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Antetokounmpo named NBA Defensive Player of the Year

MILWAUKEE Bucks star forward Giannis Antetokounmpo was named NBA Defensive Player of the Year on Tuesday.

Antetokounmpo received 75 first-place votes and 432 points in balloting performed by a panel of 100 sportswriters and broadcasters. Power forward Anthony Davis of the Los Angeles Lakers was second (200 points, 14 first-place votes) and Utah Jazz center Rudy Gobert (187, six) finished third.

Gobert won the award in each of the previous two seasons. Antetokounmpo finished second in last season’s balloting.

Statistics toward consideration for the award were used through March 11, the night the NBA season was suspended after Gobert tested positive for COVID-19 prior to a game at Oklahoma City.

Antetokounmpo averaged 13.7 rebounds up to that point — including an NBA-leading 11.5 on the defensive end — as well as 1.04 steals and 1.02 blocked shots per game.

“His commitment to defending and his commitment to winning is beyond incredible,” Bucks coach Mike Budenholzer said on TNT. “He impacts the game with his blocked shots, his rebounding, his ability to guard all five positions … his talent is beyond special.”

Antetokounmpo joins Sidney Moncrief (1982-83 and 1983-84) as the only Milwaukee players to win Defensive Player of the Year honors.

Milwaukee held opponents to a league-low 41.3% shooting from the field through March 11. The club also had the best defensive rating in the NBA by allowing 101.6 points per 100 possessions. That number was 96.5 when Antetokounmpo was on the floor.

Antetokounmpo also is finalist to win his second straight MVP award.

Only Chicago’s Michael Jordan (1987-88) and Houston’s Hakeem Olajuwon (1993-94) have been named MVP and Defensive Player of the Year in the same season. — Reuters

GM Mark Paragua eyes another online chess title in GM Balinas Cup

GRANDMASTER (GM) Mark Paragua will be seeking another online chess title when the Baby Uno Chess Challenge dubbed as Grandmaster Rosendo Carreon Balinas Jr. online chess championship set on Sept. 6, 2020 at 11 a.m. at the lichess.org.

The total cash prize for the event held as part of the 79th birthday celebration of the late Grandmaster Rosendo Carreon Balinas Jr. on Sept. 10 is P35,000.

The organizing committee of Bayanihan Chess Club led by AGM Marlon Bernardino, Genghis Imperial, Jolina and Jenley Icao decided to have a new house rules that if a player violates the lichess terms of service with it (Computer Engine Assistance, Human Assistance, Piloting), his/her prizes will go to Bayanihan Chess Club Welfare Fund.

The “free registration” online tournament will be a 21-round Swiss System, two minutes plus two seconds increment time control format, is open to all Filipino chess players here and abroad.

Organized by Bayanihan Chess Club, the event, hosted by Bethesda, Maryland USA-based Joe Balinas in close cooperation with engineer Antonio Carreon Balinas and Mr. Fernan Donguines of Hybreed Apparel Collections, offers a whopping top purse of P10,000 to the champion, P2,500 to the runner-up, P1,500 to the third placer and P1,000 each to the fourth and fifth placers, respectively.

“We honor too and remember our past chess greats Cardoso, Lontok, Naranja, Reyes,” said Joe Balinas.

“Remember them? And all who molded our chess greats from Eugene, our beloved always faithful to Pinas GM Joey, world class Wesley So and the crop of our current GMs. To all of our young chess talents.” he added.

“We urge revitalization of business and corporate support to Philippine Chess to help too our chairman/president (Prospero) Pichay,” said Joe Balinas.

For more details, message Genghis Imperial in his facebook account. — Marlon Bernardino

Turkey back on F1 calendar as Chinese GP is axed

LONDON — Formula One (F1) fleshed out its 2020 calendar to 17 races on Tuesday, with the Chinese Grand Prix cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic but Turkey back on for the first time since 2011 and Bahrain handed two rounds.

The sport said in a statement that Turkey’s Istanbul Park circuit would host a race on Nov. 15 before a Bahrain double in late November and early December and Abu Dhabi ending the season on Dec. 13 at Yas Marina.

A limited number of fans, and hospitality, will be able to attend some of the races. Russian Grand Prix organizers are already selling tickets for their race in Sochi in September.

All six grands prix held so far since the delayed season started in Austria in July have been held behind closed doors.

Formula One had confirmed only 13 races until Tuesday, all of them in Europe after those in the Americas were cancelled, but teams and drivers now have a clear idea of how many the championship will have.

The original schedule, published before the pandemic, envisaged a record 22 races, but fixtures such as Monaco had to be cancelled and a new calendar drawn up with a mix of old favorites and new venues.

China’s race in Shanghai had looked doubtful for some time due to the virus.

The first Vietnamese Grand Prix, postponed from April, will not be happening either although its cancellation has yet to be confirmed officially.

“Sadly, we will not be racing in China this season,” Formula One said, adding that it looked forward to returning next year.

Japan, Singapore, Azerbaijan and Australia have already been cancelled.

‘GREAT HAPPINESS’
Turkey will be the only race on this year’s calendar that could be considered a non-European or Middle Eastern round, since the circuit is on the Asian side of Istanbul.

“We feel great happiness and honor to have brought Formula One, the biggest motor sporting event in the world, to Turkey once again,” said Vural Ak, chairman of Intercity, which operates the Turkish circuit.

“One of the most important factors behind the Formula One administration adding Istanbul to the calendar is that in the nine years races weren’t held, the circuit was active and ready at all times as if a race was going to take place.”

Istanbul’s circuit was popular with drivers if not the locals whose attendance was limited. The only current drivers to have won there are Kimi Raikkonen, six times world champion Lewis Hamilton and four times champion Sebastian Vettel.

“It’s an old-school circuit, something I was watching on TV when I was younger. (That) massive left-hander, flat-out, is going to be pretty impressive,” Renault’s Esteban Ocon told reporters recently.

Bahrain’s two races on Nov. 29 and Dec. 6 will be designated the Bahrain Grand Prix and the Sakhir Grand Prix, after the name of the desert circuit.

Sakhir will be the third circuit to host two races this season after Austria’s Red Bull Ring and Britain’s Silverstone. — Reuters

Barca in new turmoil after Messi tells club he wants to leave

BARCELONA — Captain Lionel Messi has told Barcelona he wishes to leave the club immediately, a source confirmed on Tuesday, deepening the turmoil within the Catalan side less than two weeks after their humiliating 8-2 defeat by Bayern Munich.

The source said the club received a burofax from Messi’s lawyers declaring that the player, who has spent his entire career at Barca, wished to leave. A burofax is a service used in Spain to urgently dispatch a document through a certified email, which issues a digital certificate with legal validity.

The club subsequently sent Messi a burofax, stating they wanted him to stay and finish his career at Barca, added the source.

A second source added that the burofax Messi’s lawyers sent referred to a clause in the last contract the 33-year-old Argentine signed with the club in 2017 which allowed him to leave for free, a clause that expired on June 10 this year.

Under the terms of the contract which expires in 2021, the only way Messi can leave without the club’s consent is if a rival side pays his release clause of €700 million ($828 million).

“The club considers that the contract is fully binding until 30 June 2021,” added the second source.

The Argentine’s request to leave Barca comes a day after Spanish media reported that new coach Ronald Koeman told Messi’s close friend and strike partner, Luis Suarez, that he does not wish the Uruguayan to stay at the club.

Other reports said that Chilean midfielder Arturo Vidal, Croatian midfielder Ivan Rakitic and French defender Samuel Umtiti have also been told they are no longer wanted.

Barca are in the midst of overhauling their squad following the 8-2 defeat by Bayern in the Champions League quarter-finals earlier this month, which condemned the club to a trophyless season for the first time in 12 years.

Messi, who has been named world player of the year a record six times, has grown increasingly unhappy in the last 12 months with how the club is being run under president Josep Maria Bartomeu.

In February, he lashed out at then sporting director Eric Abidal on social media and a couple of months later turned his anger on the club hierarchy for the way in which players were forced to take a pay cut to cope with the financial hit of the coronanvirus pandemic.

After Barca surrendered the La Liga title to Real Madrid in July, Messi slammed the team as being “weak” and “vulnerable” during an uncharacteristically fiery post-match interview.

BACKED BY PUYOL
Former Barca captain Carles Puyol backed Messi’s wish to leave the club by writing on Twitter: “Respect and admiration, Leo. You have all my support, friend.”

Ex-Barca president Joan Laporta blamed Bartomeu for the stance taken by Messi.

“Bartomeu and his board should quit immediately. They have undermined Messi to save them from the sporting and financial mess they have created. If they quit there might be some hope that Messi stays at Barca,” he tweeted.

Catalonia’s regional leader Quim Torra appeared to accept that Barca’s best ever player, who in 2019 was given the Creu de Sant Jordi award for services to the region, was about to leave.

He tweeted: “Catalonia will always be your home. Many thanks for all the happy moments and for your extraordinary football. We have been so lucky to share so many years of our lives with the best player in the world and a noble sportsman.” — Reuters

Djokovic rolls on at Western and Southern Open; Murray eliminated

TOP SEED Novak Djokovic made quick work of Tennys Sandgren at the Western and Southern Open on Tuesday, never dropping serve en route to a 6-2 6-4 win over the American, while big-serving Milos Raonic enjoyed a straight sets win over Andy Murray.

Djokovic broke Sandgren thrice to reach the quarter-finals and extended his win-loss record to 20-0 this year.

“All in all it was just a great performance,” said the Serb.

“I felt better and I played better than I did last night. Everything is going in the right direction.”

Sandgren’s hapless plight was summed up during an exchange in the first set when he turned his back to the net to signal he had surrendered a point as Djokovic readied an overhead smash.

Djokovic’s thunderbolt smash came down anyway, however, knocking the racket out of the American’s hand.

An apologetic Djokovic immediately held up his hand while a bemused Sandgren leaned over to pick up his racket.

Next up for Djokovic is German Jan-Lennard Struff, who outlasted David Goffin 6-4 3-6 6-4 earlier on Tuesday.

Murray had an impressive win over fifth seed Alexander Zverev on Monday but never found his rhythm against Raonic.

The Canadian dominated on serve, firing 10 aces and winning almost 90% of his first-serve points, to advance to the quarter-finals 6-2 6-2 in a rain-interrupted match that marked his first win over the Briton since 2014 at Indian Wells.

Defending champion Daniil Medvedev looked sharp in his stress-free 6-3 6-3 dismantling of qualifier Aljaz Bedene to reach the quarter-finals.

The Russian did not face a break point and committed just nine unforced errors in the 68-minute contest in hot and humid conditions.

Stefanos Tsitsipas defeated John Isner 7-6(2) 7-6(4) and Reilly Opelka beat sixth seed Matteo Berrettini 6-3 7-6(4). Roberto Bautista Agut and Filip Krajinovic also advanced.

The ATP Masters 1000 event is being played at Flushing Meadows in New York instead of Cincinnati due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

No spctators are present at the event, which is the final tune-up before the U.S. Open Grand Slam, which begins on Aug. 31. — Reuters

NBL and WNBL now professional leagues

THE Games and Amusements Board (GAB) has approved the application of the National Basketball League (NBL) and the Women’s National Basketball League (WNBL) to turn professional.

GAB chairman Baham Mitra made it official on Wednesday during a virtual press conference that was also joined by NBL officials in chairman Celso Mercado, executive vice-president Rhose Montreal, and commissioner Edward Aquino.

The NBL becomes the first men’s professional league that will cater to homegrown talents from the provinces, cities, and municipalities they are representing.

Meanwhile, the WNBL is set to become the first-ever women’s professional league established in the Philippines.

“Basketball is not just only for males. The NBL is also advocating gender equality. If there is a men’s league there is also for women,” said Mr. Mitra.

NBL officials thanked the GAB for approving its application which will give more opportunities to men and women players.

“Just like we envisioned from the beginning, we are now reaping the results,” said Mr. Mercado in Filipino.

“The concept of the league is clear, which is to grow homegrown talents and with us turning professional we believe we can take it further,” he added.

The NBL was created in 2018 with the Parañaque Aces and the Taguig Generals winning the first two seasons. The third season is currently on hold due to the coronavirus pandemic but the league is planning to stage a bubble in San Fernando, Pampanga.

The WNBL, meanwhile, was established in 2019 with the PSI Lady Air Defenders winning the inaugural season and national team standout Janine Pontejos capturing the most valuable player award.

“Today is a special day for all our homegrown players. Today is the day for women’s players who have been dreaming of playing in a professional women’s league,” said Ms. Montreal.

“I’m lost for words because in our three seasons of handling this homegrown league, we’ve seen athletes from the countryside and the provinces who actually tried their luck to play in Manila but after three or four years, they went back to their respective provinces to play for barangay leagues or governors’ cup. This is a big day not for the NBL but for the player,” she added.

COVID-19 re-infections raise immunity concern

AMSTERDAM/BRUSSELS — Two European patients are confirmed to have been re-infected with COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019), raising concerns about people’s immunity to the coronavirus as the world struggles to tame the pandemic.

The cases, in Belgium and the Netherlands, follow a report this week by researchers in Hong Kong about a man there who had contracted a different strain of the virus four and a half months after being declared recovered — the first such second infection to be documented.

That has raised fears about the efficacy of potential vaccines against the virus, which has killed hundreds of thousands of people, though experts say there would need to be many more cases of re-infection for these to be justified.

Belgian virologist Marc Van Ranst said the Belgian case was a woman who had contracted COVID-19 for the first time in March and then again with a different coronavirus strain in June. Further cases of re-infection were likely to surface, he said.

Van Ranst told Reuters TV the woman, in her 50s, had very few antibodies after the first infection, although they might have limited the sickness. Re-infection cases were probably limited exceptions, he said, although it was too soon to tell and many were likely to surface in coming weeks.

He added that the new coronavirus appeared more stable than the influenza virus, but it was changing.

“Viruses mutate and that means that a potential vaccine is not going to be a vaccine that will last forever, for 10 years, probably not even five years. Just as for flu, this will have to be redesigned quite regularly,” he said.

Van Ranst, who sits on some Belgian COVID-19 committees, said vaccine designers would not be surprised.

“We would have loved the virus to be more stable than it is, but you can’t force nature.”

GENETIC TESTING
The National Institute for Public Health in the Netherlands said it had also observed a Dutch case of re-infection with a different strain of the virus.

“It is clear there has been a first and a second infection with a substantial quantity of virus. Enough to be able to determine the genetic code of the virus, that is what showed they were indeed different,” said Marion Koopmans, a leading virologist in the Netherlands and a member of the World Health Organization’s (WHO) scientific advisory group.

She added the elderly Dutch patient had a weakened immune system, which explained the patient’s situation. “People are worried and ask if re-infection is ‘standard.’ I don’t think it is,” she added.

WHO spokeswoman Margaret Harris told a UN briefing in Geneva regarding the Hong Kong case that, while there were anecdotal reports of re-infections, it was important to have clear documentation.

Some experts say it is likely that such cases are starting to emerge because of greater testing worldwide, rather than because the virus may be spreading differently.

Still, Dr. David Strain, a clinical senior lecturer at the University of Exeter and chair of the British Medical Association’s medical academic staff committee, said the cases were worrying for at least two reasons.

“The first is that it suggests that previous infection is not protective. The second is that it raises the possibility that vaccinations may not provide the hope that we have been waiting for.” — Reuters

China protests US spy plane incursion during military drills

HONG KONG — China has lodged “stern representations” with the United States, accusing it of sending a US U-2 reconnaissance plane into a no-fly zone over Chinese live-fire military drills on Tuesday, further ratcheting up tensions between Beijing and Washington.

China has long denounced US surveillance activities, while the United States has complained of “unsafe” intercepts by Chinese aircraft. While such missions happen regularly, for China to talk about them publicly is unusual.

China’s Defense Ministry said the U-2 flew without permission over a no-fly zone in the northern military region where live fire drills were taking place, “seriously interfering in normal exercise activities.”

This could easily have caused a misunderstanding or misjudgement or an “unexpected incident,” the ministry added.

“It was an act of naked provocation, and China is resolutely opposed to it, and have already lodged stern representations with the US side.”

In a statement, the US military said a U-2 flight was conducted in the Indo-Pacific region and it was “within the accepted international rules and regulations governing aircraft flights.”

“Pacific Air Forces personnel will continue to fly and operate anywhere international law allows, at the time and tempo of our choosing,” the US military said in the statement.

The U-2 aircraft can fly at over 70,000 feet and carry out reconnaissance activity from afar and would not necessarily have had to enter a no-fly zone.

While China did not say exactly where the incident took place, it is currently carrying out drills in the Bohai Sea. Other exercises are also happening in the Yellow Sea and South China Sea.

“China demands the US side immediately stop this kind of provocative behavior and take actual steps to safeguard peace and stability in the region,” the ministry added. — Reuters

Let light shine upon them

 

Face masks and face shields over the masks are now required in enclosed workplaces as well as other enclosed commercial establishments in Metro Manila and elsewhere. What used to be hospital protocol for the use of Personal Protective Equipment or PPE are now becoming more common even in workplaces such as service industries like salons and barbershops.

The difficult situation now for many businesses and households is the shortage in reasonably priced PPEs such as masks, face shields, and gloves. It took me numerous trips to the stores to finally get a box of gloves, settling for whatever size was available. There was also a prolonged search for retailers of suitable masks, both N95 and surgical types, and acceptable face shields. At some point, our household actually resorted to making our own cloth masks that make use of napkins as filters.

Lack of PPE supply, and increasing prices, make it difficult particularly for smaller businesses to continue operating. A firm with even just 10 employees will spend a significant amount of money daily for face masks and face shields as minimum requirements to remain compliant with present health and safety protocols set by the government. This is not to mention other requirements that must be met if one intends to remain open for business.

Then there are necessary disinfection protocols for businesses as well as households. As a matter of practice, all things coming from outside are best “disinfected” prior to bringing them into one’s residence. If feasible, the same should be done even for workplaces, especially those with workers who “commute” or travel with others in company shuttles.

Masks, the minimum safety standard, are usually disposable. But masks are now in short supply. Considering that this particular requirement applies to all who opt to leave the residence for whatever reason, there is significant cost involved in making masks available to all who need them. Then, there is the significant amount of possibly contaminated garbage generated daily from disposable masks.

For hospitals and workplaces, or even residences, that make use of a large volume of masks daily, the government should consider offering assistance in making available technologies and facilities that can allow the reuse particularly of the sturdier N95 and KN95 masks. There have been studies that show such masks — in times of crisis — may be reused, provided they are properly disinfected. But there are limited technologies for disinfecting what should be disposable masks.

There is a risk to reusing masks, of course. There are no guarantees that a mask can be 100% disinfected and at the same time retain its integrity. However, considering the situation now with supply and cost, as well as the demand, I believe that cost-effective disinfection technologies should be looked into urgently, and support should be extended to those offering such solutions.

UV technology or the use of medical-grade disinfecting ultraviolet light can be an option. This technology does not entail the use of chemicals; involve little to no “consumables” that escalate operating cost; and, is a mature technology that can be made readily available and has long been used to disinfect drinking water, waste water, air, pharmaceutical products, and surfaces against human pathogens in the last 40 years.

We refer here to Ultraviolet C or UVC ultraviolet radiation with wavelengths between 200 and 290 nm. From its natural source, the sun, studies indicate this type of radiation is filtered out by the ozone layer so that none reaches the earth’s surface. However, it can be produced for use in disinfection. Available literature indicates “Ultraviolet C is germicidal and is also used in ultraviolet phototherapy; and has been proved effective in disinfection processes.”

I concede that when it comes to COVID-19, there is nothing “tried and tested” or “proven effective” for the long-term. Thus, any intervention, when it comes to COVID-19, requires a leap of faith. However, the International Ultraviolet Association (IUVA) notes that “UV light, specifically between 200-280 nm (UVC or the germicidal range), inactivates (a.k.a., ‘kills’) at least two other coronaviruses that are near-relatives of the COVID-19 virus: 1) SARS-CoV-1 and 2) MERS-CoV.”

But it also notes that such “inactivation has been demonstrated under controlled conditions in the laboratory. The effectiveness of UV light in practice depends on factors such as the exposure time and the ability of the UV light to reach the viruses in water, air, and in the folds and crevices of materials and surfaces.”

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in the US, meanwhile, came out with a recent study on disinfecting face masks, and it noted that “disposable filtering facepiece respirators (FFRs) are not approved for routine decontamination and reuse as standard of care. However, FFR decontamination and reuse may need to be considered as a crisis capacity strategy to ensure continued availability. Based on the limited research available, ultraviolet germicidal irradiation [or UVGI], vaporous hydrogen peroxide, and moist heat showed the most promise as potential methods to decontaminate FFRs.”

The CDC added that “researchers, decontamination companies, healthcare systems, or individual hospitals should focus current efforts on these technologies.” As for UV germicidal irradiation, it also said that “disinfection efficacy is dependent on dose,” noting that “not all UV lamps provide the same intensity thus treatment times would have to be adjusted accordingly.” It also noted that use of UVGI requires precautions to avoid “exposure to skin or the eyes.”

We find ourselves in a crisis now, and I believe that disinfecting and reusing masks may no longer be a matter of choice soon enough. If things get any worse, disinfection and reuse may be necessary just to ensure sufficient supply of masks to all those who need them. I prefer UVGI for this primarily because it does not use disinfecting chemicals. The crude method of disinfecting N95 masks at home is through heat by placing N95 masks in an old rice cooker for at least 50 minutes. Between UVC and an old rice cooker, what would you rather trust?

Disinfecting masks is not just for hospitals, where the risk of exposure is probably higher than other work environments. Hospitals also have the risk of higher “viral load” — quantity of virus in a given volume of fluid like sputum or plasma. In short, I reckon people tend to get sick more from exposure in a hospital environment rather than in an open work environment.

If so, and UVGI disinfection may be deemed too risky for N95 masks used in hospitals, perhaps the method can be considered an option for disinfecting masks used in regular work environments. Perhaps in places like restaurants, or even hotels as well as casinos, where not only masks but other items like cellphones, playing cards, playing chips, etc. may be disinfected using UVC technology.

Larger work environments spend a hefty sum for masks for their workers. Being able to reuse an N95 mask maybe even for just five to eight times, rather than disposing of them immediately after a single use, by letting UV light shine upon them may go a long way in saving on mask supply for where they are needed most; in lowering business operating costs; and, minimizing the amount of garbage generated daily because of disposable PPEs.

 

Marvin Tort is a former managing editor of BusinessWorld, and a former chairman of the Philippines Press Council

matort@yahoo.com

Women have been better leaders than men during the pandemic

By Andreas Kluth

THE EVIDENCE IS IN: At least during the first wave of COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019), countries with female leaders suffered far lower death rates than comparable nations led by men. This doesn’t mean that the trend will necessarily persist in a second or third wave. Nor does it imply that women are also better leaders when it comes to whatever else governments find themselves doing, from reforming labor markets to waging war. But it’s worth pondering nonetheless.

In doing so, it’s of course tempting to descend into the netherworld of gender stereotypes and individual caricature. Donald Trump, president of the country with the most deaths from COVID-19, has communicated with an uninformed machismo that has provoked reactions ranging from shock to satire. Jair Bolsonaro, president of Brazil, the runner-up in coronavirus deaths, has pooh-poohed the disease as a “little flu.”

By contrast, Angela Merkel, chancellor of Germany, which has generally managed the outbreak well, has been impressed with explanations of the epidemiological R0 factor that went “viral” for their sobriety and clarity. Jacinda Ardern, prime minister of New Zealand, which has only 22 deaths from COVID-19 to date, has talked to Kiwis via Facebook Live from her home in a way that is casual and interactive but also reassuring and credible.

Erna Solberg, prime minister of Norway, with 264 deaths, has told her country’s children that “it’s OK to be scared when so many things happen at the same time,” acknowledging vulnerability even while projecting competence.

But in a new global analysis, Supriya Garikipati at the University of Liverpool and Uma Kambhampati at the University of Reading avoid stooping to mere anecdotes. Using data up to May 19, they matched the 19 countries led by women with their “nearest neighbors” according to a mix of factors including population, the economy, gender equality, openness to travel, health expenditures and the proportion of elderly people. They couldn’t use Taiwan (seven deaths), which is governed by a woman but doesn’t belong to the United Nations.

Their conclusion was unequivocal: On average, the countries run by women suffered half as many deaths from COVID-19 as the nations governed by men. And in individual pairings, “female” countries fared better than “male” ones. Why?

Part of the answer is that the female leaders generally ordered lockdowns much earlier, thus “flattening the curves” of their national outbreaks. Ardern, for instance, calls this approach “going hard and early” — she just went into another temporary lockdown after a new cluster of cases following 100 days of no local transmission at all. But that only raises the question of why women tend to come to that difficult decision so much faster than men.

One reason could be that women are more averse to risk, as most studies corroborate. But the choice facing leaders this spring wasn’t simply between more or less risk. It was a trade-off between one risk, that to life, and another, that of economic loss. So the difference between the men and women, as the study’s authors point out, was really that the women took less risk with lives and more with the economy, whereas men did the opposite. Over time, of course, death and economic loss become intertwined.

The women also tended to communicate very differently with citizens. It’s long been hypothesized that female leaders lean toward “a more democratic or participative style” whereas men are “more autocratic or directive.” That’s been hard to prove, but researchers are still studying whether women indeed bring more empathy to leadership or integrate more emotional information in their decision making.

An interpersonal, empathetic, and participatory approach certainly seems to help in managing a pandemic. This requires building and maintaining a consensus that the threat is serious, that sacrifice is necessary to protect others, and that individual liberties must be weighed against public-health considerations. And that kind of dialogue with citizens appears to be especially hard for strongmen and comparatively easier for other leaders, female or male.

Comparisons between the sexes invariably become frustrating, either verging on the stereotypical or the vague and woolly. We have no idea how the late “Iron Lady” Margaret Thatcher — or the Brittonic Queen Boudica, who gave short shrift to several Roman legions — would have managed COVID-19. In leadership, individual character and talent surely trumps gender and everything else.

That said, the pattern during this pandemic so far certainly suggests that the world could use much more female leadership. With only 19 countries of the 193 in the UN run by women, there’s plenty of room for improvement.

BLOOMBERG OPINION

Republicans feed their persecution complex

By Francis Wilkinson

THE Republican National Convention may be built around the cult of personality of Donald Trump, who is stronger, faster, smarter, richer, more magnanimous, truthful, and handsome than any human in history, but even the unparalleled glories of Trumpism are, in the end, mere reflections of the party’s true obsessions: persecution and aggression.

Those themes shape the rhetoric that conveys conservative values and inform the fantasies that occupy the party’s large and growing cohort of conspiracy theorists. They also reveal how thoroughly American conservatives view themselves as the unwilling subjects of liberal judgment, forever squirming beneath a hostile other’s gaze.

No healthy political party would elevate, and celebrate, the St. Louis couple whose great public contribution was pulling an AR-15 and a pistol on protesters who marched past the couple’s house on their way elsewhere. But Mark and Patricia McCloskey, who face low-level felony charges for “unlawful use of a weapon” and seem to have short-changed their palazzo taxes, are the quintessence of the GOP. First they felt persecuted by the presence of Black and brown strangers in their “quiet neighborhood.” Then they pulled out the home arsenal to wreak some vengeance.

In a long article in Politico this week, Tim Alberta spoke with Republicans about the wreckage of their party. The most concise accounting of moral and intellectual bankruptcy came from a longtime GOP congressional aide. “Owning the libs and pissing off the media,” Brendan Buck said to Alberta. “That’s what we believe in now. There’s really not much more to it.”

There’s a long, tragic backstory to all that, of course. But owning the libs and angering the media provide catharsis from the incessant moral demands and fact shaming that torment conservatives. Why do liberals and the news media always put the abductions and caging of migrant children in the harshest possible light? Why can’t Republicans be allowed to believe that Trump acted competently and vanquished the “Chinese virus”? Why all the censorious fact-checking?

Conservative victimization is the chaser that follows each shot of disaster — Iraq, Katrina, financial meltdown, Trump, COVID-19. The drinking ritual is so ingrained, and the inevitable liberal condemnation of the drunk drive home so dizzying, that large numbers of White Christian Republicans readily convince themselves that they are an oppressed minority, subject to greater discrimination than Blacks or LGBTQ Americans or even Muslims.

Writing more than a century ago, W.E.B. DuBois wrote of the “double consciousness” that American Blacks acquired as a survival mechanism. A Black American, DuBois wrote, is a dual being, who is “always looking at one’s self through the eyes of others, of measuring one’s soul by the tape of a world that looks on in amused contempt and pity.”

White conservatives are not a brutalized minority in an authoritarian system enforced by racial terrorism, as the subjects of DuBois book, The Souls of Black Folk, from which the passage above is taken, emphatically were. But as liberal facts, however self-serving, continue to shame (“own”) conservative fantasy, conservatives are acquiring their own version of double consciousness, viewing themselves through the real or imagined condescension — “amused contempt and pity” — of liberal enforcers. That the hated liberal cities, powered by mistrusted high-education elites, have been the economic engine of the nation only heightens resentment and justifies further backlash.

Metaphorically outgunned, conservatives stockpile genuine arms. Perceiving themselves caricatured by sneering elites, they watch nightly Fox News caricatures of liberalism. Culture war and racial Armageddon, with the prospect of various shades of Obamanauts ruling the land in perpetuity, threaten the conservative homeland like nothing before. These threats sanctify the most reckless counterattacks, including potentially fatal assaults on democracy and rule of law.

Persecution, or the perception of it, has hardened the conservative soul, which wasn’t all that pliable to begin with. As Dallas pastor Robert Jeffress famously said in 2016, a thuggish president isn’t a moral and political calamity; it’s the answer to White evangelical prayers. “I want the meanest, toughest, son-of-a-you-know-what I can find in that role, and I think that’s where many evangelicals are,” he explained. Better to wreck everything than let liberals run it.

This week’s convention marks another milestone in hazy double consciousness and the interplay of persecution and aggression. Conservatives rightly assume that liberals expect an embarrassing carnival of grifters, racists, and demagogues. To own the libs, Republicans will exceed their expectations. 

BLOOMBERG OPINION

Tax competition, not exemption

Governments around the world have to grapple with raising new revenues because their lockdown policies have crippled the businesses and people that pay them regular taxes while they expanded public borrowings. Raising tax rates would appear very insensitive — the likely direction is to cut taxes to help ailing businesses and this might lead to a new round of tax competition among neighboring countries and economies.

The Philippines, through the Department of Finance (DoF) has proposed a drastic reduction in the corporate income tax (CIT) under the Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprises Act (CREATE) bill. The current 30% will become 25% in the year of its legislation, then there will be a 1% per year reduction starting 2023 until it reaches 20% in 2027. Very good move by the DoF, among the few instances where I support them.

Five major East Asian economies have CIT of 16.5% to 20% — HK, Singapore, Thailand, Taiwan, and Vietnam. When the Philippines attain the 20% CIT by 2027, these economies may cut their rates further. Indonesia had a CIT of 25% until 2019 and brought it down to 22% this year — the law was made before the pandemic.

The Philippines’ high CIT and withholding tax for dividends, interest, and royalties, are among the disincentives for the entry of foreign direct investments (FDI) which is the lowest among the country’s more mature and developed neighbors. Our FDI inward stock (net of inflows less outflows through the years) was only $88 billion in 2019 (see the table).


The DoF has noted the country’s low tax efficiency. In CIT, our 30% collects only 3.7% of GDP or an efficiency of only 12.3%, vs Thailand’s 20% that collects 5% of GDP or 25.2% efficiency, or Vietnam’s 20% that collects 7.3% of GDP or 36.5% efficiency.

When it comes to VAT efficiency, the country’s 12% collects only 4.3% of GDP or 35.7% efficiency, vs Thailand’s 10% that collects 4.1% of GDP or 59% efficiency, or Vietnam’s 10% that collects 6.1% of GDP or 61% efficiency.

Aside from lower CIT, the CREATE bill has two other important provisions — lengthen the net operating loss carry over (NOLCO) from three to five years, and maintain the 5% gross income earned (GIE) up to nine years with the sunset period changed from two to seven years to four to nine years. Corporate losses this year can be carried up to the next five years under the NOLCO to reduce tax liabilities of companies, assuming they have survived these horrible, strict, indefinite and no timetable lockdowns which have crippled if not killed thousands of SMEs already.

Speaking of discouraging or disallowing tax exemptions, there is one sector that has a horrible lobby, the electric vehicles (EVs, those e-cars, e-UVs, e-bikes, e-trikes…). They want their EVs to have exemptions or reductions on import tariffs, excise tax, and VAT; they also want exemptions on import tariff and VAT for their charging equipment. Plus various non-fiscal incentives.

When the government wants more revenues and you exempt some sectors from tax, this means you will have to hike taxes of other sectors — bad. The TRAIN law imposed higher excise tax rates for petroleum products and the regular cars, UVs, but the EVs want zero tax — how horrible and crony-like could that be?

Meanwhile, the Department of Health — initiated drug price dictatorship policy has wreaked havoc on the financials of innovator pharma — the companies that produce new medicines, new vaccines — while favoring the non-innovator, generic, and local pharma. Criteria #4 of EO 104 imposes price controls on innovator, more effective, more-prescribed medicines hoping that there will be product pull out so that the less effective, less-prescribed medicines by local pharma will be left to make more money.

Some lessons and conclusions that can be derived from the above discussions are the following: One, improve revenue efficiency via lower tax rate with little or few exemptions in CIT, withholding tax, VAT, others. Two, ignore the EVs tax exemption lobby, and slap them with existing import and excise tax rates as regular vehicles. Three, price controls for one group of manufacturers and favoritism for another group is plain cronyism. And, four, have the rule of law always, the law applies equally to unequal people and sectors. Tax hikes or tax cuts or zero taxes on one sector should apply to all other sectors or sub-sectors.

 

Bienvenido S. Oplas, Jr. is the president of Minimal Government Thinkers

minimalgovernment@gmail.com