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Christmas start to NBA 2020-21?

A PUSH to start the 2020-21 National Basketball Association (NBA) season by Christmas is gaining momentum, multiple outlets reported on Friday.

A start date was just one item on the agenda at Friday’s meeting of the league’s Board of Governors, along with discussions about fan attendance amid the pandemic and the possibility of playing fewer than 82 games, ESPN reported.

The Athletic reported Friday that the NBA is targeting a Dec. 22 start date and a 72-game regular season that would finish before the start of the 2021 Summer Olympics, which are set to begin on July 23 in Tokyo.

Last month, NBA commissioner Adam Silver said his “best guess” was that the season wouldn’t start until early 2021.

The NBA has made a vow that players would get at least an eight-week notice before the start of the season. Oct. 30 would be exactly eight weeks before Christmas Day. — Reuters

PFL postpones fourth season kickoff

THE scheduled kickoff of the fourth season of the Philippines Football League (PFL) on Sunday did not push through as the league decided to postpone it because of inclement weather brought about by Tropical Depression “Quinta” and positive cases of the coronavirus.

In a statement shared on late Saturday, the PFL said it came to a decision to defer the start of its new season to “the next few days” as it feared heavy rains and wind because of Quinta could disrupt the three matches scheduled on Match Day 1 at the Philippine Football Federation (PFF) National Training Center in Carmona, Cavite.

It is also to give it time to deal with confirmed positive cases of the coronavirus among team personnel at the Seda Nuvali in Santa Rosa, Laguna, which is the official home of the league for the two-week duration of the PFL’s fourth season.

As per the statement of the league, five players and one coach among two clubs tested positive in the reverse transcription polymerase reaction (RT-PCR) tests conducted on Oct. 21. All have since been isolated.

Further tests were conducted on those with close contacts on said personnel on Oct. 24 and three returned positive.

Despite the development, PFL Commissioner Coco Torre assured there is nothing to worry about.

“We have anticipated this scenario, hence there is a set of health and safety protocols in place for incidents such as this. What is important is that all continue to adhere with the protocols, which are aimed to prevent or minimize the spread of the virus,” said Mr. Torre.

“We put emphasis on the safety of each and every individual in the bubble, whether player, staff, or match official,” PFF general secretary Atty. Edwin Gastanes, said for his part.

Adding, “We understand the current situation and with participants’ strict compliance with bubble-specific protocols, we hope to push through with kickoff in a few days.”

Scheduled to kick off the PFL proceedings on Sunday was a triple-header that had the Azkals Development Team going up against Mendiola FC 1991 at 9 a.m. to be followed by Stallion Laguna FC versus Kaya FC-Iloilo at 4:30 p.m. Capping off the opening day is the clash between Maharlika Manila FC and United City Football Club (formerly Ceres-Negros FC) at 8 p.m.

It was part of the reconfigured five match days for the league for the new season to adapt to the prevailing conditions with the coronavirus pandemic.

The team with the best record at the end of the match days is crowned as champion.

The tournament, presented by Qatar Airways, is to be conducted in a “bubble” setup in accordance with guidelines set by the government. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Talent tops tumult

Six months ago, Buccaneers head coach Bruce Arians was asked about the possibility of bringing in the controversial Antonio Brown. His reply then was the same as it was a year ago: No way. He told Tiki Barber on CBS Sports Network’s “Tiki and Tierney” that “it’s not gonna happen. There’s no room and, probably, not enough money. But it’s not gonna happen; it’s not a fit here.” His doubling down on his assessment that the wide receiver is “too much of a diva,” for the most part framed during their time in Pittsburgh, presumably closed the door on a reunion. Never mind the lobbying of newly signed greatest-of-all-time Tom Brady.

Over the weekend, however, Arians ostensibly made a 180-degree turn. News coming out of the grapevine has Brown inking a one-year deal with the Buccaneers, underscoring yet again an age-old truth in sports: talent tops tumult. It’s especially true in the National Football League, whose annals are littered with examples of troubled players being given second chances because their on-field gains are seen to outweigh their off-field missteps. In his case, the hope is that the fourth time’s the charm. Heck, they’re seemingly so bullish on what he will bring to the table as to allow him to first serve a standing suspension for his violation of the league’s personal conduct policy.

Arians wasn’t wrong to hitherto resist the lure and allure of Brown’s admittedly singular skill set. After all, he wasn’t guilty of just jaywalking; he had been accused of sexual misconduct in 2017, and is fresh off pleading no contest to a felony burglary with battery case and two misdemeanor charges. Unfortunately, the Buccaneers felt a pressing need for his services in the face of injuries to Pro Bowlers Mike Evans and Chris Godwin, as well as to sophomore sensation Scotty Miller. And, no doubt, they received enough guarantees from Brady on locker room control to believe they’ll come out on the plus side when the battlesmoke clears.

Brady has a cause to be bullish on the prospects of Brown being a productive target; they did play beautiful music together in their lone game as Patriots last year. On the other hand, there’s a reason the Steelers couldn’t wait to get rid of him in March last year, the Raiders subsequently didn’t even want to touch him, and the Patriots were then forced to go one and done with him. Don’t tell that to self-proclaimed “Tom Terrific,” though; oozing with California Cool, the quarterback is already anticipating his post-suspension contributions beginning on Week Eight against the Saints.

Will Brown be a boon or a bane? The answer is anybody’s guess. What isn’t: The Buccaneers are going all in. If it wasn’t evident when they strove to win the Brady sweepstakes in March, it is now. Their Win Now mode has them accepting an all-or-nothing proposition, initial impressions be damned, which is all well and good if their gamble winds up paying off in spades. If not, they’ll be spending much of their longer-than-planned off-season justifying their desperation.

 

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.

Samsung’s Lee, a titan who built a global tech giant

SEOUL — In February 1993, five years after taking over from his father at South Korea’s Samsung Group, 51-year-old Lee Kun-hee was frustrated that he wasn’t making his mark.

He summoned a group of Samsung Electronics executives to a Best Buy store in Los Angeles for a reality check on the Samsung brand. Covered in dust, a Samsung TV set sat on a corner shelf with a price tag nearly $100 cheaper than a rival Sony Corp model.

After a tense nine-hour follow-up meeting, Lee kick-started a strategic shift at Samsung — to gain market share through quality, not quantity.

Lee, who died aged 78 on Sunday after being hospitalized for a heart attack in 2014, was driven by a constant sense of crisis, which he instilled in his leadership teams to drive change and fight complacency. In the mid-1990s, Lee personally recalled around $50 million worth of poor quality mobile phones and fax machines, and set fire to them.

This focus on crisis, and his often abrasive manner, helped Lee grow his father Lee Byung-chull’s noodle trading business into a sprawling business empire with assets worth 424 trillion won ($375 billion) as of May 2020 in dozens of affiliates stretching from electronics and insurance to shipbuilding and construction.

Samsung Electronics developed from a second-tier TV maker to the world’s biggest technology firm by revenue — seeing off Japanese brands Sony, Sharp Corp and Panasonic Corp in chips, TVs and displays; ending Nokia Oyj’s handset supremacy and beating Apple, Inc in smartphones.

In a 1997 essay, Lee recalled his frustration at management inertia. “The external business environment was not good … but there was no sense of anxiety within the organization, and everyone appeared to be eaten up with self-conceit … I needed to tighten them up a bit and repeatedly reminded managers of the need to have the sense of crisis.”

In 2013, Forbes named Lee as the second most powerful South Korean, ranked only behind United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

FEARED AND REVERED
Four months after the Los Angeles meeting, Lee called his lieutenants to a Frankfurt hotel conference room, where he laid out his “New Management” plan, exhorting executives to “change everything except your wife and children.”

Executive meetings proved brutal, often stretching to 10 hours, with participants afraid to even drink water as they didn’t want to have to interrupt Lee’s flow by visiting the washroom.

Lee’s business acumen made him the object of endless fascination and speculation in Korea, but he and the empire he built have also been vilified by critics and activist shareholders for wielding such economic clout, hierarchical and opaque governance, and dubious transfers of the family wealth.

In 2008, Lee was accused of managing a political slush fund and of helping his children buy Samsung company shares on the cheap. Prosecutors failed to prove either charge, but Lee was convicted of tax evasion and embezzlement. He apologized and stepped down, only to return within two years following a presidential pardon.

He had since kept a lower profile and delegated to an army of managers, while promoting his son, Jay Y. Lee, to vice chairman, a grooming post for the eventual transfer of power.

As his health deteriorated Lee needed help in walking and was susceptible to respiratory diseases following lung cancer treatment — he was a less frequent presence at Samsung’s headquarters, spending long winter vacations in Japan or Hawaii.

But his hold over the group remained undimmed. Whenever he travelled overseas, at least four of Samsung’s top executives, along with company crew and security, would be at the airport to see him off.

At Samsung’s human resources development center, the tens of thousands of employees attending training sessions pay a silent vigil to a mock-up of the drab Frankfurt hotel conference room — with furniture specially imported from Germany. As most of Samsung’s staff are in their 20s and 30s and didn’t experience Lee’s managerial heyday first-hand, this homage serves to remind them of the need to ‘think crisis,” several people who have been trained at the center said.

JAPAN EXPOSURE
Lee was born in 1942 in the southern Korean village of Uiryeong, the third son of Samsung’s founder. He was sent to Japan at the age of 11, just after the Korean war ended. His father wanted his sons to learn how Japan was rebuilding from the ashes of World War II.

He has admitted to being a loner and found it tough to make friends when he returned home to a country riven with anti-Japanese sentiment. He went back to Japan to study economics at Waseda University, and then business management at George Washington University in the United States.

His early exposure to Japan’s advanced technology led him to establish the basis of Samsung Electronics by forming alliances with the likes of Sanyo, and adopting chip making and TV manufacturing technologies.

Lee began his Samsung career in broadcasting, working his way up to group chairman by 1987, breaking with the traditional Confucian practice of the eldest son taking over the reins. His older brother, Lee Maeng-hee, was initially chosen to lead Samsung in 1967 when his father retired, but his aggressive management style caused friction with the founder’s confidants, according to several books about Samsung.

The second son, Lee Chang-hee, severed family ties by telling the presidential office that his father had a $1 million slush fund overseas.

Lee senior exiled Chang-hee to the United States and returned as chairman himself. In 1976, diagnosed with cancer, he handed the business down to Kun-hee. Chang-hee died in 1991.

Kun-hee’s hunched posture, due to a traffic accident, soft voice, round eyes and often bemused expression were atypical for such a powerful character. Married to Hong Ra-hee, who runs a Samsung-affiliated art gallery called the Leeum — a combination of Lee and museum — Lee had a son and three daughters.

His youngest daughter died in New York in 2005, which Samsung said at a car accident but media reports said was a suicide.

Lee had been a member of the International Olympic Committee between 1996 and 2017. — Reuters

Murder hornet’s nest vacuumed out of tree in Washington state

A TEAM of entomologists in full-body protective gear vacuumed Asian giant hornets out of a tree in Washington state on Saturday, eradicating the first nest of the so-called murder hornets found in the United States.

The state’s agricultural department said it had spent weeks searching for and trapping the hornets, which attack honeybee hives and could pose a threat to humans, because they can sting repeatedly with venom that is stronger than a honeybee’s.

The state’s entomologists succeeded by attaching radio trackers to three hornets they had trapped earlier in the week, one of which they followed to the nest, located in a tree near Blaine, Washington, on Thursday.

They returned on Saturday to make the extraction.

“Got ‘em. Vacuumed out several #AsianGiantHornets from a tree cavity near Blaine this morning,” the agriculture department said on Twitter, adding that more details would be provided at a news conference on Monday.

The stinging hornet, the world’s largest, can grow as large as 2-1/2 inches (6.4 cm) in length and is native to Southeast Asia, China and Taiwan. It was first discovered in the United States in December by a homeowner in Blaine.

Aside from the danger to humans, the hornet presents a threat to agriculture and the apiary industry, officials have said, because it is a known predator of honey bees, with a few of the hornets capable of wiping out an entire hive in hours. — Reuters

Afghan security forces kill senior al Qaeda leader

KABUL — Afghan security forces have killed Abu Muhsin al-Masri, a senior al Qaeda leader who was on the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s (FBI) Most Wanted Terrorists list, Afghanistan’s National Directorate of Security (NDS) said in a tweet late on Saturday.

The head of the US National Counter-Terrorism Center, Chris Miller, confirmed al-Masri’s death in a statement, saying his “removal… from the battlefield is a major setback to a terrorist organization that is consistently experiencing strategic losses facilitated by the United States and its partners.”

Al Qaeda’s loss of al-Masri, Miller continued, “highlights the diminishing effectiveness of the terrorist organization.”

Al-Masri has been charged in the United States with having provided material support and resources to a foreign terrorist organization, and conspiracy to kill US nationals.

Al-Masri, believed to be al Qaeda’s second-in-command, was killed during a special operation in Ghazni province, the NDS said.

The FBI declined to comment.

The al Qaeda operative, who also went by the name Husam Abd-al-Ra’uf, was an Egyptian national, according to the FBI.

Last month, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said fewer than 200 al Qaeda operatives remain in Afghanistan.

This month marks 19 years since the United States invaded Afghanistan to topple the Taliban rulers, who had harboured al Qaeda militants who attacked the United States on Sept. 11, 2001.

The United States has been gradually drawing down its troops from Afghanistan after striking a landmark deal with the Taliban in February.

That deal is set to see foreign forces leave Afghanistan by May 2021 in exchange for counterterrorism guarantees from the Taliban, which agreed to negotiate a permanent ceasefire and a power sharing formula with the Afghan government.

The intra-Afghan peace process kicked off in Doha last month. Despite the talks, fighting between Taliban and Afghan government forces has raged in recent weeks.

Last week, US special envoy Zalmay Khalilzad said the Taliban had agreed to “re-set” their commitments under a troop withdrawal deal and reduce the number of casualties in the country. — Reuters

Philippines evacuates nearly 1,800 as tropical storm Molave approaches

The Philippines evacuated nearly 1,800 people and suspended sea travel as tropical storm Molave was expected to bring widespread rains over two regions on the southern part of the main island of Luzon on Sunday.

Tropical cyclone wind alerts were issued for several provinces in the Bicol and Calabarzon regions with storm Molave expected to make landfall later in the day while traversing the southern Luzon area, the national weather bureau said.

“Further intensification prior to landfall over Bicol region remains likely,” it warned in a bulletin.

Molave follows tropical storm Saudel, which last week caused widespread flooding in Quezon province in the Calabarzon region, southeast of the capital Manila.

After crossing the Philippine archipelago, Molave was expected to continue intensifying over the South China Sea, possibly reaching typhoon category by Tuesday evening, it said.

Sea travel operations were canceled in the Calabarzon region, with 662 people reportedly stranded at ports due to strong winds, according to the disaster monitoring agency.

In the Bicol provinces, a total of 532 families, or 1,789 people, were preemptively evacuated to temporary shelters, it said. — Reuters

Samsung chairman Lee Kun-hee, head of S.Korea’s biggest conglomerate, dies at 78

SEOUL – Lee Kun-hee, charismatic leader of Samsung Group, South Korea’s biggest conglomerate, died on Sunday, the company said, six years after he was hospitalised for a heart attack.

Lee, who was 78, helped grow his father Lee Byung-chull’s noodle trading business into a powerhouse, with dozens of affiliates stretching from electronics and insurance to shipbuilding and construction.

He died with his family by his side, including his son, Samsung Electronics Vice Chairman Jay Y. Lee, the conglomerate said.

Lee is the latest second-generation leader of a South Korean’s family-controlled conglomerates to die, leaving thorny succession issues for the third generation.

“Chairman Lee was a true visionary who transformed Samsung into the world-leading innovator and industrial powerhouse from a local business. His 1993 declaration of ‘New Management’ was the motivating driver of the company’s vision to deliver the best technology to help advance global society,” Samsung said in a statement.

During his lifetime, Samsung Electronics developed from a second-tier TV maker to the world’s biggest technology firm by revenue – seeing off Japanese brands Sony, Sharp Corp and Panasonic Corp in chips, TVs and displays; ending Nokia Oyj’s handset supremacy and beating Apple Inc in smartphones.

“His legacy will be everlasting,” Samsung said. – Reuters

Budget deficit narrows in September

The national government’s (NG) budget gap in September narrowed by 22% to P138.5 billion in September as revenue collection and state spending both declined, the Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) said on Friday.

For the January to September period, the fiscal deficit stood at P879.2 billion, 194% higher compared with the P299-billion deficit logged a year ago, the BTr’s latest cash operations report showed.

In September, government spending dropped by 15.45% to P350.9 billion, a reversal from the 0.38% uptick seen in August. The lower expenditures were attributed to the base effect of higher infrastructure spending a year ago as well as the timing of subsidy releases, BTr said.

Primary expenditures contracted by 17.32% to P307.6 billion in September, while interest payments were flat at P43.4 billion.

The September figures show the slower state spending could be the government’s “strategy to limit the budget deficit,” said ING Bank-NV Manila Senior Economist Nicholas Antonio T. Mapa.

However, he warned a continued drop in government expenditure might slow down recovery.

“Government spending alongside the net exports account were the lone bright spots for GDP (gross domestic product) in the first half of 2020 and the projected decline in fiscal expenditures does not bode well for the GDP outlook in both 2020 and 2021,” Mr. Mapa said in an e-mail.

On the other hand,​ the economic slowdown continued to affect government revenues which declined 10.19% to P212.4 billion in September, as tax revenues slumped by 8.51% to P193 billion.

Broken down, tax collections by the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) fell 6.56% to P140.6 billion in September, while collections by the Bureau of Customs (BoC) slipped 13.69% to P50.8 billion.

Meanwhile, non-tax revenues, which consists of privatization proceeds and fees and charges generated, decreased 24.13% to P19.4 billion.

The BTr’s income slid 19.35% to P8.6 billion due as the national government’s share in the income from the Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp. plunged by 87.4%. The Treasury also attributed the lower income to “the timing of remittance of interest on advances from GOCCs (government-owned and controlled corporations) offsetting the higher dividend collection from NG shares of stocks.”

Non-tax revenues from other offices also fell 27.57% to P10.8 billion for the month.

“We observe that revenue collections were lower as mobility, businesses and activities slowly recover after being hampered by renewed community quarantine restrictions from the previous month,” Security Bank Corp. Chief Economist Robert Dan J. Roces said in a text message.

The budget shortfall widened in the January to September period, as expenditures rose 15.07% to P3.022 trillion due to the government’s pandemic response. However, this was still 7.53% lower than the revised P3.269 trillion expenditure program for the year.

“The lag is attributed mainly to measures under RA No. 11494 or the ‘Bayanihan to Recover as One Act’ which are still to be implemented following the approval of the law last Sept. 11,” the BTr said.

The nine-month tally showed revenues dropped 7.92% to P2.143 trillion as tax collections fell 11.28% to P1.854 trillion. The BIR’s collections decreased 9.91% to P1.443 trillion, while BoC’s tax take went down by 15.32% to P398 billion.

The cumulative tax revenues from the BIR was 10.19% higher than the revised P1.31 trillion target. Meanwhile, the BoC’s nine-month collections also surpassed the P372.2 billion revised program.

For his part, Mr. Roces is expecting the fiscal deficit to widen further in the remaining months of 2020 due to Bayanihan II. The law provides a P165.5-billion additional boost to the country’s pandemic response. — Luz Wendy T. Noble

Philippines to allow foreign investors to enter in November

The Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID) will allow foreign investors to enter the Philippines starting from Nov. 1.

Under Resolution No. 80 dated Oct. 22, foreign nationals with investment visas will be allowed to enter the Philippines, which has implemented travel curbs starting February to stem the rise in coronavirus infections.

Foreign nationals should have visas issued by the Bureau of Immigration pursuant to Executive Order No. 226 or the Omnibus Investments Code; Department of Justice; or Aurora Pacific Economic Zone and Freeport Authority, and Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority.

The entry of foreign investors will still be subject to conditions, such as the validity of the visa and pre-booking of accredited quarantine facilities.

The Bureau of Immigration will coordinate with airlines for the proper implementation of the resolution.

The Philippines has seen a slump in foreign investments as it implemented one of the world’s longest and strictest lockdowns earlier this year. Lockdown restrictions have since been eased as part of the government’s efforts to revive the economy, which entered a recession in the second quarter.

At the same time, the IATF-EID lifted the pre-boarding coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) testing requirement for outbound Filipino travellers.

“Whenever required by the country of destination or the airline, a negative COVID-19 test taken in accordance with the health and safety protocols of such destination country or airline,” the IATF-EID said.

Those travelling on tourist or short-term visas should submit confirmed round trip tickets and adequate travel and health insurance “to cover travel disruptions and hospitalization” in case they are infected with the coronavirus.

They also have to execute a Bureau of Immigration declaration acknowledging the risks in their travel.

Outbound travellers shall follow guidelines for returning Filipinos upon their return, requiring them to undergo a 14-day quarantine upon arrival, the IATF said.

The task force allowed non-essential outbound travels starting October 21.

The task force also eased the mass gatherings for religious activities in areas under general community quarantine, now allowing 30% of the seating or venue capacity. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas

BSP approves nearly $4B in gov’t foreign loans

The central bank has approved $3.919 billion in government’s foreign loans in the third quarter, with most of the funds going to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic response and massive infrastructure projects.

The amount of national government foreign borrowings approved was 49% higher than the $2.654 billion in foreign debt greenlit in the same period of 2019, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said in a statement on Friday.

The policy-setting Monetary Board has the mandate to give prior approval for all foreign loans to be contracted or guaranteed by the government under the 1987 Constitution.

Broken down, $1.458 billion in borrowings will be used for infrastructure development while $1.247 billion will fund the government’s efforts to contain the pandemic.

The rest of the borrowings will be utilized for agrarian reform and agriculture development ($770 million), financial inclusion ($417.42 million), and local governance reforms ($26.53 million).

The country’s total external debt stock as a share of the gross domestic product stood at 23.7% as of end-June, rising from the 21.4% as foreign debt increased to support the government’s crisis response.

BSP Governor Benjamin E. Diokno has said the country’s external debt indicators remain at prudent levels.

The government expects to borrow P3 trillion this year from both foreign and local sources. This is seen to plug the budget deficit which is expected to balloon to 9.6% of gross domestic product this year as state revenues decline amid the economic slowdown.

So far, foreign borrowings surged 85% year on year to P509.69 billion in the January to August this year, data from the Bureau of the Treasury showed. — Luz Wendy T. Noble

DOT suspends issuance of retiree’s visa, orders review of PRA policies

The Department of Tourism (DoT) has ordered the Philippine Retirement Authority (PRA) to suspend the issuance of Special Retirement Residence Visas (SRRV) pending the review and amendments of the policies on age and visa deposit requirements.

Senators earlier questioned the PRA for allowing foreigners as young as 35 years old to reside in the country as retirees, saying that it is a form of “soft invasion.”

During the PRA Board of Trustees meeting on Friday, the agency was directed by the DoT to review its policies on age bracket, dollar deposit requirements, and the conversion of these deposits into allowable investments.

According to the DoT, the acceptance and processing of applications to join the SRRV program and issuance of SRRV will remain suspended pending the PRA’s compliance with the above-cited directives.

The PRA was also directed to implement an enhanced program to regularly monitor the profile and activities of active SRRV holders in coordination with other government agencies, such as the Bureau of Immigration (BI), Department of Justice (DoJ), and the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE).

The PRA was likewise ordered to coordinate with the Tourism Promotions Board (TPB) for the formulation and review of its marketing and product development plans, and its retirement programs with other countries.

Meanwhile, a lawmaker on Friday said the surge in the entry of Chinese and other foreign nationals into the Philippines will boost the country’s economic growth amid the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.

“With all due respect to the opinion of our esteemed senators in the Upper Chamber of Congress, I believe that the entry of foreign nationals who wish to retire and consider our country as their second home is a welcome development,” Partylist Rep. Enrico A. Pineda said in a statement. “Our country is still reeling from the impact of the pandemic. These retirees from other countries are willing to invest in our country by bringing business here.”

The SRRV program requires those aged 50 years old and above to have a time deposit of $10,000 to $20,000 for its issuance; $50,000, on the other hand, is required for those who are aged 35 to 49.

“On the other hand, I agree with the sentiment of our counterparts in the Senate that the minimum retiree age must be reconsidered and reviewed by the Department of Tourism and the (PRA),” Mr Pineda said, saying that it would be better if the age requirement would be adjusted from 35-14 to 40-49 years old.

“However, we have to be very cautious in the review of our retirement visa policies for us not to be misconstrued to be shooing away retirees. Most of these foreign nationals are investing in their tourist destinations, creating more jobs for the locals and giving income to the government in terms of taxes,” he said. “For as long as they follow proper procedures as required by our laws, they are welcome to retire and invest in our country.”

PRA officials earlier revealed at a budget hearing at the Senate that there are currently 27,678 Chinese retirees in the Philippines. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza