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US likely logged weakest performance in 74 years

WASHINGTON — The US economy likely contracted at its sharpest pace since World War II in 2020 as coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ravaged services businesses like restaurants and airlines, throwing millions of Americans out of work and into poverty.

The Commerce Department’s snapshot of fourth-quarter gross domestic product (GDP) on Thursday is also expected to show the recovery from the pandemic losing steam as the year wound down amid a resurgence in coronavirus infections and exhaustion of nearly $3 trillion in relief money from the government.

The Federal Reserve on Wednesday left its benchmark overnight interest rate near zero and pledged to continue injecting money into the economy through bond purchases, noting that “the pace of the recovery in economic activity and employment has moderated in recent months.”

President Joe Biden has unveiled a recovery plan worth $1.9 trillion, and could use the GDP report to lean on some lawmakers who have balked at the price tag soon after the government provided nearly $900 billion in additional stimulus at the end of December.

“Last year was awful for the economy,” said Sung Won Sohn, a finance and economics professor at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles. “This was the first service industry recession in recent memory where a lot of jobs were lost.”

Economists are forecasting that the economy contracted by as much as 3.6% in 2020, the worst performance since 1946. That would follow 2.2% growth in 2019 and would be the first annual decline in GDP since the 2007-09 Great Recession.

In the fourth quarter, GDP is estimated to have expanded at a 4% annualized rate, according to a Reuters survey of economists. The virus and lack of another spending package curtailed consumer spending, and partially overshadowed robust manufacturing and the housing market.

The anticipated big step-back, following a historic 33.4% growth pace in the July-September period, would leave GDP roughly 2.3% below its level at the end of 2019. With the virus not yet under control, economists are expecting growth to further slow down in the first quarter of 2021, before regaining speed by summer as the additional stimulus kicks in and more Americans get vaccinated.

“No doubt it will be a challenging few months as the vaccines struggle to get distributed and lockdowns remain in place,” said Sam Bullard, a senior economist at Wells Fargo Securities in Charlotte, North Carolina. “However, as COVID gets under control, we expect growth to ratchet higher, running at around a 7% pace in the second half of the year.”

K-SHAPED RECOVERY
The services sector has borne the brunt of the coronavirus recession, disproportionately impacting lower-wage earners, who tend to be women and minorities. That has led to a so-called K-shaped recovery, where better-paid workers are doing well while lower-paid workers are losing out.

The stars of the recovery have been the housing market and manufacturing as those who are still employed seek larger homes away from city centers, and buy electronics for home offices and schooling. Manufacturing’s share of GDP has increased to 11.9% from 11.6 at the end of 2019.

A survey last week by professors at the University of Chicago and the University of Notre Dame showed poverty increased by 2.4 percentage points to 11.8% in the second half of 2020, boosting the ranks of the poor by 8.1 million people.

Rising poverty is likely be underscored by persistent labor market weakness. The Labor Department is expected to report on Thursday that 875,000 more people filed for state unemployment benefits last week, according to a Reuters survey.

About 16 million Americans were receiving unemployment checks at the end of 2020. The economy shed jobs in December for the first time in eight months. Only 12.4 million of the 22.2 million jobs lost in March and April have been recovered.

Lack of jobs and the expiration of a government weekly jobless subsidy likely restrained growth in consumer spending to about a 3% rate in the fourth quarter. Consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of the US economy, notched a record 41% pace in the July-September quarter.

Renewed business restrictions likely kept spending on services subdued. Demand for goods that complement life at home probably boosted business investment, with double digit growth expected again in the fourth quarter.

Businesses were also rebuilding inventories last quarter, which is likely to have contributed to GDP growth. But the inventory accumulation included imports, likely leading to a larger trade deficit, which subtracted from growth.

Another quarter of double-digit growth is expected from the housing market, thanks to historically low mortgage rates. Government spending was likely weak, hurt by state and local governments, whose finances have been squeezed by the pandemic. — Reuters

Japan to source most AstraZeneca vaccines locally amid global snags

TOKYO — Japan said on Thursday it will procure a majority of 120 million doses of AstraZeneca Plc’s COVID-19 vaccine from domestic makers, as production problems overseas have raised concerns over timely distribution.

AstraZeneca has scaled back supplies it had promised to the European Union (EU) and Australia. Thailand also confirmed this week reduced supply from AstraZeneca.

The British-Swedish company confirmed to Japan’s health ministry that more than 90 million doses will be produced within the country, Chief Cabinet Secretary Katsunobu Kato said on Thursday.

“We believe it is very important to be able to produce the vaccines domestically,” Mr. Kato told reporters.

Japan has arranged to buy 120 million doses of the vaccine developed by AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford, with Daiichi Sankyo Co., JCR Pharmaceuticals Co. and other local partners agreeing to make and distribute the shots.

While AstraZeneca began Japanese trials of the vaccine last summer, earlier than Pfizer, Inc.’s COVID-19 vaccine, it has not yet filed for Japanese approval of its formula, leaving the rival shot the only one currently under review in the country.

AstraZeneca did not immediately respond when contacted by Reuters for comment.

Japan plans to begin its inoculation push in late February, with the Pfizer vaccine for front-line medical workers. The country trails most major economies in starting inoculations due its dependence on overseas makers and a requirement that the vaccines go through domestic trials.

Japan faces major logistical hurdles that some experts say will make it difficult for it to vaccinate a large portion of its population ahead of the planned start of the Summer Olympics in Tokyo from July. — Reuters

Crocheted Bernie Sanders doll raises $40,000 for charity

TOBEY KING used a little yarn, a crochet needle and some inspiration from Bernie Sanders to create a crocheted doll version of the Vermont senator and raise $40,000 for charity.

After photographs began circulating on social media of Mr. Sanders wearing a parka and a pair of mittens at US President Joe Biden’s inauguration, Ms. King sprang into action.

“On Inauguration Day, when I saw that that meme was trending, I said, ‘Oh, I’m going to go get that pattern, I’m going to modify it real quick to make it look like his inauguration outfit,’” said Ms. King, 46, of Corpus Christi, Texas.

“I made that in about seven hours,” she said.

Ms. King later decided to sell the doll on eBay to benefit Meals on Wheels after a friend told her Mr. Sanders was selling sweatshirts with the meme to raise money for the charity.

“He’s so down-to-earth and just really somebody that I admire for his goal of really trying just to help people. It’s very inspiring,” said Ms. King.

Bidders pounced, garnering a price of $20,300, and eBay pitched in to match the sale price for a total of $40,600.

Ms. King, whose husband lost his job to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, said she has been selling dolls to help her family make ends meet. “We’re all struggling in 2020,” she said.

“For me… the best thing to do is just start to try and help others. It really makes a difference.” — Reuters

Poland imposes near-total ban on abortion

WARSAW — Poland’s government put into effect on Wednesday a constitutional court decision banning terminations of pregnancies with foetal defects, as conservative policies increasingly take root in one of Europe’s most devout Catholic countries.

The Oct. 22 ruling had led to weeks of massive protests, forcing the nationalist Law and Justice (PiS) government to delay its implementation.

Small protests gathered late on Wednesday following an announcement PiS would take the official step to enforce the decision imminently, and abortion rights activists announced more would take place on Thursday.

Abortion has emerged as one of the most divisive issues since PiS took power in 2015, promising poorer, older and less educated Poles a return to a traditional society mixed with generous welfare policies.

The court’s verdict was published in the official gazette late on Wednesday.

“This idiotic ruling will not prevent abortions,” said Cezary Jasiński, a 23-year-old student, standing in front of the Constitutional Tribunal building in central Warsaw.

“But for every woman who will experience pain because of this ruling, or will be forced to give birth to a child with Down Syndrome, they (court judges) will be to blame.”

Last year’s protests quickly morphed into an eruption of anger against the government, particularly among young people, suggesting PiS may face a fresh challenge from new voters in coming years.

On Wednesday, officials said the government would now focus on assisting parents of disabled children, although PiS as well as its centrist predecessors have been accused by critics of not doing enough in that regard.

“The state can no longer take a life away only because someone is sick, disabled, in poor health,” PiS lawmaker Bartlomiej Wroblewski said.

The party denies opposition criticism that it had influenced the court, called the Constitutional Tribunal. It is one of the judicial bodies PiS overhauled during reforms that the European Union (EU) said has politicized the courts.

“No law-abiding government should respect this ruling,” Borys Budka, leader of Poland’s largest opposition party, the centrist Civic Platform, told reporters.

Access to abortion has declined even without the legislative curbs as more doctors refuse to perform them on religious grounds and many women seek abortions abroad.

Under the new rules, terminations will be permitted only in cases of rape and incest, and when the mother’s life or health is endangered. Doctors performing illegal abortions in Poland face jail.

In a justification published on Wednesday, the tribunal left open the possibility of the parliament regulating some circumstances covered by the law.

Marek Suski, a PiS lawmaker, said the party would consider introducing new rules that could allow the most extreme foetal deformities to be excluded. But political commentators say consensus between PiS and its arch-conservative governing allies would be difficult to achieve.

“In cases when the foetus doesn’t have a skull or has no chance to live outside the womb, there should be a choice. We will work on this,” Mr. Suski told public radio.

Opinion surveys have shown some decline in PiS popularity in recent months, but an opinion poll by the government-affiliated CBOS pollster showed it edging back up to 35% this month, from 30% in October. PiS and its two small parliamentary allies won re-election in 2019 with a 44% share of the vote. — Reuters

Bumper crop of PBA rookie talents as deadline lapses

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

PHILIPPINE Basketball Association (PBA) teams looking to shore up their rosters by way of the rookie draft will have many to choose from as a record number of aspirants submitted their applications.  

As the application deadline set by the league lapsed on Wednesday, a record of 97 players made themselves available for the 2021 Draft proceedings set for March 14.

The number broke the previous record of 91 set in the 2014 rookie draft.

The rookie talent pool includes top collegiate and pro-am standouts and 31 Fil-foreigners who are hoping to barge into Asia’s first play-for-pay league and take their basketball journeys to another level.

Among those who beat the deadline was La Salle point guard Aljun Melecio, who decided to forego his final playing year in the University Athletic Association of the Philippines (UAAP) and try his luck in the PBA draft.

A former UAAP Rookie of the Year, Mr. Melecio averaged 10.6 points (32% from threes), 3.2 rebounds and 3.7 and assists in 25 minutes in Season 82.

He was looking forward to playing his final year with the green and white, but the coronavirus pandemic scrapped all of UAAP Season 83, prompting him to move on and apply for the draft.

“There are just some things in life that we can’t control, and this was one of them. This was not the ending I expected for my time playing for the green and white. Being the team captain in my last playing year, I almost did not let go, but there are just some hard, but important decisions we must make,” Mr. Melecio said in a statement.

Also making himself available late was Filipino-American and FIBA 3×3 World Tour veteran Taylor Statham, who is seeking to extend his journey to the PBA after a stint in the National Basketball Association G League, collegiate career at Cal State Bernardino and pro work in places like China, Thailand, and Indonesia.

National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) most valuable player and Gilas Pilipinas cadet Calvin Oftana, too, has also applied for the draft.

Mr. Oftana is currently in the training “bubble” of Gilas at the INSPIRE Sports Academy in Laguna, where he is in contention for a roster spot in the national team seeing action in the third and final window of the FIBA Asia Cup Qualifiers (ACQ).

The three players made the rookie pool for this year’s draft even deeper.

The aspirants also include top 3×3 players Joshua Munzon, Alvin Pasaol, Santi Santilla and Troy Rike, UAAP stars Will Navarro, Jun Manzo, Jerrick Ahanmisi and Jaydee Tungcab, NCAA stalwarts Ben Adamos, Larry Muyang and RK Ilagan, and Fil-foreigners Jamie Malonzo, James Laput, Franky Johnson, and Mikey Williams.

The PBA will now evaluate the applications and will come up with the final list of eligible draft applicants set to be released days before draft day.

GILAS DRAFT?
Meanwhile, as of this writing, the PBA Board was holding a meeting regarding the plans of the league for Season 46 which is targeted to begin in April.

Among the topics of discussion was the holding of a special draft for Gilas Pilipinas just like in 2019.

Under the arrangement, teams will draft players from the pool, who will then be loaned to the Gilas as part of the latter’s buildup for international competitions, including the 2023 FIBA World Cup which the Philippines is one of the hosts.

The teams, however, will still have the rights to the players and will get them upon their Gilas release.

In 2019, Gilas PBA draftees were Isaac Go (Terrafirma), Rey Suerte (Blackwater), Matt Nieto (NLEX), Allyn Bulanadi (Alaska), and Mike Nieto (Rain or Shine).

Filipino tennis ace Alex Eala sets push for second professional title to a good start

DESPITE a short turnaround, Filipino tennis ace Alex Eala sets her quest for another professional title to a good start, winning her opening-round assignment at the second leg of the Rafael Nadal Academy ITF World Tennis Tournament in Mallorca, Spain, late Wednesday (Manila time).

Ms. Eala, 15, upset tournament number 2 seed Mirjam Björklund of Sweden (6-4, 3-6, 6-3) to sustain her good form.

The Rafa Nadal Academy scholar, who is also a Globe ambassador, is coming off her conquest of her first ITF professional singles title at the weekend in the same tournament, becoming the first player from the Philippines to do so since 2015.

Ms. Eala had beaten veteran Spanish player Yvonne Cavalle-Reimers (5-7, 6-1, 6-2) in the finals of the first leg.

Against Swede Björklund, Ms. Eala showed no fear against her older and more experienced opponent.

She bucked a hiccup in the second set and proved steady in the final set to book a date against local bet Alba Carrillo in the next round, set for later on Thursday.

Ms. Eala is looking to have another banner year in 2021, building on the achievements she had last year, which included winning the Australian Open juniors doubles title and making it to the semifinals of the French Open juniors tournament.

The Filipina is the No. 3 junior player in the International Tennis Federation (ITF) and is currently ranked 1,190th in the world based on the latest singles ranking released by the Women’s Tennis Association. She is ranked 1,670th in the ITF. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo 

Top local clubs United City, Kaya set for AFC action

TOP local football clubs United City Football Club and Kaya FC-Iloilo will take part in Asian Football Confederation (AFC) competitions this year.

Reigning Philippines Football League (PFL) champion United City and runner-up Kaya will represent the country in the AFC tournaments lined up this year and learned of their respective fixtures in draws held on Wednesday in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

United City will be competing in the AFC Champions League, while Kaya will try to reach the group play of said competition, with the AFC Cup also waiting for it if ever.

PFL champion United City (formerly Ceres-Negros FC) is among the 40 teams seeing action in this year’s AFC Championship League, which kicks off with the preliminary stage on April 7 and the group stage beginning on April 14 in centralized venues to guard against the spread of the coronavirus.

It is lumped in Group I along with Japan’s Kawasaki Frontale, two-time champion Guangzhou FC of China and a still-to-determined team coming from a playoff between teams from Thailand and Korea.

United City seeks to continue the competitive showing of its predecessor in international competitions and make history for Philippine football.

“Massive honor for UCFC to represent Philippine Football among these major Asian football powerhouses in AFC Champions League 2021. LET’S DO IT!” wrote the team on its official Facebook page.

United City won the PFL title last year in a “bubble” setting held at the Philippine Football Federation National Training Center in Carmona, Cavite.

It did it in impressive fashion, dropping only one game throughout the tournament.

Kaya, meanwhile, looks to join United City in group play coming from the preliminaries.

It will face Australia’s Brisbane Roar FC on April 7 in preliminary play.

If Kaya moves past the first test, it then meets China’s Beijing FC in the next stage of the playoff with the winner there booking a spot in the AFC Champions League group play in Group F.

But in the event Kaya fails to advance, it will be relegated to the AFC Cup competition where it is in Group I of the ASEAN Zone along with Myanmar’s Shan United or Ayeyawady United, Terengganu FC of Malaysia, and Geylang International FC of Singapore.

The 2021 Cup is scheduled to kick off with the preliminary round on April 6 with the group stage matches to be played in centralized venues beginning May 14. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Gilas continues training for FIBA Asia Cup window

PREPARATION of the Philippine national men’s basketball team continues even if the scheduled hosting of the country of the third and final window of the FIBA Asia Cup Qualifiers next month is not pushing through.

Currently in a training “bubble” at the INSPIRE Sports Academy in Calamba, Laguna, Gilas Pilipinas said that while it laments the cancellation of the hoops event here, it is still gearing up to plunge into action wherever the window will be relocated.

“We will continue training until we get advice from FIBA,” Gilas head coach Jong Uichico was quoted as saying by the official Philippine Basketball Association website as he spoke of the team’s situation.

On Tuesday, the Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas (SBP) announced the difficult decision it made of cancelling the country’s hosting of the FIBA ACQ window in February because of the ongoing travel ban on incoming foreigners from countries with known cases of the new variants of the coronavirus.

The SBP said that while every effort was made to have the event here to push through, prevailing conditions with the pandemic simply made it impossible.

“We’ve exerted a lot of effort into our hosting of the upcoming FIBA Asia Cup Qualifiers and this is why it is with great sadness that we announce it is no longer going to happen,” said SBP President Al Panlilio in the announcement.

“We’ve constantly communicated with our partners from the National Task Force Against COVID-19 and they have informed us that there would be no exemptions from the current travel restrictions announced by the Department of Foreign Affairs,” he added.

The window was supposed to take place from Feb. 18 to 22 at Clark City in Angeles, Pampanga.

The SBP offered the country as host to International Basketball Federation (FIBA) late last year as its way of doing its share in further pushing for the return of international basketball amid the pandemic.

Everything was a go until new variants of the coronavirus became a concern, prompting the government to raise health and safety protocols, including putting up stricter controls for inbound flights.

In the third window here, had it not been cancelled, Group A-leading Philippines (3-0) was looking to formalize its entry into the FIBA Asia Cup by winning at least one of its scheduled three games — two against Korea (Feb. 18 and 22) and one versus Indonesia (Feb. 20). Also set to see action in the group was Thailand.

Affected as well by the cancellation were matches in Group C, which has New Zealand, Australia, Guam, and Hong Kong.

The SBP is currently coordinating with FIBA on the next action to take following the Clark cancellation just as it expressed its willingness to step up to the plate to host events when conditions allow it.

“The February window can still happen. We’re waiting for FIBA, in the next few days or next week, to give us an indication of what’s going to happen,” Mr. Panlilio said.

For the window, Gilas Pilipinas will draw from the pool players in the training bubble, composed of cadets and PBA players.

They are Gilas cadets Dwight Ramos, Justine Baltazar, Will Navarro, Calvin Oftana, Dave Ildefonso, Javi and Juan Gomez de Liano, and Kemark Carino.

The pro players are Roger Pogoy and Troy Rosario (TNT), Justine Chua (Phoenix Super LPG), CJ Perez (Terrafirma), Kiefer Ravena and Raul Soyud (NLEX).

Also part of the pool are while the special Gilas draftees are Isaac Go (Terrafirma), Rey Suerte (Blackwater), Matt Nieto (NLEX), and Mike Nieto (Rain or Shine).

National Basketball Association G League player Kai Sotto is to join the training pool as well. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Jordan Clarkson nets season-high 31 to lead Jazz to 10th win in row

RUDY Gobert amassed 29 points, 20 rebounds, three blocks and three steals, and Jordan Clarkson scored 31 points as the Utah Jazz cruised past the Dallas Mavericks 116-104 Wednesday in Salt Lake City for their 10th consecutive win.

Fill-in starter Joe Ingles added 21 points, hitting seven 3-pointers, with eight assists and Mike Conley contributed 17 points and six assists.

The Jazz played for the first time this season without Donovan Mitchell. The All-Star guard couldn’t play after beginning the concussion protocol earlier in the day after being hurt during Utah’s win over New York on Tuesday night.

Luka Dončić led Dallas with 30 points, while Tim Hardaway, Jr. scored 19 and Kristaps Porziņģis added 18. No other Mavs reached double figures, however, as the team suffered its third straight loss and sixth in eight games.

This was the first time in 18 games this season that the Jazz didn’t have their usual starting lineup. Utah was also without backup big man Derrick Favors, who was hampered by lower back soreness.

Even so, the Jazz didn’t skip a beat without them despite playing their second game in as many nights.

Ingles gave Utah the lead for good after his 3-pointer just 92 seconds into the contest put the Jazz ahead 5-2.

Moments later, Gobert ignited a 9-0 run with two free throws after the Mavs had pulled within six points. Utah led by 13 after the first quarter and entered the second half up 69-48.

Clarkson scored 22 points and Gobert had 20 by the break to lead the short-handed home team, which hasn’t lost in three weeks.

Utah led by as many as 25 points — 98-73 after a Clarkson 3 late in the third quarter — and had a 22-point advantage through three quarters.

The Mavs’ Josh Richardson, Dorian Finney-Smith and Dwight Powell played for the first time in weeks due to the NBA’s health and safety protocols.

The Jazz and Mavs will play again in Utah on Friday night. — Reuters

Sixers vs Lakers

The Lakers’ road win streak wasn’t going to last the length of the season, but they most definitely didn’t want it to end yesterday. They were bent on making a statement against the Sixers, holders of the best record in the East and starring Most Valuable Player candidate Joe Embiid. And for a moment there, it looked as if they would succeed. Despite playing from behind for most of the match, they appeared to set up their desired outcome following an all-too-familiar LeBron James-Anthony Davis connection with 11 seconds left on the clock.

There was just one problem, however. The Lakers misread the Sixers’ intentions on the final play of the set-to and allowed starter Tobias Harris — who had hitherto gone a robust nine of 15 from the field — to drive unimpeded and then bury a short fadeaway jumper for the marginal bucket. Forced to inbound from the opposite baseline with just three ticks left, they could do no better than get Davis to launch a desperation 35-foot heave that had no chance of going in. The loss was just their first in 11 outings away from home, but it nonetheless showed how much they still needed to improve if they truly want to defend their title.

Make no mistake. The Sixers are for real. While long a force down low, Embiid has become a powerhouse playmaker under the charge of new head coach Doc Rivers. His raw numbers have increased significantly, and even the eye test proves how well he has read defenses from outside and in. Yesterday, his extraordinary gravitational pull was precisely what enabled teammates — and particularly Harris — to claim open looks and keep them ahead against the National Basketball Association’s supposedly stingiest defense.

To be sure, the Lakers’ inability to stamp their class per usual stems as much from the Sixers’ strengths as from their own weaknesses. In the midst of the pressures exerted on them by Embiid’s singular physicality, they continually became hard-pressed to adjust accordingly. And so imposing was he down the block that James even got called for a flagrant foul against him. With 5:44 left in the third period, his dunk attempt was foiled by a push from the four-time MVP that was deemed “unnecessary contact” by the referees. He would go on to score seven more point after, in his words, “a dangerous play. I guarantee, if that was me, I would have probably been ejected from the game.”

That James wasn’t tossed certainly helped the Lakers, who came roaring back from a deficit that stood as large as 12 with 3:07 left in the contest. He put up 12 markers in the layoff period, but his leadership, accentuated by two dimes in the crunch was especially critical. As things turned out, however, the Sixers got the outcome they felt they deserved, and versus competition they relished. As Harris pointed out, critics “think we haven’t played anybody. We wanted to go against the champs. We wanted to see where we’re at.” And, judging from yesterday’s victory, they’re right where they want to be.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and Human Resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

Podcast Network Asia receives $750,000 in new round of seed funding

Podcast Network Asia will use the funds to expand into Southeast Asia, particularly Thailand, Malaysia, and Indonesia.

Podcast Network Asia (PNA), a Philippine podcast company, received $750,000 in its new round of seed funding. The investments are from Lisa Gokongwei-Cheng, Summit Publishing Co., Inc. (traded as Summit Media), president and chief executive officer; multi-focus venture capital firm Foxmont Capital; Jakarta-based venture capital firm Venturra Discovery; and local live-streaming platform KUMU.

“Podcasting is about to enter its golden age,” said Ron Baetiong, PNA chief executive officer and co-founder. 

PNA will use the funds to expand into Southeast Asia, particularly Thailand, Malaysia, and Indonesia. The added capital will also be used to strengthen its production and performance analytics offerings, as well as enhance Podmetrics.co, its artificial intelligence-powered data analytics platform.

“I think podcasting is still in the early stages of growth in the country, and that PNA has put a stake in the ground ahead with a scalable business model,” said Ms. Gokongwei-Cheng in a press statement. “The team knows the industry well and they are quite passionate.” PNA is exploring collaborations with titles under Summit Media, which publishes fashion magazine Preview, showbiz magazine YES!, and K-pop entertainment magazine Sparkling, among others. 

“Podcasting is still in its nascent stage in Southeast Asia. When we look at top-charting podcasts, majority of them launched within the past year,” said Venturra Discovery partner Raditya Pramanay. “The industry has strong momentum, as audio streaming platforms are doubling down on this segment. We believe we can empower creators to improve and commercialize their content through data analytics and production support.”

Founded in August 2019, PNA supports the local podcast industry by providing access to production support and monetization opportunities for creators and hosts. There are 415 podcasts on the platform, including Boiling Waters, a podcast about relationships; Eve’s Drop, where “women talk and it gets real”; Kool Pals, a podcast about anything; and Walwal Sesh, a podcast for the brokenhearted. Over the pandemic, 93 new shows were added to the platform.

Integrated performance measurement is also available through the free Podmetrics, which helps understand a show’s overall value and potential. Users will be able to view total podcast analytics; apply for affiliate marketing campaigns; collaborate with brands for episode sponsorships; and view campaign impressions, conversions, and other metrics.

The rise of podcast listening is partly driven by an increase in content consumption since the pandemic. There are 31 million Filipino podcast listeners, with PNA noting that audio provides an escape for the 61% of Gen Zs and millennials in the Philippines who report experiencing screen fatigue. Spotify, in its Culture Next 2020 report, calls this the rise of “screenless moments.” 

Globally, podcast advertising has grown exponentially with the increase of podcast shows. From 2015 to 2020, podcast ad revenue in the US grew from $69 million to $659 million, with advertising revenue projected to surpass $1 billion this year, according to the Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) and PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC). — Patricia B. Mirasol

COVID is keeping us in our homes, but what makes working there a success or failure?

By Abbas Shieh and Robert Freestone/The Conversation

The Industrial Revolution transformed cities, resulting in places of residence and work becoming more distant than ever before. This spatial segregation is still largely embedded in the design of our cities today.

But the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic might have brought our cities to a similarly dramatic turning point. Working from home has received a far-reaching fillip. Our pre-COVID survey of 277 remote-working employees and self-employed Australians shows most had a separate workspace for telework and generally felt satisfied with their home-work environment.

But levels of satisfaction among workers in home-based settings vary. We identified some key factors to explain these differences.

Teleworkers’ work motivation increased with:

• having a higher income

• being a single parent with children

• living in an apartment

• satisfaction with workspace size

• quality of home office equipment

• the mobility of owning a private vehicle.

For Australian sole parents, who are more likely to be women than men, telework at home can be an efficient and smart way of working. While having more time at home for caring responsibilities, they can work and earn money for household expenses.

Living and working in apartments can provide more opportunities for social interaction. It can also enable more efficient use of energy, lowering costs. Apartments and units are more likely to be located in higher-density urban areas, which offer better access to office and business services and other amenities.

At the same time, there were factors that decreased teleworkers’ motivation, including:

• being in full-time employment

• complicated corporate protocols

• shorter time living in the current residence

• feelings of isolation and distraction

• having convenient access to public transport.

Access to public transport might seem counterintuitive but while enabling work-related journeys it also promotes more engagement outside the home, distractions to some extent, and so fewer feelings of isolation. Work-life balance at this micro-scale also has to be negotiated individually.

HOME WORKPLACE QUALITIES NEGLECTED
The pandemic has given new impetus to the critical rethinking of dispersed urbanization that dates back to the sharp rise in energy prices in the early 1970s. The idea of working from home re-emerged at the dawn of the telecommunications revolution early in the 1980s.

Our latest collective experience of working from home has brought into sharp relief both the pitfalls and the positives.

The academic literature on telework from fields such as organizational psychology focuses on maximizing economic and logistical efficiency. Many studies ignore the positive and negative effects being in the home has on the worker.

HOW TO IMPROVE SUPPORT FOR TELEWORK
To date, organizational and managerial policies have been contradictory. There are public and private organizational guidelines and supportive government tax policies to encourage teleworking. These cover matters such as ergonomics and utilities (internet, electricity and technology).

But these policies do not practically or adequately support teleworkers’ access to appropriate conditions. Teleworkers can still be left alone with a host of problems and personal challenges.

Many of these issues are rooted in place-related factors. For example, although Australian tax-deduction policies cover internet, electricity, and technology costs, they do not cover the capital costs of home renovations made to provide a home office or telework space. Yet these modifications are of great importance for successfully working from home.

The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) has recognized the risk of policies over-promoting teleworking for economic gains. The negative consequences, such as increased social isolation, distraction, and work-family conflict, mainly affect the most vulnerable social groups. They include sole parents, people with disabilities and older people.

Based on our research, the government should:

• encourage formal agreements for working from home

• support modification of homes for telework for vulnerable social groups

• develop opportunities in small regional cities

• encourage more compact cities

• develop public shared work offices and spaces at the local level.

These policy suggestions are consistent with many recent Australian urban development trends.

A SMART CITY OR A WISE CITY?
Teleworking seems set to become a more entrenched work practice than ever before. Yet factors such as the impacts of home and place on human motivation have not been dealt with.

Over time, if governments want to encourage telework, our cities will need to change. Resources and infrastructure will need to be localized where people live—and increasingly work domestically—and not just in centralized employment districts. 

 

Abbas Shieh is the Assistant Professor of Urban Planning and Design at Islamic Azad University.

Robert Freestone is Professor of Planning, Faculty of Built Environment, University of New South Wales.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.