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What does the world need? More humans

ALVIANUS DENGEN/UNSPLASH

HOW WORRIED should we be about global depopulation? Some East Asian countries have fertility rates near or even below 1.0, while much of the core population of Europe is shrinking. In the US, fertility rates have fallen below replacement rates, hitting a historic low of 1.7 in 2019, and will likely fall even further in 2020 in part due to COVID-19. Many of the world’s poorer countries are seeing their birth rates plunge at unprecedented rates. By the year 2100, according to one projection, world population growth will be practically zero.

If you think the world is overpopulated and has serious environmental problems, you might welcome this news. But as my colleague Robin Hanson has pointed out, dwindling populations create their own inexorable logic. If the Japanese population shrinks by half, to 65 million or so, what’s to stop it from declining to 30 million? Or 20 million?

There is some evidence that shrinking populations are bad for the global economy. To me, however, the greater tragedy would be a failure to take full advantage of the planet’s capacity to sustain human life. No kind of family policy should be mandatory. But there should be policies that make larger families a more appealing option, both economically and otherwise.

One possibility is that a shrinking population itself will bring self-reversing mechanisms. For instance, a Japanese population half its current size would make Japan an emptier place, presumably lowering land prices. Some families would find it easier to afford a larger apartment in central Tokyo and perhaps decide to have more children.

But that mechanism seems more likely to reduce population decline than to reverse it. Living space is only one of many factors behind decisions about family size. And as population declines, the stock of houses and apartments will decline too, so in the longer run the amount of space per family may not increase by very much.

Population trends depend on how permanent are the causes of fertility decline. In many cases women prefer to pursue careers, or to start having children later, and that means lower birth rates. This same logic would apply in a much less populous Japan or Italy.

Another factor in declining fertility, especially in the US, is single parenthood. If a potential mother is facing a fertility decision without another full-time parent on the scene, she is more likely to choose to have fewer children. As population falls, will single-parent families become less common? It is hard to see why. Whether the issue is a lack of marriageable men, unstable family norms, or women who simply prefer to go it alone, there is no particular reason to think those factors will disappear in an era of population decline.

If anything, the impetus toward smaller family size might continue or even accelerate. Job opportunities for women may keep improving in quality, which increases the opportunity costs of having a large family. Furthermore, many countries around the world are becoming wealthier. As wealth increases, religiosity tends to decline, and religiosity also tends to boost family size.

What might be some other intervening factors to restore fertility? Perhaps tender and loving robots will make it much easier to raise young children. Or maybe, as populations fall to much lower levels, a sense of moral panic will set in. Families might decide to have more children, feeling that the very survival of their country is at stake. A more elaborate and dystopian scenario would be that corporations take over empty parts of the globe and pay for the raising of children there, in return for a share of their future income.

Undoubtedly there are other unusual (and more utopian) scenarios. Whatever their likelihood, it would not be wise to count on them. It is already the case that in many places, such as Singapore, governments have embarked on aggressive yet ineffective pro-family subsidy policies.

Depopulation is a major problem that the world in general, and its wealthier countries in particular, are failing even to discuss, much less address. In any given year, in any given country, a shrinking population may not be much of an issue, and it may even be welcomed. But make no mistake: Over time, collectively, we are choosing a very different future for humanity.

BLOOMBERG OPINION

Giant next-gen container ships will make Ever Given look like a toy

IF YOU THINK the ultimate reason the Suez Canal got blocked last week is because container ships are getting too big, get ready for the future. The next few generations of cargo vessels are going to make the Ever Given look like a bath toy.

Big enough to carry 20,124 twenty-foot equivalent units, or TEUs — the standard measure for cargo, representing a single shipping container — the Ever Given was one of the world’s largest such vessels when it was launched in 2018. The first container ship to break the 20,000 TEU mark had been at sea for less than a year. One famed 1999 study, written at a time when the largest boats carried less than 8,000 TEUs, argued it would prove impossible to build craft bigger than 18,000 TEUs.

The Ever Given, finally floating on its way again, is now distinctly in the second class of mega freighters. There are nearly 100 ships carrying more than 20,000 TEUs on the seas or under construction, and the bigger vessels being assembled in Chinese and South Korean shipyards are mostly around the 24,000 TEU mark. A quarter of the capacity moved by the world’s largest container line, AP Moller-Maersk A/S, is on boats above the 17,500 TEU mark.

That’s unlikely to be the end of it. Chinese shipyard Hudong-Zhonghua Shipbuilding Group Co. has already registered designs for a 25,000 TEU vessel, and it has become relatively commonplace to predict that 30,000 TEU monsters will be plowing the oceans before the decade is out.

Such enormous hulls may cause problems that will put the Ever Given’s mishap into the shade. At Rotterdam, the largest ships already have to arrive at high tide to ensure there’s enough clearance for them to get through the channel, according to a 2019 study by Nam Kyu Park of South Korea’s Tongmyong University. Larger vessels will soon be unable to berth at Shanghai, Busan, and Hong Kong even at high tide, unless channels are dredged out further, Park wrote.

There are similar problems with infrastructure on dry land. Modern ports are astonishingly efficient at unloading, and can turn around a fully laden 20,000 TEU vessel in a couple of days. But the time spent waiting for a berth can cut deep into the wafer-thin economics of a container line. Longer quays may have to be built to accommodate the larger ships, as well as cranes that can reach across wider decks, larger loading yards for tens of thousands of containers, and faster rail and road terminals to take cargo to its next destination.

Current vessels are already at the limits of what can fit along major shipping lanes. The Ever Given is too bulky to squeeze through the Panama Canal, where boats must be lifted over its mountainous spine with massive lock gates. At 24 meters (79 feet) deep, the Suez Canal has more capacity — but it’s roughly as deep as the Straits of Malacca and Singapore, so dredging it further to accommodate bigger ships won’t help much. The binding constraint on East-West trade at this point isn’t engineering, but geology.

Extending 15.7 meters below the water line, the Ever Given shouldn’t, on paper, have trouble making it through any of those channels, which typically require 3.5 meters of clearance from the bottom. Next-generation ships with a 20-meter draught, on the other hand, would be at constant risk of grounding.

How have container ships managed to defy expectations that their size would hit fundamental limits? A large part of it is because the economies of scale are so compelling. Bigger vessels use more fuel, but relative to the number of boxes stacked on their decks they’re far more efficient. They can also turn around a larger number of containers at a time and serve a wider array of feeder ports, ensuring they can defray their massive capital costs quicker.

There’s little sign that this is about to change. New International Maritime Organization  (IMO) regulations against the burning of sulfur-intensive fuel oil introduced last year mean current ships are using costlier diesel, putting more pressure on naval architects to come up with yet more efficient designs. Beyond that, the IMO now has plans to reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 40% in 2030 compared with 2008, and by 70% by 2050. Even with a switch to cheaper, less polluting liquefied natural gas as the main fuel, that’s going to mean further drastic improvements in efficiency, not to mention propulsion technologies that don’t exist yet. To date, the best way to chip away at fuel consumption and emissions is by increasing size.

It’s hard to know how the industry is going to cope with this. Perhaps Suez, Malacca, and Singapore can be dredged to accommodate even bigger vessels. Perhaps shipyards will find ways to squeeze a few more inches out of existing channels.

If not, alternative routes around the Cape of Good Hope and through the deeper Straits of Sunda and Lombok between Indonesia’s islands may prove the only viable way to accommodate such massive boats. Should that happen, those economies of scale will have to be drastically larger to make up for the longer sailing time. We’ve seen container ships leap from 10,000 TEUs to 24,000 TEUs. Don’t be shocked to see 50,000 TEU vessels plying the sea in your lifetime.

BLOOMBERG OPINION

Westbrook triple-double propels Wizards to win over Indiana Pacers

Russell Westbrook notched his 16th triple-double of the season to lead the Washington Wizards past the Indiana Pacers (132-124) in their NBA matchup on Monday. — WASHINGTON WIZARDS FB PAGE

RUSSELL Westbrook collected 35 points, a season-high 21 assists and 14 rebounds to fuel the host Washington Wizards to a 132-124 victory over the Indiana Pacers on Monday.

Westbrook made 14 of 26 shots from the field, including 4 of 6 from 3-point range. The triple-double was Westbrook’s NBA-leading 16th of the season and second in as many games.

Rui Hachimura had 26 points and eight rebounds and Chandler Hutchison added 18 points off the bench for the Wizards, who played without NBA leading scorer Bradley Beal (right hip contusion). Raul Neto scored 15 points off the bench to help Washington win its second in a row after losing eight of its previous nine.

All was not rosy for the Wizards, however. Recent acquisition Daniel Gafford rolled his ankle and left the court in a wheelchair.

Domantas Sabonis recorded 35 points and 11 rebounds and Malcolm Brogdon added 26 points for the Pacers, who were foiled in their bid to win three in a row for the first time since capturing the first three games of the season.

Indiana scored nine straight points to secure a 116-110 lead with 5:47 remaining in the fourth quarter before Washington countered with a 22-8 run to end the game. Westbrook drained a stepback jumper, a layup and two 3-pointers during the pivotal surge.

Hutchison made three baskets to help Washington bridge the third and fourth quarter with a 9-0 run and claim a 97-92 lead. Indiana quickly forged a tie after Myles Turner sank a 3-pointer and Edmond Sumner added a pair of free throws.

Brogdon drained three 3-pointers en route to scoring 11 points to stake Indiana to a 28-24 lead at the end of the first quarter. Hachimura scored eight points to pace the Wizards, who misfired on all four attempts from 3-point range.

The teams continued their tight battle throughout the second quarter, with Sabonis’ dunk, hook shot and free throw allowing the Pacers to secure a 58-57 lead at half time.

2021 NBA DRAFT
Meanwhile, with the modified National Basketball Association (NBA) season scheduled to run deep into July, the league announced Monday that the 2021 NBA Draft will be held on July 29.

The league also announced that the draft lottery will be held on June 22, with the NBA combine set for June 21-27.

The current NBA regular season runs to May 16, with the NBA Finals due to be completed by July 22.

The deadline for players to apply for early entry for this year’s draft is May 30, and those who opt to withdraw from early entry must do so by July 19.

Setting the date roughly a month later than the traditional June NBA draft, the league has yet to determine whether the draft (with the first round televised in prime time) will be virtual or in-person, owing to the changing parameters surrounding the coronavirus pandemic. — Reuters

Local volleyball body hails Jaja Santiago’s latest achievement

VOLLEYBALL star Jaja Santiago was congratulated by the Philippine National Volleyball Federation, Inc. (PNVFI) for the integral part she played in her team’s conquest of the Japanese V.Cup title at the weekend.

Ms. Santiago, 25, became the first Filipino to win a volleyball title outside of the Philippines, helping Saitama Ageo Medics to the championship.

“On behalf of the entire leadership of PNVF, I extend my warmest and most heartfelt congratulations for your achievement,” said PNVFI President Ramon Suzara in a congratulatory message to Ms. Santiago.

Adding, “Let this be an important milestone that will bring even much more to your already outstanding career.”

One of the country’s top volleyball talents, Ms. Santiago was tapped by Ageo Medics in the 2019-20 season as an import in its campaign in the top-tier Japanese league.

Ms. Santiago and Saitama beat NEC (26-24, 20-25, 25-21, 25-17) in the gold medal match on Sunday at the Ota City General Gymnasium in Tokyo.

The Filipino player chalked up 11 points on nine spikes and two blocks.

Her play complemented well those of her teammates Yuka Sato and Shainah Joseph, who finished with 15 and 14 points, respectively, to help tow their team to the title.

The team’s showing was an improvement from its bronze medal finish in the 2020 V.League.

Ms. Santiago is due back in the country this week and is set to turn her focus on the Premier Volleyball League where her Chery Tiggo team will make their professional debut.

A former University Athletic Association of the Philippines most valuable player with National University, Ms. Santiago played for and won club championships with PLDT Home Ultera and Foton in the Philippine volleyball circuit. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Tennis ace Alex Eala takes on another ‘first’ in Switzerland

FILIPINO tennis ace Alex Eala’s groundbreaking year on the women’s tour continues as she is set to play in her first-ever $60,000 tournament in Switzerland next week.

Fifteen-year-old Eala, a Rafa Nadal Academy scholar and long-time Globe ambassador, gained entry into the main draw of the International Tennis Federation (ITF)-sanctioned Bellinzona tournament in Switzerland happening from April 5 to 11.

It will be the first $60,000 tournament in her young career, which has taken an impressive ascent early in 2021.

The Bellinzona tournament comes on the heels of her Women’s Tennis Association (WTA) Tournament debut last week at the Miami Open.

In Miami, Ms. Eala, ranked 737th in the world, played in the qualifiers but fell short against world no. 104 Viktória Kužmová of Slovakia (6-4, 4-6, 2-6).

She started the match strong against her older opponent, but could not sustain it the rest of the way en route to the defeat.

Despite the loss, Ms. Eala views her experience in Miami as something that would only serve to prepare her for the challenges ahead.

“It’s just an amazing experience. I am still in awe of the Miami Open experience,” she wrote on a Facebook post following her bid.

She went on to share that apart from playing, practicing with top WTA professionals at the Miami Open inspired her to continue working on her game and pursuing her tennis dreams.

Ms. Eala has racked up a 12-5 win loss slate in the WTA, while she holds a 17-9 overall record to include her matches in the ITF for the year.

She earned her first-ever singles title since turning professional when she ruled the opening leg of the Rafa Nadal Academy ITF World Tour in Mallorca, Spain, in January. Ms. Eala followed it up with three consecutive quarterfinal appearances in her next three tournaments. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Overseas athletes may be able to take part in Olympic test events

TOKYO — International athletes could be invited to participate in test events before the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games this summer, organizers said on Monday.

The events will be a dress rehearsal in how to prevent the spread of the coronavirus as organizers host an international sports event during a global pandemic.

“At the moment, we are currently gauging how many athletes would like to participate in the test events… We will coordinate with the government once we can confirm those numbers,” senior Tokyo 2020 official Yasuo Mori told reporters.

Test events for five competitions, including track and field and the marathon, could involve foreign athletes participating, the organizers said.

Asked what Tokyo 2020 would do with the test events if there were another wave of coronavirus infections, Games Delivery Officer Hidemasa Nakamura said they were “inextricably linked with the domestic and local coronavirus situation.”

Tokyo 2020 is planning 18 test events before the Games begin on July 23. Test events for skateboarding and shooting were this month postponed from April until May because of the pandemic’s impact on scheduling.

The Olympic Torch relay started last week, with bystanders asked to stay masked, stand apart and clap instead of cheer for torchbearers as organizers try to ease public safety concerns.

Tokyo 2020 organizers have banned international spectators from attending the Games. The decision appeared to be received positively by the Japanese public, with 85% in favor according to a poll by daily Asahi Shimbun published last week.

The same poll also suggested that people were still wary of holding the event this summer, with 36% preferring another postponement, 33% an outright cancelation, and 27% saying the Olympics should be held as planned. — Reuters

Not much love among players for coronavirus vaccine at Miami Open

TORONTO — Players at the Miami Open on Monday expressed little love for coronavirus vaccines, with many saying they want more information before getting a shot.

Seventh-seeded Aryna Sabalenka expressed more concern over the vaccine than her quarterfinal opponent number one Ash Barty, while fifth seed Elina Svitolina said she was inclined to take the advice of friends and wait.

“So far, I don’t really trust it,” Sabalenka told reporters following her fourth round (6-1, 6-2) mugging of Markéta Vondroušová.

“It’s tough to say, but I don’t really want it yet and I don’t want my family take it.

“If I will have to do it, then of course I have to do it because our life is a travel life.”

While Sabalenka wants more information about vaccines, the 22-year-old Belarusian is well aware of her next opponent Barty, who advanced into the last eight with a 6-1, 1-6, 6-2 win over Victória Azárenka.

Of major concern for Sabalenka is how quickly the vaccines were produced, the number that are now available and which one might be best for her.

“I have to speak with my doctors and see which one is better for me,” said Sabalenka. “But for now, I don’t really trust it.

“They just make it, like really quick and there wasn’t enough time to test it and to see what can happen.

“So, I think this is not enough time to make the good one.”

Svitolina said she too would wait because at the moment getting the vaccine makes no sense.

“It will not really help you in many ways because you have to quarantine anyway because ATP and WTA, they oblige you to quarantine anyway, like 24 hours as soon as you get it,” said the Ukrainian, who advanced to the quarters with 2-6, 7-5, 7-5 decision over ninth-seeded Czech Petra Kvitová.

“Okay, you will reduce your symptoms if you get it, but still, there is a chance that you can get it.

“So for now, it makes almost, like, no sense to do something that has been tested for such a short period of time.

“For me, I will probably wait for now.”

Not everyone at the Miami Open is as resistant to the idea of getting the vaccine, Australian Open winner Naomi Osaka saying she will get one when it is her turn.

“I’m planning on getting one,” said Osaka. “For me, I feel like whenever I’m eligible, I guess.” — Reuters

Immediate help

Head coach Frank Vogel could not hide his pleasure in the aftermath of free agent Andre Drummond’s decision to join the Lakers. He used the word “thrilled” and could not help but resort to hyperbole in heaping profuse praise on their pickup off the buyout market. For all his compliments, the immediate past Cavalier is not “one of the best centers in the league.” And, in the pace-and-space era, it’s fair to argue whether the position remains relevant, and whether rebounding, the acknowledged strength of their new addition, continues to be a coveted skill.

Make no mistake. Drummond will provide immediate help to the undermanned Lakers. With All-Stars LeBron James and Anthony Davis still out due to injury, he figures to jump-start a stagnant offense and serve as a solid foundation on defense. His presence is especially welcome in the face of slotman Marc Gasol’s evident swoon. Bottom line, he’ll be what he has always been: a double-double machine capable of also making an impact on both ends of the court. At the very least, he’ll be a welcome addition at a time when change — any change — is needed.

That said, the jury is out on whether Drummond can help the Lakers’ cause in the playoffs. As advanced stats will show, the defending champions are at their best when they play small — okay, relatively small — ball and Davis is at the five spot. This leaves the immediate past Cavalier from the outside looking in; from a certain vantage point, he can even be deemed a downgrade from Gasol, who, if nothing else, has an outside shot that extends to the three-point line. Of course, it didn’t stop James and Company from recruiting him heavily and selling him on a major role moving forward. Not that they can be blamed; he comes on the cheap at $794,546, what with the Cavaliers footing the rest of his $27.9-million salary.

Whether Drummond is a stopgap measure or an asset ultimately worth keeping for the Lakers remains to be seen. He definitely believes he’s the latter; he shook off overtures from the Celtics and Knicks in order to sign with the purple and gold. And, as he noted, “I’m not here to do anything besides win.” How much he is willing and able to contribute as well as sacrifice will determine his capacity to walk the talk.

 

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

Asian countries scramble for vaccine supplies after India export curbs

SEOUL/MANILA – Several Asian countries scrambled to find alternative sources for COVID-19 inoculations on Tuesday after export restrictions by manufacturer India left a World Health Organization-backed global vaccine sharing programme short of supplies.

South Korea, Indonesia and the Philippines are among countries to be hit by shipment delays to vaccines they have been promised under the COVAX programme, which was created mainly to ensure supplies for poorer countries.

“Our planned increase in daily vaccinations will be affected,” Carlito Galvez, Philippines’ vaccination chief, told reporters.

India, the world’s biggest vaccine maker, put a temporary hold on exports of AstraZeneca’s vaccine being manufactured by the Serum Institute of India (SII), as officials focus on meeting rising domestic demand.

The Serum Institute was due to deliver 90 million vaccine doses to COVAX over March and April and, while it was not immediately clear how many would be diverted for domestic use, programme facilitators warned that shipment delays were inevitable.

South Korea confirmed it would only receive 432,000 doses of the 690,000 it had been promised and delivery of those would be delayed until around the third week of April.

“There’s uncertainty over global vaccine supplies but we’re working on a plan to ensure no disruptions in the second quarter and making efforts to secure more vaccines,” Kim Ki-nam, head of South Korea’s COVID-19 vaccination task force team. Officials said they were in talks with AstraZeneca to accelerate shipments procured through a separate deal.

Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte loosened government restrictions on private sector imports of vaccines, pleading with companies to obtain supplies no matter the cost, as his country battles a resurgence of the pandemic.

In Vietnam, officials have similarly asked the private sector to step in after their COVAX supplies were slashed by 40% to 811,200 doses and shipments were pushed back by weeks.

In Indonesia, health ministry official Siti Nadia Tarmizi told Reuters that 10.3 million doses from COVAX were likely delayed until May.

India has not provided details on the length of its export curb but UNICEF, a distributing partner of COVAX, said at the weekend that deliveries are expected to resume by May.

India’s decision is the latest in a series of setbacks for the COVAX facility, relied on by 64 poorer countries, after production glitches and a lack of funding contribution from wealthy nations.

CHINA AND RUSSIA
China and Russia are primed to step into the breach.

“We have good diplomatic relations with China and Russia and we are asking if we can have access to their vaccines in April,” the Philippines’ Galvez said.

Both the Philippines and Indonesia are currently relying heavily on vaccines from China’s Sinovac Biotech to run their inoculation drives. The Philippines and Vietnam have both approved Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine, along with more than 50 other countries, mainly developing nations. The Philippines expects to receive its first batch of Sputnik V in April.

Chinese vaccine maker Sinopharm, meanwhile, plans to produce its COVID-19 vaccine at a new plant in the United Arab Emirates.

The spate of export curbs is also being felt by wealthier countries that are reliant on foreign manufacturing, including Japan, where the national vaccine rollout has been slow due to the limited number of Pfizer vaccines shipped from Europe.

“Some people are using vaccines for diplomacy, some people are trying to prioritize. Some people are buying like three to five times as many vaccines compared to their population. That’s unnecessary,” Japan’s vaccine minister, Taro Kono, told Reuters on Monday in an interview.

“We really need to have the global leaders sit down and think this is a global issue, not the domestic issue, and try to solve this together.” — Reuters 

Singer Claire Dela Fuente, 62

Singer Claire Dela Fuente passed away this morning, March 30, due to cardiac arrest. 

The singer’s son, Gregorio “Gigo” De Guzman, confirmed her death in a video interview with ABS-CBN entertainment reporter MJ Felipe who posted the video on his Twitter page. 

Mr. De Guzman said that his mother  (whose legal name was Clarita Crisostomo Dela Fuente-De Guzman) was diagnosed COVID-19 positive last week. Based on their doctor’s report, Mr. De Guzman said that “She died from cardiac arrest that was believed to be … cause[ed by] her stress and anxiety.” He added that his mother had suffered from anxiety, hypertension, and diabetes. 

Born on Dec. 28, 1958, her talent was first publicly noticed when at age 15 she won the very first singing contest she joined, singing The Carpenters’ song “Love Me for What I Am.”  

It was with her song “Sayang” though that Ms. Dela Fuente became popular in the late 1970s. Her other popular songs include “Minsan-Minsan” and “Nakaw Na Pag-ibig.” She was dubbed a “Jukebox Queen” alongside her contemporaries Imelda Papin, Eva Eugenio, and the late Didith Reyes. 

She released numerous singles and albums, many of which received double platinum awards including the singles “Nakaw na Pag-ibig” and “Minsan-Minsan, and the albums Sayang  and The Best of Claire.

With a voice that had since the beginning of her career often been described as being similar to that of the late Karen Carpenter of the duo The Carpenters, it was perhaps no surprise that she ended up teaming up with Richard Carpenter in 2008 for her international album, Something In Your Eyes.

Carpenter was not the only international singer she worked with. She recorded a duet with Michael Bolton, “The Christmas Song,” in 2010.  

Apart from her singing career, she ventured into business and served as the vice-president, treasurer, and manager of the Philippine Corinthian Liner Corp. (PCLC) bus firm. For many years she served as president of the Integrated Metro Bus Operators Association.

She also ventured into cosmetics with The Skin Shop, and the restaurant business with the Claire dela Fuente Grill & Seafood Restaurant in Pasay City. 

Ms. Dela Fuente was married to Moises “Boy” de Guzman, who passed away of cancer in 2006. They have two sons, Gregorio and Gracielo. MAPS

Unemployed Filipinos reach 4.2 million in February

THE RANKS of jobless Filipinos reached 4.2 million in February, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) reported this morning.

Preliminary results of the PSA’s February 2021 round of the Labor Force Survey (LFS) showed around 4.187 million unemployed Filipinos, up from 3.953 million in the January LFS round.

This puts the unemployment rate at 8.8% in February, up from 8.7% in January.

The February reading was the third highest since the jobless rates recorded in April 2020 and July 2020 at 17.6% and 10%, respectively.

Likewise the underemployment rate — the proportion of those already working — but still looking for more work or longer working hours, worsened to 18.2% in February from 16% in January. This translates to 7.850 million underemployed Filipinos, more than the 6.589 million in the preceding survey round.

The size of the labor force was approximately 47.341 million in February, up from 45.201 million in January. This brought the labor force participation rate (LFPR) to 63.5% in February from 60.5% previously. This was the highest LFPR reported since April 2020, according to the PSA.

The employment rate — the proportion of the employed to the total labor force — clocked in at 91.2% in February, edging down from 91.3% in January. In absolute terms, however, the number of employed Filipinos increased to 43.153 million from January’s 41.248 million.

The employment rate in the services sector increased to 58.4% in February from 57.2% the previous month. On the other hand, those in agriculture and industry slipped to 23.9% and 17.7%, respectively, from 24.4% and 18.4%.

The February LFS round marked the first of the monthly surveys to be conducted by the PSA in order to closely monitor the current job situation in the country amid the coronavirus pandemic. In previous years, jobs data was conducted and released on a quarterly basis. — Lourdes O. Pilar

Billionaire Razon sued for ending Manila casino deal

Philippines billionaire Enrique Razon was sued in New York by a company that claims the tycoon illegally terminated an agreement to operate a Manila casino and is hiding assets in the U.S. to avoid paying an arbitration award.

The suit, filed Monday in federal court in New York by Global Gaming Philippines, seeks to confirm a $296.6 million arbitration award handed down by a panel in Singapore against Razon over his withdrawal of rights to operate the Solaire Resort and Casino in Manila’s Entertainment City suburb.

Global Gaming, whose executives have experience running some of the largest gaming operations in the world including the Las Vegas Sands, says Razon solicited its services in 2011 to help develop the resort and then terminated the agreement six months after it opened in 2013. The suit also accuses Razon of working to prevent Global Gaming from selling its rights in the project.

The company alleges that Razon has avoided paying the arbitration award and taken actions to stop Global Gaming from collecting. The suit says Razon and agents of his have “formed a vast network of shell companies” in the U.S. to hide his holdings in the county and diverted assets from the Philippines to fund those entities for the benefit of him and his family.

A representative for Razon couldn’t be immediately reached for comment.

The suit is Global Gaming vs. Enrique K. Razon, 21-cv-2655, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan) — Bloomberg