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Pag-IBIG Fund: Two programs providing loan relief available to members

Top officials of Pag-IBIG Fund on Thursday (May 07) reiterated that the agency has made available two programs aimed to provide members relief on loans with its automatic grace period on loan payments in accordance with the Bayanihan to Heal as One Act and its 3-month moratorium program on all loans.

“We are one with the administration’s effort, led by President Duterte, to provide borrowers relief on their loan payments during the Covid-19 pandemic. The automatic grace period on all loan payments following the Bayanihan to Heal as One Act and the 3-month moratorium on all Pag-IBIG Loans will allow our members to prioritize their welfare and that of their families during these challenging times. While these two programs are separate, both seek the same objective of providing financial relief for our members,” said Secretary Eduardo D. del Rosario, who heads the Department of Human Settlements and Urban Development and the 11-member Pag-IBIG Fund Board of Trustees.

Earlier in the week, the agency reported granting an automatic grace period to all its 4.77 million borrowers, deferring more than P15 billion in total loan payments. This move by Pag-IBIG Fund, following the Bayanihan to Heal as One Act, defers all loan payments which fall due during the period of the Enhanced Community Quarantine (ECQ) and allows payment on its next due date without incurring any penalty. The mandatory grace period further allows the staggered payment of the accrued interest on the unpaid principal within the remaining life of the loan.

Meanwhile, the agency continues to offer its moratorium program to members with Pag-IBIG Housing Loan, Multi-Purpose Loan (MPL), and Calamity Loan whose incomes have been impaired due to the Enhanced Community Quarantine (ECQ) or by the closure of businesses as a result of the declarations of state of calamity or state of public health emergency in their area. Made available as early as mid-March, the program provides a three-month payment extension on loan payments which fall due from March 16 to June 15, 2020, without incurring penalties and other charges.

“Just a day after the declaration of the ECQ was first made, we immediately offered a 3-month moratorium on all our loans to help our members, particularly those whose incomes would be affected during this period. The program in fact, grants immediate approval to moratorium applications of home loan borrowers who are minimum or low wage earners, and borrowers with socialized housing loans. The program also provides immediate approval to moratorium applications of borrowers who have diligently kept their accounts updated,” said Pag-IBIG Fund Chief Executive Officer Acmad Rizaldy P. Moti.

He said that since the moratorium program’s availability, the agency has received as many as 12,400 applications in a day, with nearly 80% of all applications already approved. Applications for the moratorium program can be filed online via the Virtual Pag-IBIG (link: https://www.pagibigfundservices.com/virtualpagibig/LoanMoratorium.aspx), with members needing only to provide their Pag-IBIG Housing Loan Account Number, for those with home loans, or their Pag-IBIG Membership ID (MID) number, for those with MPL or Calamity Loan.

“While we have automatically granted a grace period on all loan payments in accordance with the Bayanihan to Heal as One Act, our members have the option for a longer payment extension on their loans by applying for our 3-month moratorium program. We have also made the application process for our moratorium program safe and easy, as members may apply online through our Virtual Pag-IBIG portal. Patuloy pong makakaasa ang aming mga miyembro na kami sa Pag-IBIG Fund ay makakasama nila, lalo na sa pahanon ng krisis. Patunay po dito ang agarang pagkakaloob namin ng grace period na ito, at ang pag-alok ng moratorium na higit pa sa naaayon sa batas, upang lubos na makatulong sa kanila,” Moti added.

AMTI: The ICT company that remained steadfast amid the health crisis

The enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) implemented because of the coronavirus pandemic has put a lot of pressure on businesses nationwide. Like many other leaders like him, on the day the ECQ was put into effect, AMTI President Allyxon Cua was faced with a dilemma – will he halt operations, putting hundreds of his employees out of income at a time when they most need it?

Most of his peers implemented a similar strategy after all. With restrictions on non-essential businesses, there is little chance for a company to make significant revenues during the quarantine. All over the world, economists and industry leaders are fearing the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the global economy.

Yet, unlike many of his peers, Mr. Cua did not relent to the pressure. Knowing that he had a responsibility to his employees, customers and stockholders, Mr. Cua had prepared AMTI for such eventualities through a digital transformation initiative that could flourish even in the most turbulent of times.

“Digital Transformation (DX) is about doing things in a different way (through the use of technology) in order to achieve desired business outcomes,” he said in an email.

“It mitigates the adverse effects of change and disruptions to businesses. Today, change is inevitable as we are in the era of the fourth industrial revolution where market disruption is common. Given the changes and disruptions brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic, every company must embrace and adopt DX in order to survive and stay relevant.”

Through digital transformation, AMTI, which has more than two decades of history as one of the biggest and most diversified ICT companies in the Philippines, has managed to operate through the ECQ as if it was business as usual, while keeping their employees safe against COVID-19.

AMTI’s digital transformation journey

It all started almost two years ago when Dell Technologies, the world’s biggest technology company and AMTI’s longtime technology partner, challenged Mr. Cua, to assemble a core team of executives to take part in the Digital Transformation Journey.

This was a time when digital transformation was little more than a buzzword in the Philippine business community, when most business owners failed to see the urgency to adopt it. But Mr. Cua quickly assembled his Digital Transformation core team composed of Stanley Yu (SVP, Finance), Whilma Cua (SVP, HR and Admin), and Bong M. Paloma (SVP/GM, CTO). AMTI, without hesitation, went ahead and made the investment – both in time and money – and joined discussions by diverse and experienced sets of experts from Dell Technologies in Singapore, which was followed by a series of tech updates and follow-up meetings in the Philippines.

At the time, the digital transformation helped create a response to the worsening traffic situation in Manila. The situation was not only putting a toll on the health of the company’s workforce, but it lessened employees’ customer time as they needed to take an average of three to four hours travel time every day. Mr. Cua’s AMTI-DX team toiled tirelessly to build the blueprint of a workforce transformation roadmap and immediately set it into motion.

AMTI’s early journey into digital transformation gave them the knowledge and insight that ultimately helped them become an effective & trusted IT advisor to their customers. It also paved the way for AMTI to becoming a true innovator and an ICT Technology enabler.

The company’s Digital Workforce Transformation initiative was in full swing and working like a well-oiled machine when the ECQ was implemented across the country. For Mr. Cua, it was only a matter of organizing his leadership team and rallying his resilient and passionate workforce. He declared that they will stay operational and will use their early investment in digital transformation to carry out a business-as-usual activity to respond to the urgent and immediate needs of their customers.

Now, nearly two months into the ECQ, the systems that AMTI have put in place have been stress-tested and proven effective beyond all doubt. More than that, AMTI even found that the amount of business that came in was more than their average – it was a record month for AMTI.

Thanks to the challenge set forth by Dell Technologies, and the rigorous planning and implementation of their digital transformation, AMTI managed to stay open during the most difficult time in recent history.

The initiative enabled them to capture the surge in business demand from old and new customers from the essential sectors during the ECQ. As a result, AMTI earned a lot of long-term goodwill and credibility from its customers because they delivered and served them even during these trying times. They were prepared, ready and able to ride the wave.

“Those who are prepared and willing to read the signs will surely win. We looked at DX initially as a solution to our worsening traffic condition. We explored ways to recover productivity loss due to long commute time and eventually creating what we call today a Digital Workplace as part of our Digital Transformation blueprint. Digital Workplace is all about technologies, using new tools, applications and mobile computing devices to work faster, smarter and better from any location, anytime. Digital Transformation enabled us to coast and swim against the tide especially during this pandemic,” Mr. Cua said.

For inquiries on Digital Transformation / Workforce Transformation needs, e-mail AMTI at inquiries@amti.com.ph.

 

AirBnB’s internal memo on letting go of a quarter of their workforce

Following an unprecedented global slowdown in travel that has sent related industries plummeting to a standstill, AirBnB CEO Brian Chesky announced on May 5, that he would be making the difficult decision of letting go of roughly a quarter of the travel giant’s workforce.

It’s a decision many firms the world over are facing—one necessitated by financial clampdowns (Chesky cited AirBnB’s revenue projections for 2020 being less than half of their 2019 numbers.), rising uncertainty over when the current crisis will come to an end, and what world we’ll be entering into once it does.

Below, in full, is Chesky’s internal message to his 7,500 employees. It outlines the practical steps his company will be taking, expressing his sincere empathy, and at points sorrow, for those affected by the decision. For firms finding themselves at similar crossroads, it can serve as an example of how a leader that truly values their workforce navigates these difficult conversations.

————

This is my seventh time talking to you from my house. Each time we’ve talked, I’ve shared good news and bad news, but today I have to share some very sad news.

When you’ve asked me about layoffs, I’ve said that nothing is off the table. Today, I must confirm that we are reducing the size of the Airbnb workforce. For a company like us whose mission is centered around belonging, this is incredibly difficult to confront, and it will be even harder for those who have to leave Airbnb. I am going to share as many details as I can on how I arrived at this decision, what we are doing for those leaving, and what will happen next.

Let me start with how we arrived at this decision. We are collectively living through the most harrowing crisis of our lifetime, and as it began to unfold, global travel came to a standstill. Airbnb’s business has been hit hard, with revenue this year forecasted to be less than half of what we earned in 2019. In response, we raised $2 billion in capital and dramatically cut costs that touched nearly every corner of Airbnb.

While these actions were necessary, it became clear that we would have to go further when we faced two hard truths:

We don’t know exactly when travel will return. When travel does return, it will look different.

While we know Airbnb’s business will fully recover, the changes it will undergo are not temporary or short-lived. Because of this, we need to make more fundamental changes to Airbnb by reducing the size of our workforce around a more focused business strategy.

Out of our 7,500 Airbnb employees, nearly 1,900 teammates will have to leave Airbnb, comprising around 25% of our company. Since we cannot afford to do everything that we used to, these cuts had to be mapped to a more focused business.

A more focused business

Travel in this new world will look different, and we need to evolve Airbnb accordingly. People will want options that are closer to home, safer, and more affordable. But people will also yearn for something that feels like it’s been taken away from them — human connection. When we started Airbnb, it was about belonging and connection. This crisis has sharpened our focus to get back to our roots, back to the basics, back to what is truly special about Airbnb — everyday people who host their homes and offer experiences.

This means that we will need to reduce our investment in activities that do not directly support the core of our host community. We are pausing our efforts in Transportation and Airbnb Studios, and we have to scale back our investments in Hotels and Lux.

These decisions are not a reflection of the work from people on these teams, and it does not mean everyone on these teams will be leaving us. Additionally, teams across all of Airbnb will be impacted. Many teams will be reduced in size based on how well they map to where Airbnb is headed.

How we approached reductions

It was important that we had a clear set of principles, guided by our core values, for how we would approach reductions in our workforce. These were our guiding principles:

Map all reductions to our future business strategy and the capabilities we will need. Do as much as we can for those who are impacted. Be unwavering in our commitment to diversity. Optimize for 1:1 communication for those impacted. Wait to communicate any decisions until all details are landed — transparency of only partial information can make matters worse.

I have done my best to stay true to these principles.

Process for making reductions

Our process started with creating a more focused business strategy built on a sustainable cost model. We assessed how each team mapped to our new strategy, and we determined the size and shape of each team going forward. We then did a comprehensive review of every team member and made decisions based on critical skills, and how well those skills matched our future business needs.

The result is that we will have to part with teammates that we love and value. We have great people leaving Airbnb, and other companies will be lucky to have them.

To take care of those that are leaving, we have looked across severance, equity, healthcare, and job support and done our best to treat everyone in a compassionate and thoughtful way.

Severance

Employees in the US will receive 14 weeks of base pay, plus one additional week for every year at Airbnb. Tenure will be rounded to the nearest year. For example, if someone has been at Airbnb for 3 years and 7 months, they will get an additional 4 weeks of salary, or 18 weeks of total pay. Outside the US, all employees will receive at least 14 weeks of pay, plus tenure increases consistent with their country-specific practices.

Equity

We are dropping the one-year cliff on equity for everyone we’ve hired in the past year so that everyone departing, regardless of how long they have been here, is a shareholder. Additionally, everyone leaving is eligible for the May 25 vesting date.

Healthcare

In the midst of a global health crisis of unknown duration, we want to limit the burden of healthcare costs. In the US, we will cover 12 months of health insurance through COBRA. In all other countries, we will cover health insurance costs through the end of 2020. This is because we’re either legally unable to continue coverage, or our current plans will not allow for an extension. We will also provide four months of mental health support through KonTerra.

Job support

Our goal is to connect our teammates leaving Airbnb with new job opportunities. Here are five ways we can help:

Alumni Talent Directory — We will be launching a public-facing website to help teammates leaving find new jobs. Departing employees can opt-in to have profiles, resumes, and work samples accessible to potential employers. Alumni Placement Team — For the remainder of 2020, a significant portion of Airbnb Recruiting will become an Alumni Placement Team. Recruiters that are staying with Airbnb will provide support to departing employees to help them find their next job.RiseSmart — We are offering four months of career services through RiseSmart, a company that specializes in career transition and job placement services. Employee Offered Alumni Support — We are encouraging all remaining employees to opt-in to a program to assist departing teammates find their next role.Laptops — A computer is an important tool to find new work, so we are allowing everyone leaving to keep their Apple laptops.

Here is what will happen next

I want to provide clarity to all of you as soon as possible. We have employees in 24 countries, and the time it will take to provide clarity will vary based on local laws and practices. Some countries require notifications about employment to be received in a very specific way. While our process may differ by country, we have tried to be thoughtful in planning for every employee.

In the US and Canada, I can provide immediate clarity. Within the next few hours, those of you leaving Airbnb will receive a calendar invite to a departure meeting with a senior leader in your department. It was important to us that wherever we legally could, people were informed in a personal, 1:1 conversation. The final working day for departing employees based in the US and Canada will be Monday, May 11. We felt Monday would give people time to begin taking next steps and say goodbye — we understand and respect how important this is.

Some employees who are staying will have a new role, and will receive a meeting invite with the subject “New Role” to learn more about it. For those of you in the US and Canada who are staying on the Airbnb team, you will not receive a calendar invite.

At 6pm pacific time, I will host a world@ meeting for our Asia-Pacific teams. At 12am pacific time, I will host a world@ meeting for our Europe and Middle East teams. Following each of these meetings, we’ll proceed with next steps in each country based on local practices.

I’ve asked all Airbnb leaders to wait to bring their teams together until the end of this week out of respect to our teammates being impacted. I want to give everyone the next few days to process this, and I’ll host a CEO Q&A again this Thursday at 4pm pacific time.

Some final words

As I have learned these past eight weeks, a crisis brings you clarity about what is truly important. Though we have been through a whirlwind, some things are more clear to me than ever before.

First, I am thankful for everyone here at Airbnb. Throughout this harrowing experience, I have been inspired by all of you. Even in the worst of circumstances, I’ve seen the very best of us. The world needs human connection now more than ever, and I know that Airbnb will rise to the occasion. I believe this because I believe in you.

Second, I have a deep feeling of love for all of you. Our mission is not merely about travel. When we started Airbnb, our original tagline was, “Travel like a human.” The human part was always more important than the travel part. What we are about is belonging, and at the center of belonging is love.

To those of you staying,

One of the most important ways we can honor those who are leaving is for them to know that their contributions mattered, and that they will always be part of Airbnb’s story. I am confident their work will live on, just like this mission will live on.

To those leaving Airbnb,

I am truly sorry. Please know this is not your fault. The world will never stop seeking the qualities and talents that you brought to Airbnb…that helped make Airbnb. I want to thank you, from the bottom of my heart, for sharing them with us.

Brian

The opportunity to make this digital era inclusive

When Ginni Rometty, executive chairman and former president and CEO of IBM, was growing up, her family relied on food stamps to get by. It’s a personal story she shared in a conversation she had with musician, businessman, and philanthropist will.i.am, best known as the frontman of the Black Eyed Peas. Like Rometty, will.i.am’s family struggled with poverty in his youth, a fact he didn’t realize until his high school organized a charity food drive targeting the apparently underprivileged East L.A. neighborhood he called home.

The unlikely pair shared this conversation as part of IBM Think Digital, a two-virtual event that explored new ways of working, stabilizing, and transforming organizations amidst the evolving impacts of Covid-19.

Providing an environment to thrive

Diving into their shared upbringing, Rometty and will.i.am spoke about the need to develop technologies that promote inclusivity. Due to varying access to knowledge, resources, and skills, people face different paths and different opportunities in life.

During the event, technology was framed as the silver thread that runs through everything, with the potential to equalize a world of inequality. In this utopic vision, those with the right skills are assured of a role in society in this digital era.

IBM aims to inculcate this thread through their six-year complementary school program called P-TECH, where students are taught the tech skills needed in today’s world. The framework is flexible and iterative, allowing for enough leeway to keep pace with rapid changes in technologies and workplaces. The company also recently launched Open P-TECH, a free digital education platform focused on workplace learning and digital skills. The platform—with content in English, Portuguese, and Spanish—equips 14 to 20-year old learners and educators with foundational technology competencies such as AI and cybersecurity, along with professional skills, like Design Thinking.

“We’re a builder of tech, but it’s our job to also prepare society to interact with that technology,” Rometty said. “That’s responsible stewardship.”

One of the beneficiaries of that stewardship is Itzel Becerril, a first-generation American graduating with an Associate Degree in Web Development, the first one in her family to do so. “I have been very fortunate to have tools like Open P-TECH,” Becerril said. “It allows me to continue reinventing myself by learning new skills.”

will.i.am, on his part, launched the i.am.angel Foundation in 2009 to administer charitable activities and programs targeted towards providing college scholarships, college preparation, and opportunities in STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, and Mathematics) education.

The philanthropist talked about the importance of education and imparting the importance of growth. “A lot of times when you have kids in the hood… what’s an A when they’re dealing with crime, drugs, peer pressure? [They’re thinking] ‘what’s an A going to do for me right now when there’s drug dealers telling me to do something for them and I can get $5000. right now?’ You have to inspire a kid, entice a kid, bring mentors to the table to let them know the value of an A.”

One of the more than 700 kids being nurtured by i.am.angel is Mariano Bonilla, who is off to the University of Southern California to study physics and computer science. Having worked at IBM the past summer, he’s realized that there’s a big difference between learning in a classroom setting from applying what you know at a large company. “I learned that clients have changing needs,” Bonilla said. “It’s important to adapt to those needs and think about problems efficiently.”

Being more human in this digital era

will.i.am gave an impassioned statement on what this unusual time has taught him: “What I learned is that the world is super fragile. A couple of months ago, we thought life was uninterrupted. We thought that you could sit in traffic, be rude to people, and take for granted the freedom of going where you want to go when you want to go. You took for granted people at the supermarket, people that clean the streets and take out the garbage. You took for granted the delivery service folks. You took for granted the people that work in stock. And it turns out that those people are the most important people in society.”

“I love technology, love it,” he continued. “But let’s make sure that those jobs aren’t taken as the digital world gets more advanced. Like, what did we all stay at home and be behaved for? [It’s to] protect life, to protect humanity. In this digital age, what I learned is that we have to be more human. It’s smacking us in the face, saying, humans need to be more human. We have to be more empathetic… Covid-19 was a shake-up, a wake-up call because the machine is around the corner and the machine is not going to rule us.”

Rometty shared that her role at IBM is to stress that everyone matters. She is optimistic that there will be a better future for more people if we all work on the right things together. “There is an opportunity for everyone to be involved here. IBM has P-TECH and will.i.am has i.am.angel but it doesn’t really matter which foundation you choose to support,” she said. “If we work together on the right things, this will be an inclusive era.”

Fres cheers COVID frontliners on

Fres mint, the first mouth fragrance candy to “talk” through creative messages in each pack, joined soldiers, policemen and health workers at the frontlines. The Luzon-wide community quarantine due to COVID-19 pandemic became an instrument for appreciation and the pioneer mint candy made sure that the frontliners know they are valued.

Fres shared thousands of candies along with an appreciation letter designed with words of encouragement taken from the back of every candy pillow pack. The candy pack says “thank you,” “good job” and “walang iwanan” among others. They gave it out to security checkpoint frontliners including Marine Headquarters Batallion Landing Team-10 and Naval Reserve Southern Command thru the Philippine Marine Corp. The Chief Surgeon’s Office, Civil Military Operations Group HQ, 710th SPOW, 5th FW, TOG and 600 ABG through the Philippine Air Force were also reached out by Fres.

Medical frontliners were also reminded how grateful people are with their selfless efforts, as Fres partnered with Frontline Feeders PH and Makati Med Foundation. Fres candies were also given to San Lazaro Hospital, Novaliches District Hospital and the quarantine facilty of the Rizal Memorial Coliseum.

“This crisis is hard for everybody but it has given rise to new heroes from all walks of life and we are hopeful that a small token like a candy can bring a smile to someone’s lips. We want to celebrate the people at the frontlines and let them know that their brave and selfless efforts are admired,” said Coleen N. Ducusin, Marketing Manager for biscuits, chocolates and candies.

In this time when people are mandated to wear masks, the mint candy will leave your mouth fresh and it allows you to express your feeling through the ‘Emoticon pack’. It has more than 65 words of encouragement, love, and friendship printed at the back of every pillow pack. Available in cherry, grape, and barley mint. Fres Mint is manufactured by PT Mayora, available at all sari-sari stores nationwide.

Expanded testing: Cornering the coronavirus, one test at a time

By Argie C. Aguja
Senior Features Writer, The Philippine STAR

Priority testing for COVID-19 covers symptomatic individuals, pregnant women, the elderly, the immuno-compromised and medical workers with symptoms

On May 7, the number of confirmed coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) cases in the Philippines breached the 10 thousand-mark, reaching 10,343 cases with 685 deaths and 1,618 recoveries. The country is now among 40 nations worldwide that registered 10,000 or more COVID-19 cases.

To stem the rise of COVID-19 cases, the Inter-Agency Task Force on Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID) has set up 132 sample collecting booths nationwide and ramped up the accreditation of COVID-19 laboratories as the government initiates expanded testing to include symptomatic individuals, pregnant women, the elderly, the immuno-compromised and medical workers showing symptoms.

According to the May 6 issue of Beat COVID-19 Today published by the Department of Health (DoH), there have been 126,713 unique individuals tested for COVID-19. A total of 140,134 tests have been conducted and 235,311 test supplies remain in the national stockpile. The 22 laboratories licensed to run real-time polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) tests have managed to process 7,130 tests per day, inching closer to the DoH target of 8,000 daily tests processed.

“Testing is the cornerstone of our response,” Health Secretary Francisco Duque said, emphasizing the importance of conducting more tests in order to ensure early detection of cases and timely isolation of confirmed COVID-19 patients to mitigate the risk of community transmission.

The DoH earlier stressed that those most at risk for COVID-19 will be given priority for the expanded testing. Based on the Department Memorandum No. 2020-0151, the following reflects the sub-groups of at-risk individuals arranged in order of greatest to lowest need for testing:

• Subgroup A – Patients or healthcare workers with severe or critical symptoms

• Subgroup B – Patients or healthcare workers with mild symptoms, relevant history of travel/contact and considered vulnerable (elderly, pregnant women, and those with pre-existing health conditions like diabetes, hypertension, etc.)

• Subgroup C – Patients or healthcare workers with mild symptoms, relevant history of travel/contact

• Subgroup D – Patients or healthcare workers with no symptoms butrelevant travel history/contact.

Anyone who requests to get tested must first be assessed by a licensed health professional who shall determine where he falls into any of the prioritized groups (Subgroup A and B) and whether he should get tested immediately. Upon assessment, the patient will be instructed to proceed to the most accessible health facility for testing. An RT-PCR test will be used to confirm COVID-19 among patients. Afterwards, a patient may be advised to undergo home quarantine or proceed to a community quarantine facility.

“Those who think they are infected will still need to be assessed by a health professional. They can do this in the comfort of your home through Telemedicine consultations. We want to avoid people crowding and lining up in our testing centers to demand for tests even if they do not experience any symptom,” explained Health Undersecretary Maria Rosario Vergeire during a virtual presser.

The DoH recommends calling the 24/7 Telemedicine Hotline or consulting health professionals from the Barangay Health Emergency Response Team (BHERT) to check if one needs to be tested.

Metro Manila residents may call 02-8424-1724 or 02-7798-8000. Those outside NCR may call 1555 (for all networks) and the (02) 8942-6843 hotline for medical advice. Once confirmed, the patient will be referred to the nearest available facility for testing.

‘SAFE SIX’ GUIDE FOR THE ‘NEW NORMAL’ IN OFFICES

Global real estate services firm Cushman & Wakefield crafted a “Safe Six” guide that real estate owners should follow in preparation for the “new normal” in offices.

Full story here: https://bit.ly/35IdLLh.

Virus ends 21-year growth streak

THE Philippine economy unexpectedly shrank in the first quarter, as strict lockdown measures aimed at containing the coronavirus outbreak brought economic activity to a near standstill, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) reported on Thursday.

Gross domestic product quarterly performance (Q1 2020)

Using the new base year of 2018, gross domestic product (GDP) contracted 0.2% in January to March, ending 84 quarters or 21 years of uninterrupted growth.

The last time GDP fell into negative territory was in the fourth quarter of 1998, when the economy contracted by 3% amid the Asian financial crisis.

The first-quarter result was a reversal from the 6.7% and 5.7% growth recorded in the previous quarter and in the first quarter of 2019, respectively. It was also worse than the 2.9% median estimate in a BusinessWorld poll of 11 economists conducted last week.

However, this was still within the Cabinet-level Development Budget Coordination Committee’s projection last month that the economy could contract by 0.8% or post zero growth this year.

“Our country has faced significant socio-economic risks and shocks during the first quarter of 2020, all totally unexpected: the Taal Volcano eruption in January; a significant decline in tourism and trade starting in February due to the COVID-19 pandemic; and the need to implement the enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) in Luzon and other parts of the country starting March,” National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) Acting Secretary Karl Kendrick T. Chua said in yesterday’s news briefing.

Mr. Chua acknowledged that containing the spread of COVID-19 through the ECQ “has come at great cost to the Philippine economy,” but added that the government’s priority is “to protect lives and health of our people.”

In mid-March, the government placed Luzon, which accounts for over 70% of GDP, under an ECQ that halted nearly all economic activity and domestic consumption.

The first-quarter result provided a detailed look into the damage caused so far by the coronavirus on the economy.

Among major economic sectors, agriculture and industry posted declines of 0.4% and 3% in the first quarter, a turnaround from their respective growth rates of 0.5% and 4.9% in the same quarter last year.

Bucking the trend was services, which grew 1.4% in the first quarter. This was, however, slower than last year’s 7.1%.

On the expenditure side, household spending recorded 0.2% growth, slower than 6.2% in the first quarter of 2019.

Government spending grew by 7.1%, slower than the 17% growth in the previous quarter, but faster than 6.4% in the first quarter of 2019.

Private investment, which is represented in the data as capital formation, posted an 18.3% decline compared to a 9.8% expansion in the same three months last year.

Exports and imports of goods and services also contracted to three percent and nine percent, reversing from their respective growth rates of 4.2% and 8.9% last year.

Gross national income — the sum of the nation’s GDP and net income received from overseas — posted a 0.6% decline in the first quarter compared to growth rates of 5.8% in the previous quarter and 5% in 2019’s comparable three months.

“Data from [the first quarter] show the lockdown had indeed severe economic consequences: private consumption expanded at its slowest pace in at least 20 years, while fixed investment contracted from the previous year. These two components have been the main drivers of growth in the Philippines for the past 10 years,” HSBC Global Research Economist Noelan C. Arbis said in a note to reporters.

“GDP data by sector were similarly dire, with agriculture and industrial activity both declining from the previous year, while services activity expanded at its slowest pace in at least 20 years as well,” he added.

DEEPER CONTRACTION SEEN
The worst may be yet to come in the second quarter, as the Luzon lockdown continued throughout April. Since May 1, some low-risk areas have been downgraded to a general community quarantine (GCQ) that allowed a gradual resumption of work and economic activity. However, Metro Manila and other high-risk areas remain under ECQ until May 15.

The number of COVID-19 cases in the country reached 10,343, with 685 deaths and 1,618 recoveries, the Health department reported on Thursday.

A recession appears likely as Mr. Chua said the second-quarter GDP result “might be worse.”

However, he pointed out that many areas have gradually transitioned into a GQC.

“[T]he main difference is in the ECQ, the maximum number of people that can really work and the maximum value-added that the economy can operate is… closer to 25%. Under the GCQ it is closer to 75%. So, what this means is that there is a chance that we minimize the contraction [in the second quarter]…,” Mr. Chua said.

“[W]e are using our policies to proactively manage our trajectory, so that by the second half, we can recover gradually.”

Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III expects the economy to bounce back in the second half, on the back of government plans to accelerate infrastructure spending, implement social programs and other measures in order to restore consumer confidence. However, he noted this would depend on the availability of a COVID-19 cure and if the pandemic will be under control at that time.

“[The] [g]overnment plans to restart the domestic economy soon enough would have to be balanced with relaxing mobility restrictions in such a way as not to trigger an infection resurge that could lead us back to square one,” Mr. Dominguez said in a statement.

Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Governor Benjamin E. Diokno also expressed disappointment with the first-quarter results.

“But there could be a strong bounce back by 4th quarter, so there’s hope that we may not be in a recession this year,” he said in a separate virtual meeting on Thursday.

For ING Bank N.V. Manila Senior Economist Nicholas Antonio T. Mapa: “[T]he current lockdown which spans almost a full two months of [the second quarter] will undoubtedly drag GDP deep into contraction as we see how destructive the ECQ can be for the consumption-driven economy. The [first-quarter] GDP report moves us to downgrade our current -2.2% full-year growth forecast to -2.9% for the year,” he said in a note.

In a separate note, Capital Economics’ Emerging Markets Economist Alex Holmes said the lockdown had a severe impact on Philippine economic activity.

“(Philippine) growth is likely to be even worse than we feared in 2020. We are downgrading our forecast from -4% to -6%,” he said.

In a Viber message sent to reporters, Albay Rep. and House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Jose Maria Clemente S. Salceda said the first-quarter result shows that “this crisis is unprecedented, and will require similarly unprecedented action.”

“Congress will work hand in hand with the executive to get an economic stimulus and recovery plan passed, hopefully in a matter of weeks. Consumer and business confidence will be key, so government action must inspire confidence in the people,” Mr. Salceda said. — Lourdes O. Pilar with inputs from Genshen L. Espedido, Beatrice M. Laforga, and Luz Wendy T. Noble

Gross domestic product quarterly performance (Q1 2020)

THE Philippine economy unexpectedly shrank in the first quarter, as strict lockdown measures aimed at containing the coronavirus outbreak brought economic activity to a near standstill, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) reported on Thursday. Read the full story.

Gross domestic product quarterly performance (Q1 2020)

Fitch Ratings lowers Philippines’ outlook to ‘stable’

By Luz Wendy T. Noble
Reporter

FITCH RATINGS on Thursday evening downgraded its outlook for the Philippines to “stable,” less than three months since it gave a “positive” outlook, as the economy faces a recession amid the coronavirus pandemic.

At the same time, the global debt watcher affirmed the country’s credit rating at “BBB” — a notch above the minimum investment grade which it gave in December 2017.

“The revision of the outlook reflects deterioration in the Philippines’ near-term macroeconomic and fiscal outlook as a result of the impact of the global COVID-19 pandemic and domestic lockdown to contain the spread of the virus,” it said in a note sent to reporters on Thursday.

A stable outlook indicates that the country’s rating is likely to be maintained rather than lowered or upgraded in the medium- and long-term or over the next 18-24 months.

Despite the lower outlook, Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III said in a statement: “The Philippines is in a good fiscal position to deal with the unprecedented challenges posed by this contagion that has brought the global economy to the cusp of a recession.”

“The BSP’s long list of prompt and decisive policy support measures — including the cumulative 125 basis points (bps) cut in the policy rate and the 200 bps reduction in the reserve requirement ratio so far this year — shows that we have been putting our elbow room to good use,” BSP Governor Benjamin E. Diokno said in the same statement.

In February, Fitch Ratings upgraded the country’s credit rating outlook to “positive,” citing positive economic growth, healthy fiscal conditions and its aggressive infrastructure development drive.

Now, Fitch Ratings estimates the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) to contract by 1% in 2020, a sharp revision from the 6.4% forecast it gave last year.

This compares to the flat growth to 1% contraction projected by economic managers from an initial 6.5 to 7.5% growth target range before the virus hit the country.

“Fitch projects the economy will contract this year, and that fiscal relief measures will contribute to a widening of the 2020 general government deficit by more than 3.5 percentage points of GDP,” it said.

“Under our baseline, we assume a gradual economic recovery from Q320, and we expect growth of 7% in 2021,” it added.

In the first quarter, the country’s gross domestic product shrank by 0.2%, breaking 84 quarters of uninterrupted growth. This, after the economy grew by six percent in 2019, based on 2018 prices.

Despite the headwinds brought by the pandemic, Fitch said it kept the credit rating of the Philippines at “BBB” because of its sound economic position before the outbreak.

“The affirmation of the ‘BBB’ rating reflects the Philippines’ fiscal and external buffers, including its lower government debt/GDP ratio compared with peer medians and net external creditor position, as well as its still-strong medium-term growth prospects,” Fitch said.

The pandemic is expected to impact remittance inflows, which contribute about 8% to the GDP. Fitch said remittances will likely drop by 2.5% this year, as inflows from oil-sensitive Middle East countries accounts for 20% of total cash remittances in 2019.

“We also forecast tourism receipts, which account for 2.5% GDP, to contract by about 70% before beginning to recover gradually later in the year,” Fitch added.

The decline in both tourism receipts and remittances will spill over to the country’s current account, which may see a wider deficit of -1.6% in 2020 from the -0.2% seen in 2019, Fitch said.

“Exports are also projected to contract by about 2% on account of weak external demand. Sharply lower oil prices and lower import demand mitigate the impact on the current account,” it added.

BPOs face uncertain post-pandemic future

By Jenina P. Ibañez
Reporter

THE business process outsourcing (BPO) industry is looking at an uncertain future where large global corporations either re-shore jobs or diversify their outsourcing destinations in response to the impact of the novel coronavirus pandemic on business.

In the Philippines, the outsourcing industry is expected to lose clients to other countries with stronger internet infrastructure that can support work-from-home (WFH) programs.

“Different countries have handled the pandemic very differently, and some have suffered a lot more than others. So I think that will prompt some of the large companies to take a more balanced approach to their location strategy and perhaps not put all their eggs in one basket,” Matchboard Managing Director Sharon Melamed said in a Zoom interview. Matchboard is an Australia-based outsourcing matching service.

She said big companies in Australia understand the limitations of internet coverage in the Philippines.

“Unless that dramatically changes, they may look to have alternative destinations serving particularly premium customers where they just can’t afford to have long wait times and outages.”

Kristine A. Romano, McKinsey & Company Philippines Managing Partner, said contracts are at risk of being canceled as BPOs in the Philippines only have around 40% of their staff working from home. In India, she said, companies have 60-80% of their manpower working at home.

In addition to contracts being shifted to other countries, Ms. Romano said companies may also re-shore jobs.

“There will be a push from various governments to onshore jobs. For now, we’re seeing it’s mostly manufacturing jobs that are being incentivized to be onshored, but if the crisis deepens or worsens, that might lead to even services being onshored,” she added.

Alorica Asia President Rainiero “Bong” Borja said in a recent television interview that some US-based companies are already temporarily reshoring jobs, especially for sectors like e-commerce that now need strong online support. He expects outsourcing to bounce back, noting that the sector is working with local telecommunications companies to improve WFH connectivity.

The outsourcing industry recorded $24.8 billion in revenues and 1.23 million direct employees in 2018. The sector is a key driver of real estate development and household consumption, which in turn fuels nearly 70% of gross national product.

Ms. Romano said that the recovery of the Philippine outsourcing industry may not be as quick as it did after the 2008 global financial crisis.

“The unique thing about this time around will be because it’s so global… There is now a question, not just of offshoring and reducing costs and getting efficiency gains, but also about resilience. Because they won’t just want to offshore to one country given again the risk — if that country is on lockdown, then their operations will be disrupted. So there’s now an additional consideration on resilience,” she said.

Matchboard’s Ms. Melamed also said that data security may pose a problem for large companies wary of a WFH setup, but notes that some technologies have reduced contact center agents’ access to sensitive data.

Many companies, she said, are closing down amid fallout from the pandemic.

“Many Australian businesses are suffering and even collapsing… and this is inevitably causing a reduction of (outsourcing) headcount in the Philippines.”

LOWER TARGETS
Contact Center Association of the Philippines (CCAP) President Jojo Uligan in a virtual press conference said the call center industry will have to revisit the 4-5% revenue growth target set at the start of the year.

As the global tourism and hospitality industries face challenges and the online retail and logistics industries continue to grow, he said contact centers have been reassigning employees from lower to higher-demand sectors instead of cutting jobs.

“So far, we are not hearing any of our clients shutting down or bringing back the jobs in their geography,” Mr. Uligan said.

But CCAP, which has 123 member companies, also said that 30-35% of employees work from home, and up to 20% work on site.

CCAP Board Director Tonichi Parekh said the remaining employees often don’t have the infrastructure to allow them to work from home.

“During the first part of the lockdown, most of our member companies made sure that they were also taken care of,” she said, including providing 50% salaries for non-working employees.

Mr. Uligan said CCAP is working with telecommunications companies to address internet concerns.

“We give them all the data, the issues our people are getting while we implement work-at-home. Others, we provided them with WiFi or dongles for them to be able to operate.”

NEW MARKET: SMALL BUSINESSES
The Philippine outsourcing industry may, however, attract new demand as small businesses in other countries look to outsource jobs in order to cut costs.

“The focus will be on costs. When the world is in a recession, there’s a lot of focus on cost savings, and a more flexible work force and outsourcing is exactly that,” Outsource Accelerator Chief Executive Officer Derek Gallimore said in a phone interview.

Mr. Gallimore said demand had been plateauing in recent years as 90% of multinational companies are already outsourcing. But he said that the 40 million small and medium-sized enterprises (SME) in the “high-cost English speaking world” — with only 0.5% currently outsourcing — may soon begin to consider the service.

“This is going to be a huge demand for outsourcing in the future… Now, with globalization and technology and the tools, it’s easier and more accessible for SMEs.”

Real estate service provider Santos Knight Frank, Inc. had said that the Philippines’ competitive costs, including lower rent and operating costs, will be an opportunity for increased outsourcing.

Mr. Gallimore said sectors that can expect to see more activity, particularly e-commerce, food provision, government, health care, pharmaceuticals, logistics, video conferencing, and entertainment streaming.

To do this, the Philippine outsourcing industry needs a public relations boost, the industry professionals said.

“The Philippines needs to position its outsourcing services to be the high-quality, professionalized outsourcing services,” Mr. Gallimore said.

Matchboard’s Ms. Melamed said the Philippines must improve its internet infrastructure, as well promote their services to businesses that are cutting costs.

“Come out with educational blogs, e-mail outreach and being very proactive at this time — telling businesses that they can help their business survive and thrive and get through this,” she said.

Rey C. Untal, chief executive officer and president of the Information Technology Business Process Association of the Philippines (IBPAP), said in an e-mail that the industry can gradually shift to a “new normal.”

“As should be expected, this will mean the widespread adoption of new practices that were, to a certain degree, underutilized prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. This includes the extensive use of tools like Zoom, Microsoft Teams, Hangouts, and Webex. We also anticipate seeing more businesses and employers initiating and implementing blended WFH (work-from-home) and on-site operations.”

He said reshaping the industry will require multi-agency and multi-industry cooperation “to ensure our country’s continuing relevance in the global marketplace despite and amid the challenges.”

The Department of Information and Communications Technology recently said it will work to make internet connectivity faster and cheaper after the lockdown is lifted, encouraging smaller telecommunications and cable TV operators in the provinces to connect homes to the internet.

AUTOMATION BUNDLES
The outsourcing industry is not new to questions about the risks that automation poses to contact center jobs.

“Being able to speak good English, especially for the Philippines, is no longer a big advantage because now we have chatbots which can do the work faster with lower cost,” Advance.AI Co-founder and Chief Operating Officer Dong Shou said in a Zoom interview.

He said Philippine BPOs must urgently upskill workers.

“Train workers to work with AI (artificial intelligence) systems to get them familiar with these kinds of technologies, some systems. Redeploy humans to higher value processes like data analysis and critical judgment… and leave this kind of repeated work to machines.”

Ms. Melamed, however, said that while other countries have a technological advantage, the Philippines has a unique opportunity to “bundle” both technology and talent.

“A BPO might be able to say ‘pay us per customer under management, and we’ll include in there not only all the people-side but all the technology-side.’ So bundling everything together…because the competition is really huge on both fronts,” she said.

“The Philippine BPO industry has been the admiration of so many countries in its ability to recruit and train huge numbers of people at lightning speed, and the opportunity is now to extend this into the automation sector as well.”

Diokno: Current policy rate remains ‘appropriate’

THE aggressive policy easing fired off by the central bank this year will be “appropriate” as the economy faces challenges brought by the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, according to Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Governor Benjamin E. Diokno.

“With the manageable inflation environment and stable inflation expectations, we believe that the 125-basis-point (bp) cumulative cut in the policy rate this year is appropriate to buffer the country’s growth momentum and boost market confidence amid stronger headwinds,” Mr. Diokno said in an online briefing on Thursday.

The central bank already cut rates thrice this year — a 25-bp cut in February followed by 50-bp reductions in March and April.

This brought benchmark rates to record lows of 2.75% for the overnight reverse repurchase facility and 3.25% and 2.25% for the overnight lending and deposit facilities, respectively.

Mr. Diokno has said they will assess how banks have responded to their easing moves and regulatory relief measures for their next monetary policy assessment.

The next rate-setting meeting is scheduled on June 25 as the Monetary Board has called off its May 21 meeting following the off-cycle 50-bp cut on April 16.

Meanwhile, Mr. Diokno said the reduction in banks’ reserve requirement ratios (RRR) as well as the alternative modes of compliance with the RRR are meant to encourage lending to sectors affected by the pandemic, including the micro-, small- and medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs).

Asked how banks have used the liquidity boost coming from the cuts in policy rates and RRR, Mr. Diokno said: “Monetary policy works with a lag. Nothing will happen overnight.”

“There’s a lag of about three quarters as far as historical numbers show. But there’s some movement already,” he said.

“I think more money is going into GS (government securities), some money is going into lending. Let’s not get too impatient, I think we’ll get there,” he said.

This was echoed by BSP Monetary Policy Sub-sector Officer-In-Charge Dennis D. Lapid, who said the liquidity freed by the central bank’s easing “works in different channels.”

“[It’s] not just bank lending channels. There’s a lot more short-term liquidity in the market,” Mr. Lapid said.

Latest BSP data showed bank lending in February grew by 12.2%, quicker than the 11.2% logged in January.

The Monetary Board slashed the RRR of universal and commercial banks by 200 bps to 12% effective April in a bid to boost liquidity during the Luzon lockdown.

Meanwhile, the RRR of thrift and rural banks are at four and three percent, respectively. Liquidity boost for smaller banks came through the 400-bp reduction in the minimum liquidity ratio for stand-alone thrift and rural banks to 16% until end-2020.

Mr. Diokno added that his promise to reduce big banks’ RRR to the single-digit level may come “earlier” than his 2023 goal.

“A” RATING GOAL TO TAKE A BACKSEAT
As the ongoing COVID-19 outbreak takes its toll on the economy, Mr. Diokno said the country’s ambition to get an “A” rating from debt watchers may have to be set aside for now as government efforts should be focused on people during this crisis.

“This pandemic hit the Philippines when we were on a roll. The road to ‘A’ might take a backseat at the moment,” the central bank chief said. “Our concern right now is to help our people rather than pursuing our Road to ‘A’.”

“We are going to borrow money. Fortunately for us, we start from a low debt-to-GDP (gross domestic product) ratio,” Mr. Diokno said.

“Achieving it (A rating) by 2022 may or may not happen. But as I said we are focused on appropriate policies and necessary reforms to put the economy back into its growth trajectory…,” he added.

The country’s debt-to-GDP ratio last year was revised to 39.6% using 2018 as the base year, after the indicator was initially at 41.5%. Economic managers have set a 46.7% debt-to-GDP target this year.

Ahead of the virus outbreak, the government was hoping to obtain an “A” sovereign rating from credit raters by 2022 as the country was expected to become an upper middle-income country by this year.

The Philippines’ sovereign credit ratings were upgraded to the minimum investment grade by S&P Global Ratings, Fitch Ratings and Moody’s Investors Service in 2013. Since then, the debt watchers have raised their ratings to a notch above minimum, putting the country closer to achieving an A-level grade. — Luz Wendy T. Noble