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The case for optimism

OCTAVIA BUTLER’s classic futurist novel Parable of the Sower recently made the New York Times bestseller list for the first time. It depicts an America falling apart at the seams due to violence, economic decline, and governmental dysfunction. But despite the chaos, the protagonist, Lauren Olamina, spends much of her time thinking about space exploration. Faced with a dystopian Earth, she motivates herself and her followers to survive by dreaming of the stars.

Today, the US isn’t quite falling apart yet, but a pandemic, social unrest, political chaos, wildfires, and economic recession are hastening what was an already worrying national decline. As people desperately try to shore up the nation’s institutions, a few are taking a page from Parable of the Sower and dreaming big dreams about what the future could hold.

One example is the socialists who came up with the idea of a Green New Deal. Though the particulars of such a policy haven’t exactly been hammered out yet, the basic idea is to combine a bold attack on carbon emissions with an equally audacious expansion of economic security. Aggressive targets for green energy, construction of transit and retrofitting of buildings would be combined with large-scale government job provision, free education and income security.

The idea’s promoters wax positively utopian about what a Green New Deal could accomplish. The vision is not one of diminished horizons or painful cutbacks in economic growth — which a few environmentalists demand — but rather one of clean, tranquil abundance. In the words of writer Aaron Bastani, it would be “fully automated luxury communism” — a Star Trek future where technology does all the work and humans share the benefits equally. Futurists such as Ramez Naam, meanwhile, are imagining the technologies that would be required to create an economy that’s both prosperous and environmentally friendly.

Others are reimagining the American city. The YIMBY movement — which stands for “yes, in my back yard” — is pushing to change America’s sprawling, suburban, car-centric development pattern into one based around density and public transit. An ad-hoc alliance between socialists and left-libertarians, the YIMBYs would remove zoning laws while using the government to build trains and public housing. Thanks to the visions of such thinkers as transit analyst Juliet Eldred, young people are sharing urbanist memes and passing around maps of an envisioned countrywide high-speed rail system. In an early victory, the YIMBYs managed to get Oregon to effectively ban single-family zoning statewide.

And for many of these same idealists, reimagining the American city also means reimagining the police. Police brutality has been a major cause not only of recent unrest, but of long-simmering racial tensions that have made even the most liberal American cities feel less than fully integrated. While some want to abolish the police entirely, more pragmatic visionaries are thinking of ways to reduce the number of dangerous interactions between law enforcement and the community. Darrell Owens, a co-executive of the YIMBY advocacy group East Bay for Everyone, successfully pitched the city of Berkeley on the idea of replacing traffic cops with an unarmed traffic enforcement department.

If American cities are to become more efficient in their use of land and resources, it stands to reason that more people could live in them. In his new book One Billion Americans: The Case for Thinking Bigger, writer Matthew Yglesias proposes a dramatic expansion of immigration, along with industrial and urbanist policies to give all the new Americans jobs and places to live. This idea falls short of more radical proposals for open borders, but manages to still be breathtaking in scope while not sacrificing the specific details of how to accommodate new arrivals.

Any future utopian America will need to be not just wealthier and more efficient, but far less unequal. While advocates of the Green New Deal would remake the economy with a huge array of industrial policies and programs, a small but growing group of social democrats is envisioning something simpler and cleaner.

Writers such as Annie Lowrey and the pseudonymous writer “James Medlock” envision a nation where equality is not left to the vagaries of the employment system, but instead is assured via taxes and spending. Medlock favors broad-based taxation such as the VATs used in Europe, and universal social programs such as basic income. The idea is that creating an economically equal society is actually quite easy — just use a few simple but powerful redistributionary tools to make sure everyone has enough cash.

These are only a few of the Americans dreaming of utopian futures at a time when chaos and decline threaten to overwhelm the present. Others envision bold programs to close racial wealth gaps, colonize Mars, or use technology to change the nature of what it means to be human.

Most of these big ideas are unlikely to materialize in the near future — at least not in their idealized forms. The vicissitudes of a chaotic world and a divided society, the limitations of technology, and the need for compromise always stand in the way of utopia. But the simple fact that Americans are dreaming these dreams means there is still something vital and unbeaten in the country’s spirit. The ability to imagine not just fixes for today’s problems, but a radically better tomorrow, is an essential motivator to keep fighting when everything feels like it’s falling apart.

BLOOMBERG OPINION

Sinovac vaccine is safe, says Brazil

BEIJING/SAO PAULO — An experimental coronavirus vaccine developed by China’s Sinovac Biotech appeared to be safe in a late-stage clinical trial in Brazil, preliminary results showed on Monday.

Sao Paulo’s Butantan Institute, one of Brazil’s leading biomedical research centers, which is carrying out the Phase 3 tests, said the two-dose vaccine, called CoronaVac, proved to be safe in a trial so far involving 9,000 volunteers.

But Butantan director Dimas Covas said data on how effective the vaccine is will not be released until the trial is completed on all of the 13,000 volunteers.

“The first results of the clinical study conducted in Brazil prove that among all the vaccines tested in the country, CoronaVac is the safest, the one with the best and most promising rates,” Sao Paulo Governor Joao Doria told reporters.

The result is only preliminary and researchers will keep monitoring the participants in the on-going trial, Mr. Covas said. It’s the first set of results of Sinovac’s Phase 3 global trials, which are also being conducted in Turkey and Indonesia.

Mr. Covas said there were no severe adverse reactions to the vaccine, with 20% of the volunteers reporting mild pain from the injection while 15% reported headaches after the first dose, dropping to 10% for the second. Less than 5% reported nausea or tiredness, and even less had muscle aches, he said.

Sao Paulo state health secretary Jean Gorinchteyn said the vaccine appeared to produce protective anti-bodies. The state hopes to obtain regulatory approval for CoronaVac by the end of the year to start inoculating its population early in 2021, in what could the first vaccination programs in the Americas.

Sao Paulo signed a deal with Sinovac to buy 60 million doses by the end of February.

Sinovac wanted Brazil as a testing ground because it has been one of the global hotbeds of the virus, although cases are 43% off their peak of nearly 70,000 new cases a day in late July.

Brazil has reported more than 5.2 million COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) cases since the pandemic began, the world’s third most-affected country after the United States and India.

AstraZeneca PLC and Oxford University are nearing an analysis of their UK coronavirus vaccine trial. Pfizer, Inc has said it could provide an early analysis of its trial this month, and Moderna, Inc may announce its results in November. Russia’s Gamaleya Institute may provide an analysis of its vaccine in the next month.

Competing candidates developed by AstraZeneca and Johnson & Johnson have had their trials halted in the United States due to safety issues.

Vaccines are considered as essential tools to curb the rampaging virus, which has killed over 1 million people globally. Brazil is also hosting a Phase 3 trial for AstraZeneca’s vaccine candidate, while Johnson & Johnson said last month it aims to expand its final-stage human trials there.

CoronaVac uses inactivated vaccine technology, a traditional method that uses killed virus that cannot replicate in human cells to trigger an immune response.

Experts have warned that the safety of inactivated coronavirus vaccine candidates should be observed over longer periods, as some other inactivated vaccines had led to disease enhancement effect, where vaccine-triggered antibodies, instead of offering protection, could worsen infections when people became exposed to a virus after inoculation. — Reuters

Indonesia rejected US request to host spy planes — officials

JAKARTA — Indonesia rejected this year a proposal by the United States to allow its P-8 Poseidon maritime surveillance planes to land and refuel there, according to four senior Indonesian officials familiar with the matter.

US officials made multiple “high-level” approaches in July and August to Indonesia’s defence and foreign ministers before Indonesia’s president, Joko Widodo, rebuffed the request, the officials said.

Representatives for Indonesia’s president and defense minister, the US State Department press office and the US embassy in Jakarta did not respond to requests for comment. Representatives for the US Department of Defence and Indonesia’s foreign minister Retno Marsudi declined to comment.

The proposition, which came as the US and China escalated their contest for influence in Southeast Asia, surprised Indonesia’s government, the officials said, because Indonesia has a long-standing policy of foreign policy neutrality. The country has never allowed foreign militaries to operate there.

The P-8 plays a central role in keeping an eye on China’s military activity in the South China Sea, most of which Beijing claims as sovereign territory. Vietnam, Malaysia, the Philippines and Brunei have rival claims to the resource-rich waters, through which $3 trillion worth of trade passes each year.

Indonesia is not a formal claimant in the strategically important waterway, but considers a portion of the South China Sea as its own. It has regularly repelled Chinese coast guard vessels and fishing boats from an area to which Beijing says it has a historic claim.

But the country also has growing economic and investment links with China. It does not want to take sides in the conflict and is alarmed by growing tensions between the two superpowers, and by the militarization of the South China Sea, Ms. Retno told Reuters.

“We don’t want to get trapped by this rivalry,” Ms. Retno said in an interview in early September. “Indonesia wants to show all that we are ready to be your partner.”

‘OVER-REACH’
Despite the strategic affinity between the U.S. and Southeast Asian states in curbing China’s territorial ambitions, Dino Patti Djalal, a former Indonesian ambassador to the United States, said the “very aggressive anti-China policy” of the US had unnerved Indonesia and the region.

“It’s seen as out-of-place,” he told Reuters. “We don’t want to be duped into an anti-China campaign. Of course we maintain our independence, but there is deeper economic engagement and China is now the most impactful country in the world for Indonesia.”

Greg Poling, a Southeast Asia analyst from the Washington D.C.-based Center for Strategic and International Studies, said trying to get landing rights for spy planes was an example of clumsy over-reach.

“It’s an indication of how little folks in the US government understand Indonesia,” he told Reuters. “There’s a clear ceiling to what you can do, and when it comes to Indonesia that ceiling is putting boots on the ground.”

The US recently has used military bases in Singapore, the Philippines and Malaysia to operate P-8 flights over the South China Sea, military analysts said.

China has ramped up military exercises this year, while the US has increased the tempo of naval freedom of navigation operations, submarine deployments and surveillance flights.

The P-8, with its advanced radar, high definition cameras and acoustic sensors, has been mapping the islands, surface and underwater realms of the South China Sea for at least six years.

When carrying sonobuoys and missiles, the planes can detect and attack ships and submarines from long range. It also has communications systems that allow it to control unmanned aircraft.

In 2014, the US accused a Chinese fighter jet of coming within 20 feet and executing a barrel roll over a P-8 patrolling the South China Sea. China described the US complaint as “groundless.” — Reuters

Final Trump-Biden debate will feature ‘mute’ button

WASHINGTON — The final debate between President Donald Trump and Democratic rival Joe Biden will feature a mute button to allow each candidate to speak uninterrupted, organizers said on Monday, looking to avoid the disruptions that marred the first matchup.

The Trump campaign voiced objections to the change — made after the president repeatedly talked over both Biden and the moderator at last month’s debate in violation of its agreed-upon rules — but said the Republican would still take part in the Thursday night event, one of his last chances to reach a large prime-time audience before voting ends on Nov. 3.

The Presidential Commission on Debates said each candidate’s microphone at the debate in Nashville, Tennessee, would be silenced to allow the other to make two minutes of opening remarks at the beginning of each 15-minute segment of the debate. Both microphones will be turned on to allow a back-and-forth after that time.

“President Trump is committed to debating Joe Biden regardless of last-minute rule changes from the biased commission in their latest attempt to provide advantage to their favored candidate,” campaign manager Bill Stepien said.

The Biden campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

More than 30 million Americans have already cast their ballots, limiting Trump’s chances of reframing a contest that national and state opinion polls show him trailing.

Trump repeatedly interrupted Biden during a chaotic and ill-tempered debate on Sept. 29, at one point provoking Biden to snap: “Will you shut up, man?”

Trump backed out of a second scheduled debate set for last Thursday over a disagreement about the virtual format following his COVID-19 infection. At that time, he raised concerns about having his microphone muted.

“You sit behind a computer and do a debate — it’s ridiculous, and then they cut you off whenever they want,” Mr. Trump said in an Oct. 8 interview on Fox Business.

Earlier on Monday, Mr. Trump’s campaign said it was unhappy with the announced set of topics for Thursday’s debate, arguing that it should focus more on foreign policy and asserting that the nonpartisan group was tilted toward Mr. Biden.

“I will participate but it’s very unfair that they changed the topics and it’s very unfair that again we have an anchor who’s totally biased,” Mr. Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One as he returned to Washington from rallies in Arizona.

Kristen Welker of NBC News, a respected White House reporter, is slated to anchor the debate.

Biden’s campaign said both sides previously agreed to let moderators choose the subjects. It said Mr. Trump wanted to avoid discussing his stewardship of the coronavirus pandemic, which surveys show is the top issue for voters.

“As usual, the president is more concerned with the rules of a debate than he is getting a nation in crisis the help it needs,” Biden spokesman TJ Ducklo said.

The number of Americans who voted early reached 30.2 million on Monday, according to the University of Florida’s United States Elections Project. That number represents more than one-fifth of all the votes cast in the 2016 election.

Early voting is likely to ramp up this week as more states open up voting centers for those who want to avoid possible coronavirus exposure at crowded Election Day polling sites.

In Florida, where more than 2.5 million have already voted by mail, residents lined up for the first day of early in-person voting. A Reuters/Ipsos poll released last week showed Mr. Trump and Mr. Biden effectively tied in the state, which is seen as a must-win for the president. — Reuters

Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3×3 President’s Cup unfurls

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

LOCAL 3×3 basketball action is back as the Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3×3 President’s Cup unfurls on Wednesday in a “bubble” setting at the Inspire Sports Academy in Laguna.

Forced to delay its second season because of the coronavirus pandemic, the now-recognized professional league is ready to get it going for its two-week-long tournament, which will see all participants holed up throughout the proceedings in the government-approved Calamba facility of National University.

The tournament will be conducted under strict monitoring of health and safety protocols laid out by the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID) which paved the way for the league’s season start.

Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3×3 is the second league in the country to open amid the ongoing concern with the pandemic after the Philippine Basketball Association.

The President’s Cup commences with its first leg, featuring 12 teams coming from different parts of the country out to be crowned as kings of the 3×3 court.

Three more, three legs will follow on Oct. 23, 25, and 27, with the Grand Finals which has a P1-million top prize taking place on Oct. 30.

Set to see action in the tournament are Family’s Brand Sardines-Zamboanga City Chooks, Uling Roasters-Butuan City, Bacolod Master Sardines, Nueva Ecija Rice Vanguards, Palayan City Capitals, Big Boss Cement-Porac MSC Green Gorillas, and Pasig-Sta. Lucia Realtors.

Also competing are Zamboanga Peninsula Valientes MLV, Pagadian City-Rocky Sports, Petra Cement-Roxas City ZN Rockies, Sarangani Marlins, and Bicol Paxful 3×3 Pro.

League commissioner Eric Altamirano said they are grateful and excited to have their season start just as they hope they get to provide inspiration for other sports stakeholders in the country still finding their way amid the issue with the health crisis.

They, too, are looking at the President’s Cup as jump-starting anew the national team’s preparation for the Olympic Qualifying Tournament next year.

“One of our main goals is to restart sports and hopefully through our 3×3 league, we’d be able to inspire other leagues to be able to start also. Also, it’s our goal to prepare for the Olympic qualifier. That is to use this league to prepare us for the coming OQT,” Mr. Almirano said.

The country’s top 3×3 players—Joshua Munzon and Alvin Pasaol—are seeing action in the tournament with the Family’s Brand Sardines along with other national team pool members.

To ensure that things will go smoothly, the league held a “dry run” through a preseason tournament on Oct. 19, which was topped by the team of Messrs. Munzon and Pasaol.

The President’s Cup, now powered by TM, can be seen on the Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas Facebook page, Chooks3x3TM on Digital TV, and television channel BEAM TV Channel 31.

Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3×3 was established last year and is the brainchild of the group of Bounty Agro Ventures, Inc. president Ronald Mascarinas.

Jose Romasanta underscores need to uphold Olympism ahead of POC polls

AS ELECTION month at the Philippine Olympic Committee (POC)approaches, one of its senior officials moved to remind his colleagues of the need to uphold the spirit of Olympism with the end view of making the body stronger and better.

In a statement shared on Monday, POC first vice-president Jose Romansanta stressed that as the Nov. 27 POC elections draw closer and battle lines are intensely being drawn, members should not lose sight of where their organization is rooted in and what it stands for.

“As sports leaders and POC members, we should aspire to be better men and women not only in pursuing sports excellence but also in setting an example in honesty, integrity, proficiency, and transparency for our followers, our flag, and our country, all in the spirit of Olympism,” Mr. Romasanta said.

Adding, “With the youth of the land among our constituents, we are the standard-bearers in nurturing, promoting, and propagating our respective sports based on the lofty ideals and tenets of Olympism.”

The POC official, also president of the Larong Volleyball ng Pilipinas, Inc., made his sentiments known as the election race heats up.

Seeking positions in the local Olympic body are the groups led by incumbent president Abraham Tolentino (cycling) and challenger Clint Aranas (archery).

While both parties have vowed to improve the affairs of the POC, they, however, do not see eye-to-eye on certain issues and have taken one another to task for them, which Mr. Romasanta said could be problematic if left uncontrolled.

That being said, Mr. Romasanta, who is not seeking reelection in the upcoming POC polls, urged his colleagues to be mindful of their decisions and actions since these would reflect greatly on the entire organization.

“These are heavy responsibilities and obligations that we swore to uphold when we became NSA leaders and POC members… Our actions and decisions within our associations and the POC have a larger impact beyond the field of sports and upon society we live in as well,” Mr. Romasanta said.

“Our choice and decision in this crucial election on Nov. 27 will leave a legacy for posterity that will impact succeeding generations. Let us all live up to the Olympic motto of ‘CITIUS, ALTIUS, FORTIUS’ (“Faster, Higher, Stronger”) for a better POC,” he furthered. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

2020 Hero World Challenge canceled due to COVID-19

THIS YEAR’S Hero World Challenge in the Bahamas has been cancelled due to travel restrictions amid the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, organisers said on Monday.

The event, hosted by Tiger Woods, was scheduled to take place at Albany, Bahamas from Dec. 3-6 and slated to bring together 18 of the top golfers in the world.

Prize money won by the players is not included in money rankings on any of the global professional tours but the event offers world ranking points.

“This decision was made with the health and well-being of all tournament constituents and the Albany community in mind.” the organisers said.

“We look forward to hosting 18 of the top players in the world and welcoming tournament guests to Albany, Bahamas next year.”

Sweden’s Henrik Stenson was the defending champion at the event, where recent winners also include world number two Jon Rahm, Rickie Fowler, Bubba Watson and Jordan Spieth. — Reuters

Filipino MMA fighter Dy to see action at Brave CF 44 next month

FILIPINO BRAVE CF FIGHTER ROLANDO DY — ALVIN S. GO

FILIPINO mixed martial arts fighter Rolando “Dy Incredible” Dy will be back in the Brave Combat Federation stage next month to take on highly touted John Brewin of New Zealand in a key lightweight division clash in Bahrain.

Last fought in the promotion in September, Mr. Dy (13-9, 1 no contest) is out to make it back-to-back wins at “Brave CF 44” on Nov. 5 and solidify his standing in the division.

In his last fight, 29-year-old Dy hacked out a split decision win over Polish Maciek Gierzewski in their three-round collision in Riffa.

The victory snapped for him a two-fight losing streak.

At Brave CF 44, he will battle Mr. Brewin (5-1), who is currently riding a two-fight winning streak which has earned him the promotion’s breakout fighter of the year award for 2019.

He, too, defeated Mr. Gierzewski in his last fight in November last year by way of submission (armbar).

Brave CF 44 is headlined by the lightweight world title fight between defending champion Cleiton “Predator” Silva and top contender Amin “Fierceness” Ayoub. In the co-main event, top welterweights in former champion Abdoul Abdouraguimov and Louis “Spartacus” Glismann collide.

Founded in 2016, Brave, under the patronage of His Highness Sheikh Khalid bin Hamad Al Khalifa, has made headways in bringing top-class MMA action in different parts of the globe. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Murray, Cardinals rout mistake-prone Cowboys

KYLER Murray passed for two touchdowns and ran for another to help the Arizona Cardinals record a 38-10 victory over the Dallas Cowboys on Monday night at Arlington, Texas.

Christian Kirk caught two touchdown passes — including an 80-yarder — and Kenyan Drake rushed for 164 yards and two touchdowns on 20 carries for the Cardinals (4-2). Murray completed 9 of 24 passes for 188 yards and also rushed for 74 yards on 10 carries. Arizona’s Budda Baker and Dre Kirkpatrick intercepted passes.

The Cowboys played their first game without star quarterback Dak Prescott, who is out for the season after sustaining a severe ankle injury. Andy Dalton completed 34 of 54 passes for 266 yards, one touchdown and two interceptions for Dallas (2-4), which committed four turnovers.

Dallas running back Ezekiel Elliott rushed for 49 yards on 12 carries and lost two fumbles — one as a runner, one as a receiver. He has fumbled five times this season, losing a career-worst four.

Murray played at AT&T Stadium for the first time as a pro and improved to 7-0 in the facility, counting his high school and college careers. He won three state titles in the building while playing for Allen High, located about 25 miles north of Dallas.

The game was played in front of 25,174, a count limited by COVID-19 protocols.

Arizona held a 438-344 edge in total offense while beating Dallas for the fifth time in the past six meetings.

After a scoreless first quarter, the Cardinals scored 21 points in the second to take control.

The first touchdown occurred shortly after Elliott’s first lost fumble. Kirk came across in motion and received a forward flip from Murray and raced toward the right side of the end zone for a 6-yard score with 12:58 left in the half.

Elliott lost another fumble to give the Cardinals a short field, and Drake scored from the 1 to cap a five-play, 27-yard drive to make it 14-0 with 10:31 left.

Arizona forced a punt later in the stanza, and Murray and Kirk teamed up on the 80-yard touchdown on the first play. Kirk stretched out his arms to make a fingertip grab at the Dallas 35-yard line and raced for the score with 4:43 left in the half.

Greg Zuerlein kicked a 34-yard field goal with 10 seconds left to leave Dallas trailing 21-3.

Kirkpatrick intercepted Dalton — the two were teammates in Cincinnati for the past eight seasons — early in the third quarter. The Cardinals cashed in with Murray’s 1-yard run with 7:53 left in the period.

Zane Gonzalez booted a 26-yard field goal to give the Cardinals a 31-3 lead with 8:54 left before Dalton threw a 1-yard scoring pass to Amari Cooper with 2:48 remaining. Drake tacked on a 69-yard touchdown run with 1:49 left. — Reuters

Overdue

The Dodgers are back in the World Series, and while the development may seem familiar to all and sundry, it proved far from a certainty given their complicated journey. Their stacked roster and status as favorites notwithstanding, they had to come from behind in the National League Championship Series; in fact, they even had to overcome a deficit in the low-scoring rubber match to claim the pennant. And for all their Game Seven heroics, they still required the Braves to suffer from fundamental base-running miscues in order to survive.

The Dodgers don’t care, though. Despite their evident underachievement in recent memory, they believe they’re due. No, scratch that; they believe they’re overdue. If nothing else, they deserve the breaks to be going their way for once in the face of the Astros’ broad-daylight snatching of the Commissioner’s Trophy in 2017. And in forging just the eighth comeback from a one-three LCS deficit in the annals of Major League Baseball, they needed everything to go right for them in the last three outings.

The do-or-die set-to the other day was particularly nerve-racking. The Dodgers fell behind early off a creaky showing by opener Dustin May on the mound. They then appeared to be en route to yet another disappointing finish when the Braves had two runners in scoring position with no outs in the fourth inning — that is, until they managed to luck into a 5-2-5-2-5-6 double play that dramatically shifted momentum to their side. After the fortunate turn of events, they banked on such notables as Cody Bellinger, Mookie Betts, Kenley Jansen, and Kike Hernandez, to turn seemingly imminent defeat to victory.

The Dodgers celebrated Bellinger’s home run on the seventh, so much so that he dislocated his shoulder in so doing. With a lot of baseball still left to play, it could have wound up hurting them. That it didn’t was due in large measure to Jansen’s outstanding mastery of mechanics. And with the Braves unable to find an answer, the moment was finally theirs. The World Series is up next, and they’re confident the third time’s the charm.

 

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.

Fast-tracking innovation, fiscal support needed to take advantage of new opportunities in health tech

By Patricia B. Mirasol

Health tech is expected to grow in five key areas post-COVID: telemedicine; the Internet of Medical Things; virtual reality; robotics; and quantum computing. All of these will combine in a medical ecosystem estimated to reach hundreds of billions by 2026, said Kei Shimada, leader of IBM Japan’s Digital Maker Lab.

“Telemedicine itself is not the entire solution,” said Mr. Shimada in his keynote presentation at the Ignite 2020 Cyber conference. “It has to have, for example, patients wearing devices that produce data doctors need to address symptoms over remote sessions. In order to keep distance, robots need (to be used). Quantum computing is also necessary to break down the data. It’s everything in combination.”

He strongly recommended that governments provide subsidies so that everyone can benefit from tailwinds COVID-19 is creating in the health tech sphere. Aside from providing fiscal support, countries must fast-track innovation.

“We’re all lucky to be in the healthcare space from an acceleration perspective due to COVID-19,” said Farouk Meralli, CEO of online pharmacy network mClinica. “Anyone placed in tech solving a real need will see an acceleration.” 

Among the notable health innovations mentioned at the Ignite conference were Zipline, an on-demand drone delivery service for medical supplies; and ELXR, a mobile app that provides customized fitness training programs based on one’s DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) type. 

ENABLING ENVIRONMENT
In Southeast Asia, Singapore is a model in terms of having an enabling environment for capital and infrastructure, said Mr. Meralli, in a panel discussion at the same conference. “Each country is at a different stage in innovation, and each market has its own benefit based on our experience.” Initially based in the Philippines, his company has since moved to Indonesia, where 92% of pharmacies are independent mom-and-pop shops. 

Johanna Weise, head of global expansion for fermata, Inc., shared that the femtech company took the lessons it learned in community-building in Japan to Singapore. “Instead of looking for communities, why don’t we create communities that stimulate this sort of environment?,” she said.

In the Philippines, Republic Act 11293, or the Philippine Innovation Act, was signed into law last year to boost innovation and help promote growth and national competitiveness of micro, small and medium-sized enterprises. The National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) had to return the P300 million innovation fund for it, however, because of the pandemic. Senator Joel Villanueva, during last month’s virtual hearing on the proposed 2021 NEDA budget, urged the government to fund Republic Act No. 11293, “because as many experts claim, now is the best time for innovations.” 

The period where the value of Managed Device Services become essential for businesses

Today, we continue to witness how the on-going pandemic disrupted the business landscape and pushed organizations to pivot and adopt new business models. To do that, they must accelerate their digital transformation approach and enforce remote working overnight.

With the constant innovation in technology and the development of business models over the years, workplaces are now built and designed with a wide variety of enabling and complex technologies. Hence, it highlighted the value and importance of technology in today’s disrupted business world as businesses seek technology entrepreneurs and advisors to help them navigate and address the gap to execute remote working and IT complexities.

“I have seen how fast the demand for mobile devices increased since the ECQ happened due to the quick adjustments of companies to the new normal and enforcement of work-from-home. It became immediate needs for businesses to equip their workforce to operate efficiently and remotely,” said Allxyon Cua, president of AMTI, one of the most diversified ICT companies in the Philippines and a Digital Transformation enabler. “Surprisingly, the upsurge demand led to a shortage of supply globally,” he added. The augmented and acceleration of IT requirements today overwhelmed the management and workload of one’s IT Team.

Now, enter Managed Device Services (MDS). More than ever, the availability and benefit of MDS today became essential for business resilience. The quick procurement of mobility devices of companies that enforced work-from-home revealed instead of the advantage of acquiring devices preconfigured with the necessary software, business applications, and security was an integral factor to support and quickly enable a remote workforce for a streamlined and continued business operations,” said Bong Paloma, AMTI EVP for Technology, Sales and Marketing.

When companies adapt to MDS, it reduces the burden of in-house IT teams to manage and support end-users and upgrade or acquire new devices to replace outdated ones. This allows businesses to focus more on other financial plans, innovations, and other strategic methods to sustain their business and profitability. To understand the value of MDS, here are other benefits:

  1. Lessens financial burdens or other expenditures

Technology is imperative for businesses to operate efficiently. Companies incur several costs and invest in maintaining their equipment, software, and people to manage their operations. MDS is a consumption-based model allowing businesses to invest in operating expenditures (OPEX) to keep down expenses and allocate it to other business development plans.

  1. Maintenance and Technical Support (On-site and Remote)

MDS is an all-inclusive solution with a dedicated team of IT solutions experts and engineers that can help provide innovative-customized software and devices that fit the different employee personas. They also help alleviate the trouble of resolving technical concerns an end-user experience during work. With their strong knack and experiences in the industry, they can provide innovative-customized solutions that fit one’s business, get the maximum benefit, and ensure that everything operates and runs smoothly. It helps preserve the time of the in-house IT Team and attend to other tasks to improve one’s company.

  1. Strengthened Security

The breakthrough of remote working continues to unfold as we experience the new normal. However, this also presents intruders’ opportunity to exploit vulnerabilities and malicious attempts to steal valuable information and data within one’s distributed workforce’s IT environment. MDS ensures that all distributed devices have a full range of security information (data protection, threat monitoring, intrusion prevention systems, firewall, and other security systems) to allow companies to operate and work at ease.MDS also includes asset removal or data wipeout after utilization to guarantee confidentially and protect a company’s data and information.

Rather than being caught up with IT challenges today to enable a remote workforce, MDS helps mitigate those hurdles in the long term and allows leaders to focus more on the core aspects of business operations, drive their business forward and take it to new heights. It is not merely providing cost-efficient services, devices, and IT requirements for companies and their end-users. It creates opportunities for innovation and delivers added value to businesses to get the maximum benefit of their investment,” said Cua.

The work environment people accustomed to before the pandemic might not return to the way it once was. With the on-going pandemic, the word “transformation” is seen anywhere-in business and technology. It seems like the concept is overused but to continue doing business and survive the disrupted business landscape in the post-pandemic period, business leaders and owners must seek solutions and rebuild their business models.

AMTI, a Digital Transformation enabler, and champion, together with Dell Technologies, helps businesses with Managed Device Services provide custom or tailor-fit devices, optimize IT investments, increase financial flexibility, and innovate the all-inclusive workflow solution.

Talk to AMTI now to help you analyze your current workforce situation and remote work readiness to come up with recommendations and solutions tailored for your business. Send your inquiries at https://amti.com.ph/contact-us/ or email us at inquiries@amti.com.ph.

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