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The economic status of Philippine regions Robust growth outside NCR

PHOTO CREDIT: ROAD AHEAD-UNSPLASH

(Part 1)

In 2019 before the pandemic, I wrote that the province of Batangas will be the epicenter of the next metropolis that will rival Metro Manila as the economic powerhouse of the Philippines.

I was not surprised when, on April 28, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) issued a press release saying that in 2021— the post-pandemic recovery year — Calabarzon* or Southern Luzon was the fastest growing region at 7.6%, which was far above the national growth of 5.7%.

The National Capital Region (NCR) grew at a lackluster 4.4%, which, incidentally, was already the level of growth it was registering even before the pandemic. I did not buy the explanation given by PSA that the slower growth of the NCR was due to it having the longest lockdowns among the regions. Metro Manila had already been losing its premier position for some time now. There were years immediately before the pan-demic when regions like Davao and even Bicol were growing at 8% while NCR was struggling to grow at 4%. I had already celebrated the fact that Metro Manila was being dethroned by other more dynamic regions. This is something very positive for national economic development. There is increasing decentralization of economic activities away from the center to the periphery.

From April 13 to May 5, I had the good fortune of being able to spend three weeks in the City of Pines attending a long live-in seminar for continuing education in the humanities. I take very seriously the dictum that the acquisition of skills and knowledge is never ending. During these days of study, rest, and recreation, I saw how in Baguio, starting on Holy Week and the weeks following, Filipinos from all over Luzon had taken very seriously the “revenge traveling” that was foretold. The crowds of domestic tourists that filled this “smart city” made it seem that the pandemic never happened. Kudos to the local government officials who knew how to keep a proper balance between health measures and the growth of the economy.

I was not surprised that the Cordillera Administrative Region (CAR) also grew at an above-average 7.5%, outshining Metro Manila. Domestic tourism is in full force. A visit to the Balatoc mine site of Benguet Corp. in Benguet, complete with a briefing from the managers about their performance for 2020 to 2021, also made me realize how and why CAR has grown faster than the national average. Mining, thanks to the more reasonable policies followed by the Duterte Administration after the initial anti-mining measures enforced in the first years of the outgoing Administration, is a booming industry with record prices of gold, copper, and nickel that are prevailing because of the strong world demand for minerals. A recent report in the Financial Times (April 28) described a serious shortage of these minerals in Europe, as the whole region tries to significantly reduce its dependence on fossil fuels. Nickel and copper, among other minerals, are indispensable in the manufacture of batteries, solar panels, and equipment for wind mills — not to mention all the digital devices required for Industrial Revolution 4.0 such as laptops, smart phones, iPads as well as cables for telecom and electric networks.

It is also notable that CAR saw household spending grow at an above-average rate. While Household Final Consumption Expenditures grew at a national average of 4.2%, consumption grew at almost double the rate of 8% in CAR. It is unfortunate, though, that despite talk about Baguio City becoming a smart city — even vying to become an ASEAN Creative Industry hub — its infrastructure still leaves a lot to be desired. You still see a lot of trucks delivering water to the households, despite the presence of Manila Water in the area. Electric “brownouts” are not infrequent. Whoever were the local government officials elected in Baguio and the surrounding localities must assign the highest priority to improve these public services. A fair share of the funds that will result from the Mandanas-Garcia ruling should be budgeted for the improvement of these services. The LGUs, working in tandem with the private business people in Baguio, should also proactively search for foreign direct investors from such countries as Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, and Spain who can invest in these public services that have been liberalized with the amendment of the Public Service Act. In fact, Acciona, a powerful Spanish conglomerate involved in infrastructure ownership and management all over the world, already announced its plan to invest as much as $12 billion in the Philippines for the development of infrastructure, especially water utilities.

Another region that grew much faster than the NCR is Region 3 or Central Luzon which, like Calabarzon, is already replacing Metro Manila as a residential, commercial, and industrial hub. In 2021, the region posted a growth rate of 7.4% compared to the NCR’s 4.4%.

Like Southern Luzon, this is not the first time that Central Luzon has outperformed Metro Manila in regional growth. It had been systematically growing faster than the NCR for at least the last five years before the pandemic, especially in the areas that are referred to as the Pampanga Triangle (Angeles, San Fernando, Clark-Subic). All the major real estate companies with a national reach have major projects in Central Luzon, such as Ayala Land and subsidiaries, Megaworld, Vista Land, Robinson Land, SMDC, Federal Land, etc.

The surrounding provinces of Tarlac, Bataan, and Bulacan are also attracting investments away from Metro Manila, especially as major infrastructure projects like the railway from Clark to Bulacan to Calamba, and finally all the way to Bicol, will be completed in the next few years with the assistance of the Japanese. The International Airport project of San Miguel Corp. in Bulacan will be a major game changer. Another game changer for Central Luzon will be the bridge that will be constructed connecting Cavite to Bataan, passing through the island of Corregidor. This will facilitate travel to Bataan province which has one of the highest Human Development Indices in the country.

It is also notable that there are two regions in Mindanao that grew faster than the national average. These are Region 13, i.e., Caraga**, and the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM). This fact demonstrates the enlightened policy under the Duterte Administration in which the bulk of infrastructure projects funded by the Government were focused on the underdeveloped regions of the countryside. The Build, Build, Build program accounted for the very high growth rate of Gross Capital Formation during the 2020-2021 period, the height of the pandemic. This component of the GDP (in addition to household final consumption expenditure, government final expenditure, exports of goods and services and imports of goods and services) grew at an astronomical double-digit rate of 20.3%. The high rates of growth in Caraga and BARMM must have been mostly due to government capital expenditures in infrastructure. This is a trend that must be continued by the next Administration. Government money for public works must be spent on farm-to-market roads, irrigation systems, post-harvest facilities, and others that can improve the lot of the rural folks.

Infrastructure in urban areas like Metro Manila and Metro Cebu must be generally funded by such private corporations as San Miguel Corp., ICTSI, Megawide, First Metro Pacific and other conglomerates that have been very active in building airports, tollways, skyways, subways, etc. The next Administration must make a special effort in attracting Foreign Direct Investments to supplement the long-term capital that these domestic corporations have been investing in the Build, Build, Build program.

In the Visayas, it is also a good sign that there are regions that are growing faster than Central Visayas to which Metro Cebu belongs. Central Visayas grew at the below-average rate of 5.4% compared to Western Visayas that grew at 5.9%, and Eastern Visayas at 6%. This represents a healthy trend that resembles what is happening to the Metro Manila region. There is decreasing concentration in Metro Cebu and more investments in Western Visayas, especially in the Iloilo-Bacolod corridor which will be even more attractive for investors once the bridge connecting Iloilo to Guimaras to Bacolod is completed. This will unite into one megacity these two Ilonggo urban centers. In fact, Iloilo is already considered a more attractive site for new investments in real estate, the hospitality industry, and the BPO-IT sector than traffic-infested Metro Cebu. The higher growth rate in Eastern Visayas bodes well for a more equitable distribution of income because Samar and Leyte have always suffered from having some of the highest poverty incidences in the country. n

(To be continued.)

 

*A portmanteau of the names of the provinces of Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, Rizal, and Quezon.

** The region comprises five provinces: Agusan del Norte, Agusan del Sur, Dinagat Islands, Surigao del Norte, and Surigao del Sur.

 

 

BERNARDO M. VILLEGAS has a Ph.D. in Economics from Harvard, is professor emeritus at the University of Asia and the Pacific, and a visiting professor at the IESE Business School in Barcelona, Spain. He was a member of the 1986 Constitutional Commission. bernardo.villegas@uap.asia

Duterte signs youth council dev’t law, 2 other measures

PRESIDENT Rodrigo R. Duterte has signed into law a measure strengthening youth councils in villages by expanding officers’ benefits and requiring certain qualifications for treasurers.

Under Republic Act (RA) No. 11768, members of Sangguniang Kabataan (SK) or youth council, including the treasurer and the secretary, shall receive a monthly honorarium in addition to any other compensation that they are currently getting.

However, the honorarium must not exceed the monthly compensation received by the youth council’s chairperson nor surpass 25% of the council’s fund.

Local government units may also grant additional honorarium as well as social welfare contributions and hazard pay to SK officials and appointed members through local ordinance, according to the law.

The law also mandates every youth council to appoint its secretary and treasurer, which should have an education and career background related to either business administration, accountancy, finance, economics, or bookkeeping.

Council members are tasked to create a three-year comprehensive plan for the youth in their community.

Meanwhile, Mr. Duterte also signed a law promoting the rights of abandoned children with unknown parents and recognizing their status as natural-born citizens.

Under RA 1176, an orphan found in the Philippines or in its embassies, consulates, and territories abroad shall be considered a natural-born Filipino citizen regardless of the status or circumstances of the child’s birth

The President also signed into law a measure extending the validity period of firearm licenses and registration from two years to a maximum of 10 years for people who are under high security risks.

RA No. 11766 provides that all licenses to possess a firearm, regardless of type or classification, should be renewed every five or 10 years unless sooner revoked or suspended by the government.

“Failure to renew a license or registration within the period stated above on two occasions shall cause the perpetual disqualification of the holder of the firearm license.”

The law exempts persons who are considered to be in “imminent danger” by the nature of their profession, occupation, or business from the threat assessment certificate requirement. Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

The Marcos presidency and the future of Philippine foreign policy

(MAY 10, 2022) Supporters of presidential frontrunner Ferdinand "Bongbong" Marcos Jr. are in a festive mood as they gather in front of the campaign headquarters of Marcos along EDSA in Mandaluyong City on Monday night to celebrate the big lead in the unofficial tally of votes for the 2022 national elections against rival Vice President Leni Robredo. (PHOTO BY MIGUE DE GUZMAN)

fter one of the most consequential national elections in the country’s history, Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos, Jr. is set to become the 17th president of the Philippines through a majority vote.

Thirty-six years after being forced into exile in the United States, his family’s return to power holds significant implications for the country’s foreign policy.

The presidency of Bongbong Marcos is expected to face complex and multifaceted challenges brought by heightened geopolitical risks and power shifts in the region.

His call for “unity,” conveyed throughout the campaign period, will also be tested against circumstances on the ground, especially on critical issues such as the territorial and maritime disputes in the West Philippine Sea.

Formulating and implementing a foreign policy includes the participation of domestic and international actors along with their priorities and interests. The interplay between these actors enables the government to create a framework that will systematically guide the state in navigating the international system.

In the Philippine foreign policy landscape, the “independent” foreign policy pursued by the outgoing administration has led to a significant shift in focus and direction.

With a clear departure from the Aquino administration’s balancing strategy, President Rodrigo Duterte shifted his preference towards China in exchange for more trade and investments. His administration’s foreign policy pivot eventually degraded the country’s long-standing security alliance with the United States.

President Duterte’s non-confrontational approach toward China also weakened the country’s position in the West Philippine Sea. Illegal incursions and military construction activities such as those recently seen in Subi Reef were emboldened; these persist under his leadership.

With a few weeks left before the end of President Duterte’s term, the direction that the next administration takes is of serious concern.

Due to Marcos Jr.’s absence in most presidential debates and the lack of clarity in his team’s platform, experts and analysts have very limited statements to assess whether there will be continuity or change in the country’s foreign policy.

In one of his statements, Marcos Jr. said that Philippine foreign policy should not be shaped by the interests of other states. Like the vision of the outgoing administration, he expressed his intent to pursue strategic Philip-pine interests without being caught in the geopolitical competition between the US and China.

On the West Philippine Sea issue, Marcos Jr. said that he has no plans of giving up the country’s territory to any state, including China. He also emphasized his willingness to work and engage with the leadership in Beijing to discuss the West Philippine Sea issue and other common interests.

Despite voicing his concerns over China’s assertiveness in the West Philippine Sea, his neutral take on the 2016 arbitral ruling is an issue that needs to be reexamined.

But in one interview, he claimed that the arbitration, which invalidated Beijing’s nine-dash line in the South China Sea, is no longer available to Filipinos, and the only option is to engage with China bilaterally. This fa-vors China’s narrative.

On the US-Philippines alliance, Marcos Jr. is expected to veer away from the position of President Duterte, who has repeatedly threatened to abrogate the 1998 Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA) and the 2014 Enhanced De-fense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA).

In the lone debate that he attended, Marcos Jr. highlighted the importance of the alliance and what the United States did for the Philippines in the last war. Likewise, US President Joe Biden recently underscored the im-portance of strengthening the US-Philippines alliance and expanding the bilateral cooperation on global issues.

The Marcos administration should assess and consider the current regional landscape to effectively redirect the country’s foreign policy. Maritime security, economic diplomacy, and multilateral cooperation with like-minded states such as Japan, Australia, and the European Union are areas that need to be prioritized.

Filipinos deserve and expects the Marcos presidency to execute not only a strategically responsive foreign policy but also a clear, comprehensive, and consistent national security agenda that will not compromise Philippine interests.

Given the complex and multifaceted issues this presidency inherits, we at the Stratbase Albert del Rosario Institute shall publish a compendium of area-specific policy recommendations entitled Beyond the Crisis: A Strategic Agenda for the Next President, to be launched on May 20. The book offers a well-researched set of policy actions to resolve the most urgent challenges and risks confronting the nation.

The book focuses on the pillars of security, economy, and governance, and exposes their intersectionality to understand how they mutually reinforce one another as analyzed by 16 of the country’s top experts, collaborating with Stratbase to help the next government with policy recommendations that we feel will have the most strategic impact towards sustained economic recovery in the next six years and beyond.

We believe in fostering a collective and participative environment that encourages positive action through a developmental economic strategy and a well-balanced foreign policy agenda that demands respect for our territo-ries and adheres to the rule of law. n

 

VICTOR ANDRES “DINDO” C. MANHIT is the president of the
Stratbase ADR Institute.

Remembering the Right to be Forgotten

FIRMBEE.COM-UNSPLASH

Tech giant and search engine provider Google announced on April 27 that it will allow people to request for the deletion from its search results websites containing their personal contact information such as phone numbers, e-mail addresses, and physical addresses, as well as any information that can be used for identity theft. However, the request will be subjected to evaluation — it shall be denied when the web page containing the information is broadly useful, as in the case of news articles, or when the information is part of the public record on government or official websites. Meanwhile, the removal of the information from the search results does not entail its removal from the web page itself. Still, data subjects or users are not left without further remedy.

The “Right to Be Forgotten” (RTBF) under the General Data Protection Regulation of the European Union (GDPR) provides that data subjects, on specified grounds, shall have the right to demand the erasure of personal data concerning him or her without undue delay.

While the RTBF has been discussed in older court decisions, it is the case of Google Spain v. AEPD (2014) that paved way for the inclusion of the RTBF in GDPR. In this case, the European Union Court of Justice ordered the removal of newspaper articles referring to the complainant’s previous attachment and garnishment case from Google’s search results, when his name is entered. The court reasoned that the rights to privacy and protection of personal data override not only the economic interest of the operator of the search engine but also the interest of the general public in having access to that information upon a search relating to the data subject’s name.

The RTBF finds its Philippine counterpart in the right to erasure or blocking under the Data Privacy Act (DPA). Under the DPA, data subjects are granted the right to suspend, withdraw, or order the blocking, removal, or destruction of his or her personal information from persons or entities who collect, hold, process, or use it.

This right may be exercised on the grounds that the personal data is incomplete, outdated, false, or unlawfully obtained; the personal data is being used for a purpose not authorized by the data subject; the personal data is no longer necessary for the purposes for which they were collected; the data subject withdraws consent or objects to the processing, and there is no other legal ground or overriding legitimate interest for the processing; the personal data concerns private information that is prejudicial to the data subject, unless justified by freedom of speech, of expression, or of the press or otherwise authorized; the processing is unlawful; the personal information controller or personal information processor violated the rights of the data subject.

No distinction or qualification is made as to where the erasure or blocking shall apply or refer to. Thus, unless the government or the National Privacy Commission (NPC) comes out with specific rules, it can be interpreted that this right can be exercised against any persons or entities who hold or process the information, including those who manage websites that contain the disputed information.

To enforce this right, data subjects can first execute a written request with supporting documents to the Data Protection Officer (DPO) of the concerned entity. The letter must state that the request is being made in exercise of the right to erasure. The DPO must act on the written request and in the absence of or the impropriety of the action undertaken, a formal complaint may then be filed before the NPC.

In some cases, the attempt to enforce the RTBF results in unintended and opposite consequences: the information sought to be forgotten becomes immortalized and accessible by the public. This paradox is also called the Streisand Effect. The term originated from a case involving the demand of a famous singer to have the photo of her residence removed from a website. The court proceedings found their way to several news outlets around the country, stirring up the public’s curiosity. This resulted in an increase in website traffic and downloads of the photo.

As a safeguard against this phenomenon, the DPA and its Implementing Rules mandate that members, employees, and consultants of the NPC are required to ensure the confidentiality of any personal data that come to their knowledge and possession. In observance of this policy, the NPC maintains the confidentiality of its proceedings. In issuing its decisions and advisory opinions, the NPC abbreviates or redacts the name of the concerned parties, and omits unnecessary details that could lead to their identification. Thus, with these measures in line, the right to be forgotten will unironically be enforced, if recognized.

This article is for general informational and educational purposes only and not offered as, and does not constitute, legal advice or legal opinion.

ANDREW STEPHEN S. LOTA is an associate in the Intellectual Property Department of the Angara Abello Concepcion Regala & Cruz Law Offices (ACCRALAW).

aslota@accralaw.com
8830-8000

Calling a man ‘bald’ isn’t sexual harassment

zoran borojevic-unsplash

Everybody relax. It’s still safe to say “bald” in the workplace. News reports to the contrary notwithstanding, a UK employment tribunal didn’t hold last week that using the word is sexual harassment. What the panel did hold, however, was sufficiently nit-picky that it might scare people away from a perfectly good word. The wordsmith in me is alarmed.

Here’s the case in short: During a nasty argument over repairing machines on the factory floor, one employee called another a “bald c—” … and the supervisor did nothing about it. The employee who suffered the insult was later discharged and filed a formal complaint. Last week, he won.

The three members of the Employment Tribunal ignored the word my editor requires me to express with a dash. Instead they found “a connection between the word ‘bald’ on the one hand and the protected characteristic of sex on the other.” Why? Because men are far more likely than women tend to lose their cranial hair. Thus the insult “created an intimidating etc. [sic] environment” and “was done for that purpose.”

Thus the holding is narrow, applying only in the context of an angry argument where “bald” is (1) directed at a male and (2) with the intention of intimidating. Yet even if there was intimidation, it’s hard to imagine that “bald” — rather than the unprintable word with which it was coupled — was the source. A bit of wordsmithery will help explain why.

Although the use of “bald” as an insult can be traced at least to the Hebrew Bible, where the young men who taunt the prophet Elisha as a “bald-head” wind up being mauled by bears, I’ve found no source that classifies “bald” as derogatory or offensive.

True, the now-obsolete term “bald-headed row” is attested from at least the 1880s, after the supposed tendency of older men to sit in the front row of a burlesque house, so that they might (says the Dictionary of American Slang) “ogle women.” In 1924, the New York Times reported that a German theater owner took advantage of this stereotype by selling seats near the stage to bald men only, but in such a pattern that those seated higher up “could plainly distinguish the outlines of a bird formed by the shiny-pated men sitting contentedly below and wondering what all the laughing was about.”

Mockery of that sort has gone out of style, and even at the time was anything but universal. As the cultural historian Kerry Segrave has noted, during the 19th and early 20th centuries, there were professions — medicine and aca-demia, among others — where being bald was seen as adding value. When magazines of the era published cartoons featuring chess masters or other geniuses, they were almost always men without cranial hair.

On the other hand, for whatever complex set of cultural reasons, men have long been uneasy about hair loss. A thriving market for “cures” has existed at least since the 19th century.1 A treatise published in 1917 warned that unless doctors began paying attention to the public’s worries, the treatment of baldness would soon become “the camping ground for the ignorant and dishonest quack.”

Even today, going bald can be mortifying. Around two-thirds of men with hair loss wish they had more hair. The earlier the age at which hair begins to vanish, the larger the psychological distress — perhaps because baldness is widely taken as evidence of aging. And those figures are from studies of men.

Small wonder that treatment for the condition generates $2.6 billion in annual revenue in the US alone. New technologies are being harnessed, including nanomaterials for use in bioprinting. Expensive? Sure. But one study finds that men suffering pattern baldness would be willing to pay an average of $30,000 for a treatment that will restore their hair.

Moreover, there’s no doubt that negative stereotypes of men with less hair persist.2 The oddity is that those prejudices contribute little if anything to wage discrimination and don’t seem to affect more general behavior toward the bald. Even in politics, where image is deemed so vital, researchers have found little evidence of electoral bias against men who lack cranial hair. Maybe negative stereotypes are balanced by positive ones: For instance, the bald are generally perceived as more intelligent.

Not only is bald not an insult; it may not even be gendered. Based only on their own experience, the members of the tribunal concluded that “baldness is much more prevalent in men than women.” This common assertion has come under increasing challenge. By many estimates, over half of women in the US will experience “noticeable hair loss.” Although women are often better than men at hiding the condition, their distress tends to be even greater.

So, let’s see. “Bald” isn’t an insult; it’s not a characteristic that causes disadvantage in the workplace; and it’s not confined to men. As narrow as the tribunal’s holding was, the opinion still seems to be wrong about just about everything. n

BLOOMBERG OPINION

1 Yes, the concern was gendered even then. Charles Henri Leonard, author of popular works on health, suggested in 1879 that women suffered less from hair loss in part because “they are less subject to business worry, and do not heat their heads up continually with hats devoid of ventilation.”

2 Not always. Men who are perceived to have shaved their heads voluntarily (as opposed to losing their hair) are generally considered more dominant than men with full heads of hair.

Food inflation pain puts emerging markets between rock and hard place

A woman checks loaves of bread after buying them from a bakery in Cairo, Egypt, Aug. 8, 2021. -- REUTERS

LONDON/ISTANBUL/CAIRO — Like for millions of people in developing and emerging market countries around the world, shopping for staple foods has turned from a necessity into a luxury for Selcuk Gemici.

The 49-year-old, who works in an auto repair shop in Turkey’s largest city Istanbul and lives with his wife and two children in his father’s house, says fresh produce is often out of reach with his family living on pasta, bulgur and beans.

“Everything became so expensive, we cannot buy and eat what we want — we only buy what we can afford now,” said Mr. Gemici. “My children are not properly nourished.”

Global food prices have climbed for two years, fuelled by COVID-19 disruptions and weather woes. Supply shocks to grains and oils from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine saw them hit an all-time record in February, and again in March.

Inflation rates have soared, with energy price rises adding to pressure. Turkey or Argentina with annual inflation of 70% and around 60% might be outliers, but readings are into double-digits in countries from Brazil to Hungary. It makes US inflation at 8.3% look modest in comparison.

Rising food prices are a hot topic in emerging market, raising the risk of civil unrest with echoes of the Arab spring and putting policy makers in a bind between stepping in with fiscal support to ease the pain on their population or preserve government finances.

Food is the single largest category in inflation baskets — the selection of goods used to calculate the cost of living — in many developing nations, accounting for around half in countries like India or Pakistan and on average for some 40% in low-income countries, International Monetary Fund data shows.

Food producers have become more protective: India on the weekend announcing a ban on wheat exports while Indonesia halted exports of palm oil to control soaring prices at home in late April.

And with the war in Ukraine not only disrupting food but also fertilizer supplies, food inflation could be more longer-lasting, Marcelo Carvalho, head of global emerging markets research at BNP Paribas told Reuters.

“This is here to stay,” said Mr. Carvalho. “Food is very salient — when there is a change in food prices, the perception about inflation is magnified — that feeds into inflation expectations that are more easily unanchored.”

HOT SPOT

For Um Ibrahim, a 60-year-old widow and street vendor selling headscarves in front of a mosque in the middle-class district of Madinet Nasr in Egypt’s capital Cairo, feeding her four children has become much harder.

“All prices rose — clothes, vegetables, poultry, eggs — what am I going do?” she asked, laying out her ware on a cloth.

Egypt, one of the world’s biggest wheat importers, has seen inflation soar more than 13% in April, and is expected to hike interest rates again at a meeting this week after it devalued the currency by 14% in mid-March.

Emerging market policy makers, having jacked up interest rates by hundreds of basis points cumulatively since 2020 to curb price pressures and ensure a bond premium to rising US yields for investors, have to perform a balancing act between taming inflation and keeping fragile growth alive at a time of rising global interest rates.

Emerging economies may expand just 4.6% this year, the World Bank forecasts, compared with an earlier 6.3% prediction.

Polina Kurdyavko, head of EM debt at BlueBay Asset Management, says governments have three options: Provide bigger subsidies to consumers or bite the bullet that is to let prices rise and face inflation and social unrest, or do something in between.

“There are no easy solutions,” Ms. Kurdyavko said.

A raft of countries have introduced measures: Turkey has raised the minimum wage by 50% in December to address a currency crash and inflation spike. Chile will up minimum pay this year as well.

South Africa’s government is debating whether to increase a social relief grant launched in 2020 and make the scheme permanent.

Economists fear emerging economies are facing a fresh wave of unrest on the back of the latest increases in food prices. North Africa, where food inflation was a contributor to the Arab Spring revolts a decade ago, looked particularly vulnerable, said Beata Javorcic, chief economist at the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development.

“The irony of this war is that while everybody expected Russia to have a crisis, it is actually North African countries that are closer to having an emergency situation due to high food prices,” she said.

But pain is expected to stretch further: Three quarters of nations expected to be at high-risk or extreme risk of civil unrest by the fourth quarter of 2022 were middle-income countries, risk consultancy Verisk Maplecroft said last week.

Appeasing inflation pressures through spending will come at a fiscal cost that could spell trouble further down the line, said BNP’s Mr. Carvalho.

“In emerging markets, fiscal sins are forgiven but not forgotten,” he said. “Over the last couple of years, everybody felt like they have a blank cheque … in part because rates were so low. Now that interest rates are rising, it gets a bit trickier.” — Reuters

Japan announces limited ‘test tourism’ from May as step to full reopening

A KIMONO-CLAD woman takes photos of cherry blossoms at Shinjuku Gyoen park in Tokyo, Japan, April 9, 2016. - REUTERS

TOKYO — Japan said on Tuesday it would start conducting “test tourism” in the form of limited package tours in May as a way of gathering information prior to a full re-opening of the country to tourism.

Though tourism was a major pillar of Japan’s economy, tourists have not been permitted to enter since it adopted strict border controls in 2020 at the start of the coronavirus pandemic.

Regulations have been loosened slightly to allow students and some business travelers to enter. But, individual tourists remain barred despite calls from industry leaders hoping to restart tourism to take ad-vantage of the yen, which has fallen to 20-year lows.

The Tourism Agency said on Tuesday that it would start allowing small group tours to enter from later this month as “test cases” to gain information for a broader resumption of tourism at an unspecified future date.

Tourists who have been triple-vaccinated and come from the United States, Australia, Thailand and Singapore will be allowed to take part in the tours, which will be strictly planned in conjunction with travel agencies and ac-companied at all times by tour conductors, it added in a statement.

“This venture will allow us to verify compliance and emergency responses for infection prevention and formulate guidelines for travel agencies and accommodation operators to keep in mind,” it said.

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said earlier this month during a speech in London that he would bring Japan’s border controls into line with other wealthy democracies in June, but no further details have been given, in-cluding when the country will fully open its borders to tourists again.

In 2019, Japan hosted 31.9 million foreign visitors, who spent 4.81 trillion yen. — Reuters

Ukrainian troops evacuate from Mariupol, ceding control to Russia

UNSPLASH

KYIV/NOVOAZOVSK, Ukraine — Ukraine’s military said on Tuesday it was working to evacuate all remaining troops from their last stronghold in the besieged port of Mariupol, ceding control of the city to Russia after months of bombardment.

The evacuation of hundreds of fighters, many wounded, to Russian-held towns, likely marked the end of the longest and bloodiest battle of the Ukraine war and a significant defeat for Ukraine. Mariupol is now in ruins after a Russian siege that Ukraine says killed tens of thousands of people in the city.

With the rest of Mariupol firmly in Russian hands, hundreds of Ukrainian troops and civilians had holed up beneath the city’s Azovstal steelworks. Civilians inside were evacuated in recent weeks, and more than 260 troops, some of them wounded, left the plant for Russian-controlled areas late on Monday.

“The ‘Mariupol’ garrison has fulfilled its combat mission,” the General Staff of Ukraine’s Armed Forces said in a statement.

“The supreme military command ordered the commanders of the units stationed at Azovstal to save the lives of the personnel … Defenders of Mariupol are the heroes of our time,” it added.

Ukrainian Deputy Defense Minister Anna Malyar said 53 injured troops from the steelworks were taken to a hospital in the Russian-controlled town of Novoazovsk, some 32 km (20 miles) to the east, while another 211 people were taken to the town of Olenivka, in an area controlled by Russian-backed separatists.

All of the evacuees will be subject to a potential prisoner exchange with Russia, she added.

About 600 troops were believed to have been inside the steel plant. Ukraine’s military said efforts were under way to evacuate those still inside.

“We hope that we will be able to save the lives of our guys,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said in an early morning address. “There are severely wounded ones among them. They’re receiving care. Ukraine needs Ukrainian heroes alive.”

Reuters saw five buses carrying troops from Azovstal arrive in Novoazovsk late on Monday. In one, marked with Z like many Russian military vehicles in Ukraine, men were stacked on stretchers on three levels. One man was wheeled out, his head tightly wrapped in thick bandages.

LVIV EXPLOSIONS, KHARKIV FIGHTING

Moscow calls its nearly three-month-old invasion a “special military operation” to rid Ukraine of fascists, an assertion Kyiv and its Western allies say is a baseless pretext for an unprovoked war.

Russia’s invading forces have run into apparent setbacks, with troops forced out of the north and the environs of Kyiv in late March. A Ukrainian counterattack in recent days has driven Russian forces out of the area near Kharkiv, the biggest city in the east.

Ukraine’s general staff said Russian forces were reinforcing and preparing to renew their offensive near Slovyansk and Drobysheve, southeast of the strategic town of Izyum, having suffered losses elsewhere.

Areas around Kyiv and the western city of Lviv, near the Polish border, have continued to come under Russian attack. A series of explosions struck Lviv early on Tuesday, a Reuters witness said. There were no immediate reports of casualties or damage.

On Monday, Ukraine’s defense ministry said troops had advanced all the way to the Russian border, about 40 km north of Kharkiv.

The successes near Kharkiv could let Ukraine attack supply lines for Russia’s main offensive, grinding on further south in the Donbas region, where Moscow has been launching mass assaults for a month.

A village in Russia’s western province of Kursk bordering Ukraine came under Ukrainian fire on Tuesday, regional Governor Roman Starovoit said. Three houses and a school were hit but there were no injuries, he said.

Russian border guards returned fire to quell the shooting from large-caliber weapons on the border village of Alekseyevka, Starovoit wrote on messaging app Telegram.

PUTIN CLIMBDOWN OVER NATO

Russia has faced massive sanctions for its actions in Ukraine, but EU foreign ministers failed to pressure Hungary to lift its veto of a proposed oil embargo.

McDonald’s Corp MCD.N became one of the biggest global brands to exit Russia, laying out plans to sell all its restaurants after operating in the country for more than 30 years.

Russian President Vladimir Putin appeared on Monday to climb down from threats to retaliate against Sweden and Finland for announcing plans to join the US-led NATO military alliance.

“As far as expansion goes, including new members Finland and Sweden, Russia has no problems with these states — none. And so in this sense there is no immediate threat to Russia from an expansion to include these coun-tries,” Mr. Putin said.

The comments appeared to mark a major shift in rhetoric, after years of casting NATO enlargement as a direct threat to Russia’s security, including citing it as a justification for the invasion of Ukraine itself.

Mr. Putin said NATO enlargement was being used by the United States in an “aggressive” way to aggravate an already difficult global security situation, and that Russia would respond if the alliance moved weapons or troops forward.

“The expansion of military infrastructure into this territory would certainly provoke our response,” Mr. Putin said.

Finland and Sweden, both non-aligned throughout the Cold War, say they now want the protection offered by NATO’s treaty, under which an attack on any member is an attack on all.

Finland and Sweden’s plans, however, hit a snag when NATO member Turkey’s president said he would not approve either bid. — Reuters

UNICEF expects ‘catastrophic’ levels of child malnutrition

A woman sits on the ground at a baseball stadium with her children, Manila, Philippines, July 25, 2020. -- REUTERS

LONDON — The cost of life-saving treatment for the most severely malnourished children is set to jump by up to 16% due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and pandemic disruptions, according to the United Na-tions’ children’s agency.

The raw ingredients of the ready-to-eat-therapeutic food have leapt in price amid the global food crisis sparked by the war and pandemic, UNICEF said.

Without further funding in the next six months, 600,000 more children may miss out on the essential treatment, which is a high-energy paste made of ingredients including peanuts, oil, sugar and added nutri-ents.

UNICEF did not specify how much increased spending would be needed to maintain the program. It said a carton of the specialized nutrition containing 150 packets — enough for 6 to 8 weeks to bring a se-verely malnourished child back to health — goes for about $41 on average.

Alongside the wider pressure on food security, including climate change, the price rise could lead to “catastrophic” levels of severe malnutrition, the children’s agency warned in a statement.

“The world is rapidly becoming a virtual tinderbox of preventable child deaths and child suffering from wasting,” said UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell.

Severe wasting, when children are too thin for their height, affects 13.6 million children under 5 years old, and results in 1-in-5 deaths among this age group.

Even before the war and pandemic, 2-in-3 did not have access to the therapeutic food needed to save their lives, UNICEF said. — Reuters

Filinvest Land residential business grows 9% in Q1 2022

Filinvest Land, Inc. (FLI), one of the country’s largest real estate developers, reported P4.31 billion in revenues and other income for the first quarter of 2022. It posted P2.69 billion of residential revenues which is a 9% growth compared to the same period last year. The growth in residential revenues was due to continued construction progress and high reservation sales. Net income attributable to equity holders of parent amounted to P678 million.

Reservation sales in the first quarter also reached P4.39 billion, an increase of 28% compared to the same period last year. The increase in reservation sales was due to high OFW Sales and strong demand for housing products in the Laguna, Cavite, Rizal, Bulacan, and Pampanga market areas.

“We are pleased with the continued growth of our residential revenues, and we expect to sustain this momentum as the economy, both here and abroad, continues to open. Our OFWs are starting to gain traction once again. We plan to boost our international sales network further and improve our digital and online platforms to reach out to more OFW markets abroad. FLI will continue accelerating construction completions and rolling out projects in emerging markets with large unserved housing demand. We anticipate an improvement in rental revenues going forward now that the traffic has improved in malls and rental concessions will be reduced,” said Tristan Las Marias, FLI’s President.

FLI was also given the highest credit rating by domestic credit rating agency Philippine Ratings Services Corp. (PhilRatings) for its planned bond issuance worth P8 billion, with an oversubscription option of up to P3.9 billion.

According to FLI CEO Josephine Gotianun Yap, the funds generated from the proposed bond issue would be used to support the company’s capital expenditures and service debt repayments within 2022. FLI aims to expand its leasing business to reach 2.1 million square meters of GLA in 2026 and is ready to launch P30 billion worth of residential projects. “We are grateful for this development as we reach our growth targets for our leasing and residential businesses,” Ms. Gotianun Yap said.

FLI President Tristan Las Marias added, “We are delighted with the PhilRatings report as it reaffirms our investors’ confidence in our company and our track record.”

The forthcoming bond issuance will be the third and last tranche of the P30-billion bond program of FLI as registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission last October 2020.

 


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California church shooter upset over Taiwan-China tensions -police

The man accused of killing a doctor and wounding five other people in a shooting at a Taiwanese-American church banquet in California methodically planned the attack because he was upset over Chinese-Taiwanese tensions, authorities said on Monday.

The suspect, David Chou, 68, chained the doors and placed glue in the locks at Geneva Presbyterian Church in Laguna Woods, California, about 45 miles (72 km) southeast of Los Angeles, before opening fire inside the church on Sunday, Orange County Sheriff Don Barnes said Monday.

Up to 40 people, members of a Taiwanese Presbyterian congregation from nearby Irvine, California, that has space in the church, were attending a luncheon honoring a former local pastor when the shooting began, sheriff’s officials said.

Chou, described by the sheriff as a U.S. citizen and Las Vegas resident born in China, drove to Southern California on Saturday and came to the church on Sunday morning, authorities said. After the shooting, investigators found three bags placed around the church building with various items, including additional ammunition and four Molotov cocktail-like devices.

The FBI said it was opening a hate crimes investigation in the case.

The sheriff’s department issued a statement late on Monday saying investigators had “determined that the suspect was upset about political tensions involving China and Taiwan” but did not elaborate.

In Chou’s car, Barnes said, investigators found notes written in Mandarin that indicated an obsession with Taiwan and a dislike of Taiwanese people.

China views Taiwan, a democratically governed island, as its “sacred” territory and has never renounced the possible use of force to bring it under Beijing’s control.

Taiwan rejects Beijing’s sovereignty claims, saying that it is already independent and that only its 23 million people can decide their future.

All of the victims – whose names have not been released – were of Asian heritage.

The gun violence in California came on the same day as a separate mass shooting at a grocery store in a predominantly Black neighborhood of Buffalo, New York, that left 10 people dead and three others wounded. Most of the victims of that attack, which the FBI has labeled an act of racially motivated violent extremism, were Black. Read full story

Among those killed in the Laguna Woods church shooting was a physician Dr. John Cheng, 52, who was shot when he tackled the gunman, Barnes said, crediting Cheng’s act of bravery with preventing more fatalities.

Subduing Chou gave other congregants, including a pastor, the opportunity to overpower him and tie his legs with an electrical cord, detaining him until sheriff’s deputies arrived and broke through the chains on the doors.

Chou, who remains in custody, was believed to be acting alone, Barnes said. He purchased two guns used in the attack legally in Las Vegas, where he rented a room in a shared home. He likely will be charged with one count of murder, five counts of attempted murder and four counts of unlawful possession of explosives at an arraignment set for Tuesday, Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer told reporters.

The wounded, four men ranging in age from 66 to 92 and an 86-year-old woman, were taken to area hospitals for treatment, the sheriff’s department said.

The shooting unfolded during a lunch reception the Taiwanese Presbyterian Church congregation had arranged for a former pastor who had left United States and relocated in Taiwan but returned for a visit, Tom Cramer, leader of the Presbytery of Los Ranchos and a former pastor at the Geneva Presbyterian Church, said in an interview.

Spitzer said he was considering seeking the death penalty in the case, though California has not executed a prisoner in more than a decade. Spitzer said he visited the church social hall on Sunday to see the carnage for himself.

Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen was deeply concerned about the incident and has instructed the island’s foreign ministry to help the victims and their families, the ministry said on Tuesday. – Reuters

China’s COVID controls will impact foreign investment for years – US lobby

STOCK IMAGE | FREEPIK

 – China’s strict COVID-19 controls will hamper foreign investment into the country for years to come as limits on travel block the pipeline for projects, the President of the American Chamber of Commerce warned on Tuesday.

There are few signs that American companies are leaving the China market, but the years-long process of research and due diligence for projects has been delayed, Michael Hart said at an event launching the chamber’s annual report.

“We’re very concerned about the ongoing and future investment by U.S. and other foreign companies into China because people can’t get access in terms of travel,” he said.

“Unfortunately the COVID lockdown this year and the restrictions for the last two years are going to mean three, four, five years from now, we will see investment decline, most likely.”

While much of the world has lifted coronavirus restrictions, China has strictly limited flights into the country and insisted a zero-COVID approach is necessary to prevent the country’s health resources from being overwhelmed.

The restrictions are also leading foreign companies with supply chains in China to look for alternative sources to reduce disruption, Hart said.

The chamber’s report cited market access restrictions, discriminatory regulations and intrusive cybersecurity requirements as among the main concerns of U.S. businesses.

Last week the chamber released a flash survey that warned of an “exodus” of foreign staff in China due to the COVID measures and ongoing lockdowns, saying that 58% of members had decreased their revenue projections for the year. Read full story

European businesses are braced for the next wave of disruption from COVID outbreaks, with little chance of improvement likely until China increases vaccination rates, the European Chamber of Commerce in China said on Monday. Read full storyReuters