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World Bank cites lack of vaccination training

MOST governments in low- and middle-income countries managed to come up with a coronavirus vaccination plan, but few trained people to give the shots, according to the World Bank.

About 85% of 128 economies had vaccination plans, while 68% had safety systems for the rollout, it said in a study.

But only 30% trained people to give the vaccines, while 27% came up with public information campaigns, the World Bank said. It did not name the countries in the study.

“Most countries are approaching the COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) vaccine rollout as an emergency and are emphasizing speed and expediency over deliberative system-strengthening,” it said.

“As a result, they are missing out on the benefits of long-lasting improvements that a systems approach could bring,” it added.

The World Bank also cited the slow progress in training health staff to conduct surveillance of vaccination events.

“Social mobilization and public engagement strategies also have not been enunciated in most countries. As a result, advocacy, community engagement and risk and safety communication remain largely unaddressed,” it added. — BML

Nationwide round-up (03/18/21)

Opposition coalition aims to corner majority vote in 2022 elections

FORMER government officials and other civic leaders gathered at a sports club in Makati City on Thursday to launch an opposition coalition that aims to have a united slate and win national positions in the May 2022 presidential and local elections. Lead convenor and retired Supreme Court Justice Antonio T. Carpio led the launch of 1Sambayan, a coalition of so-called democratic forces seeking to challenge administration bets in next year’s polls and rally Filipinos to stand up against state abuses and demand more from the government. “We have discussed this, again and again, and this is the understanding of everybody: That unless we are united, we cannot win in 2022,” he said at the event. “We have the majority, but the majority will become a minority if they are divided. So we have to remain united, and that is the unifying force,” he added. The alliance is composed of political parties “from the Left and to the Right,” Mr. Carpio added, citing progressive Makabayan bloc, Liberal Party and its long-time ally Akbayan, and a political party of soldiers. In the 2019 midterm elections, opposition groups formed separate senatorial slates, few of whom won. The new bloc is convened by personalities spanning the Philippine political spectrum, including former Ombudsman Conchita Carpio-Morales, former foreign affairs secretary Albert F. Del Rosario, former lawmaker Neri J. Colmenares, former education secretary Armin A. Luistro, former soldier Rommel Ong, among others. Mr. Carpio bared that the party is considering Vice President Maria Leonor G. Robredo, Manila Mayor Francisco M. Domagoso, former soldier and senator Antonio F. Trillanes, and Senators Maria Lourdes Nancy Binay and Grace Poe-Llamanzares among their candidates for national posts. The coalition will select its final slate based on a vetting process where they would be screened based on their track record, stand on key issues, platforms, and winnability. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Trade chief catches COVID for 2nd time; Rep. Romualdez also positive

TRADE Secretary Ramon M. Lopez on Thursday said he tested positive for the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) for the second time. In a Viber message, he told reporters that he received the test result Thursday morning and is experiencing no symptoms. He first tested positive for the contagious disease in December. Mr. Lopez said he was getting ready to join President Rodrigo R. Duterte in a trip to Tacloban City to distribute livelihood kits to former rebels. He will now conduct all his meetings online while he stays in isolation. Mr. Lopez has been advocating for allowing more business operations and relaxing age restrictions to spur economic recovery. He stood against a return to a stricter lockdown even as COVID-19 cases in the country started to resurge, saying there should instead be more health protocol compliance in communities and public market areas. Mr. Lopez, in the Viber message, said he had been wearing face mask and shield and was physically distancing “but still got hit.”

Meanwhile, House Majority Leader Martin G. Romualdez on Wednesday said he also tested positive for COVID-19, and is experiencing symptoms. In-person sessions at the House of Representatives buildings have been canceled as the congressional complex was placed on a four-day lockdown starting Thursday. Two other representatives and almost 30 House employees have tested positive for the virus. “Let me assure those who are concerned with my physical well-being that I am coping well despite experiencing symptoms of the disease, and that I am in high spirits,” Mr. Romualdez said in a statement, noting that he will return to work once he has a clean bill of health from medical authorities. Both Mr. Lopez and Mr. Romualdez are taking additional tests to rule out a false positive result. — Jenina P. Ibañez

Over 390,000 Filipino workers repatriated as of Mar. 16

MORE than 390,000 Filipinos working overseas were repatriated due to the coronavirus pandemic, the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) said in a Senate hearing on Thursday. Foreign Affairs Undersecretary Sarah Lou Y. Arriola said 390,917 overseas workers have been brought home from more than 90 countries and 150 cruise ships and vessels as of Mar. 16. Of these, 282,252 were land-based and 103,665 were sea-based, she said. Administrator Hans Leo J. Cacdac of the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration told the same hearing that it has recorded about 480,000 workers who have come home. “We have the data pertaining to those who have arrived, whether or not repatriated by DoLE (Department of Labor and Employment) or the DFA,” he said, noting that some workers arranged for their own travel through commercial flights. As of Mar. 17, a total of 15,928 confirmed coronavirus cases were reported among Filipinos abroad in 88 countries, Ms. Arriola said. Of these, 1,044 died and 9,645 recovered. “Many of our medical frontliners succumbed to COVID (coronavirus disease 2019). At the onset they had the same problems as we had, lack of PPEs (personal protective equipment), we also discovered that a lot of Filipino nurses are really put in the COVID wards on the frontline because we do not refuse the jobs and because they are afraid of losing their jobs,” she told the Senate labor committee hearing. “But now it’s better, they have more equipment and also they are aware of their rights,” she added. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas

Supreme Court signs deal with UnionBank for e-payment service

THE Supreme Court (SC) signed a Memorandum of Agreement with Union Bank of the Philippines (UnionBank) on Monday for setting up the Judiciary ePayment System that will allow online payment of court fees. The system “will involve an application designed to provide the courts the options to receive fees and payments digitally from litigants, their counsels, and representatives in a safe, secure, real-time, 24/7 basis from anywhere at their convenience,” the SC Public Information Office said on Thursday. “The Judiciary ePayment System will be rolled out nationwide to first and second-level courts with pilot courts,” it added. During the signing, Chief Justice Diosdado M. Peralta thanked UnionBank for its timely technical assistance “as the Philippine Judiciary is currently in the midst of its quest for digital transformation,” especially now that face-to-face transactions are discouraged due to the coronavirus threat. UnionBank Vice-Chair Justo A. Ortiz, for his part, said they are proud of the partnership and “value greatly this opportunity to be of service to the Filipino people.” The high court said it is also open to the proposal of other banks and electronic payment providers to integrate their services with the Judiciary ePayment System.

In another development, the Department of Justice (DoJ) announced Thursday that its main office is going on another lockdown from Friday to Tuesday after seven more of employees tested positive for the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). “I’m constrained to order another suspension of on-site work at the DoJ…we’ll lock down again starting tomorrow (Friday) (until) Tuesday,” Justice Secretary Menardo I. Guevarra told reporters. “Everyone will work from home, except a skeletal staff who will receive documents and attend to other frontline services,” he added. The DoJ has recorded a total of 34 COVID-19 infections, of which 17 are active cases. — Bianca Angelica D. Añago

Regional Updates (03/18/21)

Boracay tourists can now use saliva RTPCR test for entry requirement

TOURISTS going to Boracay can now use a negative coronavirus result through saliva testing for entry, the task force managing the island announced Thursday. Environment Secretary Roy A. Cimatu, chair of the Boracay Inter-Agency Task Force, made the announcement through a virtual briefing from the island. The Department of Tourism (DoT), in a statement, said it welcomes the approval of the alternative testing option, which costs less and is not invasive. Under the approved policy, saliva testing should only be taken through the Philippine Red Cross or other laboratories with such accreditation from government health institutions. The DoT said it has also recommended to the national task force handling the coronavirus response to relax age restrictions for domestic tourism by allowing those below 15 and above 65 to travel for leisure purposes. At the same time, the DoT reiterated its constant reminder on responsible travel, which means strictly following health safety protocols “to protect both the tourists, tourism workers and the residents of host communities.”

Cagayan Valley Medical Center chief appeals to private hospitals to handle mild COVID cases

THE head of the Cagayan Valley Medical Center (CVMC) has appealed to private hospitals to admit patients with suspected or mild symptoms of the coronavirus as the government-run regional facility is now 100% occupied. In a statement from the Cagayan provincial office on Thursday, CVMC Chief Glenn Matthew Baggao said their ward for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is currently handling 126 confirmed patients, “the highest” number recorded since the start of the pandemic. “We already added rooms but because of the increase in patients, we really have no more space, we cannot accept more… and it’s the patients who will suffer,” he said in Filipino. The doctor also called on authorities to monitor private hospitals, which are mandated to allocate at least 30% of their bed capacity to COVID-19 cases. “The supposed 30% allocation in private and government hospitals in the region, especially here in Tuguegarao City, is no longer being complied with,” he said. Apart from the confirmed cases, the hospital also has 38 suspected patients awaiting test results. As of Mar. 16, Cagayan Valley has recorded 10,173 coronavirus cases, of which 1,143 are active, 8,820 recovered, and 202 died. The region, with Tuguegarao City as center, is composed of the provinces of Cagayan, Isabela, Quirino, Nueva Vizcaya, and Batanes. — MSJ

Davao school brings non-digital ‘smart boxes’ to senior high students for hands-on training

A PRIVATE school in Davao specializing in hospitality, tourism, and culinary courses has partnered with the Department of Education to bring hands-on training to senior high school students at their homes through “smart boxes” that are not of the digital kind. “The delivery of skills training became more challenging during the pandemic. Schools were closed and all training delivery is done online or through modules delivered in homes of students who do not have internet connections. Together with my academic team, we needed to reset and re-calibrate our strategies,” said Joji Ilagan-Bian, chair of the JIB International Schools and founder of MinTVET, a network of technical-vocational schools in Mindanao. As tech-voc skills are best learned beyond reading modules, Ms. Bian and her team developed the JIB Smart boxes, which contain materials specific to a course — such as a cocktail glass and ingredients for those learning bartending, or protective gloves for shielded metal arc welding. “It was fulfilling to see the students wearing their JIB t-shirts and their chefs toques and aprons on screen as they do their assessments in their homes using the JIB SMART Boxes,” Ms. Bian said in an interview. The project is under the Education department’s Joint Delivery Voucher Program-Technical Vocational Learning program, which provides senior high students enrolled in public schools the opportunity to get tech-voc specialization through partner institutions such as JIB schools. The courses on offer include baking, pastry production, housekeeping, bartending, food and beverage services, and welding. — Maya M. Padillo

PSA signaling 7.5% year-on-year rise in first-quarter palay output

THE PHILIPPINE Statistics Authority (PSA) said it upgraded its first quarter estimate for production of palay, or unmilled rice, from a previous estimate made in January, with the latest projection representing a 7.5% rise in output from a year earlier.

In its palay and corn estimates report, the PSA said palay production for the three months to March is now estimated at 4.583 million metric tons (MT), up about 0.4% from the earlier forecast.

The PSA said total harvestable area for the quarter is expected to increase 4.6% year on year to 1.148 million hectares. Yield per hectare is also expected to increase 2.8% from a year earlier to 3.99 MT.

It added that 259,710 hectares, producing 933,660 MT of palay, have been harvested as of Feb. 1.

“Of the total area of standing palay to be harvested for April-June 2021, 42.8% or 634,511 hectares were at the vegetative stage, 35.1% or 519,794 hectares at the reproductive stage, and 22.1% or 328,499 at the maturing stage,” it added.

The PSA said corn output for the first quarter is expected to hit 2.52 million MT, representing a 0.3% downgrade from its January estimate.

If the projection is realized, corn output will have risen 9.6% from a year earlier.

The PSA said the harvest area for the quarter is expected to increase 2.4% year on year to 699,967 hectares. Yield per hectare was estimated at 3.60 MT, which would be up 7.1% from a year earlier.

It said about 244,093 hectares producing 759,500 MT of corn have been harvested as of Feb. 1.

“Of the total area of 635,986 hectares of standing crop for the April to June 2021 harvests, 30.1% or 191,113 hectares were at vegetative stage, 38.9% or 247,523 hectares at reproductive stage, and 31.0% or 197,349 hectares at maturing stage,” it added.

The Department of Agriculture has said that it targets output of 20.47 million MT of palay this year. Actual output in 2020 was 19.44 million MT. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

DA formally requests state of emergency to deal with ASF

THE Department of Agriculture (DA) has officially submitted its proposal to President Rodrigo R. Duterte for a state of national emergency to help contain African Swine Fever (ASF).

In a March 17 memorandum, Agriculture Secretary William D. Dar said he sent a draft proclamation to Malacañang seeking the declaration in order to appropriate funds more rapidly to deal with the emergency, which has reduced hog numbers drastically and caused food prices to rise, threatening another inflation crisis.

Mr. Dar said the DA plans to implement biosecurity measures to help rehabilitate the hog industry. More than three million pigs have died or were culled since the virus was first detected in 2019.

  “The declaration of a state of national emergency would mandate and capacitate concerned government agencies including local government units (LGUs) to work together to prevent and control the further spread of ASF,” Mr. Dar said.

“Over three million pigs have been lost… causing a contraction in pork supply and an unprecedented increase in the price of basic agricultural commodities,” he added.

During a March 9 hearing, the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Food, and Agrarian Reform approved a resolution requesting the DA to recommend a state of emergency declaration.

Senator Francis N. Pangilinan said at the hearing that such a declaration is needed to unlock the funding needed to address ASF.

Mr. Duterte issued Executive Order (EO) No. 124 which set a price ceiling on pork and chicken products.

The EO, issued on Feb. 1 and implemented a week after, temporarily capped the price of pork shoulder (kasim) at P270 per kilogram, pork belly (liempo) at P300 per kilogram, and whole chicken at P160 per kilogram.

The price controls are in place until April 8.

Asked for additional comment, DA Spokesman Noel O. Reyes told reporters in a mobile phone message that he will leave it to the Palace to announce the exact contents of the proclamation, likely after it is signed.

Samahang Industriya ng Agrikultura Chairman Rosendo O. So said the priority for the government should be the establishment of border inspection facilities.

“The idea of a state of national emergency is to re-channel funds. The priority should be border inspection facilities. The other (government) programs will be useless if the country does not have those,” Mr. So said in a mobile phone message.

Separately, the private sector has agreed to help the government implement programs to control the spread of ASF and to rebuild the hog inventory.

On March 17, the DA signed a memorandum of understanding with Univet Nutrition and Animal Healthcare Co. (UNAHCO) and other organizations to carry out the hog industry’s rehabilitation.

Signing up for the partnership were the Philippine College of Swine Practitioners; the International Training Center on Pig Husbandry; Pig Improvement Co.; Provimi Philippines; Cargill Philippines, Inc.; Novus International Pte Ltd.; Kemin Industries; Philippine Association of Feed Millers, Inc.; and SGS Philippines.

“I am confident that with this partnership, we can attain our goal of reviving the country’s swine sector, which is very crucial in our food security efforts,” Mr. Dar said during the signing.

According to the DA, UNAHCO will create a working group consisting of its industry partners and coordinate efforts with the Bureau of Animal Industry, National Livestock Program, and DA regional field offices.

They will help in the distribution of breeders, gilt and piglets, and disinfectant, among others.

Ricardo C. Alba, president of UNAHCO, said the company has also launched its own swine repopulation and biosecurity initiatives for backyard hog raisers.

“The extent of ASF has reached alarming proportions and the DA openly welcomes our help. This is a classic example of public and private helping each other,” Mr. Alba said during the signing.

Mr. Dar said LGUs are vital in the successful implementation of the hog repopulation and ASF control programs.

“I wish to reiterate my call on our partners — LGUs, hog industry stakeholders, veterinary associations, universities, and research institutions, farmers’ cooperatives and associations, and backyard and commercial hog raisers — to join us to implement stringent and sustainable biosecurity measures,” Mr. Dar said.

The Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) has estimated that the national hog inventory as of Jan. 1 fell 24.1% year on year to 9.72 million animals. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

ARTA launches app integrating business permit process, contact tracing

THE Anti-Red Tape Authority (ARTA) will launch a digital platform unifying business permit transactions and contact tracing systems next month.

The Go SmARTApp, donated by Multisys Technologies Corp., will be used by local government units for business permit issuance and other transactions, ARTA said in a statement Thursday.

The platform will also incorporate the National Government coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) contact tracing application StaySafe.ph along with the Department of Information and Communications Technology’s electronic business permits system.

ARTA is also in talks with other agencies to integrate Social Amelioration Program fund transfers into the platform.

The Go SmARTApp expands and renames the Smart City platform initially intended solely for local government transactions. The expanded functions were endorsed by the Ease of Doing Business and Anti-Red Tape Advisory Council Wednesday.

The seven-person council includes representatives from various government agencies, the ARTA Director-General, and two private sector representatives.

The council will also endorse a multi-agency draft circular suspending illegal fees and taxes charged by local governments on goods transport.

“Among others, the memorandum will move to repeal policies, issuances, or ordinances imposing pass-through fees in several LGUs (local government units),” ARTA said. — Jenina P. Ibañez

Construction starts fall on weak confidence

CONSTRUCTION starts, as measured by permit approvals, fell sharply in the fourth quarter, headlined by a 20% decline in the largest segment, residential buildings, as commercial construction declined nearly 32%, the Philippine Statistics Authority, noting disruption and reduced confidence due to the pandemic.

Approved building permits in the three months to December period totaled 31,026, down from 39,242 a year earlier.

The building projects were equivalent to 5.78 million square meters of space and were valued at P62.96 billion. The estimated value was down 46.6% from a year earlier.

Residential construction, which accounted for 70.6% of all approved building permits, declined 20% year on year to 21,892 permits. The value of all approved residential projects was P32.61 billion.

Permits to build duplexes/quadruplexes fell 69.8% to 255, followed by residential condominium (minus 64.1% to 14), apartments/accessorias (minus 46.3% to 2,010), “other residential” buildings (minus 31.9% to 32), and single houses (minus 13.7% to 19,581).

Non-residential construction declined 29.4% to 4,670 permits. Non-residential buildings for which permits were sought were valued at P25.95 billion.

The commercial category contracted 31.9% year on year to 2,854 permits. Permits to construct institutional buildings fell 30.6% to 961, followed agricultural buildings (minus 27.4% to 183), industrial buildings (minus 16.7% to 533), and “other non-residential” buildings (minus 10.3% to 139).

Permits to add to existing structures dropped 66.1% to 465, while permits to make alterations and repairs rose 2.9% to 3,999.

The Calabarzon region — composed of the provinces of Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, Rizal, and Quezon — had the highest number of approved permits with 6,368. The Ilocos Region and Central Luzon followed with 4,199 and 3,589, respectively.

John Paolo R. Rivera, an economist with the Asian Institute of Management, said the decline in construction activity reflects shaky confidence in the economy due to the pandemic.

He also cited possible factors like “liquidity constraints, rapid increases in inflation,” which reduced builders’ confidence in making significant financial commitments, Mr. Rivera said in an e-mail.

Inflation in the fourth quarter averaged 3.1%, the highest since the 3.8% recorded in the first quarter of 2019. Meanwhile, inflation in January and February came in at 4.2% and 4.7%, respectively. The February was the highest since the 5.1% posted in December 2018 and was attributed to higher food prices and transport costs.

“Unless we reduce economic uncertainties, a declining trend is possible. Construction companies must also feel the confidence that economic prospects (are improving),” Mr. Rivera said, referring to the 6.5% to 7.5% growth target set by the government’s economic managers this year, as well as the 8% to 10% target in 2022.

“Recovery is conditional on initiatives by the government to manage and contain the pandemic that will regain trust and confidence in the economy,” he added. — Marissa Mae M. Ramos

Legislator expresses optimism Senate will support economic amendments to Constitution

A DEPUTY SPEAKER said deliberations on economic amendments to the Constitution will likely continue in May for timely transmission to the Senate, where he is confident the amendments will find support.

In a statement Thursday, Representative Rufus B. Rodriquez said: “Since we will have a break next week on March 25, the deliberations will continue when we resume session on May 17.”

Mr. Rodriguez said by the time the amendments are transmitted to the Senate, that chamber will have sufficient time to consider the proposed changes to the Constitution.

The House committee on constitutional amendments last month adopted Resolution of Both Houses No. 2 which inserts the phrase “unless otherwise provided by law” in the foreign investment restrictions in the Constitution, which would allow greater foreign participation in the economy with the passage of appropriate laws.

“The changing of those restrictions will hasten the country’s recovery from this crippling pandemic,” he said, adding that statements of support by some Senators makes him confident that the chamber “will tackle our amendment proposals once transmitted to them and will eventually consider approving them.”

He added that the House will propose only economic amendments.

Senate President Vicente C. Sotto III said in January that a one-line amendment to relax foreign ownership limits in the Constitution has a chance of being passed by the Senate. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas

LGU real property tax cases worth P4.53B resolved in 2020

THE Central Board of Assessment Appeals (CBAA) resolved cases raised by local government units (LGUs) last year involving an estimated P4.53 billion worth of real property taxes, the Department of Finance (DoF) said Thursday.

Twenty-two cases remain pending after hearings were suspended at the height of the lockdown last year, according to the DoF, citing a report from CBAA Chairman Robert Hernando Tobia.

Of the 16 resolved cases received by the board, nine were from Mindanao, four from Visayas and three in Luzon.

Republic Act No. 7160 or the Local Government Code, created the CBAA as an independent, quasi-judicial body to rule on assessment and collection cases brought by municipalities, cities and provinces.

Mr. Tobia said in his report that six of the resolved cases are awaiting rulings from the Court of Tax Appeals.

The DoF said several Local Boards of Assessment Appeals (LBAAs) remain inactive or have yet to be organized, “depriving taxpayers of real property tax remedies and procedures that should be available to them.”

Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III said the CBAA should work with the Department of the Interior and Local Government to help organize LBAAs even during quarantine. — Beatrice M. Laforga

Peso rebounds on dovish Fed

THE PESO rebounded versus the greenback on Thursday as the US Federal Reserve renewed its commitment to keep rates low to support the recovery of the world’s largest economy.

The local unit closed at P48.68 versus the dollar yesterday, appreciating by 4.5 centavos from its P48.725 close on Wednesday, data from the Bankers Association of the Philippines showed.

The peso opened Thursday’s session at P48.64 per dollar. Its weakest showing was at P48.68 while its intraday best was at P48.62 versus the greenback.

Dollars traded dropped to $748.3 million from $793.7 million on Wednesday.

The peso strengthened after the Fed said it would remain accommodative, a trader said in an email.

Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said the recent uptick in US inflation will not change their pledge to leave the benchmark overnight interest rate near zero to support the virus-stricken economy, Reuters reported.

“We are committed to giving the economy the support it needs to return as quickly as possible to a state of maximum employment,” Mr. Powell said at the close of the US central bank’s two-day policy review.

The Fed’s higher economic growth and employment estimates also boosted the peso, Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said in a text message.

Fed officials said they expect US gross domestic product to expand by 3.3% and 2.2% in 2022 and 2023, beyond the estimated long-term potential growth of 1.8%.

Meanwhile, the Fed sees unemployment settling at 4.5% by end-2021, better than the 6.4% outlook it gave in June last year.

For Friday, the trader gave a forecast range of P48.50 to P48.70 per dollar, while Mr. Ricafort expects the local unit to move within the P48.63 to P48.73 levels. — LWTN with Reuters

PHL shares rise as Fed keeps key rate near zero

PHILIPPINE SHARES climbed on Thursday after the US Federal Reserve kept its key interest rate near zero to support the recovery of the world’s largest economy.

The Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) rose by 64.02 points or 0.97% to close at 6,630.85 on Thursday. The all shares index also climbed by 40.31 points or 1.01% to finish at 4,005.09.

“Market moved up [on Thursday] in line with most regional markets as [the] US Fed maintained overnight rates to reassure the market of its tolerant stance on inflation [and] renewed emphasis on continued policy support,” Diversified Securities, Inc. Equity Trader Aniceto K. Pangan said via text message.

“The PSEi climbed higher led by recently battered blue chip property and bank stocks. Trading volumes continue to decline as investors take a wait-and-see approach,” AAA Southeast Equities, Inc. Research Head Christopher John J. Mangun said in an e-mail.

The US economy is heading for its strongest growth in nearly 40 years, the Federal Reserve said on Wednesday, and central bank policy makers are pledging to keep their foot on the gas despite an expected surge of inflation, Reuters reported.

“Strong data are ahead of us,” a confident Fed Chair Jerome Powell said after a two-day policy meeting, ticking off the list of forces Fed officials expect will produce 6.5% gross domestic product growth this year — from massive federal fiscal stimulus to optimism around the success of coronavirus vaccines.

The Federal Open Market Committee’s policy statement, which kept the benchmark overnight interest rate in a target range of 0-0.25%, was unanimous.

“We are committed to giving the economy the support it needs to return as quickly as possible to a state of maximum employment,” Mr. Powell said in a briefing after the Fed released its new economic projections and latest policy statement.

Back home, all sectoral indices improved except for holding firms, which declined by 3.93 points or 0.05% to 6,694.43.

Meanwhile, financials went up by 32.05 points or 2.28% to 1,436.33; property improved by 71.29 points or 2.18% to 3,333.76; mining and oil increased by 134.28 points or 1.58% to 8,619.13; industrials rose by 54.82 points or 0.64% to 8,582.71; and services added 3.45 points or 0.24% to close at 1,438.68.

Value turnover climbed to P8.85 billion on Thursday with 3.06 billion shares switching hands from the P6.85 billion with 4.62 billion issues traded on Wednesday.

Advancers beat decliners, 149 against 64, while 41 names closed unchanged.

Net foreign selling grew to P397.96 million on Thursday from the P256.96 million seen the day prior.

“There is still some hope that the pandemic situation will improve in the coming weeks which will give the investor sentiment a boost,” AAA Southeast Equities’ Mr. Mangun said. “Until then, the market will continue sideways with a slight negative bias.” — KCGV with Reuters

The other side of the pandemic

The International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) recent issue of Finance and Development for March highlighted the other side of the health pandemic. The virus that we dread helped accelerate the digital future and its good and bad consequences. The Fund drew global attention to its potential impact on poverty and inequality following the pandemic shock and the quality of public health response.

IMF’s chief economist Gita Gopinath estimated that 90 million people are likely “to fall into extreme poverty during 2020 and 2021, reversing the trend of the past two decades.”

The Philippines is no stranger to poverty. This is a reality close to the experience of at least the families of the four million unemployed as of January. In addition, underemployment prevents people from mitigating their material lack. Between October 2020 and January 2021, underemployment rose from 14.4% to 16%, or nearly seven million Filipinos.

Labor market statistics here and in other countries would confirm that unemployment has exacerbated pre-pandemic poverty and inequalities.

Work automation, the threshold to the digital future, has no doubt contributed to labor redundancy.

Gopinath explained that the upgrades in the growth projections in the January’s World Economic Outlook assumed mass vaccination, sustained policy support in large economies and adherence to social distancing rules. With uncertainty in the implementation of public policy, the Fund was concerned with divergences in the growth prospects of member countries.

How did the Fund propose to achieve minimal economic scarring?

We completely agree that the “the pandemic is not over until it is over everywhere.” Thus, the Fund proposed global action to increase vaccine production, additional funding for the COVAX initiative to scale up coverage beyond 20% of the global population, and greater logistics support for administering the vaccines.

On the economic side, the Fund reiterated the need for expansion of public spending even by borrowings. Those with limited fiscal space should prioritize health mitigation and cash transfers to the poor. Support can also be extended to small business. The Philippines supported the poor and the vulnerable during the pandemic and helped small business. However, we failed in our pandemic mitigation. Therefore, we also failed in protecting our livelihoods. Today, we continue struggling with surges in new cases and mortalities, and weak business activity.

With a longer-lasting scar, school closures can also threaten the livelihood of a generation of children. This could widen the divergence in growth prospects.

The IMF believes in the primacy of addressing the pandemic first through strategic and quick deployment of multiple vaccines and the orchestrated moves of all sectors to “avert a great divergence in prospects across countries.”

MIT’s Daron Acemoglu of Why Nations Fail fame with James Robinson, raised the need to regulate automation if we wish to reverse the widening inequality.

Acemoglu observed what seems obvious to many. Economic growth in the US and the rest of the industrial world has become much less shared since the 1980s. It has been less inclusive. This phenomenon involves widening inequality, the disappearance of good, high-paying jobs; and the drop in the real wages of those with less education. These factors were behind the pervasive discontent and social protests across the political spectrum. Populism and authoritarianism are fueled by social alienation.

Acemoglu found that automation, among other factors, would explain this phenomenon of less inclusive economic growth. With more advances driven by machine learning and artificial intelligence, automation could increase inequality. The challenge is to properly harness it and direct it through appropriate public policy to contribute to more inclusive growth.

True, automation has been an engine of growth since the Industrial Revolution. Its labor-saving effect has been more than matched by the significant gains in labor productivity and employment opportunities.

However, the pandemic has recently incentivized employers to explore various ways to further intensify machine use and recent evidence confirms this. The evidence also disproves that idea that “new technologies will increase productivity and enrich us, even if they dislocate some workers and disrupt existing businesses and industries.” Industries that are more reliant on these new technologies have not performed better in terms of total factor productivity (TFP), output, or employment growth. Acemoglu claimed that the gains in TFP in the last 20 years of technological leaps and bounds paled in comparison with those after World War II.

Why this irony?

Acemoglu explained that automation has been quite excessive. Businesses automate beyond those levels that reduce production costs. Social costs actually increase because jobs are lost and labor wages decline. Productivity growth is also weak because the singular focus on automation technologies may lead businesses “to miss out on productivity gains from new tasks, new organizational forms, and technological breakthroughs that are more complementary to humans.”

This disconnect between technology use and productivity gains may not be true as yet in the Philippines but with globalization and business process outsourcing, spillovers may not be too far behind. We need to keep a good balance between automation and human creativity especially during this pandemic.

We share Acemoglu’s assertion that the path of future technology centered on automation is not “preordained.” The choice made in the past should be rectified to direct the technology of automation to boost productivity rather than simply to save on labor.

Acemoglu’s recommendation might surprise many. He would like the government to provide incentives that would shift the composition of innovation from undue focus on automation to more human-friendly technologies. Government is not expected to block or discourage technological progress but to keep the mantra of business to provide job opportunities and allow for a more inclusive growth.

This can be done in education and healthcare to better equip their constituencies through AI and machine learning. In manufacturing, the so-called augmented reality and computer vision could enhance labor productivity.

Indeed, Zoom and digital payments have multiplied people’s coping capability during the pandemic and therefore technological innovations should continue with the same thrust of helping people. People can be retooled and technology should be able to create new opportunities by pointing the way.

This is not to make governments authoritarian. Acemoglu suggested the same direction that was followed in the discovery and development of antibiotics, sensors, and the internet. Without public intervention, these game-changing innovations would not have been possible.

The biggest challenge in harnessing technology is its potential impact on democracy.

With fake news and misinformation easily transmitted globally, AI-powered social media could also undermine democratic discourse.

Therefore, digitalization technology can only promote inclusiveness if it has public value. Of relevance here is the article on the need for public goods to support private innovation written by Bank for International Settlements (BIS) staff Jon Frost, Leonardo Gambacorta, and our friend Hyun Song Shin, economic adviser and head of research.

The BIS zeroed in on digital technology transforming the financial industry in payments, savings, borrowing and investment on digital platforms. Fintech and Bigtech companies, according to the BIS, now compete with banks and other financial market players in a wide spectrum of financial services.

While progress in this area has been impressive, as 1.2 billion adults gained access to financial accounts between 2011 and 2017, BIS argued that for digital technology to further bolster financial inclusion, public goods are critical. “Public goods provide the underpinnings of financial inclusion.”

The pandemic imposed social distancing and economic lockdowns and since then, digital payments have become the lifeline of many people — selling and buying goods, depositing and transferring money without contact.

Related to this, the BIS raised a most fundamental point that has been sadly missed by many proponents of financial inclusion. Digital technologies cannot succeed on their own. They need enablers: mobile phones, internet, storage and processing of large volumes of digital data, and other infrastructure like cloud computing, machine learning, distributed ledger technology, and biometric technologies.

Because digital technology is scalable and can improve risk assessment based on the same by-product of data, numerous services and functionalities have been opened by digital technology. Lending without collateral may now be possible. Bigtech companies hold a great amount of credit information about the potential borrower. But Bigtech companies have become too big to fail.

BIS proposed five policies to leverage on the benefits of digital technology while safeguarding financial stability and consumer rights. One, open, inclusive digital infrastructures should be built. Two, common standards should be introduced to encourage competition. Three, competition policies should be updated. Four, data privacy should be strengthened. And finally, policymakers like central banks, regulatory, competition and privacy authorities should get and work together.

This is the other side of the pandemic. It has spawned innovation that unless tamed, could in fact exacerbate poverty and inequality.

 

Diwa C. Guinigundo is the former Deputy Governor for the Monetary and Economics Sector, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP). He served the BSP for 41 years. In 2001-2003, he was Alternate Executive Director at the International Monetary Fund in Washington, DC. He is the senior pastor of the Fullness of Christ International Ministries in Mandaluyong.