Home Blog Page 6957

Steel industry not planning to request new safeguard duties

THE steel industry does not expect to apply for new safeguard duties following the expiry of the last round of duties in 2019, after concluding that manufacturers have since recovered.

Industry representatives at a public hearing with the Tariff Commission on Thursday said that steelmaker Lunar Steel Corp. moved from loss to profit. The industry had doubled to 21 licensed local players from the previous 10 after the decade-long protection.

“There will be no need for an extension of the safeguard or a reapplication considering that imports are down and continues to be down during this period of pandemic,” Jose Salvador Rivera, Jr., the legal counsel of the petitioner, said after citing discussions with industry leaders.

The official stance of the petitioners, he said, is not to reapply for another round of measures with members showing financial growth.

Ramon Tan, president of a segment of the industry, the Steel Angles, Shapes and Sections Manufacturers of the Philippines, Inc. said, however, that unregistered angle bars are still entering the country.

“With the safeguard duty in place, we are assured of protection coming from the government that… our costs can compete with the imported product. We cannot say (when) the market… will dump another tide of cheap imported angle bars,” he said.

“As of now, (safeguards are) not yet badly needed, but soon it will be a tool to equip the local manufacturer with an additional shield or weapon against an influx of imported angle bars.”

Safeguard duties on steel angle bars were extended to 2019, after first being implemented in 2009 to 2015. The Safeguard Measures Act, or Republic Act No. 8800, allows domestic producers to ask the government to conduct an investigation into their foreign competitors if they claim to have been injured by excessive imports.

The steel angle bar industry successfully petitioned for an extension after it demonstrated that imports seriously injured the industry.

Mr. Rivera said that the problems of the industry have now shifted to smuggling and unfair trade practices, which he said would require remedies other than safeguards.

“As of the present, provided that the trend continues and there is a relatively level playing field, (the) petitioner is confident… that adjustment measures would allow them to compete against imports.”

The tariff commission’s 2017 assessment found that the domestic steel angle bar industry complied substantially with commitments to adjust to competition.

The initial application for safeguards came from Cathay Metal Corp., Dragon Asia Rolling Mills, Inc., and Lunar Steel Corp. — Jenina P. Ibañez

Palay farmgate price rises 0.1% in second week of Feb.

THE average farmgate price of palay, or unmilled rice, rose 0.1% week-on-week to P16.72 per kilogram during the second week of February, with the price rising 4.6% from a year earlier, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) said.

In its weekly update on palay, rice, and corn prices, the PSA said the average wholesale price of well-milled rice rose 0.2% to P37.37 while the retail price rose 0.1% to P40.93.

The average wholesale price of regular-milled rice fell 0.1% to P33.31 while the retail price fell 0.03% to P36.14.

The farmgate price of yellow corn grain fell 0.1% week-on-week to P12.51.

The average wholesale price of yellow corn grain fell 0.1% to P19.97 while the retail price fell 0.5% to P24.34.

The farmgate price of white corn grain rose 2.5% week-on-week to P13.82.

The average wholesale price of white corn grain fell 0.2% to P17.13 while the retail price fell 0.6% to P25.71. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

DBM warns agencies against dealing with unauthorized parties

THE Department of Budget and Management (DBM) warned local government units (LGUs) and government agencies against dealing with individuals and groups claiming the ability to fast-track the release of budget funds.

Budget Secretary Wendel E. Avisado, in Circular Letter 2021-2 dated Feb. 9, said individuals and organized groups are claiming they can facilitate or influence the release of special allotment release orders (SAROs) and notices of cash allocation (NCAs) for this year’s P4.5-trillion budget.

SARO is an authority given by the DBM permitting agencies and LGUs to incur obligations to cover the funding needed for a certain program, while the NCA represents clearance to use cash set aside for them.

“We strongly advise all National Government Agencies (NGAs), LGUs and all others concerned to refrain from entertaining or transacting with such individuals/organized groups,” according to the circular, published Thursday.

“This is to emphasize that the DBM does not authorize any person or group of persons to coordinate, more so solicit any amount from NGAs/LGUs, in order to facilitate the release of funds,” it added.

It said the DBM is following the formal procedures for the release funds and there is no need for middlemen to intervene in the process.

“In order to avoid disclosure of valuable information… the DBM shall refrain from divulging the status or details of fund releases in case of phone queries,” it said.

However, inquiries sent through e-mail will be entertained if there is an authorization letter and an identification card attached.

The DBM released 58.42% or P2.629 trillion of the P4.5-trillion budget for the year as of January, leaving about P1.877 trillion to disburse over the remaining 11 months. — Beatrice M. Laforga

Manila to work with EU on free trade — Duterte

THE PHILIPPINES would keep working with the European Union (EU) on issues including free trade and investment, President Rodrigo R. Duterte said on Wednesday as he got a visit from the bloc’s ambassador-designate.

“The Philippines is ready to work constructively with the EU for the greater good of our peoples,” Mr. Duterte told Luc Véron, Ambassador-designate of the EU to the Philippines after accepting his credentials at the presidential palace, the latter said in a statement on Thursday.

The country would also work with the EU to mitigate climate change, boost humanitarian assistance and disaster relief, said the President, who earlier accused the EU of holding up the supply of coronavirus vaccines.

Mr. Duterte said the country would continue to “redefine, refine and reinforce” its ties with the EU in the face of new challenges.

“Our priority is to intensify trade and investment through a free trade agreement,” he said. “We wish to partner with the EU to protect and promote all rights of all, especially the human rights of migrant workers.”

Last week, Mr. Duterte accused the EU of holding up coronavirus supplies from other countries, citing the bloc’s export rule that requires drug makers to obtain permission first before shipping vaccines outside the region.

The rule was imposed after British-Swedish drug maker AstraZeneca Plc failed to meet its scheduled vaccine delivery to the EU.

Mr. Duterrte said the issue was getting the supplies as big powers such as the EU not only buy up doses in bulk but have threatened to restrict exports of certain COVID-19 vaccines. “AstraZeneca was held hostage by the European Union,” he said early this month.

He said Southeast Asian nations are not as powerful as the EU and they don’t have connections to ensure sufficient access to the vaccines.

“The country is a friend to all and enemy to none,” his spokesman Harry L. Roque, Jr. said at a televised news briefing in Filipino on Thursday. “The President has seen that the country’s ties with the EU has benefited Filipinos. There is no reason to end their relations.”

Mr. Duterte would prioritize the national interest, Mr. Roque said.

“The EU and its member-states will continue their efforts to contribute to the international response to the pandemic including guaranteeing affordable and fair access to vaccines for all,” Mr. Véron had told the President.

The Philippines and the EU share a “deep respect for democracy and the rule of law,” Mr. Duterte said. “This will serve as a solid foundation for robust cooperation on the basis of mutual trust, respect, and benefit.”

The international community has condemned Mr. Duterte’s drug war that has killed thousands of suspected pushers.

Congress also rejected a plea by ABS-CBN Corp., a media network critical of the government, to have its franchise renewed.

Mr. Duterte in 2017 warned EU ambassadors living in Manila that he would cut diplomatic ties with the bloc and would order them to leave the country for interfering in the country’s affairs.

The European Parliament last year adopted a resolution calling on the European Commission to immediately start the procedure for the revocation of generalized scheme of preferences (GSP+) status enjoyed by the Philippines, citing the government’s failure to improve the human rights situation in the country.

“The EU and the Philippines have developed a strong economic and trade partnership characterized, despite the crisis, by substantial trading goods balance in favor of your country worth P715 billion,” Mr. Véron told the tough-talking Philippine leader.

Mr. Duterte also accepted the credentials of envoys Antonio Jose Maria de Souza e Silva of Brazil, Kim Inchul of South Korea, Michele Jeanine Boccoz of France and Marcela Ordoñez of Columbia. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Philippines to take delivery of Sinovac vaccines on Feb. 23

THE PHILIPPINES will take delivery of 600,000 coronavirus vaccines from China’s Sinovac Biotech on Feb. 23, according to the presidential palace.

Of the initial batch, Beijing will donate 100,000 doses to the Philippine military, presidential spokesman Harry L. Roque, Jr. told an online news briefing on Thursday.

The country also expects to take delivery of 117,000 doses of Pfizer, Inc. vaccines under a global initiative for equal access this month, he added.

The local Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved the emergency use of Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine. Sinovac has yet to get approval for emergency use.

Sinovac’s vaccines would be stored until their use is approved, Mr. Roque said. The vaccines would be sent back if these don’t get approved.

Mr. Roque said China’s vaccine donation would not affect its sea dispute with the Philippines.

The Chinese government in January said it would donate 500,000 vaccine doses to the country.

Mr. Roque said the FDA had given the Presidential Security Group (PSG) a “compassionate permit” for the use of 10,000 doses of vaccines developed by another Chinese drug maker, Sinopharm Group Co. Ltd.

Critics earlier flagged the inoculation of presidential guards with unapproved vaccines last year. PSG members had to be vaccinated “because their job is to provide security to the President,” Mr. Roque said.

The Department of Health (DoH) reported 1,734 coronavirus infections on Thursday, bringing the total to 543,282.

The death toll rose by 68 to 11,469, while recoveries increased by 423 to 500,335, it said in a bulletin.

There were 31,478 active cases, 87.6% of which were mild, 6.9% did not show symptoms, 2.5% were critical, 2.4% were severe and 0.62% were moderate.

DoH said 12 duplicates had been removed from the tally, while 52 recovered cases were reclassified as deaths. Two laboratories failed to submit their data on Feb. 10.

More than 7.7 million Filipinos have been tested for the coronavirus as of Feb. 9, according the DoH’s tracker website.

The coronavirus has sickened about 107.9 million and killed almost 2.4 million people worldwide, according to the Worldometers website, citing various sources including data from the World Health Organization (WHO).

About 79.9 million people have recovered, it said. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas and Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Senator seeks probe of underspending by gov’t amid pandemic

A SENATOR has filed a resolution seeking to investigate government underspending and delays in releasing cash aid to frontliners under its recovery plan.

Senator Francis N. Pangilinan on Wednesday filed Senate Resolution 647, noting that only P103.24 billion of P140 billion in funds under the second stimulus law had been released as of Jan. 4.

He also flagged delays in the release of contact tracers’ salaries, special allowances of health workers, cash subsidies to jeepney drivers.

Mr. Pangilinan also cited underspending by the Transportation and Agriculture departments of their budgets under the second stimulus law and the slow release of emergency cash assistance and implementation of coronavirus-related programs.

“We in Congress rushed the approval of two Bayanihan laws and the budgets to ensure there were funds to control the COVID,” he said in a statement in Filipino.

“These delays and underspending are unacceptable given that Bayanihan II was signed into law on July 27, 2020,” he added.

The senator said the Agriculture department had only used a quarter of its funds under the second stimulus law.

He cited the Philippines’ abysmal rankings in coronavirus management and vaccine procurement. It ranked 79th among 98 nations in containing the pandemic, according to a study by the Lowy Institute.

“We can’t let bureaucracy slow us down from delivering much needed aid and support,” Mr. Pangilinan said.

A similar probe had been sought at the House of Representatives.  Vann Marlo M. Villegas

Nationwide round-up (02/11/21)

Private motor vehicle inspection centers to lower fees

PRIVATE motor vehicle inspection centers have agreed to lower their fees to the same rates offered by private emission testing centers (PETCs), the Transportation department said Thursday. “Private Motor Vehicle Inspection Center (PMVIC) owners have decided to heed the appeal of Department of Transportation Secretary Arthur P. Tugade to lower the current PMVIC inspection fee, level it with the current fee of PETCs while there is a pandemic, and waive for one year the reinspection fee for private and public utility vehicles,” the department said in a statement. Private motor vehicle inspection centers were charging P1,500 to P1,800 per vehicle. “The testing fee will be lowered to P600 for private vehicles,” the department noted. “Nonetheless, the process will still cover all 73 inspection items, including smoke emission, for a comprehensive test of a vehicle’s roadworthiness,” it added. The inspection fee for motorcycles will likewise be reduced to P500 and P300 for public utility jeepneys.

RECALL
Also on Thursday, President Rodrigo R. Duterte ordered a recall of the new policy requiring vehicles to undergo inspection from PMVICs for the annual renewal of registration, according to the his spokesperson. “MVIS (Motor Vehicle Inspection System) is no longer mandatory. This means that there should be no new or additional fee for the registration of vehicles,” Presidential Spokesperson Harry L. Roque, Jr. said in Filipino during a televised briefing. “This means no new fee, no additional fees for registering cars,” he added. Mr. Roque said the President cited the impact of the coronavirus pandemic and rising costs in issuing the directive. — Arjay L. Balinbin and Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Duterte orders deferment of child car seat law

PRESIDENT Rodrigo R. Duterte has ordered the deferment of the implementation of Republic Act No. 11229 or the Child Safety in Motor Vehicles Act, according to the presidential palace. “Our president has decided. He has decided to postpone or defer the implementation of the child car seats [law],” Presidential spokesman Harry L. Roque, Jr. said in a televised press briefing. He added that the postponement should also serve as a “basis” to amend the law. RA No. 11229, which went into effect on February 2, bans children up to 12 years old and who are below 4’11” from sitting in the front seat of a vehicle. They are required to sit at the back using a restraint system appropriate for their weight, height, and age. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

High court approves COVID-19 vaccine purchase for judiciary

THE Supreme Court has approved the use of funds to buy coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccines for the entire judiciary. In a statement on Thursday, the high court said the green light was given during an en banc session on January 26. About 30,000 justices, judges, officials, and employees of the judicial branch of government are expected to get the vaccine. About P19 million will be allocated for the vaccines to be sourced from the high court’s savings fund, Presidential Electoral Tribunal, Court of Appeals, Sandiganbayan, Court of Tax Appeals, and the lower courts. Chief Justice Diosdado M. Peralta has expressed readiness to set an example by being vaccinated first “if there are no restrictions as determined by his doctors,” Supreme Court Public Information Officer Chief Brian Keith F. Hosaka told reporters via Viber. “CJ Peralta has always believed in ‘leadership by example’,” Mr. Hosaka said. The judiciary will coordinate with the national task force against COVID-19 and the Department of Health (DoH) for the vaccine procurement as required under protocols. The vaccine brand and vaccination sites are yet to be determined. — Bianca Angelica D. Añago

Regional Updates (02/11/21)

Closed to trucks starting Feb. 20

Trucks and trailers will be banned from crossing the Nagtahan Flyover in Manila starting February 20 to avoid further damage and potential accidents on the structure that is already lined up for repair, the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA) announced Thursday. The agency said light vehicles can still use the bridge, based on the recommendation of the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH).

P3.32-M calamity loan released to Marinduque electricity distributor

STATE-run National Electrification Administration (NEA) has extended a P3.32-million calamity loan to Marinduque Electric Cooperative, Inc. (Marelco) after it was hit by two typhoons last year, the agency said on Tuesday. In a press release, NEA said Marelco has received the calamity loan as of end-January. The loan is intended to help the electric cooperative restore power lines damaged by Typhoon Quinta (international name: Molave) and Super Typhoon Rolly (international name: Goni). Data from the NEA’s Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Department showed that Marelco facilities suffered P26.69 million in damage from the two typhoons. “The calamity loan program of the NEA has a 10-year repayment term and one-year grace period. It has an interest rate of 3.25 percent per annum,” the agency said. In December, NEA released P25 million in calamity loans to First Catanduanes Electric Cooperative, Inc. (FICELCO) for the repair and rehabilitation of its power facilities after the utility bore the brunt of Typhoons Quinta and Rolly. NEA earlier said it had lent P439.98 million to twenty cooperatives last year, with bulk of the fund going to the distribution utilities’ capital expenditures and working capital. Of the total, some P128.08 million were handed out as calamity loans. — Angelica Y. Yang

Palawan plebiscite in March will be a ‘dry run’ for holding elections amid COVID — Comelec

THE Commission on Elections (Comelec) on Thursday said the upcoming plebiscite to ratify the division of Palawan into three provinces would serve as a “dry run” for the conduct of next year’s 2022 national and local polls as the country still battles the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. In a virtual briefing on Thursday, Comelec Chair Sheriff M. Abas said the March 13 plebiscite will be the first time the poll body will implement stringent health measures during a voting exercise. “This will be like a dry run, how we run this plebiscite in Palawan, because if we reach May 2022, we will see in the plebiscite how ready the commission is, how ready the people, and how ready our partner agencies are in conducting this. The plebiscite is important on how we implement health and safety protocols,” he said in Filipino. Comelec Commissioner Antonio T. Kho, Jr. said the poll body en banc already approved “the creation of the new normal committee that will assist in the planning and anticipating of the health concerns to the 2022 elections.” The Palawan plebiscite is for the ratification of Republic Act No. 11259, signed into law in 2019. It divides Palawan into three provinces: Palawan del Norte, Palawan Oriental, and Palawan del Sur. There are 490,369 registered voters from 23 municipalities who are expected to take part in the voting. The plebiscite was originally set May 11, 2020. — Gillian M. Cortez

720 families still displaced after 2013 Zamboanga siege; city vows housing by August

THE Zamboanga City government aims to finally deliver by August the permanent housing units for the remaining 720 families who were among the thousands displaced during the September 2013 attack by the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) faction under Nur Misuari. Mayor Maria Isabelle Climaco-Salazar called a meeting of the inter-agency committee earlier this week to direct both the involved local departments and national agencies to finish and turnover the houses before the 8th year since the siege. The attack prompted almost three weeks of armed urban battle between government forces and the MNLF members. “We want our IDPs (internally-displaced persons) to know that we have not forgotten them even as we are currently coping with the COVID pandemic,” Ms. Salazar, who also chairs the inter-agency committee, said in a statement following the meeting. “As mayor and chair of (the committee), I have given the agencies concerned a deadline until August 2021 to finish the construction of the housing units and award them to the target IDP beneficiaries,” she said. The offices involved in the program are the City Housing Division, City Engineer’s Office, National Housing Authority (NHA), and the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH). Data from the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees show 23,794 families composed of over 199,7000 individuals were displaced by the conflict. — MSJ

2 new Skyway 3 ramps opened on Thursday

SAN Miguel Corp. (SMC) opened on Thursday two new ramps of the Skyway Stage 3, its top official said. The company said in an e-mailed statement that it opened on February 11 the “A. Bonifacio northbound off-ramp, just before the Cloverleaf Mall in Balintawak, and the E. Rodriguez southbound off-ramp on Araneta Ave., which provides access to España.” The opening of the two ramps gives an option to Balintawak-bound motorists coming from Alabang, Parañaque, Las Piñas, Pasay, or Makati to avoid EDSA, Mr. Ramon Ang noted. “Those coming from NLEX (North Luzon Expressway) headed to Quezon City, on the other hand, can opt to take Skyway 3 to get to E. Rodriguez Ave,” he added. SMC is planning to open more access points soon, including Quirino Entry, Nagtahan Entry, Nagtahan Exit, E. Rodriguez Entry, and C3 Exit for northbound motorists. For southbound, it will open C3 Entry, C3 Exit, A. Bonifacio Entry, Plaza Dilao Exit, and Nagtahan Exit. SMC officially opened the new elevated expressway on Jan. 14. “With Skyway 3, motorists are now able to bypass EDSA and other busy streets and enjoy travel time from Buendia to Balintawak in just 20 minutes, and Alabang to Balintawak in only 30 minutes.” The project was built to reduce travel time between the South Luzon Expressway and NLEX to 20 minutes from around three hours previously. Magallanes to Balintawak should only take around 15 minutes, Balintawak to Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) also only 15 minutes, and Valenzuela to Makati in just 10 minutes, the company said. — Arjay L. Balinbin

Biden talks to Xi about  ‘unfair economic practices’

JOSEPH R. BIDEN, in his first conversation as president with the Chinese leader Xi Jinping, spoke of his concern about China’s “coercive and unfair economic practices” as well as human rights abuses in the Xinjiang region, according to a White House account of their telephone call.

Mr. Biden also expressed misgivings about the country’s growing restrictions on political freedoms in Hong Kong and “increasingly assertive actions in the region, including toward Taiwan,” in the call, which took place Thursday morning Beijing time.

Mr. Biden, who wished Mr. Xi a happy Lunar New Year, was “committed to pursuing practical, results-oriented engagements when it advances the interests of the American people and those of our allies,” the White House said.

The two presidents, according to the readout of the call, “exchanged views on countering the COVID-19 pandemic, and the shared challenges of global health security, climate change, and preventing weapons proliferation.”

China’s official state news agency Xinhua, meanwhile, cited Mr. Xi as saying China and the US should re-establish mechanisms for dialogue so that there would be an accurate understanding of each other’s policy intentions and to avoid misunderstanding and miscalculation.

The Xinhua report said foreign affairs officials from both sides may deepen communication on bilateral relations and major international and regional matters. More contact may be carried out among economic, financial, law enforcement and military bodies, Xinhua said. But it also repeated that Taiwan, Hong Kong and Xinjiang issues were China’s domestic affairs, and said the US should respect China’s core interests and act with caution.

‘WORK WITH CHINA’
Mr. Biden, in a tweet, said he had told Mr. Xi “I will work with China when it benefits the American people.”

The Biden administration will engage with partners in Asia and Europe — though not out of nostalgia, one administration official insisted before the call, but to develop a joint strategy on restricting sensitive high-tech exports and Chinese investment in critical industries.

A crucial part of the Biden China strategy would involve public investments in American enterprise and innovation to foster US competitiveness. Announcements on those commitments are expected in the coming weeks and months, the official said.

Mr. Biden has criticized former President Trump for failing to strengthen US economic muscle and making China policy on the fly. The official acknowledged that it would likely take years for the strategy to play out, so the focus is on making it sustainable.

The Biden team is reviewing actions put in place by the Trump administration, including its imposition of tariffs on more than $350 billion in Chinese goods. While that review continues, the existing tariffs remain in place until decisions have been made on what adjustments to make, the official said.

The new administration plans to be very careful in its initial interactions with the Chinese, but has made its priorities clear through multiple avenues, including a meeting between Chinese ambassador Cui Tiankai and Kurt Campbell, Indo-Pacific coordinator at the National Security Council, according to a second official.

Mr. Campbell has also engaged with all allies in the region, most of whom share the US’s concerns on China’s economic and military practices, the official added.

The White House is planning to consult with Congress and allies to work through sources of leverage as it’s crafting a sharper, more effective trade strategy. Key Cabinet members involved in the review, including the US Trade Representative and commerce secretary, have yet to be confirmed.

The call was arranged after Mr. Biden had spoken with numerous other counterparts around the world, including European and Asian allies and even Russian President Vladimir Putin.

While the US president entered the conversation with no illusions, according to an official, he also wants to ensure an open line of communication with Mr. Xi and his government. That applies to the entirety of the US government in order to resolve issues on various levels, the official said. 

Mr. Xi and Mr. Biden have pledged to find common ground where they can, including on topics such as climate change. Yet Mr. Biden and his team have been clear that they intend to maintain the Trump administration’s more adversarial approach to China, with Secretary of State Antony Blinken saying in his confirmation hearing that China “poses the most significant challenge of any nation state to the United States.”

In a visit to the Pentagon on Wednesday, Mr. Biden said he had directed Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin to establish a task force to review national security policy with respect to China.

US-China tensions weren’t eased during a recent call between Mr. Blinken and top Chinese diplomat Yang Jiechi, according to two people familiar with the matter. Chinese officials objected to what they said was an overly negative tone to the American summary of the call, while Mr. Blinken’s team felt China’s readout put words in the secretary of state’s mouth over the “One China” policy regarding Taiwan.

China has generally approached the US cautiously since Mr. Biden’s election and Mr. Trump’s unprecedented campaign to challenge the result. While Mr. Xi sent Mr. Biden a congratulatory message in late November, he hasn’t spoken with a sitting US president since last March.

Soon after that last call, Washington and Beijing launched into a series of disputes that saw their relationship sink to its lowest point since the height of the Cold War. In recent months, the two nations have traded sanctions, expelled journalists, closed each other’s consulates and clashed over everything from Taiwan to the origins of the coronavirus.

Mr. Biden has met Mr. Xi repeatedly over the years, including as vice president, and until recently touted what he said was his friendship with the Chinese leader. He gave a harsher assessment on the campaign trail last year, calling Mr. Xi a “thug” who “doesn’t have a democratic — with-a-small-‘d’ — bone in his body.”

China failed to meet its 2020 trade targets under the Trump administration’s “phase one” agreement, buying just under 60% of the $172 billion worth of goods it said it would purchase.

The two countries have also clashed over technology, with the US seeking to curb the growth of Chinese tech champions. The Trump administration used export controls, entity lists and executive orders to block companies including Huawei Technologies Co., chipmaker Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. (SMIC),  ByteDance Ltd. and Tencent Holdings Ltd. from American goods and consumers.

The status of the democratically run island of Taiwan, which Beijing considers part of its territory, has also re-emerged as one of the biggest flash points between the two sides. Mr. Trump oversaw a dramatic expansion of ties with Taipei, including a visit by then-Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar last August.

Chinese leaders usually seek to get their American counterparts to reaffirm the country’s commitment to the One China policy. Mr. Trump recommitted to upholding the policy, which recognizes the People’s Republic as the sole legal government of China, during his first call with Mr. Xi in 2017, and State Department spokesman Ned Price said at another briefing that the Biden administration won’t change that position. — Bloomberg

2 masks, snug fit reduce coronavirus spread — CDC

MAKING SURE a mask fits snugly on the face and use of two masks is likely to significantly reduce a person’s exposure to the coronavirus, laboratory experiments described by US health officials on Wednesday showed.

The US Centers of Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in January conducted experiments to see how well wearing a cloth mask over a three-ply medical procedure mask, and knotting the ear loops of a surgical mask and then tucking the excess material close to the face, protects against coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).

They found that both these methods helped reduce the exposure to potentially infected aerosols by more than 90% in laboratory simulations.

The data also showed that wearing a mask helped reduce exposure to aerosol particles that were the size of droplets that spread COVID-19, when compared to wearing no mask at all.

The experiments highlight that “masks work, and they work best when they have a good fit and are worn correctly,” CDC Director Rochelle Walensky told reporters.

Ms. Walesnky added that re-useable devices known as mask-fitters were also an option to improve a mask’s fit.

Results from one experiment demonstrated that the un-knotted medical procedure mask alone blocked 42.0% of the particles from a simulated cough, and the cloth mask alone blocked 44.3%.

The double mask combination blocked 92.5% of the cough particles.

In another experiment, the CDC tried to simulate the spread of COVID-19 during breathing when one or both people are properly masked. In the first scenario with only the source of the aerosols wearing a mask, they found coronavirus exposure was reduced by 82.2% when double-masking, and 62.9% with a snug fitting, knotted and tucked surgical mask.

When the source and receiver of simulated breathing aerosols were both fitted with double masks, or knotted and tucked medical masks, the exposure of the receiver was reduced 96.4% and 95.9%, respectively, the experiments found.

With more highly contagious virus variants circulating, CDC medical officer John Brooks told The Washington Post, “whatever we can do to improve the fit of a mask to make it work better, the faster we can end this pandemic.” — Reuters

Malaysia offers free COVID-19 vaccinations to foreign residents, undocumented migrants

KUALA LUMPUR — Malaysia will extend its free coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccination program to all foreigners residing in the country, including students, refugees and undocumented migrants, the government said on Thursday.

The Southeast Asian country is expected to begin its vaccine rollout at the end of this month, aiming to cover at least 80% of its 32 million population within a year.

“A safe environment free from COVID-19 can only be achieved when as many Malaysian residents as possible are immunized,” the government committee on vaccine supply said in a statement. “During a pandemic, providing vaccinations is a humanitarian step.”

The committee, however, said priority will be given to Malaysians, with the vaccination schedule for foreigners to be announced at a later date.

Separately, science minister Khairy Jamaluddin said foreigners eligible for free vaccinations will include asylum-seekers registered with the UN refugee agency UNHCR and undocumented migrants.

“(The committee) will be discussing further on how this can be implemented,” he said on Twitter, adding that authorities will bring in state governments, foreign embassies and non-government organizations to assist in vaccine distribution.

Malaysia has secured more than enough vaccines to reach its targets after agreeing supply deals with US drug maker Pfizer and German partner BioNTech, Russia’s Gamaleya Research Institute as well as China’s Sinovac Biotech Ltd. and CanSino Biologics.

It had also secured two separate vaccine shipments from AstraZeneca Plc, including one arranged under the global COVAX facility.

The first shipment of Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines is expected to arrive on Feb. 26.

Malaysia has seen a sharp spike in coronavirus infections in recent weeks, after having largely reined in the epidemic for most of last year.

That has pushed total cases past 250,000, including 923 deaths, as of Wednesday. — Reuters

Overheating in the US, stagflation in the Philippines?

The International Monetary Fund (IMF), credit rating agencies, and investment bank analysts share a common assessment of the Philippines’ fiscal stimulus package. It’s not enough.

The issue in the US is its massive fiscal stimulus plan. Some fear it could produce overheating and high inflation.

Current US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and past US Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers are slugging out the enormous size of the fiscal stimulus. At $1.9 trillion, the package proposed by US President Joe Biden is three times the estimated negative output gap of $665 billion as of the last quarter of 2020. The US Treasury intends to stimulate the economy by higher public spending. This is Biden’s countervailing force to weak private consumption and investment.

Summers is not actually opposed to the idea of stimulating the US economy in a big way. Bloomberg reported that in fact, he admits that during the Global Financial Crisis in 2008-2009, the US economy would have recovered faster with a bigger package than the $787 billion he succeeded in putting together.

What the former Treasury head questions is the sheer size of the package and the risks attendant to it. It is likely that spending an amount approximating the World War II package to deal with recession would trigger phenomenally high inflation. He wrote “I worry that containing an inflationary outbreak without triggering a recession may be even more difficult now than in the past.”

Summers is referring to the conventional monetary policy tools of jacking up interest rates and reducing domestic liquidity through tight open market operations. This combination could moderate price movements but it could also depress business activities. A prolonged drop in output gives way to another recession.

In answer to this warning, Yellen explained: “As Treasury secretary, I have to worry about all the risks to the economy. And the most important risk is that we leave workers and communities scarred by the pandemic and the economic toll that it’s taken, that we don’t do enough to address the pandemic and the public health issues, that we don’t get our kids back to work.”

We have no doubt our very own economic managers led by Finance Secretary Sonny Dominguez have been worrying as much about similar risks to the Philippine economy. Their worries must have multiplied during this pandemic and kept them awake at night. But Yellen’s retort might be instructive to our authorities. She is very emphatic that their government should one, ensure that workers and communities are brought back to active economic groove; two, spend on health measures, vaccines and the whole public health system to stop the virus from further infecting and killing people; and three, enable the safe return of students to school. It’s a whole of system approach that does not equate the economy with public health, and in the process, avoids an either/or decision. Competent and compassionate pandemic mitigation will surely allow the revival of the domestic economy.

To be sure, the broad strokes of the US package are not fundamentally different from those put together by our economic managers. Focus is given to soften the pandemic blows to the most vulnerable through cash transfers and small business support especially those in agriculture, transportation and tourism. Capital expenditure and infrastructure support will be sustained. Monetary policy will also accommodate the funding needs of the economy.

But our pandemic response is quite paltry. From the IMF’s monitoring, the chart below shows the extent of discretionary fiscal response to the COVID-19 crisis in emerging markets and middle-income countries. Out of 19 jurisdictions, the Philippines ranked 13th in terms of additional spending on medical buildings, equipment, staff and medical supplies as well as foregone revenues as a percent of 2020 gross domestic product (GDP). At 2.5% of GDP, ours was below the GDP-weighted average for this group of countries, even behind India and Indonesia.

Using the same metrics, US’ additional funding for pandemic mitigation was a huge 16.7% of GDP.

Summers’ beef about the size of the fiscal support is beyond inflation and possibly a stock market bubble. He thinks it could undermine congressional appetite for future fiscal action to deal with long-term agenda like infrastructure spending and climate change. Excess in one could mean too little for the other.

Biden thinks otherwise.

“Some in Congress think we’ve already done enough to deal with the crisis in the country. Others think that things are getting better and we can afford to sit back and either do little or nothing at all… that’s not what I see. I see enormous pain.”

Yellen focused Biden’s point by clarifying that the US Government will launch yet another package to deal with these long-term fundamental problems like weak public investment. That means a bigger total package and bigger potential for what Summers described as “inflationary pressures of a kind we have not seen in a generation.”

It is true Bloomberg shows that so far, investors appear to have just shrugged off inflation concerns. What worries the market is instead the issue about financial stability as excessive liquidity swamps different asset markets, ultimately leading to a crash. History shows this to be true in 2000 and again in 2007.

In Japan, a similar concern about excess liquidity was expressed by a Bank of Japan (BoJ) board member when he said: “…by buying huge amounts of assets and holding onto them for a prolonged period, the BoJ could affect market functions. That is something we need to be mindful of.”

These, meaning inflation and financial instability, might as well be the cost of reversing job losses which the US Congressional Office said could take until 2025 to restore to 4% again from January’s 6.3%. Unemployment is the modern scourge and Yellen considers it synonymous to “tremendous suffering in the country.” To her, this must be addressed as it is the biggest risk.

Yellen’s argument is imperative because of the continuing uncertainty posed by the pandemic despite the general roll-out of the vaccines. Black workers, women, and those in low-paying jobs are likely to become unemployed.

That brings us back to the Philippines where some bank analysts have raised the specter of stagflation, the threat of stagnant growth and rising inflation. While Yellen and Summers are sparring on the issue of potential overheating, here we are struggling to climb out of an economic recession.

At this point, we cannot be too pessimistic based on actual evidence. Yes, we are probably in a prolonged economic slowdown after last year’s deepest recession due to pandemic-induced economic scars. If only for base effects, we should be able to show some modest positive real GDP this year and perhaps next year. While the Philippines lags behind the ASEAN and other emerging markets in managing the pandemic and economic recovery, the early economic revivals in other economies could help boost its external payments position and contribute to growth. ADB’s Director for Regional Cooperation Cyn-Young Park also said recently: “I do believe that the Philippines has a strong potential given that its post-pandemic trade landscape will give more weight on the digital and services trade.”

But it would be ambitious to add that we could recover the pre-pandemic growth levels this year or even early next year.

Our favorite caveat is that our health authorities should never, never drop the ball ever again in vaccine sourcing and administration. Despite all the noise on vaccines’ side-effects due to co-morbidity and allergy factors, the US and UK experience shows they have started to bring down the pandemic curve. This was reported by the Financial Times based on the seven-day rolling average of new cases. In short, vaccines work and if they do, promptly rolling them out in the Philippines could reduce risk aversion, increase mobility and business activities.

On inflation, the challenge is to manage the supply side which is no different from saying we should grow the economy. Cost-push inflation is usually non-persistent but if we continue to see some improvements in domestic demand and monetary policy remains excessively easy, that could entrench high inflation. With early recovery and an OPEC (Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries)  oil cutback, increasing oil prices can be an upside risk. The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas should not be carried away by a more accommodative stance. Heavy lifting should yield to heavy monitoring of high frequency mobility indicators of Google, Apple, and Waze; equity and bond price indices; debt and credit default swap spreads; and FX daily and intra-day movements. These will help the Monetary Board handle the delicate balancing act.

No, stagflation is not around yet but we should be cautious not to welcome and abet it with open arms but closed eyes.

 

Diwa C. Guinigundo is the former Deputy Governor for the Monetary and Economics Sector, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP). He served the BSP for 41 years. In 2001–2003, he was Alternate Executive Director at the International Monetary Fund in Washington, DC. He is the senior pastor of the Fullness of Christ International Ministries in Mandaluyong.