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Consumer Act, CREATE named DTI priorities

THE Trade department has asked the new chairman of the House committee on trade and industry to prioritize the passage of consumer protections and pricing laws.

Trade Secretary Ramon M. Lopez and Navotas Representative John Reynald M. Tiangco held their first virtual meeting Tuesday.

In a statement Thursday, the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) said Mr. Lopez sought priority treatment for the passage of a revised Consumer Act of the Philippines, as well as an expanded Price Act.

The House committee on trade and industry last year approved an amendment to the Price Act to classify personal protective equipment as a prime commodity subject to price regulation.

Mr. Lopez also asked that priority be given to small-business funding and the “One Town, One Product” encouraging various parts of the country to specialize in certain classes of goods. Mr. Lopez also expressed support for the revised Warehouse Receipts Law that would allow farmers to use their crops as collateral for bank loans, which is currently pending with the Committee on Appropriations.

Mr. Lopez also backed the passage of the Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprises (CREATE) Act, which cuts corporate income tax rates while streamlining fiscal incentives. Legislators are harmonizing both chambers’ versions of the measure and hope to wrap up bicameral conference committee sessions within the month.

“This is a very important piece of legislation that will help the economy recover much faster and stronger, with the reduction in income tax rates and better set of time-bound, performance-based and focused incentives,” he said.

“The CREATE bill is a game-changer in attracting more investments to the country.” — Jenina P. Ibañez

Household electrification rate hits 92.96% in Oct. — DoE

THE household electrification rate was 92.96% as of October, equivalent to 23.23 million households with access to power, the Department of Energy (DoE) said, citing data from electric cooperatives and utilities.

The October total exceeds the 22.98 million with access to power identified in the 2015 census, the DoE said in its 37th Electric Power Industry Reform Act (EPIRA) Implementation Status Report.

Households within distribution utility territories that do not have access to power as of October totaled 1.61 million.

The electrification levels of electric cooperatives (ECs); private investor-owned utilities or local government owned utilities; and Manila Electric Co. were at 89.19%, 97.08% and 100%, respectively.

The report, posted on the DoE’s website Thursday, highlighted action taken by the DoE and its agencies, the Energy Regulatory Commission, and private sector industries to comply with the EPIRA law between May and October.

In its previous EPIRA status report, the DoE estimated the household electrification rate at 91.25%.

Between May and October, the National Electrification Administration (NEA) disbursed P60.82 million worth of loans to ECs in Misamis Oriental, Masbate, Davao Del Norte and Surigao del Sur.

Last month, the NEA reported that more than 12,000 rural sitios still did not have access to power and that the agency would require more funding to meet the government’s 100% electrification target.

The NEA has said in a statement that the P1.6-billion allocation for sitio electrification — as provided for in the 2021 National Expenditures Program — will only cover 1,085 sitios.

In September, the NEA said that it needed P9 billion to achieve full electrification by next year. — Angelica Y. Yang

First Metro sees 2021 GDP growth at 5.5%-6.5%

THE ECONOMY is likely to grow between 5.5% and 6.5% this year, with recovery prospects mainly supported by infrastructure spending and various tax reform initiatives, according to First Metro Investment Corp. (FMIC).

The main risks to growth are uneven application of quarantine rules and a strong peso, according to economist Victor A. Abola of the University of Asia and the Pacific, FMIC’s partner in issuing regular economic outlooks.

“We will be coming from a low base. We expect a negative print in the fourth quarter and possibly in the first quarter of this year,” Mr. Abola said at a virtual briefing Thursday.

FMIC’s growth estimate is weaker than the government’s 6.5% to 7.5% forecast for the year.

In 2020, FMIC estimates a contraction of between 9% and 10%, against the 8.5% to 9.5% contraction projected by economic managers.

Gross domestic product (GDP) fell 10% in the first nine months of 2020, following a GDP contraction of 11.5% in the three months to September.

This year, growth prospects will be supported by benign inflation, key infrastructure projects, the vaccine rollout, and more localized quarantines rather than blanket restrictions applied to large areas, FMIC said.

Mr. Abola said that sectors that are faring relatively well despite the pandemic are trucking, delivery, death care, animal slaughter and processing, food and beverage, construction, medical services and hospitals, residential care facilities, and training services.

On the monetary policy side, Mr. Abola said the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) has room to conduct further easing withs inflation likely to subside.

He said another 25 basis points (bps) reduction is possible “after inflation rate goes down below 2.5%… in the month of February or March.”

FMIC expects inflation to rise to 2.7% this year from 2.6% in 2020. This is below the 3.2% projected by the central bank.

The key policy rate or the overnight reverse repurchase is currently at 2% after the BSP slashed rates by 200 bps last year. This has affectively led to negative real interest rates as headline inflation in December was 3.5%.

BSP Governor Benjamin E. Diokno has said that monetary authorities will maintain an accommodative policy stance until a growth trajectory of 6.5% to 7.5% is regained. — Luz Wendy T. Noble

Second year of pandemic ‘could be tougher’ — WHO

REUTERS

GENEVA — The second year of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic may be tougher than the first given how the new coronavirus is spreading, especially in the northern hemisphere as more infectious variants circulate, the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Wednesday.

“We are going into a second year of this, it could even be tougher given the transmission dynamics and some of the issues that we are seeing,” Mike Ryan, the WHO’s top emergencies official, said during an event on social media.

The worldwide death toll is approaching 2 million people since the pandemic began, with 91.5 million people infected.

The WHO, in its latest epidemiological update issued overnight, said after two weeks of fewer cases being reported, some five million new cases were reported last week, the likely result of a letdown of defences during the holiday season in which people — and the virus — came together.

“Certainly in the northern hemisphere, particularly in Europe and North America we have seen that sort of perfect storm of the season — coldness, people going inside, increased social mixing and a combination of factors that have driven increased transmission in many, many countries,” Mr. Ryan said.

Maria Van Kerkhove, WHO’s technical lead for COVID-19, warned: “After the holidays, in some countries the situation will get a lot worse before it gets better.”

Amid growing fears of the more contagious coronavirus variant first detected in Britain but now entrenched worldwide, governments across Europe on Wednesday announced tighter, longer coronavirus restrictions.

That includes home-office requirements and store closures in Switzerland, an extended Italian COVID-19 state of emergency, and German efforts to further reduce contacts between people blamed for failed efforts, so far, to get the coronavirus under control.

“I worry that we will remain in this pattern of peak and trough and peak and trough, and we can do better,” Ms. Van Kerkhove said.

She called for maintaining physical distancing, adding: “The further, the better…but make sure that you keep that distance from people outside your immediate household.” — Reuters

Yellow grub becomes EU’s first insect food

LONDON — Mealworms may soon find their way into Europe’s pasta bowls and dinner dishes, after becoming the first insect approved in the region as a human food.

Wednesday’s decision by the European Food Safety Agency (EFSA) paves the way for the yellow grubs to be used whole and dried in curries and other recipes and as a flour to make biscuits, pasta and bread. Despite their name, mealworms are beetle larvae rather than worms and are already used in Europe as a pet food ingredient.

Rich in protein, fat and fibre, they are likely to be the first of many insects to feature on European’s plates in the coming years, EFSA chemist and food scientist Ermolaos Ververis told Reuters.

Under his supervision, mealworms were the first insect that the EU (European Union) agency assessed under a “novel food” regulation that came into effect in 2018, triggering a flood of similar applications.

“There is great interest of the scientific community and also the food industry in the edible insect sector,” he said.

People across much of the world — including parts of Africa, Australia and New Zealand — already enjoy tucking into insect bars, cricket burgers and other grub-based foods,

Once the European Commission ratifies ESFA’s endorsement, Europe will join them.

Some sociologists, however, believe psychological barriers particularly strong in Europe mean it will be some time before the yellow worms start flying off supermarket shelves there.

“There are cognitive reasons derived from our social and cultural experiences — the so-called ‘yuck factor’ — that make the thought of eating insects repellent to many Europeans,” said Giovanni Sogari, a social and consumer researcher at the University of Parma in Italy.

“With time and exposure, such attitudes can change.”

EFSA said it had received 156 applications for “novel food” safety assessments since 2018, covering everything from algae-derived foods to an array of insect species. — Reuters

Gut bacteria tied to COVID-19 severity, immune response

THE MICROSCOPIC organisms living in our intestines may influence the severity of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and the body’s immune response to it, and could account for lingering symptoms, researchers reported on Monday in the journal Gut.

They found that the gut microorganisms in COVID-19 patients were very different from those in uninfected individuals.

“COVID patients lack certain good bacteria known to regulate our immune system,” said Dr. Siew Ng of The Chinese University of Hong Kong. The presence of an abnormal assortment of gut bacteria, or “dysbiosis,” persists after the virus is gone and could play a role in the long-lasting symptoms that plague some patients, she said.

Her team has developed an oral formula of live bacteria known as probiotics and a special capsule to protect the organisms until they reach the gut.

“Compared with patients on standard care, our pilot clinical study showed that more COVID patients who received our microbiome immunity formula achieved complete symptom resolution,” Ms. Ng said, adding that those who got it had significantly reduced markers for inflammation in their blood, increased favorable bacteria in their stool and they developed neutralizing antibodies to the virus. — Reuters

It’s a six-way battle for PBA best player of the conference award

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

THE Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) honors standout performers in its tournament “bubble” last year this weekend, including the best player of the conference (BPC) which has six players vying for the award.

To be held virtually on Jan. 17 and broadcast over TV5 and One Sports, the awards proceedings temporarily take the place of the annual Leo Awards of the PBA, with tweaks made on the honors to be given out since only one tournament was played in 2020 because of the coronavirus pandemic.

In lieu of the most valuable player award traditionally given in a three-conference season, the best player of the conference will be up for grabs, with Stanley Pringle of champion Barangay Ginebra, Ray Parks Jr. and Roger Pogoy of TNT, Matthew Wright and Calvin Abueva of Phoenix Super LPG, and CJ Perez of Terrafirma in contention.

“It’s not a full season, so it will be the BPC award,” said PBA commissioner Willie Marcial of the decision to make a change in the league’s top individual award.

While he was outside of the top five in statistical points (34.8 SPs), Mr. Pringle made a strong case for himself for the top award by being a steady force for the Kings throughout the bubble at Clark City in Angeles, Pampanga, held from October till December.

In the eliminations, “Stan The Man” averaged 18.7 points, 6.4 rebounds and 3.2 assists for the Kings and was one of the catalysts for his team in the playoffs en route to winning the Philippine Cup.

Mr. Pringle, 33, said what they accomplished in the bubble was already special in itself, but to top it all off with a first-ever BPC award for him will be an added blessing.

TNT’s Parks led in the statistical points with 38.2 SPs on the strength of solid averages of 22.4 points, 7.8 rebounds, 3.1 assists, and 1.5 steals per game throughout the tournament, helping in the process the Tropang Giga to reach the finals.

Unfortunately, he got injured (calf) in Game One that kept him sidelined for the rest of the championship series with TNT bowing to Barangay Ginebra, 4-1.

Teammate Pogoy further raised his stock as a PBA star and gunner in the bubble, going great guns with norms of 18.8 points and 5.6 rebounds in the eliminations.

In the playoffs, particularly in the finals, he took the cudgels for the Tropang Giga when Mr. Parks went down with injury, and later on Jayson Castro (knee), to make it a series against the Kings.

Mr. Wright, for his part, was Phoenix’s top scorer with 21.1 points per contest to go along with 5.5 assists and 4.4 rebounds.

Through his leadership, the Fuel Masters made significant strides in the league, coming to within a win away from barging into their first finals appearance.

“To be considered for the award is already special, but to win it would be a huge deal,” said Mr. Wright.

His teammate, Mr. Abueva, did not get to play from the start of the tournament bubble as his league suspension was still in effect, but once he got the nod to return, he more than made up for lost time.

He only played six games in the eliminations, but produced solid numbers of 13.7 points and team-best 10.7 rebounds and 6.7 assists.

In the playoffs, Mr. Abueva was his usual go-getting and do-it-all self, which made TNT sweat in the semifinals before it got to book a stop in the finals.

Terrafirma struggled anew in the Philippine Cup, managing to notch only one victory, but a constant bright spot was Mr. Perez.

The Lyceum standout was the scoring champion in the PBA for the second straight year with an average of 24.4 points.

He also posted 6.8 rebounds, 4.3 assists and two steals for the Dyip, enough to keep hopes of better days ahead for the team alive.

For the BPC award, SPs make up 40% of the total tally. The rest is composed of votes from the media (30%), players (25%), and Commissioner’s Office (5%).  

Other awards to be given are outstanding rookie, most improved players, sportsmanship and outstanding/elite five.

Houston Rockets trade star guard James Harden to Brooklyn Nets in four-team deal

THE James Harden saga ended on Wednesday when the Houston Rockets traded the star guard to the Brooklyn Nets as part of a four-team trade, according to multiple reports.

The trade comes one day after a disgruntled Harden went on a postgame rant following Tuesday’s 117-100 loss to the Los Angeles Lakers. The Rockets told Harden not to attend Wednesday’s practice.

Houston reportedly received guard Victor Oladipo from the Indiana Pacers, guard Dante Exum from the Cleveland Cavaliers, forward Rodions Kurucs of the Nets, three first-round draft picks from the Nets, one unprotected 2022 first-round pick from the Cleveland Cavaliers (via the Milwaukee Bucks) and the right to swap four first-round picks with the Nets.

Guard Caris LeVert and a second-round pick will go from the Nets to the Pacers, and center Jarrett Allen and forward Taurean Prince go from Brooklyn to the Cavaliers with Cleveland sending a 2024 second-round pick to the Nets.

The first-round picks Houston received from the Nets are in 2022, 2024 and 2026. The swaps are in 2021, 2023, 2025, and 2027.

The trade reunites Harden with former Oklahoma City Thunder teammate Kevin Durant. They played together for three seasons before Harden was dealt to the Rockets just before the start of the 2012-13 season.

Harden, 31, has been upset with the Rockets since the departures of coach Mike D’Antoni and general manager Daryl Morey after last season.

Harden, an eight-time All-Star, has three years, $133 million with a player option for the final season remaining on his current deal.

Harden is averaging 24.8 points per game — down from his career average of 25.2 — after reporting late to training camp. However, his assists are up to 10.4 per game from a career average of 6.3.

Harden has led the National Basketball Association (NBA) in scoring in each of the past three seasons with averages of 30.4, 36.1 and 34.3.

The Rockets traded Russell Westbrook to Washington for John Wall in a swap of point guards just before the start of camp. Westbrook’s one-year teaming with Harden didn’t pay off, as the Rockets lost in the second round of the Western Conference playoffs in five games to the Los Angeles Lakers.

The Nets have experienced their own recent drama with Kyrie Irving away from the team for personal reasons.

Oladipo, 28, is a two-time All-Star who is in the final season of a four-year, $84 million deal. The Pacers weren’t expected to sign him to another deal and were looking to send him packing prior to the trade deadline.

Oladipo is averaging 20.0 points, 5.7 rebounds, 4.2 assists and 1.7 steals in nine games this season. He has career averages of 17.4 points, 4.6 rebounds, 3.9 assists and 1.7 steals in 430 games (370 starts) in eight seasons with the Orlando Magic, Oklahoma City Thunder, and Indiana Pacers.

Exum, 25, is averaging 3.8 points, 2.8 rebounds and 2.2 steals in six contests (three starts) this season. He is currently sidelined with a calf injury.

Exum has career averages of 5.7 points, 2.1 assists and 1.8 rebounds in 245 games (72 starts) in six seasons with the Utah Jazz and Cavaliers.

The 22-year-old Kurucs is averaging 0.6 point and 0.6 rebound in five games this season. The 22-year-old Latvian has played 115 games (55 starts) in three seasons with the Nets with averages of 6.5 points and 3.4 rebounds.

The Pacers landed the potent LeVert, who is averaging 18.5 points, 6.0 assists and 4.3 rebounds in 12 games (four starts).

Overall, the 26-year-old LeVert has career averages of 13.1 points, 3.7 rebounds and 3.7 assists in 225 games (96 starts) in four-plus campaigns with the Nets.

Cleveland landed a promising big man in the 22-year-old Allen, who is averaging 11.2 points and 10.4 rebounds in 12 games (five starts this season). He also has 19 blocked shots.

The former first-round selection has career averages of 10.1 points and 7.9 rebounds in 234 games (180 starts). The fourth-year pro has 319 career blocked shots.

Prince, 26, was in his second season with the Nets and he was averaging 8.1 points and 2.8 rebounds. He spent his first three seasons with the Atlanta Hawks and has career averages of 11.4 points and 4.3 rebounds in 272 games (204 starts) in five seasons.

The shakeup in Houston gives the franchise a fresh start. Less than an hour before reports of the trade erupted, Rockets big man DeMarcus Cousins blasted Harden and said he had been “disrespectful” to the franchise and causing unnecessary drama.

“Just the approach to training camp, showing up the way he did, the antics off the court, the disrespect started way before (Tuesday night),” Cousins said of Harden. “This isn’t something that all of the sudden happened last night, but with that being said, like I said, this is the nasty part of the business. So, it is what it is.” — Reuters

Adiwang featured at ONE Championship’s first offering this year

ONE Championship opens its 2021 season on Jan. 22 with “ONE: Unbreakable” which has Filipino mixed martial artist Lito “Thunder Kid” Adiwang among the featured fighters.

Happening as the Singapore Indoor Stadium, Unbreakable is a six-fight offering from ONE, which the promotion hopes will set the pace for it as it tries to rebound from a coronavirus pandemic-disrupted 2020.

The Philippines will be represented in the event, with Team Lakay’s Adiwang (11-3) going up against Hexigetu of China in a three-round strawweight joust.

Mr. Adiwang is looking to bounce back from a narrow split decision loss to Japan’s Koha “Hiroba” Minowa last November.

The loss stopped for the Filipino strawweight a seven-fight winning streak in MMA — two in the main roster of ONE — and something Mr. Adiwang wants to stop in his upcoming fight.

“Nothing has changed in my mindset. The goal remains the same for me. I’m climbing to the top. If anything, I just got more motivated and driven. I want to prove myself in this next fight, and to do that, I have to be at my best,” said Mr. Adiwang, a product of the ONE Warrior Series, in a release.

“Expect a better, stronger, and wiser Thunder Kid next time. Definitely, surviving and learning from all the challenges and setbacks that came my way has made me a better person, a better fighter.”

Added motivation for Mr. Adiwang to do well in his Circle return is to honor the memory of his late mother, who he lost last month.

“There is nothing a mother wants more than to see her child happy and successful. I know my mother loved me so much, and she just really didn’t want me to get hurt, which is why she didn’t fully accept me being a fighter with her whole heart,” he said.

“But I chose this career, and I believe she was happy to see me succeed in what I love to do. I know in my heart she is proud of me, and I will continue to live my life in her honor.”

Mr. Adiwang’s opponent, Hexigetu (7-3), meanwhile, is on a roll, winning his last three fights, the most recent of which a split decision conquest of Thailand’s Dejdamrong Sor Amnuaysirichoke last October.

ONE: Unbreakable is headlined by the ONE bantamweight kickboxing world championship clash between reigning champion Alaverdi Ramazanov of Russia and challenger Capitan Petchyindee Academy of Thailand.

Co-headliner is the lightweight battle between former champion Shinya Aoki of Japan and American James Nakashima.

Also on tap is Serbian heavyweight kickboxer Rade Opacic against Swiss Patrick Schmid; welterweight Zebaztian Kadestam of Sweden versus Gadzhimurad Abdulaev of Russia; and atomweights Meng Bo of China and Samara Santos of Brazil.

In the Philippines, Cignal TV and TV5 are the broadcast homes of ONE Championship. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Nets handle Knicks, with short roster following Harden trade

NO James Harden, at least for one more game? No Kyrie Irving, for who knows how long? It was no problem on Wednesday night for the Brooklyn Nets.

Kevin Durant scored 26 points to lead seven players in double figures for the rapidly retooling Nets, who capped a wild day with a 116-109 win over the host New York Knicks.

Everyone in uniform except DeAndre Jordan and Chris Chiozza scored at least 10 points for the Nets hours after the team reportedly agreed to acquire Harden from the Houston Rockets in a blockbuster four-team trade.

The trade brings together the only active players to win three consecutive scoring titles. Harden is the NBA’s reigning scoring champ (2017-20), while Durant led the league in points per game from 2009-10 through 2011-12, and added a fourth scoring title in 2013-14.

With Irving’s availability uncertain, the deal also buys the Nets some “superteam” insurance. Irving missed his fifth straight game due to personal reasons and is expected to sit out at least the rest of the week.

Bruce Brown had 15 points and 14 rebounds for the Nets while Joe Harris scored 15 points. Timothé Luwawu-Cabarrot, and Landry Shamet each had 13 points, and Jeff Green and Reggie Perry added 11 points apiece.

Julius Randle scored 30 points for the Knicks, who have lost four straight. RJ Barrett had 20 points while Mitchell Robinson (10 points, 12 rebounds) recorded a double-double. Immanuel Quickley (19 points) and Kevin Knox II (13 points) each got into double-digits off the bench.

Randle scored 10 points in the first nine minutes as the Knicks took a 20-13 lead. The Nets ended the first quarter on a 13-5 run and went ahead for good on Perry’s putback 37 seconds into the second period.

The Nets ended the half on a 9-0 run to extend their lead to 61-45. Brooklyn led by as many as 19 in the second half and maintained a double-digit advantage until the Knicks ended the game on a 14-3 run. — Reuters

21-assets deal

James Harden finally got what he wanted. Within a day after publicly declaring he was in a “situation… that I don’t think can be fixed,” he wound up being shipped to the Nets as part of a four-franchise deal involving a stunning 21 assets. It was what he wanted, of course, and he made his sentiments felt way back in a tumultuous offseason that saw erstwhile backcourt partner Russell Westbrook leave in frustration. Since then, he had been on a scorched-earth offensive; he partied instead of practiced, breached health and safety protocols, showed up thoroughly out of shape, sulked his way to poor performances, and alienated teammates with his polarizing words and actions.

Indeed, the Rockets had no choice but to send Harden packing, pronto. His rant the other day, after a second straight blowout against the powerhouse Lakers, proved to be the last straw. Prior to things coming to a head, general manager Rafael Stone pledged to play the waiting game, keeping lines with league counterparts open while waiting for a fair trade. As things turned out, however, he proved so desperate to leave as to keep any semblance of respect and respectability in and to the process. Ask four-time All-Star DeMarcus Cousins, who knows what recalcitrance looks like from personal experience, and who thus found cause to rip him to shreds in reaction.

And so Harden will now go through the remainder of the 2020-21 season with the Nets, who, in giving up their future for him, evidently did not learn from their Kevin Garnett-Paul Pierce experience. The more optimistic view holds that, unlike the aforementioned Celtics greats, he’s in his prime and, therefore, in far better position to justify the ransom paid for him. Only time will tell; while the sight of three otherworldly scorers sharing the court together does elicit visions of shotmaking wizardry, there’s only one ball and, aside from them, two other players sharing it that cannot simply be throw-ins.

In any case, the payoff deals a significant blow to Harden’s reputation with the Rockets, not to mention the National Basketball Association. The numbers don’t lie; his contributions since he arrived in 2012 had been nothing short of historic. At the same time, he leaves behind a legacy of failed relationships and disappearing acts under pressure. “I love this city,” he said of Houston in the midst of his rants the other day. “I literally have done everything that I can.” And he’s right. He has done everything, including throwing the proverbial kitchen sink back to where he once belonged.

 

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.

Fitch and Moody’s: Qualified Rating Actions

It’s most interesting juxtaposition between the varied accounts and perspectives on the pandemic and the Authorities’ optimistic view of the Philippine economy this year and the next. We saw this in the last few days splashed all over the broadsheets, with both citing factual basis but pointing perhaps to some qualified conclusion.

Are we looking at a classic example of clustering illusion?

Last Tuesday, Jan. 12, the broadsheets reported that Fitch affirmed the Philippines’ long-term foreign currency issuer default rating at triple B with a stable outlook. A country with a triple B rating in Fitch methodology is of “good credit quality.” It indicates “that expectations of default risk are currently low.” As such, the Philippines is considered to have the capacity to pay for its financial obligations. Given our painful experience with the pandemic, this is great for the Philippines.

Cited as main bases for this rating action were the country’s modest government debt levels and still strong growth prospects amid the coronavirus crisis. Expectedly, Fitch recognized that the impact of the pandemic on growth was more significant than their initial projection. The infection rate was higher and public health policy response was deemed broadly inadequate.

As a debt watcher, Fitch was correct to raise the potential risk of a delay in vaccine procurement and administration especially in the face of expected surge in transmission following the holiday season and the mass gathering in Quiapo. The most recent detection here of the UK variant of the SARS-CoV-2 virus should add greater urgency to stronger public health policy. Other factors could pull down the growth prospects including the presidential elections in May 2022 and the Supreme Court ruling mandating the National Government (NG) to pay up arrears and increase revenue allotments to local government units.

Policy-wise, the fiscal authorities affirmed their commitment to prudent fiscal and debt management to help revive the economy. The point, to them, is to restore both business and consumer confidence.

This is a welcome affirmation because, as Fitch stressed, weaker growth translates into lower public revenues and weaker capacity to undertake public infrastructure programs and sustain anti-pandemic measures. Public spending is compensatory to anemic consumption expenditure and decline in net income from abroad.

The central bank, on the other hand, focused on its early response to the pandemic in order to “signal to the market that we were ready to act swiftly and decisively to buoy market confidence, as well as to ensure sufficient liquidity and efficient functioning of the financial system.”

Fitch observed, however, that the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) today has limited monetary space because the key policy rate is now below the 2.6% average inflation in 2020 and forecasts for inflation for both 2021 and 2022. The BSP was correct in acting promptly but may have to rethink its ultra-easy monetary policy. Growth in bank loans remains lethargic.

We see the same narrative of Moody’s as reported by the broadsheets the following day, Wednesday, Jan. 13. If Fitch was quite optimistic about its growth expectation for 2020 at minus 8.5%, the lower end of the NG’s minus 8.5-9.5% forecast, Moody’s was less optimistic at minus 8.7%. But Moody’s 2021 growth projection was right at the midpoint of the Development Budget Coordination Committee’s (DBCC) 6.5-7.5% growth prospects for this year compared with Fitch’s 6.9%.

But there is an identical qualifier. “Continuing pandemic-related constraints inhibit a complete recovery to 2019 output levels in 2021, despite our projection of relatively rapid real GDP growth.”

I share the view of both debt watchers that the key to economic bounce back in the Philippines and the rest of the Asia Pacific region is policy effectiveness against the pandemic. Without safeguards, opening the economy and encouraging people to go out and spend are just plain irresponsible.

What is the scenario out there?

Vaccination of the population will take time to cover a critical mass of both the population and the regional areas. Final talks are yet to be closed by the NG with vaccine makers such that the rollout is expected to happen in February. Against our population of more than 108 million, only 40 million doses will be available by then.

In fact, some members of the Philippine Senate are sceptical about the ability of the NG to fulfill its target of ordering 148 million doses of the coronavirus vaccines by year-end. The basis of minority leader Senator Frank Drilon, for instance, is that up until today, no emergency use authorization to any vaccine of any brand has been issued. On top of that, only part of the money to buy the vaccines is available. Administering the vaccines is another problem because of the people’s hesitancy to get the jab.

If local governments units (LGUs) and private corporations remain outside the perimeter of authorized parties to source the vaccines, it would be an enormous challenge to achieve herd immunity and restore business and consumer confidence. If the tripartite partnership among the NG, the LGUs/private corporations, and pharmaceutical companies can be streamlined by some protocols, and devolved, the faster we shall be able to overcome these issues.

The numbers have it. Cabinet Secretary Karlo Nograles recently announced that the Government has allocated P75 billion for the purchase of the vaccines. That would be good for around 57 million Filipinos. An additional 13 million, or a total of 70 million Filipinos, will get the vaccines if the sourcing by LGUs and private companies is factored in.

But what about the rest of us?

It would help us all if the Government at this point makes its vaccination policy — from sourcing to distribution — transparent. Access should be defined in an inclusive way. By all means, the Government should also define whether getting the jab is free or at cost. This is very critical to avoid confusion, perhaps riots, and discourage the emergence of a parallel market in vaccines. We cannot tolerate undue enrichment of some because of regulatory capture.

We have no time to lose. We are now behind some 42 countries that have started to vaccinate their citizens. The World Health Organization disclosed that of these early birds, 36 are high-income and the rest are middle-income countries. The UK with Pfizer was the first, with some boosters from its own AstraZeneca-Oxford University vaccine and Moderna. The European Union has also announced it has more than enough for its population. We used to deride the US for its infamous contribution to the rapid spread of the virus but mass vaccination is now in progress. The US was rather proactive in advancing billions of dollars to both Pfizer and Moderna while their vaccines were still being developed.

Looking ahead, what do we see?

From the BSP’s vantage point, “the worst is behind us. The recovery phase has begun.” This broadsheet actually supplied it with the eye-catching headline “remarkable rebound seen this year.” The BSP predicted a “solid” growth in the December quarter and “double-digit” growth in the second quarter of 2021. Policy-wise, the nation was assured that “the current policy is sufficient to carry us through” after the Philippines experienced its worst recession in many years.

This is not the first time we are hearing this optimistic commentary. An equally sanguine assessment of the “green shoots” in the third quarter was also made but the recession remained in double-digit territory. Unfortunately for us, many lagging and leading indicators have actually worsened since then.

The last easing by the BSP says it all. Despite the negative real policy rate, easing was continued because there must have been some fear the economy might fail to ascend from the recession.

And today, inflation rates here and abroad are rising. If growth perks up, and this is the pronouncement, domestic demand will begin to expand. No less than the Department of Finance flagged inflation risks from higher prices of food particularly vegetables and meat. Crude oil prices will not help because they are rising and are now exceeding $55 per barrel with output cuts by the Saudi-led OPEC and its allies.

Interest rates and money supply are definitely not the only games in town.

Like Fitch and Moody’s, I also see good prospects in our growth story. But I also see risks should we foul up our pandemic mitigation. Our people ought to know the limits of our exuberant optimism. Without vaccination reaching critical mass, our people might have to spend more time in lockdown, no country might admit them for work. Tourists would be discouraged to come. These images are repugnant to economic recovery.

But some of us might be seeing different shapes in the clouds, or “Face on Mars” instead of just mere rock formations.

Rolf Dobelli in The Art of Thinking Clearly argues that our brains do seek patterns and rules but seeing none, they could simply make some. This is a clustering illusion. We might therefore be seeing the economy’s impressive record of the last 20 years and projecting them into the next few years. The virus will not allow that if we fail to subdue it with massive vaccination.

 

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.

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