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NIA finishes P631-million irrigation project in Ilocos Sur

NATIONAL IRRIGATION ADMINISTRATION PHOTO RELEASE

THE NATIONAL Irrigation Administration (NIA) reported on Monday the completion of the P631-million Barbar Small Reservoir Irrigation Project in San Juan, Ilocos Sur.

NIA said in a statement the project, to be inaugurated on May 6, is estimated to benefit 1,156 farmers in 11 villages in the neighboring towns of San Juan and Magsingal.

The project has a service area of 846 hectares and includes the establishment of an earthfill dam that has a storage capacity of 861,000 cubic meters. The dam is situated across the Bical River.

“Access roads were constructed simultaneously with the lateral canals having the same length with the latter, providing mobility and accessibility for farmers and their farms inputs and products,” NIA said.

The agency said the structure will also help address flooding in the area since it is capable of storing typhoon water that can be used for irrigation. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

Reforming corporate income inequality

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VECTORJUICE-FREEPIK

Last year, the Economic Policy Institute reported that the ratio of CEO to average employee pay in the top US companies increased from a low 31 to one in 1978, 61 to one in 1989, 118 to one in 1995, to a whopping 320 to one in 2019. My mind reels at such inequality, but there’s more.

The New York Times reported recently that despite the terrible impacts of the pandemic on corporate bottom lines and jobs, the CEOs of some of the hardest hit companies were “showered in riches.” Hilton laid off almost a quarter of its staff because of pandemic-related losses of $720 million, but CEO Chris Nassetta was compensated with $55 million in 2020. Boeing reported a really bad 2020 with a $12-billion loss and plans to lay off 30,000 employees, but CEO David Calhoun received $21.1 million in compensation.

What’s going on? Shouldn’t these companies be more sensitive to the plight of their employees, especially during these difficult times? If they can afford to pay their top executives so much, shouldn’t they channel the money instead to keeping more employees on the payroll during these tough times? Wouldn’t this be the decent thing to do?

Dan Price, CEO of Seattle-based Gravity Payments, thinks so. Even before the pandemic, he lowered his million-dollar salary in order to increase his employees’ pay to $70,000 over three years. His research had shown that this was the level of salary that would free his employees from financial worries so that they could meet their needs and focus on being good at their work. The results were higher levels of employee productivity and much more business for Gravity Payments that more than offset the cost of the higher employee pay.

When the pandemic came and the company’s business volume fell by half, employees volunteered to take pay cuts so that all of them could keep their jobs. After that, Gravity Payments aggressively helped small businesses devastated by the pandemic to digitally transform and turn their businesses around. As a result, the company managed to recover from its own pandemic losses and repay everyone’s voluntary pay cuts.

The case of Gravity Payments shows what can happen when business leaders are in solidarity with employees and have the acumen to grow customers while giving employees just compensation and benefits. This is a crucial part of stakeholder capitalism that is being promoted by the Management Association of the Philippines, Shareholders Association of the Philippines, and other business associations through the Covenant for Shared Prosperity.

Stakeholder capitalism is essential in building a robust society supported by business activity. One of the major challenges is extreme inequality in corporate incomes. This is why the World Economic Forum recommends the monitoring of the ratio of CEO pay to average employee pay in companies. High ratios of CEO to average employee pay are not sustainable. In fact, they are often exploitative because employees are not paid justly based on their contribution to the company’s output.

The English economist Arthur Cecile Pigou, in The Economics of Welfare, explained that when workers’ real wages are below their contribution to a firm’s productivity, they are being exploited. This kind of exploitation can be observed in many types of corporate situations where people may be fully employed but compensated so low that they are barely able to meet their basic needs. This is the main reason that Price increased his employees’ pay. He had learned from a close employee that she had to get a second job just to cover her basic expenses. He, therefore, found his million-dollar paycheck simply unconscionable, and made the necessary adjustments.

More executives need to follow the example of Price and Gravity Payments. We are finding it hard to cope with the pandemic because so many of our people, even those who are employed, live in unhealthy conditions and have little access to quality healthcare. Physical distancing among the urban poor is nearly impossible, with many of them living in crowded quarters that they can barely afford. Companies who are paying their executives generously while their workers are struggling need to take a hard look at their compensation policies.

The goals of the Philippines’ nation-building project are spelled out in the Constitution: full employment, the eradication of poverty, and a rising quality of life for all. High corporate growth since the late 1990s and leading to the pandemic did not decrease poverty fast enough to bring us at par with neighboring countries like Thailand or Malaysia, or even Vietnam. Is it because the lion’s share of the fruits of growth went to executives? I think so — and this needs to change.

 

Dr. Benito L. Teehankee is the Jose E. Cuisia Professor of Business Ethics and Head of the Business for Human Development Network at De La Salle University.

benito.teehankee@dlsu.edu.ph

Tax Guide on CREATE Law

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VECTORJUICE-FREEPIK

(1st of 2 parts)

On March 26 this year, President Duterte signed into law RA 11534, otherwise known as the Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprises (CREATE) Act. It is another landmark legislation of the Duterte Administration which took effect on April 11.

The CREATE Act is the second package of the Comprehensive Tax Reform Program that reduces the corporate income tax (CIT) rate from 30% to 20%. The following are its salient features:

1. CIT rate is reduced from 30% to 25% for large corporations, and 20% for small and medium corporations with net taxable income not exceeding P5 million, and total assets not exceeding P100 million (excluding land) effective July 1, 2020;

2. Minimum CIT (MCIT) rate is reduced from 2% to 1% effective July 1, 2020 to June 30, 2023;

3. Percentage Tax is reduced from 3% to 1% effective July 1, 2020 to June 30, 2023;

4. The improperly accumulated earnings tax shall no longer be imposed on corporations upon the effectivity of the CREATE onwards;

5. Qualified export enterprises shall be entitled to four to seven years Income Tax Holiday (ITH) to be followed by 10 years 5% Special CIT (SCIT) or enhanced deductions;

6. Qualified domestic market enterprises shall be entitled to four to seven years ITH to be followed by five years enhanced deductions;

7. Registered enterprises are exempt from customs duty on importation of capital equipment, raw materials, spare parts, or accessories directly and exclusively used in the registered project or activity;

8. Value-Added Tax (VAT) exemption on importation and VAT zero-rating on local purchases shall only apply to goods and services directly and exclusively used in the registered project or activity by a Registered Business Enterprise (RBE);

9. For investments prior to the effectivity of CREATE, RBEs granted only an ITH shall continue with the availment of the ITH for the remaining period of the ITH while RBEs granted an ITH + 5% Gross Income Tax (GIT) or currently enjoying 5% GIT shall be allowed to avail of the 5% GIT for 10 years.

The Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) issued several revenue regulations to fully implement the CREATE Law. For easy reference, here’s a summary list of revenue issuances dated April 8, 2021:

a. RR No. 2-2021 which amends certain provisions of RR No. 2-98, as amended, to implement the amendments introduced by the CREATE Act to the National Internal Revenue Code (NIRC) of 1997, as amended, relative to the Final Tax on certain passive income;

b. RR No. 3-2021 prescribes the rules and regulations to implement Section 3 of the CREATE Act, amending Section 20 of NIRC of 1997;

c. RR No. 4-2021 implements the provisions on VAT and Percentage Tax under the CREATE Act, which further amended the NIRC of 1997, as amended, as implemented by RR No. 16-2005, as amended;

d. RR No. 5-2021 implements new Income Tax rates on the regular income of corporations, on certain passive incomes, including additional allowable deductions from Gross Income of persons engaged in business or practice of profession pursuant to the CREATE Act, which further amended the NIRC of 1997.

To serve as a tax guide especially for small and medium enterprises (SMEs), here are some of the most frequently asked questions on the CREATE Law:

1. Will small businesses benefit from CREATE law? How about one-person corporations?

Yes. Small corporations including one-person corporations with net taxable income not exceeding P5 million and total assets not exceeding P100 million (excluding land) will be subject to only 20% CIT effective July 1, 2020.

2. Is the reduced percentage tax from 3% to 1% applicable even to individual taxpayers?

Yes. It’s applicable to all non-VAT registered taxpayers with annual gross sales of P3 million and below, effective July 1, 2020 to June 30, 2023.

3. If you filed an annual income tax return before the issuance of revenue regulations on CREATE law, can you amend it to apply the reduced CIT rate?

Yes. RMC 46-2021 allows amendment of filed tax returns on or before May 15, 2021 without penalty. Any excess payment due to the reduced tax rate may be carried over as credit in the next period or may be filed for refund.

4. Is there a reduced income tax rate of 20% applicable to foreign corporations?

No. It’s only for domestic MSME corporations. Foreign corporations subject to the regular rate will use 25% similar to other domestic corporations.

5. Are non-stock and non-profit proprietary educational institutions still exempt under the CREATE law? How about the non-profit and proprietary educational institutions and hospitals?

Yes. The income tax exemptions granted to non-stock and non-profit proprietary educational institutions were not repealed. Non-profit and proprietary educational institutions will be subject to a reduced special rate of 1% effective July 1, 2020 to June 30, 2023.

To know more about the CREATE law, you can watch the BIR’s free webinar on its Facebook and YouTube channel. You may also join the Elite Taxpayer Circle and attend the exclusive CREATE webinar for free which was organized by the Asian Consulting Group. For inquiries, send an e-mail to consult@acg.ph or call +632 7622-7720.

This article reflects the personal opinion of the author and does not reflect the official stand of the Management Association of the Philippines or MAP.

 

Raymond “Mon” A. Abrea is a member of the MAP Ease of Doing Business Committee, the Founding Chair and Senior Tax Advisor of the Asian Consulting Group and the Co-Chair of the Paying Taxes — EODB Task Force. He is Trustee of the Center for Strategic Reforms of the Philippines — the advocacy partner of the Bureau of Internal Revenue, Department of Trade and Industry, and Anti-Red Tape Authority on ease of doing business and tax reform.

map@map.org.ph

mon@acg.ph

map.org.ph

Asia’s obsession with food and beauty has a dark side

FREEPIK

AT A RECENT doctor’s visit, my endocrinologist admonished me for gaining two pounds. “You’re not obese” — I’m not even close — “but it’s something to watch,” he told me.

I left the appointment equal parts indignant and unsure. It wasn’t the first time I’d encountered this level of frankness about my body or appearance since moving to Asia. When I was pregnant in Hong Kong, my Chinese teacher confirmed that I must be having a boy. “Boys give mothers beauty, girls take it away,” she said. Years later, my property agent in Singapore was relieved to hear I was pregnant with my second child: “I thought you were just getting fat!”

This hyper-attentiveness to appearances comes alongside a cultural love affair with food. Singaporeans often joke that they start planning lunch as soon as breakfast is over, and “Have you eaten?” is a standard way of saying hello. As one put it, the aunties urging you to eat more are the first ones to tell you you’re fat.

Such competing social messages would be difficult to balance in the best of times. Add the isolation and anxiety of the COVID era, and it’s little wonder that eating disorders are a rising concern. Yet these conditions are still poorly understood, and people who suffer often believe they don’t need help, which makes diagnosis and proper treatment elusive. Despite all the straight-talk about beauty, conversations about eating disorders, and mental health in general, remain taboo in many parts of Asia. In this moment of ultimate social disconnection, such gaps can become a matter of life or death. 

For decades, the medical community believed that eating disorders such as anorexia and bulimia were a phenomenon affecting primarily White, wealthy, educated young women. The global spread was viewed as an unfortunate consequence of Westernization, the commercial assault of McDonald’s French fries wrapped up with the cultural assault of Kate Moss.

More recent research suggests this view isn’t quite accurate. A better way to think about this troubling trend is through the lens of development. Ascribing value to excessive thinness is the result of industrialization and urbanization — stages the West reached earlier than Asia — rather than the wholesale export of Western culture, according to a 2015 review in the Journal of Eating Disorders. In other words, the go-go-go lifestyle of economic aspiration — one that keeps track of everything from hours at the office and bonuses, to daily steps taken and photos liked — is to blame. If anything, symptoms associated with eating disorders can be more severe in South Korea, China, and Thailand than the US, the authors noted. One social media craze that rippled across China in 2016, for example, challenged people to cover their waists with a vertical piece of A4 paper, which is little more than eight inches wide.

In this light, our screen-bound era of Instagram escapism has worrisome ingredients. The influencer du jour might be quick to post photos of her turmeric-tinged juices, but certainly not the bag of chips she scarfed while scrambling to meet a deadline. Even those sweaty-chic workout selfies might be misleading. Meitu, a Chinese app that lets you do everything from reshaping your jawline to thinning your nose, has 115 million monthly active users. Beauty apps and other products owned by the eponymous company have been activated on 2.2 billion unique devices globally. The dangers of curated fantasy lives were present before COVID, but can be destabilizing without encountering fallible humans, in the flesh, on a regular basis.

More damaging than social media, however, can be family dynamics, according to Nishta Geetha Thevaraja, a senior psychologist at Singapore General Hospital. While researchers have debated the extent of genetics versus cultural triggers, many doctors agree that families play at least some role in the onset of eating disorders. In Asia, where young unmarried people often live with their parents, this can become a point of vulnerability. Roughly 27% of Singaporean households are families whose youngest member is 16 or older. During the city-state’s two-month lockdown last year, some sufferers were trapped in a 600-square-foot hive of dysfunction — a threat to any fragile efforts at healing.

It’s difficult to say how prevalent these illnesses have become in Singapore, given the lack of research. One study published late last year, citing this deficit, found that 63% of participants screened positive for eating disorders or were at high risk of developing one. Fewer than 2% of those in the former group reported currently being in treatment.

The toll is serious: Anorexia nervosa, characterized by severely restricted food intake, has the highest death rate of any mental disorder, according to the US government-run National Institute of Mental Health. An added complication is that many cases go unreported or get swept up with other ailments, including anxiety, depression, and, for binge eaters, even diabetes, says Dawn Soo, the Asia-Pacific medical director at Cigna International Markets. One study of university women in Singapore found that only 14% could correctly identify symptoms of bulimia, which is characterized by gorging on unusually large amounts of food and ridding the body of it. Almost 40% attributed the traits to low self-esteem.

That bodes ill for treatment. Parents have been unhappy with rehabilitation programs, citing health professionals’ limited knowledge, sparse explanations, poor communication, and a perceived lack of empathy from doctors, among other issues, according to a study of ethnic Chinese adolescents battling anorexia in Hong Kong. The suggested tactics overwhelmingly focused on weight restoration, as opposed to psychological support. Certain approaches, such as home-diet monitoring, were viewed as a “harsh task” that strained the relationship with their children, the authors found. Families were broadly left to figure things out for themselves.

Navigating recovery can be equally difficult for adults. Sam, 43, grew up in the UK and has been living in Hong Kong for four years. She has been battling with anorexia for more than two decades, and was also diagnosed with anxiety, depression, and post-traumatic stress disorder. Sam recalls telling herself that she was fat, ugly, stupid, unlovable, useless, and worthless, and came close to being hospitalized in her early 30s for her own safety.

“Unfortunately, with the exception of my husband who has been at my side every step of the way, my family, friends, and work colleagues stayed away and pretended that nothing was wrong,” she wrote in an e-mail. Even her healthcare professionals made mistakes: A general practitioner at one point told Sam she was “very fat.”

Yet fear of saying the wrong thing shouldn’t be an impediment to helping. Look for warning signs, such as obsessional thoughts about food that get in the way of concentrating on anything else. Some people with eating disorders struggle to make conversation at the dinner table beyond the menu, or fall silent to mental calorie-counting. It’s important to give as much attention to these behaviors as weight gain or loss, because some people who suffer eating disorders, such as bulimia or binge eating, appear to be of normal weight or overweight.

When you’re ready to make an approach, try to avoid listing potential health risks, coercions to eat, or prosecutorial questions, such as, “Why are you doing this to yourself?” More productive would be expressing your worry and desire to help. If you notice physical changes, ask how that person feels, rather than focusing on the weight gain or loss, according to Odile Thiang, a clinical adviser at Mind Hong Kong, a mental health charity. A breakthrough will likely take a few attempts.

For some people with eating disorders, the lack of structure during COVID has been debilitating, at times triggering an urge to maintain control with extreme dieting and exercise. For others, the disruption led to even darker places, eventually resulting in death. If the past year taught us anything, it was the value of taking better care of ourselves. To curb these afflictions, it’s important we take better care of each other, too.

BLOOMBERG OPINION

What is the optimal energy mix?

The Department of Energy (DoE) released the Philippines Power Statistics 2020 this week and it shows some interesting data on the country’s energy mix. Installed capacity in 2020 has reached 26,250 megawatts (MW) or 26.25 gigawatts (GW), and the four biggest energy technologies are coal, oil-based, hydro, and natural gas. In actual electricity generation, the four biggest sources are coal, natural gas, geothermal, and hydro (see Table 1).

There are three interesting pieces of data here. One, coal constituted 42% of total installed capacity in 2020 but its actual power generation was 57% of the total. The big increase in coal generation came from the Mindanao grid starting 2016 (double the 2015 level) through 2019 (double the 2016 level). There are no longer daily “Earth Hours” and regular blackouts in Mindanao.

Two, oil-based plants constituted 16% of total installed capacity but contributed only 2.4% of total power generation. This is because they are mostly used as peaking plants, meaning they run only on peak demand hours and days, and are not base load plants running 24/7.

Three, the combined power capacity of biomass, solar, and wind in 2020 was 7.3% of total but their actual power generation was only 3.5% of total. They remain marginal and nearly insignificant power producers after more than a decade since the Renewable Energy (RE) law of 2008 (RA 9513) was enacted.

The anti-coal activists continue to bully the Philippines private energy companies and government agencies even if the Philippines is a minor coal producer compared to many countries. Our 58.2 terawatt-hours (TWH) of coal power generation in 2020 was what Vietnam and Malaysia produced four to five years ago, what Indonesia produced 14 years ago, what Taiwan and South Korea produced 24 and 27 years ago (see Table 2).

Last week I saw two press releases gloating over the cancellation of the Redondo Peninsula 600 MW coal project in Subic:

1. “Green groups hail cancellation of Meralco Subic coal project, ask the same for Atimonan”

2. “Greenpeace to Meralco: drop all dirty energy projects, not just Subic coal plant.”

These are emotional statements based on rhetoric and not on actual energy realities. Here are three reasons why.

One, the anti-coal activists want full decarbonization of Meralco and other energy companies when actual data show that their favorite renewables — biomass, solar, and wind — will only assure us of large-scale blackouts as they contributed only 3.5% of total power generation in 2020.

Two, that Atimonan 1,200 MW ultra-supercritical coal project is a P160-B investment that can create lots of jobs and give the Philippines a very modern, efficient, and stable energy source.

Three, the real “dirty energy” are candles and gensets running on diesel, not coal plants. When you have frequent blackouts, the poor will buy candles (and risk more fires) while the rich will buy more gensets (which are more costly, more polluting).

A friend alerted me to one trend where some legislators become cozy with some rooftop solar companies seeking back channel subsidies in net metering. To avoid indirect subsidies, export energy should be at Wholesale Electricity Spot Market (WESM) rates while net metering customers should pay a minimum distribution charge to cover installed facilities, meter reading, etc.

Finally, here are three recent reports in BusinessWorld that caught my attention:

1. “Gov’t may expand role in power generation to build up reserves” (April 28),

2. “NPC sets minigrid, RE construction target of 5 megawatts this year” (May 2),

3. “House bill seeks to ban cross-ownership in power industry” (May 2).

Report numbers 1 and 2 show that the government may violate the EPIRA law of 2001 (RA 9136) where power generation has been transferred to the private sector to encourage more competition and discourage politics in the sector. Government power companies like the National Power Corp. (NPC) and the Power Sector Assets and Liabilities Management Corp. (PSALM) seem bent on staying around forever instead of fading away under the Electric Power Industry Reform Act (EPIRA).

Report number 3 shows that Bayan Muna continues its abolition-of-the-EPIRA agenda. A distribution utility can own power plants not necessarily to serve its needs but to supply power to various retail electricity suppliers (RES), electric cooperatives in other provinces.

EPIRA is not perfect but it remains a beautiful law. There is a clear division of function between the private sector as power generators and RES, and the government as regulator of power supply agreements and power pricing.

An optimal energy mix is one determined by the energy consumers themselves like the 2020 generation mix. Not by the government and legislators, not by leftist political parties like Bayan Muna, not by anti-coal activists who want to kill coal power competition and push RE favoritism and big gas companies shrewdly hiding behind a climate smokescreen.

 

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

minimalgovernment@gmail.com

Indonesia finds cases of Indian COVID-19 variant

JAKARTA – Indonesia has recorded its first cases of a highly infectious COVID-19 variant first detected in India, the health minister said on Monday, as authorities implored people not to travel to their hometowns for the end of the Muslim fasting month.

Indonesia, which has been trying to contain one of the worst COVID-19 outbreaks in Asia, stopped issuing visas last month for foreigners who had been in India in the previous 14 days.

The two cases of the Indian variant, known as B.1.617, were found in Jakarta, while the minister said a variant first discovered in South Africa was also detected in Bali.

“We need to contain these cases, while there are still only a few of them,” Budi Gunadi Sadikin told a virtual conference.

Scientists are studying whether the B.1.617 variant is to blame for India’s devastating second wave of infections.

The variant has now reached at least 17 countries including Britain, Switzerland and Iran, prompting some governments to close their borders to people traveling from India.

Authorities in Indonesia, which is the world’s largest Muslim-majority country, have banned the traditional mass exodus where people visit relatives for the Eid al-Fitr festival for a second year to curb COVID-19 transmission.

“Do not return to your hometown. Do not go on holiday in your hometown. Be patient,” Doni Monardo, the chief of Indonesia’s COVID-19 task force, told the same news conference.

But before the ban came into force on Thursday some were leaving now to beat the deadline.

“I just wanted to go home, what’s important is that we adhere to health protocols,” said Dasum, a 35-year-old driver from Central Java, speaking at a Jakarta bus station.

Indonesia has reported more than 1.67 million virus infections and 45,700 deaths since the start of the pandemic, though cases have been declining since peaking in January.

Nonetheless, the positivity rate, or the percentage of people tested who are found to have the disease, was still hovering at more than 12% on average last month. The World Health Organization considers positivity rates above 5% to be of concern. — Reuters 

One in two people globally lost income due to pandemic — poll

REUTERS
People walk inside a building in Tokyo, Japan Jan. 23, 2019. — REUTERS/ISSEI KATO

NAIROBI — One in two people worldwide saw their earnings drop due to the coronavirus, with people in low-income countries particularly hard hit by job losses or cuts to their working hours, research showed on Monday.

US-based polling company Gallup, which surveyed 300,000 people across 117 countries, found that half of those with jobs earned less because of COVID-19 pandemic disruptions. This translated to 1.6 billion adults globally, it said.

“Worldwide, these percentages ranged from a high of 76% in Thailand to a low of 10% in Switzerland,” said researchers in a statement.

In Bolivia, Myanmar, Kenya, Uganda, Indonesia, Honduras and Ecuador, more than 70% of people polled said they took home less than before the global health crisis. In the United States, this figure dropped to 34%.

The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) crisis has hit workers across the world, particularly women, who are over-represented in low-paid precarious sectors such as retail, tourism and food services.

A study by the international charity Oxfam on Thursday said the pandemic had cost women around the world $800 billion in lost income.

The Gallup poll found that more than half of those surveyed said they temporarily stopped working at their job or business — translating to about 1.7 billion adults globally.

In 57 countries including India, Zimbabwe, the Philippines, Kenya, Bangladesh, El Salvador, more than 65% of respondents said they stopped working for a time.

Countries where people were least likely to say they stopped working were predominantly developed, high-income countries.

Fewer than one in 10 of those who had jobs in Austria, Switzerland and Germany said they had stopped working temporarily. In the US, the figure was 39%, research showed.

The poll also showed that one in three people surveyed lost their job or business due to the pandemic — translating into just over one billion people globally.

These figures also varied across nations with lower income countries such as the Philippines, Kenya and Zimbabwe showing more than 60% of respondents lost their jobs or businesses, compared to 3% in Switzerland and 13% in the United States. —  Thomson Reuters Foundation

China seen acting more ‘aggressively’ abroad

STOCK PHOTO | Image by SW1994 from Pixabay

WASHINGTON — US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in an interview that aired on Sunday that China had recently acted “more aggressively abroad” and was behaving “increasingly in adversarial ways.”

Asked by CBS News’ 60 Minutes if Washington was heading toward a military confrontation with Beijing, Mr. Blinken said: “It’s profoundly against the interests of both China and the United States to, to get to that point, or even to head in that direction.”

He added: “What we’ve witnessed over the last several years is China acting more repressively at home and more aggressively abroad. That is a fact.”

Asked about the reported theft of hundreds of billions of dollars or more in US trade secrets and intellectual property (IP) by China, Mr. Blinken said the Biden administration had “real concerns” about the IP issue.

He said it sounded like the actions “of someone who’s trying to compete unfairly and increasingly in adversarial ways. But we’re much more effective and stronger when we’re bringing like-minded and similarly aggrieved countries together to say to Beijing: ‘This can’t stand and it won’t stand.’”

The Chinese Embassy in Washington did not immediately respond on Sunday to a request for comment on Blinken’s interview.

On Friday, President Joseph R.  Biden’s administration said China had fallen short on its commitments to protect American intellectual property in the “Phase 1” US-China trade deal signed last year.

The commitments were part of the sweeping deal between former President Donald Trump’s administration and Beijing, which included regulatory changes on agricultural biotechnology and commitments to purchase some $200 billion in US exports over two years.

Mr. Blinken arrived in London on Sunday for a G7 (Group of 7) foreign ministers meeting where China is one of the issues on the agenda.

In the interview, Mr. Blinken said the United States was not aiming to “contain China” but to “uphold this rules-based order — that China is posing a challenge to. Anyone who poses a challenge to that order, we’re going to stand up and — and defend it.”

Mr. Biden has identified competition with China as his administration’s greatest foreign policy challenge. In his first speech to Congress last Wednesday, he pledged to maintain a strong US military presence in the Indo-Pacific and to boost US technological development. 

Mr. Blinken said he speaks to Mr. Biden “pretty close to daily.”

Last month, Mr. Blinken said the United States was concerned about China’s aggressive actions against Taiwan and warned it would be a “serious mistake” for anyone to try to change the status quo in the western Pacific by force.

The United States has a long-standing commitment under the Taiwan Relations Act to ensure that self-governing Taiwan has the ability to defend itself and to sustain peace and security in the western Pacific, Mr. Blinken said.

Taiwan has complained over the past few months of repeated missions by China’s air force near the island, which China claims as its own. — Reuters

India’s coronavirus case total nears 20 million

A MAN is consoled by his relative as he sees the body of his father, who died from the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), before his burial at a graveyard in New Delhi, India, April 16. — REUTERS
REUTERS

BENGALURU — India on Monday reported more than 300,000 new coronavirus cases for a 12th straight day, taking its overall caseload to just shy of 20 million, while deaths from coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) rose by 3,417.

With 368,147 new cases over the past 24 hours, India’s total infections stand at 19.93 million, while total fatalities are 218,959, according to health ministry data.

Medical experts say real numbers across the country of 1.35 billion may be five to 10 times higher than the official tally.

Hospitals have filled to capacity, medical oxygen supplies have run short and morgues and crematoriums have been swamped as the country deals with the surge in cases.

At least 11 states and union territories have imposed some form of restrictions to try and stem infections, but Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government is reluctant to impose a national lockdown, concerned about the economic impact.

“In my opinion, only a national stay at home order and declaring a medical emergency will help to address the current healthcare needs,” Bhramar Mukherjee, an epidemiologist with the University of Michigan said on Twitter.

“The number of active cases is accumulating, not just the daily new cases. Even the reported numbers state there are around 3.5M active cases.”

The spike in infections is India’s biggest crisis since Mr. Modi took office in 2014. Mr. Modi has been criticized for not taking steps earlier to curb the spread and for letting millions of largely unmasked people attend religious festivals and crowded political rallies in five states during March and April.

A forum of scientific advisers set up by the government warned Indian officials in early March of a new and more contagious variant of the coronavirus taking hold in the country, five scientists who are part of the forum told Reuters.

Despite the warning, four of the scientists said the federal government did not seek to impose major restrictions to stop the spread of the virus.

It remains to be seen how his handling of the crisis might affect Mr. Modi or his party politically. The next general election is due in 2024. Mr. Modi’s party was defeated in India’s West Bengal state in results declared on Sunday, although it won in the neighboring state of Assam.

Leaders of 13 opposition parties on Sunday signed a letter urging Mr. Modi to immediately launch free national vaccination and to prioritize oxygen supply to hospitals and health centres.

Several states have postponed widening a vaccination drive for adults that was to start on Saturday due to a lack of vaccines. The national health ministry says states have 10 million vaccines stockpiled and 2 million more coming in the next three days.

Despite being the world’s biggest producer of vaccines, India does not have enough for itself — undermining a plan to ramp up and widen inoculation from Saturday. Only about 9% of its 1.4 billion people have had a dose.

India has struggled to increase capacity beyond 80 million doses a month due to lack of raw materials and a fire at the Serum Institute, which makes the AstraZeneca vaccine.

International aid has been pouring into India.

Britain will send another 1,000 ventilators to India, the government said on Sunday. Prime ministers Boris Johnson and Mr. Modi are scheduled to talk on Tuesday.

The Indian COVID-19 variant has now reached at least 17 countries including Britain, Switzerland and Iran, leading several governments to close their borders to people travelling from India. — Reuters

PBA trying to be proactive in push for Season 46

THE PBA is seeking ways to augment the immediate start of its delayed Season 46. — PBA IMAGES

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

WHEN Season 46 of the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) will start remains up in the air, but the league is staying proactive and weighing all options to get the ball rolling at the soonest possible time.

Originally set to begin on April 18, the new PBA season was deferred to a still-to-be-determined date, now dependent on whether the number of coronavirus cases will go down, league officials had been told by the government.

The league, however, remains hopeful that the coronavirus situation here will swing for the better just as it is seeking ways to augment the immediate start of its delayed season.

One of the things it is currently looking at is finding an alternate venue for its member teams to at least begin training and scrimmages in preparation for the eventual start of the season, with Batangas City as a possible venue.

With Metro Manila and the nearby provinces of Bulacan, Rizal, Cavite, and Laguna still under stricter quarantine restrictions and are not allowed to host any sporting activities, the PBA is hoping to squeeze in preparatory work by going outside said areas.

“Batangas is near [Metro Manila] and has more relaxed restrictions. Maybe, it can accommodate us. It is important that the teams get to scrimmage and prepare before the season starts,” said PBA governor Alfrancis Chua of Barangay Ginebra in a media briefing last week.

Mr. Chua and PBA commissioner Willie Marcial met with Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea and Senator Bong Go in Malacañang last Wednesday where they presented the league’s recalibrated plans for its Season 46.

They said the officials were warm to the idea of staging the new season but underscored that it all hinges on whether the pandemic situation in the country, particularly the number of coronavirus cases, will improve in the coming weeks.

The PBA’s request, they said, was to be forwarded to the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID) for review and approval.

The league is hoping to at least begin Season 46 by June so it can still stage a two-conference season designed to give local basketball fans more action amid the pandemic.

At the weekend, the PBA’s Batangas push gained significant headway as Mr. Marcial reported that the local officials agreed to host the practices of the teams.

The PBA official said he spoke to both Batangas City Mayor Beverley Dimacuha and Congressman Marvey Marino, who expressed their willingness to have their city as a venue pending approval of other requirements.

“The LGU has agreed to host us. Now, we have to fulfil the requirements under the JAO (Joint Administrative Order) of the Department of Health, Games and Amusements Board, and Philippine Sports Commission. After that, and upon approval, maybe our teams can start practices in May,” said Mr. Marcial.

He went on to say that venues committed by the LGU are the Batangas City Coliseum and Batangas State University Gym.

The league is set to meet with authorities of Batangas City in the coming days to further thresh out details, including health and safety protocols, of the hosting.

Other matters the league is working on are the availability of vaccines for the entire PBA family, which it sees as providing stability and flexibility for the league in pushing for its plans moving forward; and crafting measures to cushion the impact of the pandemic on its financials.

The PBA only had one tournament played last year because of the pandemic under a “bubble” setup held at Clark City in Angeles, Pampanga.

Antetokounmpo stars with 49 points as Bucks edge Nets

GIANNIS Antetokounmpo scored a season-high 49 points to lead the Milwaukee Bucks past the Brooklyn Nets (117-114). — MILWAUKEE BUCKS FB PAGE

GIANNIS Antetokounmpo scored a season-high 49 points Sunday afternoon and outdueled Kevin Durant as the host Milwaukee Bucks edged the Brooklyn Nets (117-114).

Antetokounmpo, who missed Friday’s game against the Chicago Bulls with an ankle injury, delivered the dunk that put the Bucks ahead for good with 7:57 left. The 49 points were the third-most of his career and his most since he scored 50 points against the Utah Jazz on Nov. 25, 2019.

Khris Middleton had 26 points and 11 rebounds as the Bucks (40-24) maintained their hopes of finishing first in the Eastern Conference for the third straight season. Milwaukee closed within 2 1/2 games of the East-leading Nets (43-22) and Philadelphia 76ers (42-21), who were scheduled to play the San Antonio Spurs later on Sunday.

Jrue Holiday had 18 points and Bryn Forbes 12 points for the Bucks.

Durant tied a season-high with 42 points but missed a pair of potential game-tying three-pointers in the final 30 seconds, including a shot that glanced off the rim just before the buzzer.

DeAndre Jordan finished with 10 points and 11 rebounds, and Kyrie Irving scored 20 points. Off the bench, Landry Shamet netted 17 points and Blake Griffin added 11.

The Nets led by as many as 14 in the first quarter before the Bucks chipped away in the second, when they went on a quarter-ending 18-9 run to take a 62-59 lead. Holiday’s three-pointer tied the score at 52-52 with 3:20 left, and Forbes’ three-pointer put Milwaukee ahead 57-54 — its first lead since 2-0.

The Bucks led by as many as seven in the third, which ended with three lead changes and one tie in the final 1:30. A jumper by Antetokounmpo tied the score at 90-90 before Holiday missed a three-pointer and Brook Lopez whiffed on a putback just before the buzzer.

Griffin and Shamet opened the fourth with three-pointers for the Nets, but Middleton scored six straight points to spark the Bucks’ 11-0 run that included Antetokounmpo’s go-ahead dunk.

Milwaukee twice led by seven before the Nets pulled within three points three times. Brooklyn was 0-for-3 on potential game-tying 3-pointers, with Irving missing a chance to knot the score with 1:28 remaining. — Reuters

Karateka Tsukii grabs gold in Lisbon meet, pads Olympic hopes

FILIPINO-JAPANESE karateka Junna Tsukii won a gold medal at the 2021 Karate 1 Premier League in Lisbon, Portugal, late Sunday, padding her push to qualify for the Tokyo Olympics later this year. — JUNNA TSUKII FB PAGE

FILIPINO-JAPANESE karateka Junna Tsukii won the gold in the female kumite -50 kg division at the 2021 Karate 1 Premier League in Lisbon, Portugal, late on Sunday.

Ms. Tsukii, 29, beat Moldir Zhangbyrbay of Kazakhstan (2-0) in the final to win the top prize in her division and pad her push to qualify for the Tokyo Olympics later this year.

The gold-winning feat was a culmination of an impressive run of the Philippine karate bet in the tournament which took place from April 30 to May 2.

She began with a first-round bye before dominating Colombia’s Daniela Gallego (10-2) in the second round.

In the next stage, Ms. Tsukii upset world no. 3 karateka Sara Bahmanyar of Iran (2-1) to book a place in the quarterfinals.

The quarters had her facing world number six Radwa Sayed of Egypt. The contest ended in a 1-1 draw. But having recorded more flags, 3-2, in the match, Ms. Tsukii was the one who advanced to the semifinals.

In the Final Four, the Filipino-Japanese karateka had a relatively easier time, sending world number eight Alexandra Recchia of France to a 2-0 defeat.

On her Facebook page, Ms. Tsukii celebrated the huge win after.

“Look at my first gold medal on the world caliber stage. I would like to thank everyone who has supported me to this point. This medal is for YOU,” she wrote with a photo of her wearing her gold medal.

Ms. Tsukii, currently eighth in her division (third in Asia) in the Tokyo Olympic qualifying standings, is seeking to break the top four in the world to book an automatic spot in the Games.

She, along with the other members of the national karate team, is also eyeing the world Olympic karate qualifiers in Paris, France, set for June as a springboard to the Olympics. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo