Aug. 15 while religious events may be conducted at 10% of the venue’s capacity.     

Gatherings relating to the provision of health services, government services, or humanitarian activities authorized by the appropriate government agency are also allowed.   

Iloilo City and the entire province of Iloilo are included in the Department of Health’s list of areas under high risk alert due a surge in cases as well as high utilization rate of medical facilities.   

The city government, however, noted in a statement and data release that more than 50% of patients in the city’s hospitals are from the provinces of Iloilo, Antique, and Aklan. Iloilo City serves as the center of Western Visayas and hosts the region’s biggest hospitals.   

Mr. Treñas last week requested the national task force handling the coronavirus response to allocate more vaccines to the city given its position.   

“We are definitely asking for more vaccines as an urgent need to achieve herd immunity faster,” he said on Friday.  

“Our vaccination roll-out is working efficiently, still only 24.49% of our target population has been vaccinated,” he added.   

The mayor cited that with the 10,000 to 15,000 current daily inoculation rates of Iloilo City, the remaining vaccines would only last until Aug. 19.  

“The city also inoculates non-residents working here,” he said. — MSJ 

Group tells China to respect PHL rights after rescue of 2 Chinese fishermen 

PAMALAKAYA PILIPINAS

THE RECENT rescue of two Chinese fishermen off Palawan by the Philippine Coast Guard and local fisherfolk should remind the Chinese government to respect the rights of Filipino fishers at all times, said the militant fishers’ group Pambansang Lakas ng Kilusang Mamamalakaya ng Pilipinas (PAMALAKAYA).   

In a statement over the weekend, PAMALAKAYA said the incident demonstrates that Filipino fishers still have “basic acts of humanity” during emergency situations despite the Chinese government’s aggressive behavior within the Philippine’s exclusive economic zone.     

The Philippine Coast Guard reported on Aug. 7 that two Chinese fishermen were found dead while two others were rescued from their life raft after rough weather caused them to abandon their vessel.   

The Chinese Embassy in Manila, in a statement, thanked Philippine authorities and local fishermen for rescuing the Chinese fishermen.    

Bobby Roldan, PAMALAKAYA vice-chair for Luzon, said Filipino fishers are not capable of the same hostile actions previously shown by Chinese vessels.    

“This serves as a reminder to China that they should respect the rights of Filipino fishermen within the territory they are claiming, similar to the good treatment we give to Chinese fishermen who are illegally entering the country’s waters,” Mr. Roldan said.    

He cited the Recto Bank incident in June 2019 where a Chinese vessel rammed and abandoned the Philippine-flag fishing boat F/B Gem-Ver 1, which was carrying 22 fishermen. A Vietnamese fishing vessel rescued them.    

Mr. Roldan also cited the fishing blockade by at least two Chinese Coast Guard vessels on Filipino fishers who tried to venture in Panatag Shoal, which has a lagoon that gives shelter during bad weather.   

Mr. Roldan previously said Zambales fishers have abandoned their traditional fishing haven due to the presence of Chinese Coast Guard vessels that prevent them from entering the lagoon.    

The fisherfolk leader said despite these aggressions and prevailing tension between the two countries, they can never abandon or mistreat fellow fishermen regardless of nationality. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave   

Poe seeks review of lockdown impact on food MSMEs  

PHILIPPINE STAR/ ANDY ZAPATA JR.

A LAWMAKER filed a resolution asking the Senate to assess the impact of lockdowns on micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs), especially in the food and beverage industry, and come up with recommendations for their recovery.  

“MSMEs should be part of the equation when we plan the implementation of lockdowns. If we keep leaving them out, it will be harder for our economy to bounce back with not many businesses left after the pandemic,” said Senator Mary Grace S. Poe-Llamanzares in a press release on Sunday.  

She cited the Department of Trade and Industry report that as of June, 10% of MSMEs have been forced to shut down.   

The Philippine Statistics Authority’s 2019 List of Establishments show 99.5% of businesses in the country are MSMEs. Accommodation and food services are the second biggest sector for MSMEs.   

“While the government’s effort to infuse capital in support of MSMEs and the prioritization of their employees in the vaccination rollout are laudable, we need more long-term and sustainable recovery roadmaps for the foreseeable future,” said Ms. Poe-Llamanzares in her Senate Resolution No. 817.  

The resolution stated that due to the nature of the food service industry where inputs have a short shelf life, it is among the top MSME groups gravely affected by switching quarantine restrictions.  

Defend Jobs Philippines said that 80% of food establishments were severely hit by the lockdown implemented in March, which restricted dine-in services. The group said only 20% were able to recover their losses through take-out and delivery services.  

Ms. Poe-Llamanzares said that on top of these business losses, more workers in the food service industry are losing their jobs.  

According to the 2018 Census of Philippine Business and Industry, 377,227 workers were employed in restaurants and mobile food service activities.  

“This is our new normal, and it calls for a better response from us. We need to be at least one step ahead, because every lockdown can’t feel like we’re taking two steps back,” the senator said. — Alyssa Nicole O. Tan 

DoJ investigating fake email using secretary’s name 

JUSTICE SECRETARY MENARDO I. GUEVARRA — PCOO.GOV.PH

THE DEPARTMENT of Justice’s (DoJ) cybercrime office will investigate the fake email address used by someone posing as Justice Secretary Menardo I. Guevarra to solicit gift cards allegedly for donation to hospitalized patients across the Philippines.   

“The DoJ Office of Cybercrime is on it (and) if necessary, I’ll seek help from the NBI (National Bureau of Investigation),” Mr. Guevarra told reporters via a group message on Viber on Sunday.   

In an advisory posted on its website on Saturday, the justice department warned the public against the fake email address, osecmig1@gmail.com.   

“The said email address was used to send messages to a number of recipients requesting assistance in the alleged procurement of iTunes gift cards as donations to patients at hospice care units across the Philippines, subject to reimbursement,” the advisory read.  

The DoJ said Mr. Guevarra’s only Gmail email address is osecmig@gmail.com, while his only government email address is osec@doj.gov.ph.  

The Justice department further warned the public who will receive emails from the fake address to not click any link or provide personal information, and report the email as spam or fraudulent, and to block the sender.   

Under Republic Act 10175 or the Cybercrime Prevention Act of 2012, actions with fraudulent intent are punishable with imprisonment of six years and one day to 12 years, or a fine of at least P200,000 and/or the amount of damage incurred by the act, or both. — Bianca Angelica D. Añago  

No more red tide warning in parts of Misamis Occidental, Davao Oriental   

THE BUREAU of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR) has lifted red tide warnings in the areas of Murcielagos Bay (Sapang Dalaga and Baliangao) in Misamis Occidental and Balite Bay in Davao Oriental after testing negative for paralytic shellfish poison or more commonly referred to as red tide.   

In its 24th shellfish bulletin, BFAR also raised new warnings in the areas of Carigara Bay in Leyte and Biliran Islands after testing positive for red tide contamination.    

Meanwhile, areas that remain affected by red tide include Milagros in Masbate; Dauis and Tagbilaran City in Bohol; San Pedro Bay in Western Samar; Matarinao Bay in Eastern Samar; Dumanquillas Bay in Zamboanga del Sur; Murcielagos Bay in Zamboanga del Norte; and Lianga Bay in Surigao del Sur.    

All types of shellfish and Acetes sp. or alamang harvested in areas affected by red tide are unfit for human consumption. Other marine species sourced from the same areas can still be consumed with proper handling.    

Red tide occurs due to high concentrations of algae in the water. Human consumption of contaminated shellfish may result in paralytic shellfish poisoning, which affects the nervous system.    

Typical symptoms of paralytic shellfish poisoning include headache, dizziness, and nausea. Severe cases may cause muscular paralysis and respiratory problems. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave  

Argentines stream through streets to press for jobs, food

A MAN begs during the feast day of San Cayetano (Saint Cajetan), patron saint of labor and bread, at San Cayetano church in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Aug. 7. — REUTERS

BUENOS AIRES — Tens of thousands of Argentines took to the streets of Buenos Aires on Saturday to protest over poverty and a lack of jobs amid a lengthy economic crisis that has only deepened with the coronavirus pandemic.

Organizations working with the unemployed and leftist groups led the protest that started at a church to the west of the Argentine capital where thousands of pilgrims travel each year to pray at the shrine of San Cayetano, the patron saint of work, whose feast day is Saturday. It ended in the Plaza de Mayo, a massive square in front of the seat of government where protests habitually take place.

“I come on behalf of people who do not have work: my brother, my neighbors and many people who you see really struggling everywhere,” Néstor Pluis, a 41-year-old educational assistant, told Reuters.

Protests also took place in other parts of the country, including in Argentina’s second city of Cordoba and the western city of Mendoza.

Lawmaker Juan Carlos Alderete, leader of the left-wing party Corriente Clasista y Combativa, said the needs of people in some neighborhoods were “tremendous.”

“The soup kitchens are seeing whole families coming to eat and many of the children have to be attended to by health professionals because they are malnourished,” he said.

A total of 19 million people, 42% of Argentina’s population, was classified as living below the poverty line in the second half of 2020 and unemployment at present stands at 10.2%.

Argentina’s President Alberto Fernandez said on Friday that he saw brighter days ahead, and the first rebound in the economy in three years this year with 7% growth.

“Argentina is growing, recuperating jobs and will recover income,” Mr. Fernandez pledged.

Ahead of the legislative elections in November, the government also announced on Friday a relaxation of COVID restrictions in the hope of speeding economic recovery.  Reuters

Global COVID deaths estimated to reach 5.3 million by Dec.

THE WORLD will see 5.3 million reported deaths and 12 million excess fatalities by December as the Delta variant drives a surge in COVID-19 cases, according to projections by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation.

The US-based institute expects deaths to peak at the beginning of September then slowly decline afterward, it said in a report published Friday. The IHME’s forecasts distinguish between officially reported COVID-19 deaths and excess deaths attributed to the illness including unreported fatalities.

There have been almost 4.3 million deaths from COVID-19 globally since the start of the pandemic, according to the World Health Organization.

The Delta variant is associated with viral loads that are more than 1,200 times higher in newly infected individuals compared with the original coronavirus strain, which means that delta can spread as easily as chickenpox. Studies from the UK have also shown that delta, which was discovered in India in October, is more resistant to vaccines than the alpha variant that emerged in England in late 2020. — Bloomberg

Child protection in the time of COVID

FREEPIK

The COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted the everyday lives of children. Being on lockdown and having to stay home while attending synchronous and asynchronous schooling will have distressing long-term effects, including the emergence of violence against children.

Violence against children had already been a serious concern even before the pandemic. According to the United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF, 2015), two in three kids went through physical violence, two in five underwent psychological violence, one in four suffered sexual violence, and two in three experienced peer violence. All in all, eight out of 10 children in the country are victims of physical, sexual, and cyber sexual abuse.

Undeniably, the pandemic has intensified poverty, which is the underlying factor that causes the increase in child abuse, marriages and exploitation, with victims mostly coming from low-income families.

Leah Bordlee (2020) wrote in a Borgen Project blog that COVID-19 has exacerbated cyber-trafficking, and “increasing risks of poverty” will lead to the growth to the online exploitation of children. “This relationship suggests a strong link between poverty and exploitation.”

The occurrence of lockdowns has made children more vulnerable to violence. According to UNICEF (2020), 1.8 billion children living in 104 countries, including the Philippines, are at risk, due to the disrupted violence prevention and response services.

Aggravating the situation is the fact that the age of sexual consent in the Philippines is 12 years old, the lowest in Asia and the second lowest in the world. Why is it that the law does not consider a 16-year-old fit to drive but makes a 12-year-old capable of having sex?

Gaps do exist in our laws and law enforcement when it comes to creating protective measures against the abuse of children. Congress should change the age of sexual consent in the face of the rise of online sexual exploitation and abuse of children (OSEAC). Senator Win Gatchalian has proposed raising the age of sexual consent to 18 in Senate Bill No. 739.

Further, Republic Act No. 9775 or “An Act Defining the Crime of Child Pornography, Prescribing Penalties Therefor and for Other Purposes” has to be amended. It penalizes foreigners with a lenient sentence: “he/she shall be immediately deported after the complete service of his/her sentence and shall forever be barred from entering the country.” With online sexual exploitation and abuse as the focal point of the law, the pedophile may victimize children again using the Information Communication Technologies (ICT) from other parts of the world. The perpetrators of OSEAC are usually foreign-based older men, in most cases from Western countries (The ASEAN Post, 2020).

Society tends to forget that human rights include children’s rights. In this regard, Senate Bill No. 1373, known as the “Girls Not Brides Act” or “An Act Protecting Children by Prohibiting and Declaring Child Marriage as Illegal and Providing Programs and Penalties Thereof,” deserves support. The bill features an inclusive response, mobilizing different agencies as “Duty-Bearers” for children empowerment and prevention of child marriage. However, the penalties stated in the bill are light: “Any person who causes, fixes, facilitates or arranges a child marriage shall be fined at least P40,000” and “Should the perpetrator of the child marriage be an ascendant or authority figure such as a parent, step-parent or guardian of the minor a fine of at least P50,000.” A low-cost fine in exchange for a lifelong trauma.

Actualizing protective measures has been a problem as well. According to the Office of Cybercrime at the Department of Justice, 11 years have passed since the passing of the “Anti-Child Pornography Act of 2009” but ISP (Internet Service Providers) companies are deficient in fulfilling their duty to protect Filipino children. Blocking child pornography is part of the requirements for ISP companies to retain their franchises.

The Office of Cybercrime has reported a 260% increase in cyber-sex offenses during the pandemic, specifically online sexual exploitation and abuse of children (ChildFund, 2020). This can be traced to the current stressors that lead families to put their children at risk for sexual exploitation, including loss of income and suspension of face-to-face classes.

The data show the increase of family-related online sexual exploitation during the pandemic. According to World Hope International (2020), in a recent finding of its partner organization, International Justice Mission, OSEAC is usually a family-based crime. They found that of the 217 victims where the relationship to the trafficker was known, the abuse was perpetrated by biological parents (41%) and other relatives (42%). With the emergence of social media, it is easier to create a platform for an illegal family business to exploit children.

Child abuse in the Philippines is a public health crisis. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), children who are exposed to an abusive environment are more likely to acquire chronic mental health problems such as bipolar disorder, anxiety, borderline personality disorder, depression, and grief. Studies show an evident correlation of child abuse to poor performance in school and overall mishandling or abuse of drugs and sexual intercourse.

The Universal Health Care (UHC) Law provides service coverage to access mental health services and rehabilitation that will strongly help victims of child abuse in the country. However, these services still do not come free and are not inclusive. The government’s health spending has not been properly allocated to what has most value. Financing is inadequate for primary care services, preventive health services, and health promotion, key components of UHC. Similarly, government spending has to generate efficiencies, lower costs and improve quality (Asian Development Bank, 2021).

Further, information is lacking about access to these services. The public, for example, is not familiar with the “Essential Health Benefit Package” of the UHC which includes primary care services, diagnostic, laboratory tests, and medicine. Preventive, curative, and rehabilitative care must likewise provide mental health and emergency services.

The Philippines can learn harm reduction strategies from other countries. We can learn from Canada’s program to increase funding on sexual assault centers that provide safe accommodation to child abuse survivors. The funding for such may be added to the Bayanihan III bill or next year’s General Appropriations Act.

Safe accommodation for abused children can be supplemented by assistance from non-government organizations that offer face-to-face visits and consultations to houses reported regarding domestic abuse of children. For example, the UNICEF together with the Child Protection Network and Ateneo de Manila University created Masayang Pamilya (MaPa) Sa Panahon ng COVID-19. This program prevents child abuse with the use of positive parenting and enhancing family sensitivity.

MaPa is a community-focused parent support intervention that is designed to specifically target low-income areas. Parents are encouraged to participate in discussions, understand skills, and practice role modeling. This initiative uses support rather than condemnation as the way of parenting.

This program is laudable in its effort to build relationships with parents that focus on empathy and education. However, to build a stronger harm reduction strategy, the government (through enabling policy and providing resources), the health community, and other stakeholders should be included in this conversation.

Empowering children with education and awareness about child abuse is one step towards harm reduction. The community must also be involved, stay observant of abuse situations, and report suspected abuse cases.

We are aware of the rising number of children experiencing abuse and violence. We are pained by their life-long trauma and sufferings.

The government and society must act now. At the start of the COVID-19 pandemic our government called us to heal us one. The healing must include the children of this nation.

 

Emmanuella Iellamo is a health policy researcher of Action for Economic Reforms.

Statutory import liberalization is inadequate for pork and rice

ALEKSANDARLITTLEWOLF-FREEPIK

I talked to a leader of a fairly large pig raisers association. He confirmed that pork prices had remained high despite the lowering of pork tariffs this year. I heard that Secretary William Dar conducted a meeting of his officials to inquire into what has happened. If the purpose of lowering tariffs was to reduce pork prices to pre-African Swine Fever (ASF) levels, why has it not accomplished its objective?

One likely answer comes from the law of supply and demand: imported pork had not really entered the country in the quantities expected by those concerned about the lowering of pork tariffs. Industry leaders and their supporters in the Senate were opposed to the proposal to temporarily reduce tariffs because that would have “killed” the industry much faster than the ASF.

One may observe that statutory reduction of tariffs is inadequate to immediately reduce local prices of the imported substitutes. It may not be in all situations, but it applies very well for imported pork. There are two constraints to pork importation after tariffs were lowered. One is the ASF itself. With ASF outbreaks in many pig producing countries, the supply of imported pork is difficult to find. An importer may find the cost of imported pork higher because regionally there is a shortage of it due to ASF, and supply search costs can be significant.

But there are other countries which are ASF-free, such as the United States, Taiwan, and a few other countries in the EU like Germany. While true, it takes time for our importers to establish transactional relationships with pork suppliers in those countries. This can still be search costs. After all, if not for the outbreak of ASF here, our market in the eyes of pork exporters is small, capped in only tens of thousand tons by the government because we are protecting our local producers.

The other constraint is the lack of cold storage and cold chain logistics to move around frozen pork. The country’s cold chain system has not been designed to accommodate significant volumes of imported pork. Importers have to compete with other users of cold chain facilities in the country. That raises the cost of imported pork.

Both constraints manifest themselves in higher prices of pork in world markets and storage costs locally. These are still legitimate costs, that would help explain why the quantities of imported pork had not come in the expected quantities. It is not surprising that pork prices had not really gone down to pre-ASF levels.

Let us compare the reduction of pork tariffs with the rice tariffication law. To recall, the 2019 law ended the import monopoly of the National Food Authority (NFA) in rice and effectively reduced rice tariffs to 35%. The law allowed any of us to import rice subject to the phytosanitary import permit from the Bureau of Plant Industry.

There was no shortage in rice in mainland Southeast Asia, our primary source of imported rice. Imported rice requires no specialized storage facilities such as for frozen pork.

Wholesale rice prices in the National Capital Region (NCR) dropped by 14.4% in 2019 from 2018. The reduction was significant but less than what was expected based on the reduction of the rice import tariff to 35%. Imported rice should have fetched a price of nearly P30 to a kilo, but wholesale prices ended the year nearly P4 higher.

The rice import business can be viable for smaller firms. Why then did new importers stay out of the import business? Or we may ask, why then did existing big importers not increase further the quantities they imported? The P4 margin is still significant enough to compete for.

One possible explanation is that existing or the large experienced importers may have found themselves searching for more supply of rice. We have taken for granted that the world supply of rice is huge. It is not. Only about 4% to 6% of global production is exported by surplus countries.

The Philippines has been competing with Indonesia to become the world’s largest rice importer. In fact, we were in 2008. Indeed, the NFA’s significant importation that year jacked up the world price of rice then, so much so that Thailand had to request the Philippines to stop importing so as not to increase prices further.

Our decision to liberalize rice importation might have pushed prices of imported rice up because of potential added demand from Philippines. Importers might have found themselves importing at increasing costs, which explains why the quantities that were brought into the country in 2019 fell short of expected.

But if rice can be viable for smaller firms, why do those not even into rice trading yet, like you and I, not enter the import business? The inexperience of these potential entrants in the trade can become a significant entry barrier. Eventually, if they study the trade carefully, ordinary businessmen not into this business will learn the trade and import rice. But they need time.

From both experiences in liberalizing imported food items, pork and rice, one may observe that statutory trade reforms are not enough. Import restrictions had been an important barrier, but once these are removed by law, new barriers to import emerge. This may not always apply to each imported food item. But in a few like pork and rice, it is useful to make a more wholistic assessment of the barriers to imports.

There is potentially another barrier when it comes to importing food items: sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) import permits. SPS measures are necessary to protect our local food industries, like pork or rice, from pests or diseases that may be brought into the country through imports. They are legitimate regulations, but should be implemented as automatic import licenses, i.e., when the product meets the standards, SPS regulators should grant the permit. They are not designed to control the volume of imports to limit the competition in the local market, and thus protect local producers from competition.

But these measures can be abused, i.e., they can become de facto instruments to limit the volume of imports or the number of importers, who can go into the import business. Potential entrants into the business of importing food items may find these regulations become the new import barrier.

 

Ramon L. Clarete Is a professor at the University of the Philippines School of Economics.