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Kai Sotto, Adelaide 36ers to face the Perth Wildcats in NBL opener

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KAI Sotto will now face a different team in his debut with the Adelaide 36ers following changes on the National Basketball League (NBL) regular season schedule next month.

Instead of testing the mettle of new team Tasmania JackJumpers, Sotto and the 36ers will pay a visit at the RAC Arena in Perth to clash with the stacked Wildcats on Dec. 3 for the main game of the NBL twin-bill opener.

Perth (25-11) finished second to NBL champion Melbourne United last season, making it a tall order for Adelaide that settled for a 13-23 record in seventh place.

After Perth, the 36ers then host the Illawarra Hawks on Dec. 5 at the Adelaide Entertainment Center to cap off their opening week.

The NBL said it opted to tweak the original schedule released last month to prioritize more fans in game venues after restrictions last season.

Adelaide will be under the watch of new mentor CJ Bruton, who replaced Conner Henry in the offseason.

But first, Mr. Sotto will get a taste of NBL action in the Blitz preseason games starting this weekend when Adelaide battles the Cairns Taipans at the MyState Bank Arena in Tasmania.

Mr. Sotto and Adelaide will also collide with Perth, Tasmania and the Brisbane Bullets in the NBL Blitz slated to run until Nov. 28.

The 7-foot-3 Filipino sensation is hoping to impress in his international pro league debut in the NBL for his ultimate goal of making it to the NBA down the road.

Jovin Bedic, Kaya FC Iloilo blank Mendiola FC, 6-0

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JOVIN Bedic fired a brace to power Kaya FC Iloilo to a comprehensive 6-0 win over Mendiola FC 1991 and Group B top seeding going into the semis of the Philippines Football League (PFL) Copa Paulino Alcantara Wednesday in Carmona, Cavite.

Mr. Bedic opened scoring in the 10th and 35th minutes then Ryo Fujii (40’), Kenshiro Daniels (63’), Daizo Horikoshi (71’), and Carlyle Mitchell (90+2’) joined the fray to seal Kaya’s two-game sweep of group action.

The Iloilo-based booters, who beat the Azkals Development Team (ADT) in Sunday’s kickoff match, 2-0, will face Group A No. 2 Dynamic Herb Cebu in the knockout semis.

“The players are getting better game by game and we hope to keep this good form in the semifinals,” said Kaya coach Yu Hoshide.

Mendiola and the ADT, meanwhile, will dispute the second semis spot in their Group B faceoff tomorrow. Winner of this matchup will battle Group A topnotcher Stallion Laguna FC.

Stallion took the No. 1 in the bracket after beating Cebu last Wednesday, 1-0.

Senegalese Abou Sy delivered an early strike then the Laguna-based squad fended off the Cebuanos’ final stand despite playing with 10 men in the last 19 minutes of play to get it done. — Olmin Leyba

Bernardo beats Bangladeshi foe and jumps to no. 7 in para world chess championship

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DARRY Bernardo overpowered Ejaz Husain of Bangladesh in 25 moves of a seldom used Colorado Counter to carry the country’s fight following stinging defeats by countrymen Sander Severino and Jasper Rom after six rounds of the World Chess Championship for People with Disabilities on Wednesday.

Mr. Bernardo, a member of the Far Eastern University team that won the UAAP gold medal two years ago, outplayed Mr. Husain in the opening where the former emerged a queen up to snare the full point and leapfrog to a group at No. 7 with five points apiece.

Russian Stanislav Babarykin led the way with a perfect six points followed by a five-player group with 5.5 points each.

Mr. Bernardo was clashing with top seed Grandmaster Marcin Tazbir of Poland, a former world champion for people with disabilities, in the seventh round at press time.

He overtook Severino and Rom, who absorbed painful defeats to Ganbat Dashtseren of Mongolia in 60 moves of an English Opening and Zarko Selkovski of Macedonia in 42 moves of a Sicilian duel, respectively.

Severino and Rom were stuck with four points in this nine-round tournament.

Henry Lopez likewise stayed in the hunt as he dumped Luis Anibal Rodriguez Pirela of Venezuela in 45 moves of a Dutch Defense to hike his total to 4.5 points.

Milwaukee Bucks squander big lead before topping NY Knicks

PAT Connaughton hit a career-high seven 3-pointers on Wednesday night, including three in a span of 95 seconds late in the fourth quarter to fuel a game-ending run as the visiting Milwaukee Bucks held off a furious comeback by the New York Knicks to earn a 112-100 win.

The Bucks, who squandered a 21-point lead in a 113-98 loss to the Knicks on Friday, led by 24 points in the third quarter on Wednesday before New York rallied. Fueled almost entirely by reserves, the Knicks mounted a 40-16 run to tie the game at 89-89 on a 3-pointer by Immanuel Quickley with 5:06 left in the fourth quarter.

George Hill answered with a 3-pointer to give the Bucks the lead for good. The Knicks twice pulled within a point before Milwaukee, hanging on to a 98-94 lead, grabbed momentum after coach Mike Budenholzer challenged a foul call on Giannis Antetokounmpo with 2:53 left.

Upon review, the foul was changed to a block of a layup attempt by Obi Toppin. Antetokounmpo won the subsequent jump ball, and Connaughton drained a 3-pointer to begin the Bucks’ decisive surge.

Connaughton finished with a game-high 23 points, one shy of his career-high set for the Portland Trail Blazers against the Phoenix Suns on Oct. 18, 2017. The seven 3-pointers exceeded his previous best of six treys, established against the Indiana Pacers on March 22.

Antetokounmpo had 15 points, 15 rebounds and eight assists for the Bucks, who have won two straight. Jrue Holiday finished with 18 points while Bobby Portis (17 points) and Grayson Allen (15 points) also got into double-digits.

Derrick Rose scored 22 points to lead the bench brigade for the Knicks, who played the final 14-plus minutes with Rose, Quickley, Taj Gibson, Alec Burks and Obi Toppin on the floor. Quickley had 18 points while Burks and Top-pin finished with 14 points apiece. Julius Randle (16 points) was the only New York starter to reach double figures. — Reuters

Spain football team’s World Cup bid hit by long list of injuries

COACH Luis Enrique will have to depend on a makeshift lineup to secure Spain a place in next year’s World Cup finals as he will be missing nine key players through injury for the qualifiers against Greece and Sweden over the next four days.

Ahead of their final two qualifiers, Spain sits in second place in Group B, trailing Sweden by two points and four ahead of third-placed Greece.

With only the group winners guaranteed a spot in next year’s tournament in Qatar, Luis Enrique will be hoping his understrength lineup will be up to the task for Thursday’s match in Athens as well as Sunday’s home tie against Sweden in Seville.

The second-place finishers in each group face a playoff.

Marcos Llorente, Ferran Torres, Mikel Oyarzabal, Pedri, Gerard Moreno, Ansu Fati, Eric Garcia, Yeremi Pino have all been ruled out of both matches while doubts remain over midfielder Mikel Merino’s availability for Sunday’s game against Sweden.

“Our will is so big that it surpasses any difficulties. Yes, we have many injuries, but it also means that the door was opened for new blood that arrived with hunger. I really believe we will win both matches,” Luis Enrique told reporters in Athens.

“I enjoy the pressure. But I’m much more optimistic today, after seeing the boys on the pitch. The rhythm, the quality and the way that they trained made me more confident.”

Having reached the final of the UEFA Nations League earlier this year, Spain, who cannot finish lower than third in Group B, is already guaranteed a spot in at least the playoffs. — Reuters

Hader, Hendriks top relievers

MILWAUKEE Brewers left-hander Josh Hader and Chicago White Sox right-hander Liam Hendriks were named the relievers of the year on Wednesday.

Hader won the Trevor Hoffman Award as the National League’s top reliever, while Hendriks was named winner of the Mariano Rivera Award as best in the American League.

Hader, 27, recorded 34 saves and a career-best 1.23 ERA in 60 appearances this season while winning the Hoffman Award for the third time in the past four seasons.

Hendriks led the American League with 38 saves and posted a 2.54 ERA. He went 8-3 in 69 appearances and led all relievers with 113 strikeouts in just 71 innings while making the All-Star team for the second time in his career.

Hendriks, 32, also won the 2020 Rivera Award as a member of the Oakland Athletics. — Reuters

Kontaveit and Plíšková win to kick off WTA Finals

ANETT Kontaveit’s sensational late season form continued as she rolled past Barbora Krejčíková (6-3, 6-4) while Karolína Plíšková outlasted Garbiñe Muguruza (4-6, 6-2, 7-6(6)) as the Women’s Tennis Association (WTA) Finals got underway in Guadalajara on Wednesday.

The 25-year-old Estonian Kontaveit captured the 30-minute first set with an ace out wide and sealed the win when an error-prone Krejčíková sent a backhand into the net on match point.

Kontaveit, who was the final singles player to secure her place in the eight-player tournament, claimed four WTA titles this year to surge to world number eight and has now won 11 straight matches.

“I managed to win Cleveland, then it just sort of started rolling from there,” said Kontaveit, who also picked up titles in Ostrava, Moscow and Cluj-Napoca.

“I’ve been believing in myself a little bit more, and the game definitely has clicked from just getting more wins and playing a lot of tennis and really feeling comfortable, enjoying playing tennis.”

French Open champion Krejčíková, who is the only reigning Grand Slam champion in the competition, never found a rhythm on the purple court in the high-altitude Mexican city.

“The match was difficult,” Krejčíková said.

“I think Anett, she was playing a solid game, she was serving well.”

In a battle of former world number ones, Plíšková overcame a slow start to see off Muguruza under the lights in the night session.

After dropping the first set, Plíšková broke Muguruza’s serve to end an eight-minute game and take a 2-0 second set lead she would not relinquish.

In the third set, Muguruza saved two match points on her serve at 5-4 and held her nerve to ultimately force a tie-breaker.

But the hard-hitting Czech would not be denied and extended her record to 9-2 against the Spaniard when Muguruza sent a forehand wide to end the marathon third set.

The WTA Finals divides the players into two groups of four to play in a round-robin format, with each player competing in three matches.

The top two players from each group will advance to the semi-finals, where the tournament will then use a knockout format.

The WTA Finals were not held last year because of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic and was originally scheduled to take place in Shenzhen before being moved because of pandemic-related travel restrictions in China. — Reuters

Middling Bucks

When the Bucks greeted the turn of the month with three consecutive home losses, head coach Mike Budenholzer rightly noted that a pity party should not be forthcoming. “You’ve got to go out and compete. Nobody feels sorry for you. Nobody’s going to worry about you.” Never mind that the cause of the green and cream has been handicapped by injuries to vital cogs, including starters Jrue Holiday, Khris Middleton, Brook Lopez, and Donte DiVincenzo and reserves Bobby Portis, Rodney Hood, and Semi Ojeleye. Forget that the manpower deficiencies have compelled the defending champions to rely on such raw talents as Sandro Mamukelashvili and Thanasis Antetokounmpo.

Not that the Bucks are complaining. Two-time Most Valuable Player awardee Giannis Antetokounmpo continues to perform at a high level and, more importantly, stay healthy; over the last two seasons, he missed games in the double-digits due to a variety of ailments. And, as Budenholzer knows only too well, it’s not how they start but how they finish that ultimately counts. They ended both their 2018-19 and 2019-20 regular campaigns with the best record, only to falter in the playoffs. Meanwhile, they were merely seventh-best leaguewide last season, but managed to gain momentum and peak at the right time en route to the title.

That said, there can be no denying the Bucks’ relative lack of competitiveness of late, and of its significance as a warning sign if nothing else. They’re being outrebounded every time out, and by a wide margin. They’re also playing with much less pace than they’ve been used to, and yet own a negative net rating. Taken together, the developments underscore their inadequacies on defense, and to the point where there is even greater pressure on them to be nothing short of perfect when it comes to scoring opportunities.

The Bucks won yesterday to push their slate to six and six, barely enough to crowd the Raptors for the last playoff spot in the Eastern Conference. To be sure, a full 85% of the campaign still has to be negotiated, and it bears noting anew that they were middling at best much father into their ultimately successful run for the hardware last season. And who knows? The forced thrusting of erstwhile marginal figures into the limelight may yet prep them for the more important battles ahead.

 

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.

SMDC scores big at 9th PropertyGuru Philippines Property Awards

Following a tremendous showing last year, SMDC bagged a total of 11 awards at the 9th PropertyGuru Philippines Property Awards including the highly coveted Best Developer (Philippines) for the second straight year, and Best Mid Rise Condo Development (Philippines) for Gold Residences. The awards ceremony was held virtually on November 11, 2021.

Alongside winning Best Developer, SMDC also secured the all-new Best Developer (Luzon) Award as well as being a two-time winner for the Best Lifestyle Developer Award in recognition of the company’s efforts to offer additional facilities across all developments made to enhance the living experience of residents.

In the Development category, Gold Residences, within Gold City – SMDC’s pioneer township development in Parañaque City, is the winner of the Best Mixed Use Development Award. Gold Residences won the Best High End Condo Development (Metro Manila) and Best Lifestyle Development awards as well. Vine Residences won the Best Upper Affordable Condo Development (Metro Manila) Award, while Green 2 Residences earned the award for Best High End Condo Development (Southern Luzon).

Many other SMDC projects were highly commended across several Development categories: Best High End Condo Development for Metro Manila (Sail Residences), Best Upper Mid End Condo for Metro Manila (Light 2 Residences, Shore 3 Residences), Best Upper Affordable Condo Development for Metro Manila (Bloom Residences, Charm Residences), Best Affordable Condo Development (Hill Residences), Best Condo Development for Metro Davao (Lane Residences), Best Condo Development for Central Luzon (Cheer Residences), and Best Condo Development for Visayas (Smile Residences, Style Residences).

Gold Residences also won in the Design category, earning the title of Best Landscape Architectural Design as well as commendations for the Best Condo Architectural Design and Best Condo Interior Design Awards. Light 2 Residences (Best Condo Architectural Design) and Vine Residences (Best Landscape Architectural Design) were also among the developments highly commended by the awarding body.

SMDC was also among the winners of the Special Recognition in Sustainable Design and Construction – an award given to developers whose projects utilize environmentally-friendly design features, low-impact material selection, and are assessed to be durably designed and capable of withstanding various lifecycles.

This year’s results further build on what has been a highly successful awards show run for SMDC, continuously driving the company’s vision to making luxurious urban living more affordable – enabling more Filipinos access to a truly cosmopolitan lifestyle.

“For our efforts to be recognized by an esteemed organization such as PropertyGuru is indeed something we at SMDC can truly be proud of,” SMDC President Jose Mari Banzon said. “While these wins certainly validate the collective work we have done to realize the vision of our company founders, ultimately, they fuel our drive towards the creation of a nation of homeowners where each and every Filipino can live their best lives”, he added.

To learn more about SMDC, visit https://smdc.com/.

 


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Surprise US-China climate deal breaks through superpower standoff

CHINA and the US vowed to work together to slow global warming, issuing a surprise joint statement Wednesday that injects new momentum into the last days of global climate negotiations. The deal also marks a rare moment of cooperation between superpowers locked in geopolitical rivalry and who seemed at odds for most of the two-week talks in Glasgow, Scotland.

The two sides agreed to boost their efforts to cut emissions, including by tackling methane and illegal deforestation, China’s special climate envoy Xie Zhenhua told reporters. They will establish a working group to increase ac-tion in the 2020s — a key decade — which will meet in the first half of next year. His US counterpart John Kerry said that the group will focus on “concrete” measures.

As the world’s two major economies, “we need to work actively to address climate change,” Mr. Xie said. Mr. Kerry said that “the US and China have no shortage of differences, but on climate cooperation is the only way to get this job done.” The two spoke at separate press conferences, one after the other, with Mr. Xie going first.

The announcement changed the mood in Glasgow, where negotiators are in the midst of fraught discussions over how to accelerate measures to curb the rise in global temperatures. It was a bilateral agreement be-tween the US and China that paved the way for the landmark Paris Agreement in 2015.

“The big significance of this is geopolitical,” said Nick Mabey, co-founder of think tank E3G. “The US and China have signaled they will end the wars of words that marred the past days.”

Relations between the world’s two biggest economies have steadily improved since Chinese officials told Mr. Kerry in September that progress on climate depended on improved overall ties, prompting President Joseph R. Biden to call counterpart Xi Jinping in search of a breakthrough. Shortly afterward, the US reached a deal to release Huawei Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou from extradition proceedings in Canada — one of Beijing’s top demands.

The joint agreement on climate comes ahead of another virtual summit likely to be held next week between Mr. Biden and Mr. Xi, who skipped an in-person appearance at COP26. Mr. Xi wrote in a letter this week to the National Committee on US-China Relations that China is ready to deepen ties with the US and better manage their disputes.

That meeting is likely to address tensions over everything from tech to trade, human rights and the status of Taiwan. Both leaders have an incentive to put the relationship on a more even footing as they each focus on challenges at home, and climate matters is a key area they can cooperate on.

The two countries reaffirmed the temperature goals of the Paris accord, which has a stretch target of limiting warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius, and recognized there is a gap between current policies and what needs to be done, Mr. Xie said. Both are committed to pushing for a successful COP26, including agreements on climate finance and rules to create a global carbon market, he said.

Still, China declined to join the global pledge being pushed by the US and the European Union to cut methane emissions 30% by the end of the decade from 2020 levels. Mr. Xie said China will develop its own national plan. Mr. Kerry admitted that he had failed to get China to move its deadline for reaching peak emissions earlier from 2030. “We’ve peaked out on peaking,” he said.

As the world’s biggest emitter of greenhouse gases, China can do more than any other country right now to help the world avoid the worst effects of global warming. But it argues that its plan to reach carbon neutrality by 2060 will already be the most ambitious emissions reduction ever attempted.

“It can only be good news that the US and China are working closely on climate change and slashing methane emissions,” said Bernice Lee, research director at Chatham House. “But the statement is not enough to close the deal. The real test of Washington and Beijing is how hard they push for a 1.5°C-aligned deal here in Glasgow.”  —  Bloomberg

Brands rake in millions as Alibaba’s Singles’ Day enters last stretch

SHANGHAI — More than 380 brands from Apple, Inc. to L’Oreal SA have raked in more than 100 million yuan ($15.7 million) each since Alibaba Group kicked off its Singles Day festival on Nov. 1, the company said on Thursday.

The online blitz is an 11-day event with the best deals concentrated in two discount periods, Nov. 1-3 and Nov. 11. Last year it racked up $74 billion in orders, or “gross merchandise value” (GMV).

Alibaba this year has toned down nL4N2RO2XZ the marketing hype amid stringent regulatory scrutiny, but the event remains a top draw for millions of merchants and shoppers with livestreamers hawking products from skincare to sports shoes.

China’s most popular livestreaming hosts, Li Jiaqi and Viya, begun livestreaming on Oct. 20 and respectively presold over 11.5 billion yuan and 8.53 billion yuan of products, according to Chinese media.

Analysts, however, say they are expecting Alibaba to report only a minor increase in GMV this year, citing slowing retail sales, supply shortages, power disruptions and COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) lockdowns.

The company has done away with an audience for its annual entertainment gala this year and has not provided a media center to reporters for the first time, citing COVID-19 precautions. It opted to livestream the event instead.

On the eve of the event’s final 24 hours, the livestreamed gala on Wednesday featured British actor Benedict Cumberbatch, known for his portrayal of fictional crime-fighter Sherlock Holmes, who provided clues to puzzles the hosts solved via video message. Prior to the pandemic, Singles’ Day galas saw in-person performances by stars such as Taylor Swift and Pharrell Williams.

Track star Su Bingtian, the first Chinese person to compete in the men’s 100-meter final at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, also appeared this year, along with other Chinese celebrities and performers.

The shopping event caps a year of ongoing regulatory tightening from Chinese authorities in a number of industries during which Alibaba was a frequent target.

The e-commerce giant was fined a record $2.8 billion for monopolistic behavior in April and its founder Jack Ma, China’s highest-profile entrepreneur, has retreated from public view after criticizing Chinese regulators a year ago.

The crackdown has extended into the Singles’ Day sales period. On Nov. 5, regulators in Guangdong Province convened with a number of e-commerce companies, including Alibaba to warn about uncompetitive practices, fake merchandise, and other issues. — Reuters

Inflation threatens to return to US politics in replay of 1980

“Is it easier for you to go and buy things in the stores than it was four years ago?” Ronald Reagan asked days before his sweeping 1980 presidential election victory. That simple question looms as a decisive factor in next year’s congressional ballot.

Inflation is now running at its highest in a generation, with a report Wednesday showing that consumer prices surged at a 6.2% annual pace in October. Nearly all economic forecasters expect it to cool in the coming year, but the key question for President Joseph R. Biden and congressional Democrats is how quickly and how much.

While Mr. Biden argues that inflation will be pulled down by his forthcoming $1.75-trillion social-spending bill, along with a $550-billion infrastructure plan he will soon sign, Republicans are hammering exactly the opposite argument: cash drops by the government are driving up prices. Even some Democrats are echoing GOP fiscal concerns, complicating the outlook for the pending legislative package.

At stake in how quickly inflation recedes, and in the debate over the cause and remedy of the escalation in prices, is control of Congress. In next November’s midterm elections, Democrats’ razor-thin majorities of both chambers will be up for grabs. It’s effectively the first national election where inflation will be a prime issue since Mr. Reagan’s win over President Jimmy Carter.

“We’ve never recorded as many people talking about high home prices or high appliance prices or high TV prices,” said Richard Curtin, who oversees the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Survey, a key gauge of household attitudes. “We get a large share of people talking about the reduction of their living standards due to inflation,” made worse because “consumers see no effective economic policies that would restrain inflation,” he said.

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said in an interview that aired Tuesday on National Public Radio’s Marketplace that she expects inflation next year to be “closer to the 2% that we consider normal.”

Outside forecasters largely agree. The median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg is for a 2.8% rate in the third quarter of next year, on the eve of the election, with 2.4% seen for the final three months of 2022. Gasoline futures are trading about 18 cents per gallon lower for next October compared to current levels, signaling prices at the pump should ease.

But much depends on the course of the pandemic, and things may get worse before they improve, with no guarantee that supply-chain bottlenecks will have fully cleared. Meantime, rising prices at grocery check-out lines and the gas pump are already unsettling the public, and much of the country is in for more sticker shock when winter heating bills start arriving.

And even if headline inflation subsides, some costs might keep climbing. Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. economists expect rent increases next year to run at 30-year highs. The Wall Street bank’s latest outlook pencils in inflation at an historically high rate above 4% in the third quarter.

RENT GAINS STILL IN PIPELINE

Mr. Biden on Wednesday said he’d directed top economic aides to focus on reducing energy costs, and flagged the role of the Federal Reserve in monitoring prices. He also asked regulators to watch for any “price gouging.” During a stop in Baltimore, he highlighted benefits from his infrastructure bill as part of “a plan to finish the job of getting us back to normal” after the pandemic.

But most economists don’t see a near-term impact on inflation from the fiscal packages. It can take years for infrastructure projects to affect transport and other costs, for example. And the ramping up of social safety-net support could in the meantime add fuel to already strong demand.

“The spending is front-loaded,” said Jason Furman, a former senior economic adviser in the Obama administration who’s now a professor at Harvard University.

Inflation could be boosted by “a few tenths of a percentage point” next year, he said. Longer term, any inflation impact would be “miniscule” and could work in either direction.

With American payrolls about 4 million lower today than they were before the pandemic, the biggest impact on inflation over the next year is likely to be how quickly people return to the labor force, Mr. Furman said. “Inflation right now is more uncertain than at any point in many decades. We’re in such an unprecedented situation that our biggest lesson from the last year should be humility in our forecasts.”

A key Democratic swing voter in the Senate, Joe Manchin of West Virginia, is worried enough about the idea that he’s held up consideration of the social spending bill the White House and congressional leaders are trying to get enacted. He’s yet to commit to voting for the draft package.

Republicans have spent months concentrating their fire on portraying Democrats’ pandemic relief bill — signed in March and costing $1.9 trillion — and the forthcoming social spending plan as inflationary.

For now, they’re succeeding in tying Mr. Biden to rising prices — a low bar since voters typically blame incumbents for inflation. By mid-October, 62% of Americans said the president’s policies are responsible, according to a Politico/Morning Consult Poll.

Democrats are now in a contest to show voters by next November they are gaining more ground from a growing economy and Mr. Biden’s $1.75-trillion Build Back Better initiative than they are losing to rising prices.

It may take a while for voters to feel the impact of some signature pieces of that package, which still hasn’t passed Congress. Items such as the expanded child tax credit immediately put money in people’s pockets, though that merely continues an income boost that families with children have been getting since July. Some other high-profile pieces are more complicated.

Cindy Lehnhoff, director of the National Child Care Association, a trade group for licensed private child care centers, highlighted the importance of the legislation’s subsidies capping child care costs at 7% of income for families making up to 250% of state median income, or about $251,000 for a New York state family of four.

But the federal government first will have to come up with rules, and states will need to draft their own plans for the program. In addition to the bureaucratic reasons for the delay, child care centers will need to expand staff.

“I think most states will still be in the planning process, quite frankly, on how to execute this” by next fall, Ms. Lehnhoff said. “If I were running for office, I wouldn’t depend on it.”  — Bloomberg