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Making it happen: Harmonizing efforts to promote investments

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It is comforting to know that amid the political theatrics currently taking place, the Marcos Jr. administration is able to tone down the noise and keep its focus on what it deems more consequential in terms of materially improving the lives of the people.

Specifically, the pursuit of making the Philippines a sound investment destination, which has always been a daunting task.

It remains the goal, nonetheless. The benefits of investments, both foreign and domestic, are universally accepted. Investments provide a multiplier effect of economic possibilities. They bring jobs and income, increase people’s consumption power, give rise to economic activity, stimulate infrastructure development, and reinforce technological advancement.

The government has also recognized the Philippines’ key advantages: a powerful workforce of young, dynamic, and resilient Filipinos, abundant natural resources, and a strategic position at the center of the Indo-Pacific region.

More importantly, there is a recognition that simply having these strengths will not bring the investments we need for sustainable development and prosperity. There is a need to do more.

Just last month, President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. signed the CREATE MORE (Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprises-Maximize Opportunities for Reinvigorating the Economy) Act, a move that aims to simplify the tax system and strengthen the country’s investment appeal in various priority sectors. There are also moves to institute greater transparency and accountability in the government, ensuring a stable and predictable regulatory environment, so that businesses can come, plan their operations, set up shop — and be assured that the same rules will apply, and that their venture will be shielded from any adverse, irrational, or whimsical policy swings.

Of course, while the pursuit of investments is a collaborative effort on the part of the government, the private sector, and civil society, there are key agencies at the helm of this endeavor.

These Investment Promotion Agencies (IPAs) act in concert while performing their nuanced functions in the greater effort toward presenting the Philippines as a premier investment destination and facilitating investments’ smooth entry to the Philippines.

The Department of Trade and Industry – Board of Investments (DTI-BoI) promotes the Philippines through its “Make it Happen in the Philippines” campaign, which aims to generate Foreign Direct Investments (FDIs) specifically focused on key industries that have the most potential for foreign investments.

The DTI-led Inter-Agency Investment Promotion Coordination Committee (IIPCC) is currently formulating the Foreign Investment Promotion and Marketing Plan (FIPMP) to ensure that there is a single investment promotion framework and strategy throughout the country.

The establishment of ecozones is also an important strategic policy to boost export promotion, attract FDI, and create employment opportunities for the local labor force. In this respect, the Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA) plays a central role.

As of last October, PEZA had approved a total of P123.76 billion worth of projects since January. In October alone, the PEZA Board approved 19 projects with aggregate investments amounting to P7.87 billion, consisting of eight projects in manufacturing, eight in information technology, two in ecozone development, and one in ecozone logistics.

These projects are expected to boost Philippine exports by $3.08 billion annually and generate about 40,733 jobs. This year, job creation in PEZA ecozones have increased by 43% from 28,521 jobs generated in the same period last year.

On Nov. 26, the Stratbase Institute, in collaboration with the DTI-BoI held a roundtable discussion with representatives of IPAs to gain insights and recommendations which the Philippines can implement to draw in more investments to the country.

Empowering IPAs is crucial because they play a key role in facilitating the seamless entry of foreign investments into the country. Collaborating with these agencies and aligning them with the “Make it Happen in the Philippines” campaign could significantly improve the delivery of the unified investment message we are putting out to the rest of the world. We also want this message to be consistent across all regions in the archipelago.

During the roundtable event, discussions revolved around initiatives to attract investments that will revitalize the manufacturing sector, produce goods not just for export but also for the domestic market, leveraging the country’s young workforce to foster innovation, enhance productivity, and generate quality jobs.

The streamlining of administrative processes, prioritization of strategic infrastructure development, use of emerging technologies, and adherence to environmental responsibility were touched upon as well.

The conversations also brought out the need to have a stronger strategic head or government body, which will focus on and consistently lead a unified effort with all IPAs in creating an inventory of investment data sources, harmonizing marketing and promotions programs, and implementing activities involving all interested agencies.

Competition for FDI is fierce around the world, with countries vying to attract potential foreign investors to spur economic growth. For a developing country like the Philippines, FDI is not only desirable but necessary in order to achieve sustainable development, job creation, and technological advancement.

Thus, the manner in which we promote our investments is important. A coordinated approach among IPAs will get the message across effectively and show that the Philippines is serious and resolute in attracting investments — and keeping them.

 

Victor Andres “Dindo” C. Manhit is the president of the Stratbase ADR Institute.

Ayala Land targets to finish Vermosa estate church by 2026

LISTED property developer Ayala Land, Inc. (ALI) expects to finish the construction of San Sebastian Church at its Vermosa estate in Cavite by 2026.

ALI recently held the groundbreaking ceremony for the church, which has a 500-person seating capacity, the real estate company said in an e-mailed statement on Monday.

Architectural firm Casas + Architects, Inc. will be the lead designer for San Sebastian Church, while the builder has yet to be announced.

“This partnership reflects our shared commitment to make a difference in the lives of our fellow Filipinos and provide a space for their spiritual well-being in the Cavite community,” ALI Vice-President and Senior Project Development Head of Estates Group May P. Rodriguez said.

“As we break ground today, let this moment remind us of our shared mission: to foster communities where everyone can thrive,” she added.

San Sebastian Church is poised to be a central gathering place for worship, reflection, and community events. It will feature various amenities such as facilities for weddings, seminaries, and parking spaces.

“Rooted in the principles of aggiornamento, the design of the San Sebastian Church in Vermosa aspires to transcend trends, offering a sacred space that reflects God’s eternal presence. Casas’ process focuses on creating an atmosphere that invites worship and evokes an experience of heaven on earth,” Casas Architects Principal Architect Carmelo T. Casas said.

Vermosa is a 752-hectare estate that features facilities such as the Ayala Vermosa Sports Hub, AyalaMalls Vermosa, and the De La Salle Santiago Zobel Vermosa Campus.

The property spans the cities of Imus and Dasmariñas in Cavite.

On Tuesday, ALI shares rose by 0.52% or 15 centavos to P29.15 per share. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

CIMB Bank PH eyeing mass affluent market to boost its customer base

CIMBBANK.COM.PH

CIMB BANK Philippines, Inc. (CIMB Bank PH) will tap the mass affluent segment next year to boost its customer base, its top official said.

CIMB Bank PH Chief Executive Officer Vijay Manoharan on Tuesday also announced the products and services that the digital-only commercial bank plans to launch in 2025.

“We are now close to nine million customers, but now we’re trying to segmentize some of them. Those of them who are a bit more affluent, we are analyzing how we should talk to you differently. What kind of offerings can we give you which are more bespoke to an affluent segment?” he said.

CIMB Bank PH earlier this year launched exclusive offerings for OFWs and is looking to roll out credit and insurance products for the sector in 2025.

It previously said products targeted for SMEs will also be introduced in the first quarter of 2025.

Mr. Manoharan said the bank will partner with companies for share trading and remittances, as well as merchants for exclusive rewards.

“Today, we are largely an unsecured lending bank. We want to start to dabble and venture into secure financing, to other means of products and services as well,” he said.

“We think it’s a huge opportunity to go cashless. The country is still heavy in cash, and there are one or two operators doing non-cash payments. We want to disrupt that space through our own cashless QR (quick response) machine,” Mr. Manoharan added.

CIMB Bank PH loans are expected to grow by 30% year on year by end-2024, he said. The bank also sees a 35-40% growth in loans next year.

The bank aims to disburse P75 billion in loans this year and to reach a total deposit cash-in level of P500 billion.

CIMB Bank PH expects to post “higher than single-digit” net income growth this year, Mr. Manoharan earlier said.

The lender forecasts faster net income growth next year as it plans to expand its offerings for underserved sectors. — Aaron Michael C. Sy

Elton John says he has lost his eyesight

A scene from the 2024 documentary Elton John: Never Too Late.

LONDON — Music legend Elton John told a theater audience in London on Sunday he had lost his sight after struggling to recover from an eye infection earlier in the year.

The 77-year-old star — famous for “Tiny Dancer,” “Your Song” and a string of other hits — was in London’s West End for the opening of The Devil Wears Prada musical, for which he wrote the score.

In an emotional speech from the stage of the Dominion Theater at the end of the show, he said the performance had sounded good, but he had not been able to watch it.

“As some of you may know I have had issues and now I have lost my sight. I haven’t been able to see the performance but I have enjoyed it,” Mr. John said. “I love to hear it,” he added, to rapturous applause.

He thanked his husband David Furnish for being his “rock.”

Mr. John, who has sold more than 300 million records over a six-decade career, said in a documentary that premiered in September that his health made him worry about the future.

“This is the latter time of my life. I don’t know how much time I have left,” he said in the documentary Elton John: Never Too Late.

He said that month in an Instagram post that he was feeling positive about how his eye was healing after an infection in July.

Two months later, he told ABC News he could not see out of his right eye and his left was “not the greatest,” meaning he could no longer read or watch anything.

He said his condition was keeping him out of the studio where he had been working on a new album.

“It’s been a while since I’ve done anything,” he said. “There’s hope and encouragement that it will be okay, but it’s, I’m kind of stuck at the moment.”

Mr. John, who shot to fame in the early 1970s, went on a farewell tour from 2018 to 2023.

He and Mr. Furnish have two sons, Zachary, 13, and Elijah, 11.

“I’m so lucky. I’m the luckiest man in the world,” Mr. John told ABC News last month. — Reuters

How Endeavor PHL supports high-impact entrepreneurs

FACEBOOK.COM/ENDEAVORPHILIPPINES

ENDEAVOR PHILIPPINES, a global community that supports high-impact entrepreneurs across various industries, aims to expand its network by promoting a culture of mentorship among businesses.

“We aim to foster a deeply rooted pay-it-forward culture within our entrepreneurial community,” Endeavor Philippines Managing Director Manny Ayala said in an interview with BusinessWorld.

The organization is working to broaden its network of business founders from 46 to 100 by 2035, he said.

In its ten-year plan, Endeavor Philippines hopes to transform the country into a global source of high-impact entrepreneurs, with founders dedicated not only to building world-class companies but also to paying it forward. High-impact entrepreneurs are those who launch and grow ventures capable of making substantial economic, social, or environmental contributions.

“Each success story sparks another, creating a lasting cycle of growth and positive impact for generations to come,” Mr. Ayala said.

According to the global community, the multiplier effect highlights how one founder’s journey and mentorship help other entrepreneurs navigate and excel in the industry.

“Our core focus is searching for, selecting, and supporting entrepreneurs,” Mr. Ayala said.

“Each founder we back is a catalyst for innovation and opportunity, multiplying their success by mentoring, investing, and paving the way for others,” he added.

Since its launch in 2015, Endeavor has supported 33 companies across various industries, such as fintech, e-commerce, and logistics. The company also noted that it collectively generated over $900 million (P53.1 billion) in revenue, created 66,000 jobs, and raised $1 billion (P58.98 billion) in capital in 2023.

“We’re not just supporting individual entrepreneurs; we’re building a chain reaction that reshapes industries and empowers entire communities,” Mr. Ayala said.

Moving forward to 2025, the company plans to continue its usual events, such as MatchCap, a networking event held in Singapore that aims to connect investors and entrepreneurs.

Mr. Ayala added that he intends to improve the group’s Scale Up program, a global set of programs designed to help early-stage and high-potential entrepreneurs through curated mentorship.

“This year we had a cohort of eight; hopefully, we can double that number of people in the cohort.”

Another MatchBiz event, where startups can meet large conglomerates, will also commence next year. “In this country, it’s super important to work with conglomerates,” he said. — Almira Louise S. Martinez

Philippines picks up in 2024 Bribery Risk Rankings

THE PHILIPPINES improved its ranking in a global index assessing business bribery in over 190 economies. Read the full story.

Philippines picks up in 2024 Bribery Risk Rankings

Postmortem on our energy pricing problems

FREEPIK

While our National Government leaders play at disgusting adolescent political posturing more than four years before the next presidential election, the country continues to suffer from high inflation that has caused our poverty situation to worsen with each passing year.

In the early 1960s, before Ferdinand Marcos, Sr. became president, we ranked 2nd only to Singapore among Southeast Asian nations based on per capita GNP. Today, we rank 7th among nine countries, surpassing only Myanmar and Cambodia or Laos. What are the causes of our decline in productivity? Inflation, which cannot catch up with our population growth, low input of foreign investments, and of course, waste of the peoples’ money due to graft, corruption, and political wastefulness.

Perhaps we need to remind them that the people are suffering from food poverty day after day, largely due to high prices of basic needs. Climate change has also made us one of its worst victims.

We know, and they should know, what the basic cause of our high inflation is. It is the price of energy caused by our lack of access to oil and other low-priced electricity inputs.

Postmortems are undertaken to learn the causes of problems and how they can be solved and avoided over the long term.

Let us try to look at the problem as forensic pathologists.

First, President Marcos Sr. purchased the Bataan nuclear plant on a loan from the US government’s Import-Export Bank. There has been a lot of debate on whether the sale of the nuclear plant by Westinghouse through the Romualdez’ cousin Herminio Disini was overpriced. US-based courts found no evidence that the rumor was true that the price (a total of $1.9 billion) was double what it should have been. But the Disini group received $50 million in commissions from Westinghouse.

When the nuclear plant in Morong, Bataan was ready to receive uranium-based fuel in mid-1986, the Chernobyl nuclear plant in Soviet Russia blew up. This happened soon after Cory Aquino became president. Joker Arroyo, who was practically running the fledgling government at the time, ordered the shutting down of the Bataan nuclear plant and went even further. He abolished the Department of Energy which he said was plagued by corruption. Meanwhile, demand for electricity was rising dramatically due to an increase in investments, both local and foreign.

Since the Department of Energy was abolished, current and future demand for electric power was not being monitored. Since no alternative source of energy was provided for in lieu of what was to have been provided by the nuclear plant, brown-outs began to plague Luzon, especially the areas serviced by Meralco. The crisis was so severe that President Cory became very unpopular in Metro Manila.

When the military man Fidel V. Ramos became president in 1992, among his first directives was to restore power at any cost, ASAP. The plants able to produce power the fastest were diesel-fired. But they also produced the most expensive electricity among the various options. Moreover, investors in these power plants demanded incentives from the government to ensure adequate profitability given the risks they were taking, with the economy seeming to be in decline due to high prices of imported oil, since the country does not produce its own oil. The government had no choice. It signed commitments to make up for deficiencies in minimum profits to the investor power suppliers.

The government was able to complete the payment for the nuclear plant no earlier than the year 2007 or 30 years from purchase. I read somewhere that the Harvard and Columbia University economist Jeffrey Sachs wanted to help the Philippines negotiate reductions in its nuclear plant debt burden. Sachs thought that the Philippines had so much goodwill that it could obtain better terms from the US government. For some reason we cannot appreciate at this time, our government preferred to be “an honorable debtor.” Meanwhile, the government continues to maintain the non-operating nuclear plant at a cost of almost $800 million a year!

Surveys of potential foreign investors find that the main reason why they do not invest in our country is the high cost of energy. This is why even those who were located here, such as Intel, have moved to Vietnam and other Southeast Asian nations close to the big market, China. There is very little manufacturing, which provides jobs, in our country today.

Meanwhile, the average cost of living for the Filipino family is probably the highest in our part of the world, mainly because of the price of food and other essential commodities. This adds to our unattractiveness to foreign investors: the high cost of labor.

So, clearly, rather than engage in adolescent power games and back and forth drama, our politicians must put together, as a matter of urgency and importance, a multilateral (private and public sector) team of thinkers to strategize creative and effective solutions to our energy pricing problem. It may call for radical ideas and compromises in policy, but we cannot continue pretending there is no problem. We could end up in dire circumstances in 10 years or less.

In a recent TV interview, Secretary Frederick Go, the government’s economic czar, revealed his focus on bringing in manufacturing investments, with a “Make more” law that provides incentives, including tax breaks. He said that steps to make it easier to go into business by reducing bureaucratic bottlenecks was one of the priorities. The interview lasted almost an hour; yet I did not hear any mention of the high price of energy as a key concern.

Our electricity is fueled by mainly coal (58%), natural gas (18.7%), geothermal (10%) and hydro (9%). All others (solar, biofuels, waste, etc.) contribute less than 5%.

The government has been doing a lot of studies on nuclear power, which for many reasons is unpopular with the general public. Mr. Go may want to bring together a multilateral group of experts who can investigate other fuel and policy options. For example, we produce so much waste. Can we do some radical moves that can increase the contribution of our garbage to energy? There could be energy producing technologies that have been discovered that we can adopt.

The Malampaya gas field, which contributes almost 20% of our energy fuels, is being depleted. The government expects our demand for energy to triple by 2040.  It is crucial, important and urgent to act on the problem today!

 

Teresa S. Abesamis is a former professor at the Asian Institute of Management and fellow of the Development Academy of the Philippines.

tsabesamis0114@yahoo.com

PHL, Israel eye tourism partnership

TAYLOR BRANDON-UNSPLASH

THE PHILIPPINES and Israel are eyeing collaboration to drive tourism growth and strengthen economic ties, their tourism representatives said on Tuesday.

The Philippines’ Department of Tourism (DoT) and the Israel Ministry of Tourism signed a joint declaration of intent to cooperate on Tuesday.

“In time to come, a memorandum of cooperation on tourism will be signed and what was executed today is a joint declaration of the intention of both countries to cooperate on tourism,” Tourism Secretary Ma. Esperanza Christina G. Frasco told reporters.

The agreement is expected to result in economic growth by bringing more opportunities for expansion in terms of providing livelihood in the tourism industry, Ms. Frasco said.

While the Philippines and Israel have yet to sign a memorandum of understanding on tourism cooperation, Ms. Frasco said this will likely happen soon.

Year to date, the Philippines has logged nearly 14,000 tourists from Israel, making it a priority source market for the country, Ms. Frasco said.

“We view Israel as an opportunity market especially that the Philippines offers tourism products that are very attractive and popular with the Israeli market,” she added.

For Israeli Tourism Minister Haim Katz, the possibility of launching a direct flight between the Philippines and Israel would be important and could result in at least 100,000 tourists from Israel coming to the Philippines.

“This is a matter that has been on the table for some time, in the case of our national flag carrier, Philippine Airlines. So, I express that we will relay the continued interest of Israel for direct flights,” Ms. Frasco said.

Philippine Airlines does not currently offer direct flights to Tel Aviv. The flag carrier mounts flights to Dubai and has an interline agreement with flydubai, operated by Dubai Aviation Corp., which offers flights to Israel.

At the same time, Foreign Affairs Deputy Assistant Secretary Marlowe A. Miranda said the Department of Foreign Affairs is taking a cautious lens on the overall situation in Israel, but the agency supports DoT’s move to explore tourism opportunities with Israel.

“I cannot really say when the request for increasing and re-establishing flights between the Philippines and Israel would happen because there are also considerations for other airlines to launch it, but [the Philippines] is definitely willing to hold the talks,” Mr. Miranda said.

The Philippine Embassy in Tel Aviv has advised Filipinos to suspend nonessential travel to Israel due to the ongoing conflict with Iran and the war in Gaza.

Tensions in the Middle East continue to escalate after Israel’s bombardment of Gaza in response to missile attacks by militant group Hamas in October last year. — Ashley Erika O. Jose

Federal Reserve chief Powell may have made US monetary policy boring again

WASHINGTON — For much of the past 17 years the US Federal Reserve has been the central player in US economic policy, throwing multitrillion-dollar safety nets under the financial system, offering nearly a decade of ultra-cheap money, jumping red lines during the COVID-19 pandemic, and delving more into areas like equity and climate change.

But that expansive role has now shrunk to one of terse policy statements, a meat-and-potatoes debate over interest rates, a declining stash of bonds, and a growing possibility that Fed Chair Jerome H. Powell may be remembered both as the man who got the US through the economic crisis triggered by the pandemic and the one who made central banking boring again.

Former St. Louis Fed President James Bullard was on the policy-making team that saw the central bank’s role expand during the 2007-2009 financial crisis, watched as it mushroomed again during the pandemic and sees it now morphing back into something more normal.

In recent years “we had to go back to kind of heavy-duty inflation fighting that is reminiscent of the old days when you did not worry about the zero lower bound, you did not worry about balance sheet policy,” Mr. Bullard said. “It is kind of plain vanilla in that respect. Times have changed.”

Mr. Bullard, who is now the dean of the Mitch Daniels School of Business at Purdue University, will give the opening address on Monday at a conference in Washington about the Fed’s monetary policy framework and its strategy for achieving its mandate to foster price stability and maximum employment.

For all the potential controversy around the Fed posed by Donald J. Trump’s victory in the Nov. 5 election – hints, for example, that the US president-elect might rekindle his first-term feud with Mr. Powell by trying to fire or undercut him — there’s an alternate possibility that the framework discussion highlights: That with inflation coming under control, the economy growing, and interest rates in their longer-run historic range, the central bank may be moving somewhat offstage, with its steady focus on inflation now the important thing for the incoming administration to sustain.

SUPER-LOW RATES NO LONGER NEEDED
Mr. Trump’s initial picks for his economic team have been more conventional than not. The conference in Washington, which is organized by the American Institute for Economic Research, includes a keynote address by Fed Governor Christopher Waller, an appointee from Trump’s first term in the White House who, like Fed Governor Michelle Bowman, would offer an in-house option for new leadership when Mr. Powell’s term as central bank chief expires in May 2026.

With Mr. Powell, Mr. Waller has been a leading force in navigating the fight against inflation and steering the Fed system away from issues like climate change that are outside the direct sway of monetary policy and which had raised tensions with some Republicans in Congress.

Mr. Waller is likely to have a strong voice, too, in reforming the Fed’s current policy framework, which at its adoption in 2020 took the central bank into new territory that many now see as out of step with the current economic environment.

The outbreak of the pandemic that year led to widespread unemployment and made the healing of the labor market a top priority for central bankers determined not to see a replay of the slow-paced employment recovery after the 2007-2009 crisis that many feel caused a lost decade, scarring a generation of workers. Chronically weak inflation and historically low interest rates also sparked concerns about stagnation.

The 2020 framework tried to address all of those issues with a new commitment to “broad-based and inclusive” employment amid expectations that interest rates would remain low and end up near the zero level “more frequently than in the past.”

The “zero lower bound” is the bane of a central banker’s existence: Once interest rates go to zero, only bad and politically difficult options remain to further support the economy. Interest rates can be pushed into negative territory, in effect taxing people for saving, or other unconventional steps can be taken, such as large-scale bond purchases to suppress long-term rates and promises to keep rates low for a long time.

The solution for the 2020 Fed was to promise periods of higher inflation to offset periods of weak price growth, which its policy makers hoped would keep inflation at the central bank’s 2% target on average.

What followed, for a variety of reasons, was the worst inflation in 40 years, which spurred the Fed to aggressively raise interest rates in 2022 and 2023. Whatever else that meant for the US economic and political landscape, it may have also juiced the entire economy out of its torpor and put fiscal and other policies back in the driver’s seat.

“The economy and stock market simply don’t require super-low rates anymore,” said David Russell, global head of market strategy for TradeStation. “Trade and tax policy will probably matter more than monetary policy going forward.”

PREEMPTIVE ACTIONS ‘NECESSARY’
Fed officials now see inflation pressures remaining more elevated than before the pandemic, with rates lodged far enough above zero that they can achieve their goals by raising and lowering them, just as central bankers did before the “Great Recession” unleashed use of unconventional methods 17 years ago.

Those tools remain at hand, and a big enough shock may see their return.

Some economists argue, for example, that the incoming Trump administration’s policies, by simultaneously raising the price of imports with tariffs, stoking spending through lower taxes, and restricting the pool of available workers by limiting immigration, could rock an economy the Fed feels is currently both healthy and in balance.

But there is emerging agreement that the central bank’s current framework was tailored too much to the circumstances and risks of the decade after the 2007-2009 crisis and the pandemic era, and needs to return to a more cautious stance on inflation.

Fed staff research has suggested that stance provides better job market outcomes anyway, and a return to the old-school philosophy of suppressing inflation before it takes hold has regained favor.

“Preemptive monetary policy actions are not only appropriate, but necessary,” economists Christina Romer and David Romer wrote in research for a Brookings Institution conference in September. The Fed “should not deliberately seek a hot labor market,” they wrote, since the blunt tools of monetary policy “cannot… reduce poverty or counter rising inequality.”

Mr. Powell seems to have anticipated changes ahead, and not unwelcome ones given they indicate the US has escaped the need for extraordinary Fed support, something he was not fully comfortable with in his first years as a central bank governor.

After pushing Fed power to its limit during the pandemic, he may leave his successor a much more focused institution.

“Twenty years of low inflation ended a year and four months after we did the framework,” Mr. Powell said last month in Dallas where he spoke of a return to a more “traditional” style of central banking. “Shouldn’t we change the framework to reflect interest rates are higher now, so that some of the changes we made … shouldn’t be the base case anymore?” — Reuters

Excitement, relief in Paris as Notre-Dame Cathedral prepares to reopen

NOTREDAMEDEPARIS.FR

PARIS — Paris’ Notre-Dame Cathedral will reopen its doors this week to tourists and the Catholic faithful, five-and-a-half years after fire gutted the Gothic masterpiece, one of the French capital’s most beloved and visited monuments.

President Emmanuel Macron was one of the first to catch a glimpse of the newly renovated cathedral on Friday morning. He appeared impressed by the spectacular light pouring into the nave after the cathedral’s windows were renewed and its white stones cleaned.

“This is overwhelming,” the president said as he took an extensive tour along with his wife Brigitte and some officials, shaking hands with many of the master craftsmen who had taken part in the renovation.

Major reconstruction works have restored the 12th-century cathedral, its spire, rib vaulting, flying buttresses, stained-glass windows and carved stone gargoyles to their past glory, with the white stone and gold decorations shining brighter than ever.

It is a far cry from the evening of April 15, 2019, when TV viewers in France and worldwide watched with horror as the cathedral’s roof and spire burst into flames and collapsed in a raging fire that also threatened the main bell towers, which narrowly avoided destruction.

Firefighters worked through the night to save the cathedral, and for more than five years, thousands of expert craftspeople used age-old methods to restore, repair, or replace everything that was destroyed or damaged.

“It was an exceptional renovation project,” stone-carver Samir Abbas, 38, said, relieved at having finished on schedule, while waiting along with some 1,300 other workers in front of the cathedral for Mr. Macron’s arrival.

An opening ceremony — to which celebrities and heads of state have been invited — is planned for the evening of Dec. 7, followed by days of special Masses to celebrate the reopening and to thank those who helped save and rebuild the cathedral.

So much money poured in for the renovation from all over the world — more than 840 million ($882 million), according to Mr. Macron’s office — that there are still funds left over for further investment in the building.

The Catholic Church now expects the cathedral to welcome some 15 million visitors annually.

“We are very eager to welcome the whole world under the roof of our cathedral,” Paris’ Archbishop Laurent Ulrich said in a message on the cathedral website, expressing the Church’s gratitude to all those who helped save it.

“On the night of April 15, hundreds of thousands of people committed themselves to what then seemed an impossible bet: to restore the cathedral and give it back its splendor within the unprecedented deadline of five years.” — Reuters

Bestfriend Goodies partners with gov’t agencies to fight malnutrition

FACEBOOK.COM/NUTRIBUNPHILIPPINES

BESTFRIEND GOODIES, a food enterprise in Cagayan de Oro City, hopes to help combat malnutrition and stunting by producing science-based nutritional products like enhanced nutribun and ready-to-eat (RTE) items.

The company initially began as a pasalubong (souvenir) food producer, but the pandemic’s impact on local tourism prompted it to adopt new technologies to create food products for government-led feeding programs, said Bronson Mabulay, consultant for Bestfriend Goodies, in an interview with BusinessWorld.

He said the Department of Education (DepEd) requires a very specific type of food to counter malnutrition and stunting. Bestfriend Goodies’ food products, he noted, comply with the “green category,” which is a must-have food in the canteen as specified by DepEd.

Bestfriend Goodies’ nutribun is produced under a license from the Department of Science and Technology (DoST)-Food and Nutrition Research Institute, he added. Each 160-165 gram serving contains 504 calories, 17.8 grams of protein, 6.08 milligrams of iron, and 244 micrograms of vitamin A.

The RTE products, including Filipino favorites like Arroz Caldo, are packaged in convenient pouches under a licensing agreement with the DoST-Industrial Technology Development Institute, Mr. Mabulay noted.

The company also has a licensing agreement with the University of Science and Technology of Southern Philippines for four other RTE products: mixed fruit with coconut milk (bilo-bilo), sweet chocolate rice porridge (champorado), chicken soup with coconut milk, and mung bean-based food with coconut milk.

Mr. Mabulay said the RTE products have a two-year shelf life due to the water retort technology from the DoST, the same used for canned goods like sardines.

This year, Bestfriend Goodies launched nutritional cookies made from local ingredients like squash, moringa, cassava, and coconut.

Mr. Mabulay said children consuming Bestfriend Goodies’ nutritional products through feeding programs are showing positive results.

“They said, ‘Yes Sir, it’s effective,’ because the following year, the number of children they had to feed decreased as the children gained weight and were no longer on the list,” he said in Filipino.

Mr. Mabulay said Bestfriend Goodies currently produces 17,500 RTE meals and 10,000 cookies daily.

The company aims to improve its online retail presence, as 99% of its sales come from government contracts, he added. — Edg Adrian A. Eva

Supreme Court’s recent ruling emphasizes crucial role of procedural rules in labor disputes

FREEPIK

In a decision published on Nov. 19, the Supreme Court departed from prevailing jurisprudence on the filing of complaints by aggrieved workers against their employers before the National Labor Relations Commission (NLRC), particularly regarding the inclusion of additional claims.

In Lingganay v. Del Monte Land Transport Bus Co., Inc. (G.R. No. 254976, Aug. 20, 2024), the Supreme Court clarified that under the 2011 NLRC Rules, a complaint may only be amended to add new causes of action during the mandatory conciliation and mediation conference or, at the latest, before the submission of position papers. No amendments to the complaint shall be allowed after the filing of position papers, except with the express permission of the Labor Arbiter.

In 2017, Marcelino Dela Cruz Lingganay, a bus driver for Del Monte Land Transport Bus Co. (DLTB Co.), filed a complaint for illegal dismissal against his employer and Narciso Morales. Lingganay’s employment was terminated for several reasons, including multiple vehicular accidents: one in 2013 along the Maharlika Highway in Quezon, another in 2016 involving a motorcycle, and a third in 2017 when the company bus he was driving rear-ended a Toyota Wigo along the San Juanico Bridge.

On July 13, 2017, Lingganay filed an amended complaint, adding claims for moral and exemplary damages, and attorney’s fees against DLTB Co. He then submitted his position paper on Aug. 17, 2017, with a motion to further amend his complaint, seeking entitlement to separation pay, holiday premium, and underpaid wages.

In a decision dated Sept. 29, 2017, the Labor Arbiter ruled in favor of the respondents, finding that Lingganay’s dismissal was justified due to his violations of DLTB Co.’s rules and regulations on health and safety. Moreover, the Labor Arbiter denied Lingganay’s motion to further amend his complaint pursuant to Rule V, Section 11 of the 2011 NLRC Rules, which states in part that “an amended complaint or petition may be filed before the Labor Arbiter at any time before the filing of position paper[.]”

The NLRC affirmed the Labor Arbiter’s decision. It also denied Lingganay’s motion for reconsideration.

In its July 6, 2020 decision, the Court of Appeals upheld Lingganay’s dismissal and concurred with the Labor Arbiter’s denial of his motion to further amend his complaint, citing Rule V, Section 11 of the 2011 NLRC Rules, as well as Section 12 thereof, which prohibits the amendment of the complaint after the filing of position papers unless there is leave from the Labor Arbiter. As observed by the Court of Appeals, since the second amended complaint was already embedded in Lingganay’s position paper, the denial of his motion was justified. The Court of Appeals also dismissed Lingganay’s motion for reconsideration.

Lingganay argued before the Supreme Court that his motion to amend and second amended complaint in the position paper were supported by its ruling in Our Haus Realty Development Corp. v. Parian (G.R. No. 204651, Aug. 6, 2014), citing Samar-Med Distribution v. NLRC (G.R. No. 162385, July 15, 2013), which allowed claims not raised in the initial complaint to be included in the position paper.

The Supreme Court disagreed with Lingganay, noting that the cited rulings were based on the outdated 1990 NLRC Rules, which had already been superseded by the 2011 NLRC Rules when Lingganay filed his illegal dismissal complaint in 2017.

A specific rule on amending complaints was first introduced in the 2005 NLRC Rules and was carried over as Rule V, Section 11 in the current 2011 NLRC Rules. According to the Supreme Court, the intention behind this, like any notice requirement, is to fully apprise the other party of all causes of action in the complaint, allow him/her to present informed arguments, and avoid surprises that could result in injustice. It was also aimed at preventing delays just to give the other party the time to counter the additional allegations and search for new evidence or witnesses to address a belatedly raised cause of action in the position paper.

Considering Lingganay’s repeated failure to timely raise his additional claims at the expense of the speedy disposition of the case, the Supreme Court held that it was within the sound discretion of the Labor Arbiter to disallow Lingganay’s motion to further amend his amended complaint.

In this case, the Supreme Court highlighted that procedural rules — designed to facilitate the adjudication of cases — must be treated with utmost respect and due regard, in accordance with the constitutional guarantee in the Bill of Rights stating that “all persons shall have the right to the speedy disposition of their cases before all judicial, quasi-judicial, and administrative bodies.”

Indeed, the observance of procedural rules should not be regarded as merely a formality, but as a cornerstone of our legal system that safeguards the rights of all parties while preserving the integrity of our judicial processes.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author. This article is for general informational and educational purposes only and not offered as and does not constitute legal advice or legal opinion.

 

Rey Alan L. De Juan is an associate of the Labor and Employment department of the Angara Abello Concepcion Regala & Cruz Law Offices (ACCRALAW)

rldejuan@accralaw.com

8830-8000