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What if data scientists had licenses like lawyers?

DATA SCIENTISTS, if they’re poorly qualified or act irresponsibly, can do at least as much damage as lawyers and doctors. The algorithms they create can ruin lives, aggravate social divisions, even facilitate genocide.

Which makes me wonder: Why shouldn’t they have a professional association to guide and police their behavior, like lawyers and doctors do?

Anyone who doubts the power of professional accreditation need only witness the antics of Donald Trump’s lawyers as they seek to challenge the 2020 election results. As soon as they enter a courtroom, their fraud claims dissolve. For good reason: They know they can lose their licenses or even be charged with crimes if they knowingly lie or misrepresent facts to a judge. At a time when truth and honesty seem vanishingly rare, it’s like a miracle.

Granted, occupational licensing has its downsides. As Milton Friedman famously argued, it can insulate incumbents from competition and increase the prices of services. In some cases — such as florists and barbers — it has probably gone too far. That said, I think I’m not alone in being willing to pay more to ensure that buildings don’t fall down, doctors aren’t total quacks, and lawyers aren’t utterly corrupt. And in such crucial areas, where quality can be difficult for individual consumers to assess or act upon, standardized requirements are certainly better than often-biased and easily gamed rankings such as Yelp.

Consider what associations require of lawyers. They must pass the bar exam, which defines what it means to be professionally informed and qualified. They must attend yearly ongoing education, to ensure they stay abreast of developments in the law. They must adhere to ethics standards, many based on the American Bar Association’s Model Rules of Professional Conduct — rules that have managed to contain even Trump’s lawyers.

Data scientists have none of this. Although they have many skills in common, there’s no standard curriculum, and boot-camp programs often fail to provide important technical background. Ongoing education is voluntary, despite its necessity in a field where tools are built and discarded regularly. As regards ethics, behold the case of Facebook, where data scientists reportedly weakened an algorithm designed to demote posts deemed “bad for the world” because it threatened to reduce profits.

So what would requirements for data scientists look like? Although there’s no obvious way to build the perfect test for technical skills, it would certainly include basic data wrangling and algorithm training, implementation and testing. Its drafters could also borrow ideas from actuary licensing, such as a thorough understanding of linear algebra and statistics.

The ethical standards would have to recognize the peculiarities of the job. As opposed to lawyers, who interact directly with judges and clients, data scientists interact primarily with their employers, typically large technology companies. Their loyalties are split between the people who can fire them and the public they might be harming.

So, where lawyers are required to “Respect the Rights of Third Persons” — for example, by not taking advantage of people who don’t know the law or don’t have legal representation — the rules for data scientists might focus on more fundamental questions. Does this algorithm violate the law — say, by discriminating against people according to race or gender? Does it exploit people’s data or attention in ways that they could not have anticipated or knowingly approved? Professionals should be responsible not only for their own actions, but also for reporting any violations they witness. This could help put a damper on socially undesirable decisions of the Facebook variety.

Data scientists in particular, and technologists in general, build the digital architecture we all rely on. While a poorly engineered website simply won’t work, a terrible algorithm can go undetected and unmitigated for months or years. Considering the increasing role such algorithms play in people’s lives — deciding what they see, whether they get credit, whether they get hired, where they go to college, how much time they spend in prison — placing some responsibility on their creators seems a reasonable ask.

BLOOMBERG OPINION

Bob Dylan sells out: Why Universal Music Group dished out for art

BOB DYLAN

IT CAN’T HAVE been a difficult decision for Bob Dylan to sell his songwriting catalog to Universal Music Group (UMG). Perhaps the more interesting question is why the record label wanted to pony up several hundred million dollars to buy it.

The logic for Dylan is straightforward. The copyright on his music will expire 70 years after his death, at which point his work will enter the public domain. The older he gets, the closer his catalog is to depreciating in value. Selling now lets the 79-year-old artist realize the portfolio’s worth, which has likely received a new lease of life as online streaming reignites growth in the recording industry. The value of music catalogs has increased accordingly, and just last week, the 72-year-old Fleetwood Mac star Stevie Nicks sold an 80% interest in her copyrights in a deal that valued her catalog at about $100 million.

What’s in it for UMG? Parent company Vivendi SA is planning an initial public offering (IPO) for the world’s biggest record label next year. The French media conglomerate is therefore in the process of gussying it up to make it as attractive as possible to new investors. Although streaming services such as Spotify Technology SA and Apple Music have reinvigorated the music industry, they’ve also highlighted some of its vulnerabilities.

Digital distribution has made it easier for artists to reach audiences without a record label, which traditionally fronted the studio and marketing costs in return for a slice of future revenue. Cutting through is still a challenge, and a label’s massive marketing budget can help, but the internet has enabled artists such as “Old Town Road” singer Lil Nas X to build a significant following (and gain leverage) before signing to a label.

The shifting power dynamics enabling some artists to negotiate more generous terms have led record labels to place greater emphasis on owning intellectual property — and the reliable income that comes with it.

In this case, it’s Dylan’s compositions. When the time comes for UMG’s IPO roadshow, a deep back catalog of recording and publishing rights will let Chief Executive Officer Lucian Grainge paint a more resilient picture of the company’s earnings. The dependable returns promised by Dylan’s oeuvre will no doubt help with that. UMG can meanwhile extend the lifespan of each song better than Dylan or his estate could alone, for instance by encouraging its stable of artists to record cover versions.

The strategy has already been deployed with some success by rival Warner Music Group Corp., which listed shares publicly for the first time in June. In its IPO filing, it was eager to point out that much of its revenue stemmed from “stable and recurring sources such as our music publishing library,” and that “less than 10% of our total revenues depend on artists without established track records.”

Music publishing (the rights to the underlying composition and lyrics) is also more profitable than the rest of the business, with earnings that represent 23% of revenue, compared with the 15% profit margin from recorded music (the performed versions of songs or pieces). It’s the same reason that Spotify has been charging into podcasts: Owning more content outright means it doesn’t have to pay as much in royalties to other parties.

The times may be a-changin’, but Dylan’s tunes will generate an annuity for many years yet.

BLOOMBERG OPINION

Barangay Ginebra Kings go for the title-clincher

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

THE Barangay Ginebra San Miguel Kings try to put the finishing touches on their assault on the PBA Philippine Cup title in Game Five of their best-of-seven finals series with the TNT Tropang Giga on Wednesday at the Angeles University Foundation Sports Arena in Pampanga.

Currently holding a commanding 3-1 series lead, Barangay Ginebra goes for the jugular in the scheduled 6 p.m. game that would put it on top of the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) All-Filipino tournament summit anew after more than a decade.

The Kings thrust themselves on the cusp of winning the title following their steady performance in Game Four on Sunday, where they came out a 98-88 victor over the Tropang Giga.

Banking on its depth and collective experience in big games, Barangay Ginebra had firm control of the previous game, even if TNT made a strong late push to claim the victory.

LA Tenorio led the thorough attack of the Kings, finishing with 22 points, including two clutch triples late in the contest that frustrated attempts by the Tropang Giga of completing a charge back. He also had six rebounds and three steals.

Athletic big man Japeth Aguilar also had 22 points for the Kings while peppering it with nine rebounds and two blocks.

Stanley Pringle finished with 16 points while do-it-all Scottie Thompson had a near triple-double of 11 points, 11 rebounds and nine assists.

“I felt we played our best game of the whole bubble tonight. We hit big shots all night and we made defensive plays. I hope we can carry it over for Wednesday,” said Barangay Ginebra coach Tim Cone of their Game Four victory.

For Mr. Tenorio, who is looking to win his first-ever Philippine Cup title, their job is not yet done and that despite holding a commanding series lead they cannot let their guard down.

“Closing a series is the hardest. I’ve been in these situations in my career and I know teams are still capable of coming back from such a deficit, especially with a kind of team like TNT. They are going to adjust and it’s going to be hard. But if we will have it our way, we don’t want to give them another chance because it will be harder for us if they get back in this series,” said the veteran Kings floor general.

The last time Barangay Ginebra won the Philippine Cup title was back in the 2006-07 season when it was still being coached by Jong Uichico.

The Kings defeated the San Miguel Beermen, 4-2, in their best-of-seven finals series. Now-retired Jayjay Helterbrand was the finals most valuable player.

Long-time Barangay Ginebra player Mark Caguioa is the only remaining player from that championship team still part of the Kings this year.

Meanwhile, despite recognizing that it is going to be an uphill battle for them from here on, the Tropang Giga are still not giving up.

They have been competing throughout the series, notwithstanding the absence of key cog Ray Parks Jr. because of calf injury in their last three games.

Compounding their woes, veteran Jayson Castro was not able to finish their last game after reaggravating a knee injury. His status for Game Five is still uncertain as of this writing.

Stepping up big time for TNT is Roger Pogoy, who is averaging 27.2 points in the series, including an explosive 34-point output in the last game.

NBA to loosen rules on teams resting their players

THE National Basketball Association (NBA) plans to give greater leeway to teams this season when it comes to resting players in non-nationally televised games, according to a report from ESPN.

A league memo obtained by the network said the relaxed restrictions would apply to teams taking part in back-to-back games, as well as other scenarios “to rest a key veteran player who played a substantial role on a team that advanced deep into the 2020 Playoffs, or to rest a player who is still returning to full strength after recovering from COVID-19.”

Load management has been a touchy subject in the NBA for the past few years, but this year is unusual in that stars such as LeBron James, Anthony Davis, and Jimmy Butler competed in the NBA Finals until mid-October. The league is set to restart before Christmas, marking the shortest offseason in its history.

James said this week that he and the Lakers will be careful with his workload in the early part of the regular season.

“I’ve always listened to my coaches,” James said last season. “We had the same thing last year. We’re going to be as smart as we can be on… making sure that my body, on making sure that I’m ready to go.

“Obviously, every game matters, but we’re competing for something that’s high. We don’t ever want to short-change our stuff. For me personally, that’s a fine line with me, but understanding that it’s a shortened season. I think it’s 71 days that the offseason is going to be, the shortest [offseason] for any professional sport ever.

“We’re very conscientious about what we’re going to do going forward, as far as me personally.”

The league memo states that qualifying factors for “unusual circumstances” include the age, injury history, COVID-19 recovery, season, and career workload of a particular player. Schedule concerns also could play a role, such as how much a team has recently played and how many consecutive road games it has endured.

The memo reinforced rules involving nationally televised games, emphasizing teams that rest healthy players could be fined $100,000 or more. — Reuters

Europe’s top sides handed straightforward routes to Qatar

ZURICH — England was pitted against old rival Poland in their World Cup qualifying group on Monday after a draw which left Europe’s top sides with apparently straightforward routes to the 2022 tournament in Qatar.

Spain, France, Italy, Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands, Portugal, Croatia, and England all avoided each other thanks to the seeding system and, barring major upsets, should qualify comfortably for the tournament in Qatar.

Instead, the main excitement is likely to be the scramble among the middle-ranking teams to finish second in their groups and qualify for the playoffs.

Under a revised format, the 10 group winners qualify directly for Qatar while the runners-up go into a play-off system along with the best two teams from the Nations League, a separate competition.

Those 12 teams will be divided into three paths of four, with the winners of each also going to Qatar. The group stage will be played between March and November next year with the playoffs in March 2022.

World champion France was drawn in Group D alongside Ukraine — a side it recently beat 7-1 in a friendly — Finland, Bosnia and distant Kazakhstan in European Group D.

“The trips will be very long,” said France coach Didier Deschamps. “We will have to wait until Tuesday to have the calendar. This could bring additional difficulties. I’m not going to jump to the ceiling. We must always have enough humility and respect for these teams.”

Old rival England and Poland will face each other again as they were placed in Group I along with Hungary, Albania, Andorra and San Marino.

Poland, led by prolific forward Robert Lewandowski, were arguably the most dangerous side among the second seeds. The two sides have been paired in five previous World Cup qualifying competitions, with Poland famously reaching the 1974 World Cup at England’s expense.

“There is a great history with that fixture. There was a spell when we seemed to draw them all the time,” said England manager Gareth Southgate.

“Poland is obviously a very good side. Hungary just got promoted into the Nations League top division — so those two in particular will be games that will be tough.”

Spain must get past Sweden, which qualified for the 2018 World Cup at the expense of Italy, in Group B, although even if it finishes second, it will still have another bite of the cherry in the playoffs. Greece, Georgia, and Kosovo are the other teams in that group.

Cristiano Ronaldo’s Portugal, the current European champion, must face Serbia, Ireland, Luxembourg, and Azerbaijan in Group A while Belgium meets Wales, Czech Republic, Belarus, and Estonia in Group E.

“We have faced Wales in the past and those games have always been competitive and the Czech Republic is an always a competitive team,” said Belgium coach Roberto Martinez.

“Those two sides will be difficult. They are similar in profile with a lot of exciting young players coming through.”

Even off-color Germany should be able to get through Group J where its opponents are Romania, Iceland, North Macedonia, Armenia, and Liechtenstein.

Group F appeared to be the most evenly balanced group featuring Denmark, Austria, Scotland, Israel, Faroe Islands, and Moldova.

Croatia, runner-up in 2018, will face Slovakia, Russia, Slovenia, Cyprus, and Malta in Group H. The Russian match will be a repeat of the 2018 World Cup quarterfinal, which Croatia won on penalties after a 2-2 draw.

“We have to embrace the role of group favorites because that’s what we are, with Slovakia and Russia featuring as our strongest rivals for the top spot,” said Croatia coach Zlatko Dalic. “It’s going to be tough because we’ve been pitted against the top teams from each of the pots, but nothing less than qualifying for the World Cup will do.” — Reuters 

Surfing and breakdancing among four sports to win Paris 2024 spot

BREAKDANCING, surfing, skateboarding, and sports climbing won a spot in the 2024 Paris Olympics when the International Olympic Committee (IOC) ratified their inclusion on Monday, IOC President Thomas Bach said.

The Paris 2024 organizing committee had last year proposed the four sports for inclusion and was waiting on a final review by the International Olympic Committee’s Executive Board.

Surfing, climbing, and skateboarding are already part of the Tokyo 2020 Olympics, having been proposed along with karate by the Japanese hosts.

Paris Games organizers have said they want to deliver a program that is in keeping with the times and will attract a new and younger audience.

Under new IOC rules first introduced for the Tokyo Games, Olympic host cities can hand-pick sports and propose them for inclusion in those Games if they are popular in that country and add to the Games’ appeal.

The IOC also trimmed the overall events for Paris by 10 to 329 compared to the Tokyo Games next year, while increasing mixed gender events from 18 in Tokyo to 22 in four years time.

“With this program, we are making the Olympic Games Paris 2024 fit for the post-corona world,” Mr. Bach said. “We are further reducing the cost and complexity of hosting the Games.”

“There is also a strong focus on youth,” he added.

The IOC also capped the total athlete quota to exactly 10,500. The recent summer Olympics had seen an increase to more than 11,000. There will also be exactly 50% men and 50% women athletes in Paris, up from 48.8% women in Tokyo.

“While we will achieve gender equality already at the upcoming Olympic Games Tokyo 2020, we will see for the first time in Olympic history the participation of the exact same number of female athletes as male athletes,” Bach said.

“It’s a nice reference to the 1900 Paris Olympics, when it was the first time that women were at the Games,” Jean-Philippe Gatien, sports director for Paris 2024, told reporters at the Paris 2024 headquarters on Monday.

“It suits perfectly what we want to do with those Games. It will be Games that are young, urban and creatives.”

The IOC is desperate to refresh the Games’ sports program to remain relevant to sponsors, broadcasters and younger fans. — Reuters

Luxury brands come on board ONE Championship’s The Apprentice

The ONE Championship edition of the popular reality television show The Apprentice recently signed luxury brands as partner presenters.

In production right now and set for airing in early 2021, The Apprentice: ONE Championship Edition got as exclusive category partners Hugo Boss, Bentley Motors, and TUMI, the sports media property announced in a statement.

The three companies will work with ONE on category-exclusive marketing and branding activations.

“We are delighted to announce that category leaders Hugo Boss, Bentley Motors, and TUMI are working with ONE on a series of exclusive marketing and branding activations for The Apprentice: ONE Championship Edition. These class-leading brands understand the value of building leadership and affinity with our massive audience of Gen Y and Gen Z, who are the luxury consumers of tomorrow,” said Hari Vijayarajan, chief commercial officer of ONE, of the involvement of the three leading brands.

The Apprentice: ONE Championship Edition has 16 contestants handpicked from around the world competing in a high-stakes game involving business and physical challenges.

The winner will receive a $250,000 job offer to work directly under ONE Chairman and CEO Chatri Sityodtong for a year as his protege in Singapore.

CEOs confirmed to join the show include Zoom CEO Eric Yuan, Grab CEO Anthony Tan, Zilingo CEO Ankiti Bose, Catcha Group CEO Patrick Grove, and Everise CEO Sudhir Agarwal.

Athletes who have agreed to make appearances on the show, meanwhile, include mixed martial arts legends Georges St-Pierre and Renzo Gracie, former ONE Welterweight World Champion Ben “Funky” Askren, ONE Heavyweight World Champion Brandon “The Truth” Vera, ONE Women’s Atomweight World Champion “Unstoppable” Angela Lee, ONE Flyweight Grand Prix World Champion Demetrious “Mighty Mouse” Johnson, and ONE Women’s Strawweight World Champion “The Panda” Xiong Jing Nan.

An offshoot of The Apprentice show which first aired in the United States in 2004, the ONE Championship edition of the program, will consist of 13 episodes.

“Ultimately, The Apprentice is global general entertainment, and we feel that this is going to be a great way for fans all over the world who love ONE Championship to watch some fun stuff,” said Mr. Sityodtong, who touts the show as one of their ways of making their offering fresh, especially amid the prevailing conditions with the coronavirus pandemic. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Woods’ Hall of Fame induction on hold due to coronavirus

Fifteen-time golf major winner Tiger Woods (Tiger Woods Facebook page)

Tiger Woods’ induction into the World Golf Hall of Fame will have to wait, after organizers said they were postponing the 2021 ceremony until the following year due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The 15-time major winner will be inducted alongside 11-time LPGA winner Susie Maxwell Berning, former PGA Tour Commissioner Tim Finchem and the late Marion Hollins, who broke barriers as one of the few female developers of golf courses in the sport’s history.

The honorees, who were announced earlier this year, will be inducted as the Hall of Fame class of 2022, a spokeswoman said.

“Given the uncertainties of the COVID-19 pandemic, moving the ceremony back a year will give us a better opportunity to properly recognize and honor this important class,” World Golf Foundation CEO Greg McLaughlin said in a statement.

“We look forward to shining a light on their achievements and inspiring future golfers around the world through this ceremony and celebration.”

The induction ceremony will take place March 9, 2022, during the Players Championship. — Reuters

Holdout

Honesty has always been one of Rockets head coach Stephen Silas’ trademark traits, so he was just being himself when he spoke candidly about James Harden’s status heading into the 2020-21 season. Over the weekend, he held his first workout with players since being pried from the Mavericks to take the hot seat in late October, and the eight-time All-Star was a notable absence. At the time, he cited the National Basketball Association’s stringent novel coronavirus protocols as the primary cause; his would-be top dog could most recently be found partying in Atlanta and Las Vegas in contravention of the league’s directive against breaking quarantine outside of essential activities. Yesterday, however, he was more succinct with the situation; the 2018 Most Valuable Player, he said, is “a holdout,” having missed a scheduled Sunday night workout and subsequent practice.

 In describing the circumstances that led to Harden’s absences, Silas proved to be alternately patient and confident. “There is no timetable, as far as I know,” he said. “It is a setback. You want your best player to be here.” Indeed, and for more grounds than he can enumerate. The league’s reigning scoring champion also happens to be the Rockets’ longest-tenured player and acknowledged leader, and the unexplained no-shows convey the wrong message. Make no mistake; the signals being sent are deflating, new acquisition John Wall’s insistence that “we’ve been on the same page since I’ve been traded here” notwithstanding.

Depending on source and perspective, Harden’s decision to go dark on the Rockets stems from his disappointment with their plight following the resignations of erstwhile bench tactician Mike D’Antoni and general manager Daryl Morey. He’s also said to be angling for a transfer to the Nets and a reunion with good buddy Kevin Durant. So much for the merit of kowtowing to his every whim and fancy. At his behest, they agreed to ship Chris Paul and a bevy of draft assets for Russell Westbrook in June 2019. The latter wound up being an extremely expensive one-season rental after they again acceded to his desire to bring in Wall. Now, everything they’ve done for him apparently counts for squat; despite changing their entire system to match his style and reconfiguring their roster to suit his preferences, the thanks they get is a demand that he be moved. And so bent on leaving is he that he doesn’t have second thoughts holding them hostage.

It’s too bad, really, because Harden’s a force on the court, capable of willing the Rockets to a playoff berth all by and unto himself. This is why he’s due $40.8 million for his 2020-21 campaign, not to mention another $90 million after. They need him in order to stay relevant, which is why they’ve also added such notables as Christian Wood and DeMarcus Cousins. And which is why they’re angling to keep him, or, at worst, get fair value in exchange for his departure. And, as the annals of pro hoops has shown, “fair value” doesn’t mean four quarters to the dollar.

 Silas is himself a holdout — that is, for the possibility of the relationship to be mended enough for Harden to consent to sticking around. Meanwhile, he remains frank about the prospects. “What’s real is he’s not here. And he has a reason, but that’s on him to tell whoever what his reason is.” Meanwhile, Rockets fans get to experience the same old, same old: They lose anew.

 

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.

British grandma is 1st in world to get Pfizer vaccine outside trial

LONDON — Margaret Keenan, a 90-year-old grandmother from Northern Ireland, became the first person in the world on Tuesday to receive the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine shot outside of a trial as Britain began vaccinating its population.

An early riser, Keenan received the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine at her local hospital in Coventry, central England, on Tuesday morning at 0631 GMT, a week before she turns 91.

A video showed Keenan being pushed in a wheelchair out of the ward while nursing staff clad in protective gear lined the corridor to applaud and cheer, in an echo of moving video clips released through the year when COVID-19 survivors finally left hospital.

Britain is the first Western country to start immunising its general population in what has been hailed as a decisive watershed in defeating the coronavirus.

“I feel so privileged to be the first person vaccinated against COVID-19,” said Keenan, as she received the shot from May Parsons, a nurse originally from the Philippines in front of a photographer and TV crew.

“It’s the best early birthday present I could wish for because it means I can finally look forward to spending time with my family and friends in the New Year after being on my own for most of the year.”

Keenan, known as Maggie to her friends, is a former jewellery shop assistant who only retired four years ago. She has a daughter, a son and four grandchildren.

Video footage showed her wearing a light blue mask, a grey cardigan along with a blue t-shirt with a penguin in snow and the message “Merry Christmas” as she received the shot in her left arm from nurse May Parsons.

“WE WILL BEAT THIS TOGETHER”
Parsons, one of many thousands of people from around the world employed in Britain’s National Health Service (NHS), where she has worked for 24 years, said the last few months had been tough, but there was now light at the end of the tunnel.

Britain is the worst-hit European country from COVID-19, with over 61,000 deaths. Prime Minister Boris Johnson hopes to turn the tide against the disease by rolling out the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine before the United States or European Union.

The mass inoculation will fuel hope the world may be turning a corner in the fight against a pandemic that has crushed economies and killed more than 1.5 million, although ultra-cold storage and tricky logistics will limit its use for now.

“Thank you to our NHS, to all of the scientists who worked so hard to develop this vaccine, to all the volunteers – and to everyone who has been following the rules to protect others,” Johnson said on Twitter.

“We will beat this together.”

British Health Secretary Matt Hancock and Stephen Powis, medical director for NHS England, said they both found it very emotional watching the vaccine programme rollout.

The BBC said the second patient to receive the jab in Britain was a man named William Shakespeare from Warwickshire.

Britain has ordered 40 million doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech shot. As each person requires two doses, that is enough to vaccinate 20 million people in the country of 67 million.

About 800,000 doses are expected to be available within the first week, with care home residents and carers, the over-80s and some health service workers the top priority to get them. — Reuters

Japan unveils $708B in fresh stimulus with eye on post-COVID growth

yen
The new plan includes a 2-trillion yen fund to promote carbon neutrality by 2050, 1 trillion yen to accelerate digital transformation and 1.5 trillion yen in subsidies to support restaurants hurt by shortened trading hours due to COVID-19.

TOKYO — Japan announced a fresh $708 billion economic stimulus package on Tuesday to speed up the recovery from the country’s deep coronavirus-driven slump, while targeting investment in new growth areas such as green and digital innovation.

The new package will include about 40 trillion yen ($384.54 billion) in direct fiscal spending and initiatives targeted at reducing carbon emissions and boosting adoption of digital technology, Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga said in a meeting with ruling party executives.

Policymakers globally have unleashed a wall of monetary and fiscal stimulus to prevent a deep and prolonged recession as the coronavirus closed international borders and sent millions out of work. In the United States, a $908 billion coronavirus aid plan is currently under debate in Congress.

In Japan, the pandemic has forced the government to put its fiscal reform agenda on the backburner, despite holding the industrial world’s heaviest public debt burden, which is twice the size of its gross domestic product.

“We have compiled the new measures to maintain employment, sustain business, and restore the economy and open a way to achieve new growth in green and digital areas, so as to protect people’s lives and livelihoods,” Mr. Suga said at the meeting.

The stimulus package will bring the combined value of coronavirus-related stimulus to about $3 trillion.

The government will compile a third extra budget for the current fiscal year worth around 20.1 trillion yen to fund the fresh economic stimulus, a government source told Reuters on Tuesday.

Some investors expect the additional new bond issuance needed to fund the third extra budget to be around 15 trillion yen.

“Japan needs to make a plan for fiscal reform and shift to reconstructing public finance at some point. But now is the time to help firms and households hit by the pandemic,” said Yuichi Kodama, chief economist at Meiji Yasuda Research Institute.

“The government’s new bond issuance is expected to top 100 trillion yen for this fiscal year. But I don’t think the size of the package will roil the market.”

Two previous packages this year worth a combined $2.2 trillion focused on dealing with the immediate strain on households and business from the pandemic.

The new plan includes a 2-trillion yen fund to promote carbon neutrality by 2050, 1 trillion yen to accelerate digital transformation and 1.5 trillion yen in subsidies to support restaurants hurt by shortened trading hours due to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).

Japan’s economy, the world’s third-largest, rebounded in July–September from its worst postwar contraction in the second quarter, though many analysts expect a third wave of COVID-19 infections to keep any recovery modest. — Reuters

Tropical food farmers must grow more on less land, as climate policy shifts

Green groups blame the production of palm oil, the world’s most widely used edible oil, and other agricultural commodities for much of the destruction, as carbon-storing forests are cleared for plantations, ranches, and farms. — REUTERS

KUALA LUMPUR — Tropical farmers will struggle to meet rising food demand unless they sustainably boost yields on the same land, with rising forest protection and carbon prices aimed at fighting climate change expected to hinder agriculture expansion, researchers said on Monday.

A report by thinktank Orbitas looked at the financial risks to tropical farmers and agricultural businesses — including palm oil, soybean, and beef — if they do not adapt to new climate actions by governments, companies, and consumers.

It found that those risks are as significant in agriculture as they are in the energy and transport sectors.

If temperature increases are capped at 1.5 degrees Celsius, in line with the lower temperature goal of the Paris climate accord, up to 600 million hectares of agricultural land — or more than 10% of agricultural land globally — will need to revert to forests, the report said.

This is party due to an expectation that prices paid for carbon storage in forests could rise above the revenue that could be obtained from using that same land for agriculture, said Mark Kenber, managing director of Orbitas.

“A response to climate change that gets the world anywhere close to net-zero emissions will require farming and agro industry to transform,” Mr. Kenber added. “This is an enormous blind spot for investors.”

In 2019, tropical rainforests — whose preservation is considered crucial to limiting planetary heating — disappeared at a rate of one football pitch every six seconds, according to data from online monitoring service Global Forest Watch.

Green groups blame the production of palm oil, the world’s most widely used edible oil, and other agricultural commodities for much of the destruction, as carbon-storing forests are cleared for plantations, ranches, and farms.

Environmentalists say conserving existing forests and restoring damaged ones reduces the risk of drought and flooding, stores more planet-warming carbon, and protects threatened biodiversity.

The Orbitas study focused on tropical farmers and agriculture businesses, many of which have large land banks for future expansion on their balance sheets.

It analyzed the consequences for these firms from changing climate change policy — such as government carbon financing and forest protection schemes, corporate zero-deforestation and emissions pledges, and changes in consumer habits.

It found that companies whose business strategies rely on expansion into forested territories will confront vastly increased land prices and possibly no access at all.

Those that already hold forest concessions as land banks will face significant asset stranding, although they could benefit from carbon credits if they adapt their businesses and become more sustainable and transparent.

“Even under pretty modest policy, deforestation will have to end quite soon—and that’s between 2025–2040—depending on the carbon price and strength of policy,” London-based Mr. Kenber told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone.

COMING WRITE-OFFS
In Indonesia, up to 76% of unplanted forest concessions and 15% of existing palm oil assets could be written-down or off under a meaningful national climate transition, the report said.

Carbon credits and regulations will further disrupt agricultural businesses, it said, with global palm oil, beef, and soybean producers facing up to $19 billion in additional costs each year.

“Demand for palm oil is going to continue to grow whatever happens. Those who will win will be those who can satisfy that demand by sustainably increasing yields (on existing land), managing their emissions, and looking for complementary revenue streams,” said Mr. Kenber.

Public and private finance will be needed to enable small-scale palm oil growers—who are responsible for about 40% of output from top producing countries Indonesia and Malaysia—to also improve their yields, he added.

By investing in sustainable intensification, regenerative agriculture, and diversifying revenue streams, forward-looking agricultural companies will see their net value and profitability rise under climate transitions, the report said.

Robin Chazdon, a professor at Australia’s University of the Sunshine Coast who has researched the best places to replant forests, said caring for land and water must become the new bottom line — not only for communities and countries but also for businesses and corporations.

Corporate agendas and demand for short-term economic gain currently drive much use of the earth’s resources, she said.

For businesses, “the resulting losses of biodiversity, escalating carbon emissions, and decline of ecosystem services have been externalized and dismissed as ‘not my problem,’” she said. “Now these issues have become everyone’s problem and the fate of the planet hangs in the balance.”

Tom Picken, a director at green group Rainforest Action Network, said investors that continue to finance forest destruction, rights abuses, and climate change are risking their bottom line as governments and markets increasingly recognize forest areas as no-go zones for expansion.

“Feeding the world does not have to mean cutting down more forests,” Mr. Picken said. — Thomson Reuters Foundation