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Better accounting can get us through the pandemic

THE coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has revealed just how much governments matter — and that competent management can be the difference between life and death. Good leadership requires good information to support smart, timely decisions. Further, democracy itself relies on information that is understood and trusted by its citizens. High-quality accounting is a vital source of that information.

In the fight against the coronavirus pandemic, while most governments debate how much debt is sustainable and what fiscal measures should be used to measure it, countries like New Zealand are deploying the fiscal measures that make sense on the basis of a proven technology: accrual-based accounting. This method underpins financial decision-making and reporting in the private sector — and has contributed to the wealth many enjoy today.

Unfortunately, most government accounting relies on ancient methods. Charlemagne would recognize the system of cash-based accounting that almost all governments still use today. Modern, accrual-based accounting, like that used by public companies, is mostly eschewed by governments; few, including New Zealand’s, use it as the basis for their budgeting and financial reporting. But accrual accounting recognizes and reports all transactions when they occur, rather than when and if cash changes hands, and accounts for all assets and liabilities, not just cash and debt.

The concept of net worth — assets less liabilities — is the most comprehensive measure of the fiscal health of individuals, companies or governments. Not only would accrual accounting give governments a clear view of their current financial positions, but it would also provide the information needed to make informed policy decisions. It allows for rapid, targeted, and secure assistance to those in need. It reduces the potential for corruption in the distribution of funds.

Not least, accrual accounting has helped countries respond better to the pandemic. Since switching to accrual accounting over two decades ago, New Zealand has steadily built a very strong balance sheet, with substantial positive net worth. In the pandemic, that information, and the public’s trust in it, helped give the government the confidence to act decisively and quickly. As Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern pointed out, a strong balance sheet allowed the government to “go early, go hard” in its successful strategy to eliminate COVID-19. According to Johns Hopkins University, New Zealand’s cumulative death rate is one of the lowest in the world, while both the UK and the US have two of the highest rates.

And the method has provided comprehensive feedback — earlier than for other countries’ — on the fiscal impact of a government’s response to the crisis. Countries still on the anachronistic cash system base their decisions on a partial view of their financial positions and prospects. No wonder that governmental accounting in the US, UK, and Europe is often seen as largely irrelevant. For good reason, corporations don’t make crucial decisions based only on the information in their bank statements. Rather, they trust in a comprehensive system of budgeting backed up by audited accounts. Governments should do the same.

High-quality information, to support informed and speedy decision-making, is vital. But so is winning the public’s trust. New Zealand has built confidence in its political system by using a public financial-management system in which high-quality accounting information is primarily a decision-making tool but also demonstrates accountability. This system builds trust in a number of ways, including by producing monthly financial statements. These inform citizens of the government’s current fiscal performance against the budget and give them this information when it matters, not months later when nothing can be done about it.

Another, equally important mechanism for building trust is the pre-election economic and fiscal update that the New Zealand government produces 20 to 30 days ahead of a general election. This document lays out the current economic conditions and prospects, and it conveys the government’s fiscal position in updated financial statements, as well as forecasted financial statements for the next four years and projections for the following 10 years. The effect of this update is that manifestoes and policies can be assessed by political parties against the forecasts in the document to minimize the risk of appearing to promise the unaffordable.

The icing on accrual accounting’s cake is the ability to put a fair market value on public assets. The cash-based system can’t do that; attempting to measure fiscal position by reference primarily to debt, or a debt-to-GDP ratio, ignores major components of the balance sheet, including public assets such as real estate.

In contrast, a focus on net worth creates incentives both to invest in assets that provide value for future generations, and to manage more professionally the vast store of wealth held by governments, not least at the local level. Studies by the International Monetary Fund suggest that additional revenues amounting to 3% of gross domestic product could be generated annually through more professional asset management — for the US, this would amount to some $640 billion, money that will be much needed to recover from the pandemic.

The pandemic has strained the global social fabric to a degree matched only by war. Economic systems have been tested in a way that makes the global financial crisis seem trivial. Government finances have been pushed into unknown territory. Recovery will require markedly better information about government’s economic resources, and better management and utilization of those resources. The technology is there. Governments just need to use it.

BLOOMBERG OPINION

The US is likely rejoining TPP because of the Biden administration Quo vadis, Philippines?

Remember the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade agreement? It was ready to go, participated by 12 big Pacific Rim countries and led by the United States. In January 2017, President Donald Trump pulled the United States out of this trade treaty, which it had nurtured from idea to a fully signed trade agreement, among his first official acts as the US President.

Disappointment was expected for the 12 countries that negotiated the TPP. The TPP was the largest free-trade market in the world with about 725 million consumers. The mega trade bloc represented about 30% of world’s trade and 40% of global gross domestic product (GDP). But the TPP had an Obama imprint, and Trump had been saying his predecessors, particularly Obama, did not know how to negotiate trade agreements for the United States.

Some in the US had dubbed it to be the gold standard of free trade agreements in the 21st century.

While the TPP had the traditional features of trade agreements like the reduction of tariff and non-tariff barriers, it was designed more as setting down uniform rules in global trade, rules that US trade negotiators could not have possibly succeeded in getting the World Trade Organization (WTO) to approve.

It set down business rules and practices that largely reflect those in the US or better, rules on intellectual property (IP) rights, e-commerce, labor and environmental standards, investor-state dispute resolution. US Trade Representative (USTR) negotiators with its American private sector lobby, particularly in the pharmaceutical industry, saw in the TPP the opportunity to create a fully integrated economic area with business rules that would reduce the regulatory risks in trade agreements.

The pullout of the US from the TPP did not stop the TPP-11 countries from going ahead with the trade agreement, but calling theirs the Comprehensive and Progressive Trans Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) agreement. Soon after the announcement of the US pullback, the 11 countries negotiated for about a year and on March 8, 2018 signed the CPTPP trade accord. On Dec. 18 of that year, it entered into force for a minimum of six countries.

The US pullout from the TPP de-Americanized the trade agreement. Intellectual property rules were the most purged. The CPTPP preserved the content of the TPP except for 22 articles, majority of which were on IPP and investment rules.

The USTR succeeded in TPP to lengthen copyright terms, build in patent extensions, and introduce separate protections for new technologies which effectively assured the evergreening of patents. For example with TPP rules, it is likely that our generic firms could not legally manufacture their generic versions of Moderna or Pfizer’s anti-COVID-19 vaccine once these are off-patent in 2040. New uses can possibly be discovered for these vaccines by their current owners, allowing them to hold on to their patent rights to the vaccines under the TPP rules.

Equally controversial was the investor-state dispute system (ISDS). This feature of the TPP was patterned after how disputes regarding bilateral investment treaties are settled by independent tribunals like those under the auspices of the International Center for the Settlement Investment Disputes (ICSID). Critics, who included accomplished lawyers and economists in the US like Nobel Laureate in economics Joseph Stiglitz, say the ISDS undermines the national sovereignty of contracting parties by allowing multinational companies a chance to bypass their local laws through findings of unaccountable tribunals.

The CPTPP negotiators decided to exclude these TPP provisions. They did not close the door to these however, hoping that someday the United States comes back and may find these provisions important. The investments chapter of the TPP remained however, but contracting parties limited the scope of its ISDS provision.

The US returning to the TPP is highly expected under the Biden administration. The US was, and remains, the crown jewel of the TPP. It is suffering now from an economic recession which is largely due to the COVID-19 pandemic, but these problems will be surmountable in a year or two. Countries expect the US to assert the global leadership which it lost under the outgoing Trump administration, and the TPP is seen to be important for that.

The US rejoining the TPP will bring this mega trade deal back to where it used to be: the world’s largest free trade market. Without the US, the CPTPP lost a significant amount of importance — about 16.5% of global GDP and 230 million consumers. As in the climate deal which President Trump also bungled, the world community, in pursuit of keeping global warming in check, would have to welcome back the US. Likewise the CPTPP has no recourse but to welcome back the US to pursue its objectives of expanding trade and the wellbeing of its respective populations.

Will the US rejoin? Yes. Even the Trump administration thought of rejoining the TPP in 2018 but did not pursue it. Well, there are at least two reasons for that. One is the TPP-11 countries would have to welcome the US back under their terms not Trump’s. The US cannot be the leader anymore, particularly if TPP-11 countries disagree fundamentally with the trade views of President Trump. Or the Trump administration was inefficient: it could not focus on it or could not accept the TPP to be a better Asia-Pacific trade strategy than its US-China trade war.

Will the Biden administration want to rejoin the TPP? It has to, particularly since China is now taking over the leadership in trade in the Asia Pacific region. The TPP had been the central US strategy to project its influence in this region. Now that the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), the other mega trade deal under China’s leadership, and CPTPP are very much alive and have overlapping participants, and with their reach spreading down to Pacific side of South America, the incoming Biden administration would easily conclude the fastest and most sensible strategy is to knock on the door of CPTPP.

The prodigal ex-leader of the TPP has come back!

But the Biden administration will have to start from where CPTPP is: it is a TPP less 22 articles, mostly on IPR and investment rules. If investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) or evergreen patent rules are that important to the US, those would have to take some time to be developed while trust is restored in the original TPP block. Even domestic politics in the US at the time just before the withdrawal of the US from the TPP indicated fractured support for the trade agreement. Some of those who had reservations, like Senator Bernie Sanders, were unhappy with it and ratifying the TPP would have required significant effort by former President Barack Obama to sell the agreement to the US public. The concerns in the US about the TPP had been, and likely still are, that it destroys more American jobs than it creates, is strongly pro-big business like the pharmaceutical industry, and undermines the national sovereignty of its trading partners with the ISDS.

PHILIPPINES AND TPP
The Philippines was excluded by the TPP-12 countries which, at the time they negotiated the agreement, believed our country was not ready to assume the obligations of a TPP member. But just about the time the TPP was signed, the Obama administration strongly viewed that the TPP without the Philippines, among the closest allies of the US in the region, would weaken its pivot to the region.

The Philippines was invited by the US to join a second wave of TPP members which already included Thailand, Indonesia, Columbia, South Korea, and Chinese Taipei. This was at the close of the Aquino administration. The current administration was likely to go along with the plan of joining the TPP, given that most of its trading partners in the region were planning to join it, with a few reservations likely on IPR and ISDS rules. Of course, the withdrawal of the US in 2017 did not compel the Duterte government to officially decide to join the TPP.

Several years ago, I calculated the economic benefits of the Philippines joining the TPP. I estimated that Philippine exports could expand by 42% and nominal GDP could increase by 59%. Analysts have observed how Vietnam has overtaken the Philippines. If one looks at the factors contributing to that, it is that Vietnam has a free trade agreement with the US, is a CPTPP member, and is an RCEP contracting party. The Philippines is an RCEP member too, but if the US joins the CPTPP, it cannot make the mistake of staying out of TPP.

Staying out of these agreements would be a big mistake for the Philippines. Vietnam, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand can easily erode Philippine market shares in the US because they would have preferential market access and the Philippines simply would have most favored nation status. Why not a bilateral free trade agreement with the US? That one is a more difficult route to pursue politically.

Now that 2021 is increasingly viewed as the year when the COVID-19 pandemic will wind down, when economic activities all over the globe will recover, global value chains restart and warm up, and when the global community sees the destructiveness of trade wars, it is time for us to sharpen our trade negotiating skills and be a more active participant of the global trading community.

 

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

Metro Manila, a metaphor for government’s lack of vision and corruption

When one is surrounded by disorder, clutter and chaos, one becomes desensitized by it. Such is the situation of Metro Manila residents. Like frogs sitting in a pot of slowly boiling water, residents of Metro Manila have been made to live with squalor, congestion, and the indignity of being a pedestrian, as if it were “normal.”

Those fortunate enough to travel know how far Metro Manila has fallen behind in terms of living conditions.

Save for pockets managed by the private sector like BGC, Makati, Ortigas, and Alabang, the rest of the city is plagued with squalor, grime and decay under the hands of local government units (LGUs). Metro Manila is badly managed — this is the uncomfortable truth that the authorities must accept.

Our capital city is not a reflection of our values, aspirations, and achievements as a nation. Rather, it is a morbid metaphor of how our leaders have failed to provide a decent quality of life for our people. It mirrors the government’s incompetence, corruption, lack of vision, and penchant for making exceptions to the law whether for expediency or personal interest.

The world agrees. Backpacker.com named Manila as the worst Asian city to visit. Waze named it the worst city for motorists, and the Asian Correspondent named it the least sustainable city in Asia.

Generally speaking, the commitment of the LGUs to the welfare, livability, and aesthetics of our cities goes only as far as their financial and/or political interest. If this were not true, why would they allow multiple exceptions in zoning and building height restrictions? Why would they allow the loading and unloading bays of malls and high rise towers to encroach on the roads? Why would they allow the proliferation of billboards even if they are in blatant defiance of the national building code? Why would they clutter the city with unsightly lamp-post banners and road island marquees? Why would they allow vendors to encroach on sidewalks and thoroughfares? Why would they allow colonies of illegal settlers to use sidewalks and roads as extensions of their living rooms? Why would they allow their cities to be inundated with their faces, names and initials?

What stings acerbically is that the national government is desensitized to the state of our capital city too.

Its standards are so low that it doesn’t even bother to rally the Mayors, let alone compete with the likes of Kuala Lumpur or Bangkok. It is satisfied to be the ugly neighbor who can’t even provide the most basic of public services.

Compared to our peers in the region, Metro Manila is inferior in infrastructure, in quality of life and sustainability. This is a result of years of poor governance and years of compromising the common good for personal interests.

It was not always like this. There was a point in history when Metro Manila was the most beautiful, greenest, and cleanest capital city in Asia. What happened?

The ill-conceived enactment of the Local Government Code of 1991, authored by former Senator Aquilino Pimentel, sealed Metro Manila’s fate. It will be recalled that the law called for the dissolution of the Metro Manila Commission (later on changed to the Metro Manila Authority), the super body that was responsible for long term city planning and management. In its place, powers were devolved to the local governments of Metro Manila’s 16 cities and one municipality, all of whom adopted their own laws, ordinances, and development plans.

The local government code created political dynasties that treated their cities like mini-fiefdoms. Mayors looked inward, concerned only with the development of their respective domains. This explains why Metro Manila’s growth has been disorganized, disjointed, and bereft of a long term vision.

The Metro Manila Development Authority (MMDA) was created but only as a coordinating body. Its role is limited to aligning plans and ordinances among LGUs, not to enforce them. It is in charge of city services like trash collection and flood control which it does with moderate success. It also embarked on a token greening of EDSA.

As far as the national government is concerned, it has a say only on certain aspects of the metro’s functionalities. Among them are the management of bus franchises, railway systems, national roads, solid waste disposal, etc.

This flawed governmental structure makes it conducive (and convenient) for the national government and LGUs to engage in a frenzy of finger pointing when things go awry. Manila is consigned to urban blight while no one takes responsibility. The cancerous local government code is a Pimentel legacy.

We have come to expect nothing from this government as far as urban renewal is concerned. But as a tax paying citizen, I still want to see my taxes work towards the improvements of the city I live in. If a comprehensive urban renewal is too much to ask, then at least fix EDSA.

One cannot help but traverse EDSA when navigating Metro Manila. It is the highway most utilized and one that provides the most lasting impression of the city. Make EDSA beautiful and it will go a long way towards improving the city’s image. Like it or not, EDSA is the face of the city.

Let us not even talk about solving traffic on EDSA. All we ask is the barest minimum. First, get rid of the thousands of illegal billboards that degrade the city’s aesthetics and contribute to blight and clutter. Without ugly billboards, EDSA will be open to unobstructed vistas of the city’s greenery, the river, the sky, and our impressive skyscrapers. Second, intensify the greening of the highway with more trees and foliage. Third, install more public art and public monuments to infuse a sense of identity to an otherwise nondescript highway.

This piece will likely fall on deaf ears since it speaks of the uncomfortable truth. But let it not be said that we did not air our grievance.

 

Andrew J. Masigan is an economist

andrew_rs6@yahoo.com

Twitter @aj_masigan

Annus Horribilis and Christmas 2020

This year, 2020, is annus horribilis. The statistics are grim: close to 1.7 million people out of 76.1 million cases, globally, and still counting, have died from coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).

The annus horribilis is not just about COVID-19.  For whatever reason, deaths have piled up this year, whether or not they are associated with COVID-19. The tragedy, moreover, is personal. This year, I grieve over losing two aunts (Paula Isis and Paula Isabel), a cultural icon that I regarded as my second mom (Gilda), distant relatives, friends, colleagues, relatives of friends, etc.

But even as 2020 is about to end, the horror, the misery, and the devastation persist in our wretched land.

A new surge of COVID-19 infections is happening during the holiday season. Many just couldn’t resist the temptation of celebrating with relatives and friends. Having large get-togethers, dining indoors with non-household companions, being merry by boozing or singing loudly in public places are risky activities at this time. And the poster boys of reckless revelry are high-level government officials — Salvador Panelo, Harry Roque, and Debold Sinas, all caught on video breaking the government’s health protocol.

It is most frightening that the resurgence of COVID-19 cases and fatalities will again overwhelm us during and after the Christmas season.

In this regard, the health sector has called on the public to be vigilant and to observe measures that will reduce the risk of getting infected. The Health Professionals Alliance against COVID-19 (HPAAC) has embarked on an information drive that is expressed in the message: “APAT dapat.” APAT stands for:

A — Air circulation.

P — Physical distance of one meter or more.

A — Always wear a mask and face shield.

T — Thirty minutes interaction or less.

The Department of Health has a similar slogan:  BIDA+, which means:

Bawal walang mask at face shield. (Not wearing face masks and face shields is not allowed.)

I-sanitize ang mga kamay. (Sanitize your hands.)

Distancing ng isang metro. (Keep a distance of one meter.)

Alamin ang totoong impormasyon. (Learn about real information.)

+ Siguraduhin ang magandang daloy ng hangin. (Make sure there is good air circulation.)

Let us follow APAT dapat or BIDA+. APAT dapat and BIDA+ are apt messages for Christmas.

Upon deeper reflection, Christmas is truly a celebration — but it is a celebration of life, symbolized by the birth of Jesus Christ. COVID-19 dampens the spirit of Christmas. Nevertheless, the message of APAT dapat and BIDA+ is about the value of life, about protecting our health, about saving lives. By observing the reminders encapsulated in APAT dapat and BIDA+, we are able to uphold the spirit of Christmas, of valuing the life of everyone.

Most tragic is that the unnecessary loss of life in the Philippines is not only attributable to the pandemic and the other diseases. People are being killed, being murdered. At a time that the government and society are fighting COVID-19, and despite government’s pronouncements about saving lives, the State apparatus has been used to kill people.

Recently, stories have been published about the killings of unarmed political activists and of people, including a popular Los Baños mayor, suspected of involvement in the drug trade. Their deaths have the trademark of extra-judicial killing (EJK).

Again, in the spirit of Christmas — of valuing the sanctity of life — we call for the end to these killings. The pattern of killings can no longer be ignored. The International Criminal Court (ICC) reports that it has “reasonable basis to believe” that crimes against humanity were committed in the conduct of the administration’s war on drugs.

The unnecessary and disproportionate use of violence also applies to the killing of political activists.

It is imperative for the whole of society, including the decent high-level officials in the Duterte administration, to act and stop the impunity. We must encourage a bipartisan effort for a thorough investigation to stop the impunity and to exact accountability.

Annus horribilis is about unwanted deaths caused not only by the pandemic but also by the State’s brutal war on citizens.

Pope Francis’s message for 2021 is about a “culture of care,” wherein no person is discarded. In his words: “To care is to know how to value, that is, to recognize the individual as a person with dignity that must be cared for.”

May we have a caring and peaceful Christmas, and may 2021 no longer be an annus horribilis.

 

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

www.aer.ph

Government in talks with Indian drug maker for Covovax orders

THE PHILIPPINE government and Serum Institute of India Ptv. Ltd. are in talks for the supply of 30 million doses of coronavirus vaccine Covovax.

The vaccine, which is in the third phase of clinical trials, could become available in the third quarter of next year, once a supply agreement is reached, the Indian drug maker said in a statement on Sunday.

“If and when the negotiations are concluded successfully, this would be a wonderful development for us Filipinos,” Luningning Villa, medical director at Faberco Life Sciences, said in the statement.

Faberco is the local partner of Serum Institute, which is manufacturing Covovax for US biotechnology company Novavax, Inc. with which it developed the vaccine.

Ms. Villa, who met with vaccine czar Carlito G. Galvez, Jr last week, said she expects the talks to be completed by year-end.

About 15,000 patients have participated in phase three trials of Covovax in the United Kingdom and 30,000 in the US and Mexico.

Initial phases of the clinical trials were conducted in Australia, South Africa and India.

The Serum Institute last month authorized Faberco, a distributor of specialized healthcare products, to represent the Philippines for the supply of the coronavirus vaccine.

Faberco has partnered with the Indian drug maker for key vaccine programs such as inactivated polio, rotavirus, pneumococcal conjugate and COVID-19 vaccines.

Ms. Villa told BusinessWorld last month Covovax was expected to be “logistically manageable” in terms of cold chain requirements because it does not require deep freezing during storage and transport.

The government plans to immunize 20 million Filipinos yearly in the next three years.

The private sector, the government, and UK-based drug maker AstraZeneca Plc have signed a deal for the purchase of 2.6 million doses of vaccines, expected to arrive in as early as May.

The Department of Health (DoH) reported 1,754 coronavirus infections on Sunday, bringing the total to 459,789.

The death toll rose to 8,947 after 36 more patients died, while recoveries increased by 8,080 to 429,134, it said in a bulletin.

There were 21,708 active cases, 81.3% of which were mild, 8.7% did not show symptoms, 6.4% were critical, 3.2% were severe and 0.37% were moderate.

Quezon City reported the highest number of new cases at 163, followed by Rizal province at 104, Benguet and Laguna at 83 each and Bulacan at 61.

DoH said nine duplicates had been removed from the tally, while 25 recovered cases were reclassified as deaths. Twelve laboratories failed to submit their data on Dec. 19.

The coronavirus has sickened about 76.6 million and killed 1.7 million people globally, according to the Worldometers website, citing various sources including data from the World Health Organization (WHO).

About 53.8 million people have recovered, it said. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas

Senate to inquire into state of local tourism amid virus

A SENATOR has filed a resolution to look into the status of ecotourism sites in the country amid a coronavirus pandemic.

“It is necessary for the Senate to conduct an inquiry on the matter to determine the status of ecotourism sites and identify the potentials and challenges of ecotourism development in the country,” Senator Maria Lourdes Nancy S. Binay said in the resolution.

Ecotourism can sustain an area if it is aligned with Philippine economic development and conservation strategies, the lawmaker said, citing a study by the Department of Science and Technology (DoST).

The agency’s National Research Council of the Philippines in an August 2020 study cited 16 ecotourism sites with the best practices.

This included Mt. Pulag National Park, Masungi Georeserve Park and Manleluag Spring Protected Landscape in Luzon; Taklong Island Marine Reserve, Danao Adventure Park and Oslob Whale Shark Tourism in the Visayas; and Philippine Eagle Center, Dahilayan Adventure Park and Tinuy-an Falls in Mindanao.

A National Geographic article has also cited Boracay Island, Manila Bay and Sagada in Benguet as popular ecotourism sites.

“Ecotourism, an alternative to mass tourism, is poised to reign supreme in the Philippine travel industry’s transition to the new normal post-COVID-19, according to experts at the Ecotourism Philippines webinar,” Ms. Binay said in the resolution.

The tourism industry was among the hard-hit sectors when the government locked down the entire Luzon island in mid-March to contain the pandemic.

The global tourism sector has been devastated by the pandemic, and the World Economic Forum (WEF) has predicted that 120 million jobs were at risk, with economic damage likely to exceed more than $1 trillion.

International travel came to a screeching halt at the height of the global pandemic in April and May, resulting in international tourist arrivals that trailed last year’s total by almost 60% through the first five months of 2020.

The World Tourism Organization earlier said it expected international tourism receipts to drop by $910 billion to $1.2 trillion this year, which would set the global tourism industry back by two decades. — Charmaine A. Tadalan

Gov’t expects fewer Pinoys to go hungry amid virus pandemic

THE GOVERNMENT expects fewer Filipinos to go hungry amid a coronavirus pandemic.

“The National Government is confident that the hunger level would ease further while it fast-tracks the implementation of various anti-hunger measures,” Cabinet Secretary Karlo Alexei B. Nograles, who heads Task Force Zero Hunger, said in a statement in Filipino on Sunday.

About four million Filipinos families or 16% experienced hunger at least once in the past three months, lower than 30.7%, or 7.6 million in September, according to the latest Social Weather Stations poll.

While the hunger rate declined in November, the average full-year rate in 2020 was now at 21.1%, higher than 19.9% in 2011 and 2012. It has also more than doubled from the 9.3% average 9.3% last year.

Hunger incidence was the highest in Metro Manila at 23.3%, followed by Mindanao at 16%. The rest of Luzon recorded a hunger rate of 14.4%, while the Visayas was at 14.3%.

Mr. Nograles said the declining hunger rate showed that the government was on the right track toward ending hunger by 2030.

This is in line with one of the 17 sustainable development goals adopted by the United Nations (UN) in 2015. — Charmaine A. Tadalan

Nationwide round-up (12/20/20)

QC representative backs decentralization of vaccine procurement

THE NATIONAL government should allow local government units (LGUs) to purchase coronavirus vaccines for their constituents, a lawmaker said over the weekend. “I hope the national government will decentralize the procurement and vaccination process to ensure a speedy and efficient roll-out, especially as some of our LGUs have expressed their readiness and have set aside their own funds for the purchase of vaccines for their constituents,” Quezon City 5th District Rep. Alfred D. Vargas said in a statement. The Quezon City government is setting aside at least P1 billion for the procurement of vaccines. Mr. Vargas cited other LGUs that have also allocated funds for vaccines, including the cities of Manila, Davao, and Iligan. He said LGUs should be given a more active role “given the magnitude of the government’s vaccination plan,” which creates a “logistical nightmare.” Congress has allotted P72.5 billion in the proposed 2021 national budget for the purchase of COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) vaccines next year. Mr. Vargas, however, pointed out that the allocation is “unprogrammed” or still subject to fund availability. “Given that we cannot guarantee its sources, the willingness of LGUs to buy will certainly be a huge boost,” he said. Meanwhile, Mr. Vargas appealed to Quezon City residents not to neglect health protocols during the holiday season, as COVID-19 cases continue to rise in the city. A recent study conducted by the OCTA Research Team showed that the city’s COVID-19 reproduction rate already went beyond the 1.00 threshold as it reached 1.15. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Solon says health safety policies should not be ‘one size fits all’

THE GOVERNMENT’S task force against coronavirus should abandon the “one size fits all” mentality in implementing health safety protocols, a lawmaker said over the weekend. Party-list Rep. Jocelyn P. Tulfo was referring in particular to the latest policy mandating cyclists, runners, and scooter riders to wear face shields. Ms. Tulfo said face shields that are commonly available are not suitable for road conditions. “Those face shields are for walking conditions, not for road use,” she said. She said face shields should only be required in public places and indoor spaces. She added that the task force should consult road safety experts, cycling sports associations, and cyclists, runners, and scooter riders before continuing with the policy. Several local governments are not adopting the policy, such as the cities of Iloilo and Pasig. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Regional Updates (12/20/20)

Still rainy in Cagayan Valley, Cordillera on Monday after Vicky exits

MODERATE to heavy rains are still expected in the regions of Cagayan Valley and Cordillera as well as parts of Quezon and Aurora provinces on Monday after tropical depression Vicky exits the country late Sunday, according to state weather agency PAGASA. In its 11 a.m. bulletin Sunday, PAGASA warned of possible flooding and rain-induced landslides in these affected areas. In Tuguegarao City, the regional center of Cagayan, some parts were flooded over the weekend as river channels overflowed. Tropical depression Vicky, as of 10 a.m. Sunday, was located 135 kilometers east-southeast of Kalayaan, where typhoon signal #1 was up. Meanwhile, another low pressure area was spotted 140 kilometers east of Virac, Catanduanes as of Sunday morning. PAGASA said this is “less likely to develop into a tropical depression in the next 24 hours.”

NCCC launches online mall with own store brands

THE NCCC Group of Companies has launched an online shop carrying all its store brands, with delivery service currently available in Davao City and will soon expand to cover Davao del Norte and Puerto Princesa, Palawan. “With our official website, it’s like going to a mall but online,” NCCC President and Chief Executive Officer Lafayette A. Lim said in a virtual briefing in the first week of December.

The company’s site, www.mynccc. ph, includes products at its supermarket, department store, HB1 Pharmacy, and Hardware Maxx. Mr. Lim said they are anticipating online shopping to increase despite the easing of mobility restrictions due to the coronavirus outbreak. “When the restrictions were eased, increase in frequency for shopping in physical stores was observed. However, it is predicted that online shopping will increase more even after the pandemic due to convenience that this has brought to households,” he said. NCCC has also maintained its Chat2Shop service, first offered at the height of the lockdown period, wherein “online personal shopping assistants” take orders from customers through Facebook Messenger. Meanwhile, the group’s pharmacy arm has also started operating the HB1 TeleClinic, a mobile application that offers Davao Region residents online consultations and purchase of prescribed medicines. — Maya M. Padillo

Budget, Bayanihan II extension bills now with Palace for signing

MEASURES extending the validity of the 2020 budget and the Bayanihan to Recover as One Act (Bayanihan II) until next year are now before President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s signature.

The bills have both been transmitted to the Office of the President, House appropriations committee chairman and ACT-CIS Representative Eric G. Yap said in a phone message Sunday.

Budget Secretary Wendel E. Avisado in a separate phone message said, “We are for the extension only, nothing more nothing less,” when asked whether he recommended the approval of the measures.

House Bill No. 6656 will amend Republic Act No. 11465 to extend the P4.1-trillion national budget for 2020 until Dec. 31, 2021; while House Bill No. 8063 will extend RA 11494, or Bayanihan II, until June 30, 2021.

The measures were adopted and approved by the Senate on Dec. 15, and were later adopted by the House on Dec. 16, doing away with the need to convene the bicameral conference committee.

Bayanihan II, which provided P140 billion worth of assistance to hard-hit sectors and P25.5 billion more in standby allocations contingent on funding availability, expired on Dec. 19. Executive Secretary Salvador C. Medialdea was asked in a phone message on the status of the bills, but had not commented at deadline time.

Without the extension, the funding under these measures will revert to the National Treasury.

The Department of Budget and Management has reported that P110 billion of the 2020 spending plan has not been released as of Nov. 13. The equivalent amount is P38 billion for Bayanihan II, as of Nov. 11.

The extension is expected to help the government catch up on spending after its projects were disrupted by the lockdown, which started mid-March. This contributed to the 10% contraction of the economy in the first nine months. — Charmaine A. Tadalan

4th quarter palay output estimate cut to 7.54 million MT

THE PHILIPPINE Statistics Authority (PSA) said it reduced its estimate for fourth quarter output of palay, or unmilled rice, to 7.54 million metric tons (MT).

In a report, the PSA said the three months to December projection is 2.6% lower than an earlier estimate of 7.74 million MT released on Oct. 1.

If realized, the projection would represent a 0.6% increase from the 7.49 million MT produced a year earlier.

PSA estimated that palay harvest area for the quarter will fall 0.8% year-on-year to 1.83 million hectares.

Yield per hectare is projected to increase 1.5% year-on-year to 4.13 MT.

“About 1.12 million hectares or 61.3% of the updated standing crop have been harvested,” the PSA said.

“Of the total area of standing palay to be harvested for January to March 2021, 38.1% were at the vegetative stage, 22.9% at the reproductive stage, and 39.1% at the maturing stage,” it added.

Meanwhile, corn output for the fourth quarter has been projected at 1.681 million MT, 0.4% lower than the previous estimate of 1.687 million MT issued on Oct. 1.

If realized, the projection would represent a 1.4% increase from the 1.658 million MT produced a year earlier.

Harvest area for the quarter is expected to increase 0.5% to 561,789 hectares against 559,030 hectares last year.

Yield per hectare is projected to increase 0.7% year-on-year to 2.99 MT.

“About 245,271 hectares or 43.7% of the updated standing crop has been harvested,” the PSA said.

“Of the total area of 595,824 hectares of standing crop for the October to December 2020 harvests, 56.2% were at vegetative stage, 25.7% at reproductive stage, and 18.1% at maturing stage,” it added.

The Department of Agriculture (DA) said its production target for palay in 2021 is 20.48 million MT, with some 9.02 million MT targeted for production in the first half of next year. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

DA, BCDA to establish P285-M agri-industrial site in New Clark City

THE Agriculture department and the Bases Conversion and Development Authority (BCDA) recently signed an agreement covering the development of the first agri-industrial zone at New Clark City in Tarlac.

In a statement on Sunday, Agriculture Secretary William D. Dar said the project has been allocated initial funding of P285 million. It will be known as the New Clark City Agro-Industrial Business Corridor and National Seed Technology Park.

“We envision the seed technology park to be the core base for the country’s modern crop industry, one that will take us one step towards industrialization and modernization of the agriculture industry,” Mr. Dar said.

“The historic project, when properly planned, supported, and funded, would make it possible for the agriculture sector to unleash its potential as a major pillar of the Philippine economy,” he added.

BCDA President and CEO Vivencio B. Dizon said the agri-industrial project is targeted for completion by 2022.

“The agro-industrial business corridor is critical not just for Clark, but also for the entire country for agricultural sustainability and resiliency,” Mr. Dizon said.

According to the Department of Agriculture (DA), the agri-industrial zone will be located on 50 hectares at New Clark City.

The first phase of the project will be operated by the DA and will cover a seven-hectare portion of the property.

It will include the establishment of the seed technology park components such as the seed laboratory, incubation hubs, machinery shed, soil and water chemistry laboratory, and other support facilities.

Meanwhile, the project’s second phase will be developed by the BCDA and will cover the remaining 43 hectares of the site.

It will involve the commercial components for agribusiness activities such as downstream and upstream linkages in the agricultural value chain.

“The lessons of the pandemic singled out the agriculture sector as a driver of economic recovery. The sector will not only produce food and better incomes for farmers, it will also generate employment and spark entrepreneurship in the most sustainable and inclusive ways possible,” Mr. Dar said.

In July, the DA also evaluated Taguig City as another potential agri-industrial site, with its location near Laguna de Bay envisioned as a landing spot for produce grown in Rizal and Laguna, to the east and south of Metro Manila. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave