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DTI small business loan program obtains P1B from state banks

REUTERS

THE Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) said it will be accepting new applications for its small business loan program after obtaining additional funding from state banks.

Its financing arm, the Small Business Corp. (SB Corp.), had received loan applications from under-pressure businesses that were worth more than triple its P1-billion initial funding.

SB Corp.’s COVID-19 Assistance to Restart Enterprises (CARES) program targets businesses affected by the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic.

SB Corp. obtained an additional P1 billion from the Land Bank of the Philippines (LANDBANK) and the Development Bank of the Philippines (DBP), Trade Secretary Ramon M. Lopez confirmed in a mobile message Thursday.

“We are just completing documentation from the SB Corp. side,” he said.

The new funding could be available starting next week.

The terms of the loan, Mr. Lopez said, are still being finalized. Loans offered under the CARES program are no-interest but feature a service fee.

Mr. Lopez did not discuss whether funding from the state banks would have the same terms.

The department may be able to borrow up to P3 billion more from state banks if needed, Mr. Lopez told a television reporter Wednesday.

“Hopefully before that happens, may masama tayo dito sa stimulus package na may bagong pondo na ‘yun mas mabilis na, hindi na kami hihiram sa LANDBANK, DBP — may pondo na for SB Corp. to use (I am hoping this program is funded by the stimulus, which will be released faster and not need to be borrowed from LANDBANK and DBP),” he said.

Mr. Lopez said that the department may tap for funds its P3 (Pondo sa Pagbabago at Pag-asenso) portfolio, the economic stimulus package, and the 2021 budget.

Loan applications received by the CARES program now total 23,477 and are worth P3.38 billion.

Micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises make up 99.5% of all establishments operating in the Philippines, based on 2018 data. The businesses employ 63% of all workers.

In June, a DTI survey found that a quarter of businesses remained permanently or temporarily shut despite easing lockdowns. — Jenina P. Ibañez

Moody’s backs PHL sovereign rating if reforms pass Congress

THE Philippine credit profile will remain intact despite the pandemic, provided that Congress manages to avoid political distractions and passes reforms urgently needed for recovery, according to Moody’s Investors Service.

The Philippines’ Baa2 sovereign rating and stable outlook, which was affirmed earlier this month, is deemed likely to withstand the risks posed by the pandemic, due to the manageable and affordable debt burden, with the government also improving its revenue potential, according to Christian de Guzman, a Moody’s senior vice-president with its Sovereign Risk Group.

“The progress in terms of increasing revenue by this administration and the past administration over time, it really is remarkable in terms of how much they’ve improved revenue as compared to other Baa2 peers that have seen declining revenue,” he said in an online briefing Thursday.

Mr. De Guzman said despite seeing a 10 percentage-point rise in the debt to gross domestic product (GDP) ratio this year due to pandemic-related borrowing, debt levels remain “comparatively mild” compared to other Baa2-rated sovereigns. The debt-to-GDP ratio in 2019 was a record low 39.6%.

The Baa2 rating is a notch above investment-grade while the “stable” outlook suggests the rating is likely to be maintained over the next six months to two years.

“The other part of our assessment was that we saw that the Philippines’ external strengths remain intact so there is no worsening of external vulnerability in our estimation,” Mr. De Guzman said.

He added their ratings review also considered the country’s institutional strengths and political risk.

Mr. De Guzman said legislators are prone to a “great deal of distraction” as shown “by the fact that they are focusing on other issues such as the Anti-Terrorism bill and the ABS-CBN franchise.”

“The challenge for Congress is to really move forward with meaningful economic and fiscal reform,” he said.

In June, Moody’s forecast that Philippine GDP in 2020 will contract by 4.5%, much worse than its view of a 2% contraction issued in May. Its pre-pandemic outlook for the year before the pandemic hit was for growth of 6.2%.

It upgraded its view on 2021 to 6.5% growth from 6.4%, citing base effects from a weak 2020. — Luz Wendy T. Noble

BIR registers more than 3,000 online sellers

AROUND 3,254 online sellers have registered with the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) by the end of July, with the enrolment deadline extended by a month.

BIR Deputy Commissioner for Operations Arnel SD. Guballa said in a text message that the businesses registered after the bureau issued Revenue Memorandum Circular (RMC) No. 60-2020 in June, making enrolment mandatory.

Mr. Guballa said roughly 97% or 3,148 were registered as individual online vendors while the remaining 3% or some 106 businesses were corporations.

The bureau issued RMC No. 75-2020 on Wednesday extending the last day of registration to Aug. 31.

The BIR said in the new circular that there will be no penalty for businesses that voluntarily declare and pay taxes on past transactions.

“All those who will be found later doing business without complying with the registration/update requirements, and those who failed to declare past due taxes/unpaid taxes shall be imposed with the applicable penalties under the law, and existing revenue rules and regulations,” according to the circular.

Due to the surge in online transactions during the lockdown, the BIR reminded businesses selling goods and services through online platforms of their tax obligations.

The Department of Finance (DoF) said in May it is working with the BIR on measures that will capture the potential value-added tax (VAT) leakages in the digital economy. The DoF estimates up to P17 billion in fresh VAT collections from online transactions.

On Wednesday, the House Ways and Means Committee approved a bill imposing 12% VAT on digital services provided by companies such as Facebook and Netflix, Inc.

The government’s move to tax e-commerce proved controversial, but officials stuck to their guns and cited the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion Act, which sets the ceiling for tax-exempt annual income at P250,000. Other laws exempt from VAT entities with gross sales below P3 million. — Beatrice M. Laforga

PHL remittance-decline forecast revised to 15% from 10% — IIF

THE forecast decline in 2020 Philippine remittances has been revised to 15% from 10% as overseas workers lose their jobs or see their wages reduced, the Institute of International Finance (IIF) said.

In its latest Macro Notes edition issued Wednesday, the IIF said inflows have dropped significantly in remittance-dependent countries like the Philippines, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Vietnam, but detected traces of a “moderate pickup” in May.

“The outlook for the full year remains bleak — in the Philippines, for example, a country with remittances reaching 10% of GDP, we project a 15% decline,” it said in the report, which carries the title “EM Asia: COVID-Induced External Adjustment.”

“As a result of lower remittances inflows, domestic demand, and consequentially imports, will remain under significant pressure for the rest of the year,” it added.

The study “analyzed the external adjustments in emerging markets” in Asia given the impact of the coronavirus pandemic, noting that the slowing global economy has dampened exports with weak domestic demand expected to drag down imports.

Meanwhile, other sources of foreign exchange inflows “have come under significant pressure as well” in the first six months, including income from foreign tourism and remittances.

Cash remittances dropped 16.2% from a year earlier in April to $2.046 billion, the sharpest decline since a 33.5% slump in January 2001.

The World Bank expects global remittances to decline 20% this year, while Moody’s Investors Service sees Philippine remittance inflows falling 5-10%.

“The economic disruption brought about by the pandemic is unprecedented in both its severity and scope, and we are observing a global synchronized recession amidst widespread government-imposed restrictions. In this context, it is not surprising that international trade — including in services has dropped sharply,” the IIF said.

It said the more stringent lockdowns in the Philippines and India caused exports to decline sharply, while the prolonged restrictive measures to curb the spread of the virus weakened domestic demand.

It said these “dramatic changes in international trade” will result in “significant current account adjustments” in the region.

The Philippine current account deficit hit $464 million in 2019 or 0.1% of gross domestic product (GDP), narrower than the $8.773-billion gap seen in 2018.

“The dramatic shift in cross-border flows could accelerate structural changes in the region, such as the shifting and upgrading of industrial capacities and shortening of supply chains. Countries in EM Asia are also attempting to strengthen domestic tourism and reduce their overall dependence on external demand,” it added.

The Philippines projects a 2-3.4% GDP contraction this year. — Beatrice M. Laforga

PAGCOR swings to net loss in half as lockdown hits gaming revenue

THE Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp. (PAGCOR) said it booked a net loss in the first half after a sharp decline in its gaming revenue with casinos forced to close due to the lockdown.

In financial statements released Thursday, PAGCOR said its net loss was P1.596 billion in the six months to June, after reporting a year-earlier profit of P3.079 billion. It missed its P2.835-billion profit target for the half as gaming venues unable to operate and overseas gamblers unable to visit due to travel restrictions.

The regulator’s income from gaming operations fell 49.56% year on year to P18.443 billion.

Less gaming taxes and contributions, net gaming earnings totaled P8.76 billion, down 49.56% year on year.

The regulator paid some P922 million for the 5% franchise tax and contributed P30 million to the Dangerous Drugs Board.

As a government-owned and controlled corporation, it also remitted P8.73 billion to the national government, down 49.65% year on year.

Income from related services and other activities totaled P316.01 million and P655.62 million, down 51.92% and 58.67%, respectively.

PAGCOR booked expenses of P11.317 billion in the six months, down 31.53% from a year earlier.

Starting mid-March, casinos were shut down after being deemed non-essential and also a risk because they depended on mass gatherings.

PAGCOR Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Andrea D. Domingo has said the regulator has submitted its recommendations to the Inter-Agency Task Force on Emerging Infectious Disease for the reopening of casinos.

Philippine Offshore Gaming Operation businesses have been allowed to resume partial operations provided they settle their tax arrears.

Ms. Domingo said the regulator lost revenue of about P5-6 billion due to the lockdown. — Beatrice M. Laforga

Renewables industry touts ‘untapped’ potential, superior safety vs nuclear

THE renewables industry said its potential for providing energy is “untapped” while its safety record is superior to that of nuclear energy, which the government is considering adding to the power generation mix.

“If we need more power, the renewable energy potential of our country is already at 250 gigawatts, and that excludes solar energy. It is an untapped resource (that) is safe, reliable, and perfect for scaling from small communities to big cities,” Gerard C. Arances, the convenor of the Power for People Coalition, said in an e-mail.

Malacañang said Wednesday that Executive Order (EO) No.116 authorized a study on the feasibility of nuclear energy and called for the development of a national policy on nuclear energy.

The order indicates that a nuclear energy program is at hand which will aid in achieving energy security and shield consumers from price volatility, Energy Secretary Alfonso G. Cusi said.

The inclusion of nuclear energy in the generation mix “may add problems,” according to Bayan Muna Partylist.

“The government should instead concentrate on renewable energy rather than dangerous sources of power like the long-mothballed Bataan Nuclear Power Plant,” Representative Carlo Isagani T. Zarate said in a statement.

The EO, which President Rodrigo R. Duterte signed on July 24, constitutes the Nuclear Energy Program Inter-Agency Committee, which will be conducting the review on nuclear adoption. The committee will be led by the Department of Energy (DoE) and the Department of Science and Technology (DoST).

It will evaluate the viability of the 620-megawatt BNPP.

Mr. Zarate said the “dangers and disadvantages far outweigh the presumptive benefit” of the potential reopening of the nuclear facility.

According to the DoE, nuclear generation will be beneficial if the Philippines manages to address infrastructure gaps and meet other requirements set by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

“(N)uclear energy is one of the cheapest sources of electricity and the cleanest, with near-zero emissions,” said Dr. Carlo A. Arcilla, director of the DoST’s Philippine Nuclear Research Institute.

However, Mr. Zarate disputed the claim that nuclear power is cheap and a low-carbon source.

“(W)hen all the energy-intensive stages of the nuclear fuel chain are considered — from uranium mining to nuclear decommissioning — nuclear power is not a low-carbon electricity source. Nor is it cheap,” he said.

Senator Sherwin T. Gatchalian said in a statement said the study must be done with “utmost transparency” and that the public should be “well-informed on the inherent risks and potential of nuclear power.”

The government will work closely with the IAEA and other experts in introducing nuclear power into the generation mix, Mr. Cusi said. — Adam J. Ang

Sept. deadline set for reporting all related-party transactions

THE Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) has set the end of September as the deadline for taxpayers to report and submit documentation on related-party transactions (RPTs) of any size, with no reporting threshold determined yet.

Commissioner Caesar R. Dulay signed Revenue Memorandum Circular No. 76-2020 Wednesday giving taxpayers until Sept. 30 to report such transactions in the form of attachments to income tax returns for the period ending March 31.

All such transactions, regardless of size, will need to be reported since no threshold has been set, BIR Deputy Commissioner Marissa O. Cabreros said in a text message Thursday.

According to the circular the deadline was extended due to the pandemic.

The bureau issued Revenue Regulations (RR) No. 19-2020 early this month to require reporting of RPT via the new Form 1709, along with supporting documents.

The rule aims to ensure that transactions between related parties are made at arm’s-length. The new form is now among the required attachments taxpayers have to submit along with their annual income tax returns.

“Ultimately, it is aimed at improving and strengthening the BIR’s transfer pricing risk assessment and audit. With the information gathered in the RPT Form and its attachments, the BIR will be able to perform transfer pricing risk assessment and make an informed decision, at the early stage, whether or not to conduct a thorough review/audit of a particular entity or transaction. In this way, and given its limited resources, the BIR will be able to focus its audit and commit its resources only on the most important transfer pricing issues,” the bureau said.

It said non-profit corporations and organizations are also required to comply with the directive since they are allowed to participate in activities “conducted for profit without losing their tax-exempt status for their not-for-profit activities.”

RR No. 19-2020 defines RPTs as the “transfer of resources, services or obligations between a reporting entity and a related party, regardless of whether a price is charged.” — Beatrice M. Laforga

Addressing the crack in the narrative

Last Monday, after patiently enduring five months of variously named-lockdowns, the Filipino people eagerly lent their ears to the President, desperate to hear some good news and a clear plan of action. For the daily update of COVID-19 incidence in the Philippines continues to pull down the public’s sense of safety and security.

It could have been a straightforward State of the Nation Address.

But, again, as with previous public addresses, the President deviated from his prepared speech and delivered tirades against a senior legislator, a disenfranchised radio-TV network, and the two telecom companies.

These were cracks in the SONA narrative that confused the message.

We must not be sidelined.

A greater crack exists. It is a dangerous crack that threatens to swallow up all the economic progress we have achieved thus far.

Our narrative of uninterrupted economic growth for 21 years is threatened by the crack that is 2020’s COVID-19 pandemic.

In last week’s column, we dwelt on the grim scenarios painted by international financial institutions, credit rating agencies and a multinational bank.

We face a certain economic recession. Job losses involving at least 7 million people will definitely shrink about 70% of our gross domestic product. Labor remittances from abroad will certainly wane.

While Moody’s expects the dip to be between 5% and 10%, the World Bank expects it at

20% given the global recession. If April’s cash remittances drop of 16.2% is any guide, it would be wise to be conservative.

There is an emerging consensus that the first quarter decline of 0.2% reflects the pandemic’s onset and the impending economic lockdown. As for the second quarter, government and private economists attribute the economic trough to the strict Luzon-wide lockdown. These factors considered, the argument is that the worst effects of the pandemic’s economic impact should be over with the second quarter of 2020 as our lowest point.

This was in fact, the very message of Central Bank Governor Ben Diokno who, the other day,

was quoted by the Philippine News Agency.

Governor Diokno declared that the worst is over, that the country faced the pandemic from a strong position due to improved fundamentals. He admitted though that challenges remain. With this, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) commits to deploy necessary policy measures and reforms to help recovery.

Equally optimistic, National Economic and Development Authority Secretary Karl Chua earlier pointed to three indicators of a pick-up in economic activity: 1.) slower decline in external trade; 2.) softer decline in manufacturing output; and, 3.) expansion in manufacturing capacity utilization.

Lest we be carried away by these green shoots, we must remember that traction of external trade is a great function of resumption of global trade. And this remains anemic.

Moreover, the slower drop in manufacturing output should be linked to the prospects of bank credit and business sentiment. Corporates could be hard pressed in working out their financials with weak sales given that banks prefer to be procyclical. Consider, too, that lending rates remain high, and the BSP reports tighter credit standards. According to the BSP’s survey, business expectations for the next 12 months actually declined.

Neither should we be overly confident about capacity utilization improvement. We recall that even during the Great Financial Crisis, when economic activity nearly flattened in the Philippines, capacity utilization was upwards of 81%.

Can we pin our hopes then on the Build, Build, Build (BBB) Projects?

On this, The Philippine Star’s Boo Chanco wrote: “Believe it or not, the government claims it is planning to build its way out of the coronavirus economic downturn. If that means resurrecting the BBB program, good luck.”

Boo has a strong point there because any fiscal stimulus will likely be limited to social amelioration, wage support, assistance to MSMEs, and whatever additional amount can be spared for the health sector against the pandemic.

Moreover, with only half of the year remaining, and the rains and floods coming in, only a limited value added could be forthcoming from this end. Bureaucrat capitalism is also one big problem in the execution and funding of the triple B.

Thus, whether more public spending could realistically improve our third and fourth quarter numbers to support the BSP’s fearless forecast remains bleak and challenging.  We should not underestimate this crack in the narrative.

The IMF is definitely not underestimating it. It described it as a “crisis like no other.”

Thus, it needs a response like no other.

In this, the Philippine response continues to be orthodox: spend some on health, spend big on social protection, help small business, work on economic recovery.

While monetary policy is being eased in practically all IMF member economies, easing will be of limited help in the face of paralyzed business activities and diminished demand for bank credit which remains unresponsive to policy rates. The pandemic has a unique way of flattening economic activities and jobs.

In the extreme, the BSP could bring its policy rate to zero or even negative territories. It could pump even more liquidity into the system by further reducing the required reserves. Nonetheless, there still would be very little perceptible result if banks remain stubborn in their trenches.

We need to recognize that to some extent, the space we see today is incidental. Inflation is within the 2% to 4% target partly because oil is cheap following the global recession. The peso appears strong because the demand for foreign exchange is weak due to low imports and outward foreign investments. The gross international reserves level is at an all-time high because dollar demand is low and the proceeds of foreign loans are coming in.

The point is that: this year is, and will continue to be, a crack in the narrative unless the health issue is faced strategically and head-on, and unless we abandon the stance of merely passively waiting for a Chinese vaccine to turn the corner. Unless we focus, and let go of petty distractions, and proceed from a strategic plan of action.

Paul Krugman’s analysis of why the US failed dismally on “both the epidemiological and the economic fronts” is instructive. Krugman echoes what many of us have been saying in the last five months. In the US, loss of jobs figured prominently in their calculus. The US “ignored both infection risks and the way a resurgent pandemic would undermine the economy.” Krugman blamed the Republicans and big business for prioritizing the economy over health.

Relatedly, The New York Times report on Vietnam should be sobering: “The economy reopened, travel restarted and residents began leaving their masks at home. But over the weekend, the country announced that the virus was lurking after all — and spreading. Experts do not know the source.”

Vietnam was a COVID-19 success story. Japan, China, Australia, and South Korea also did the right things. But every one of them recorded a spike last Wednesday. In the case of Vietnam, the incidence started in five Danang hospitals but quickly spread to Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh, and two provinces in the country’s center,and even the remote Central Highlands.

Discussing the US predicament, Krugman blamed the cult of selfishness. It is selfishness that prevents people from extending social benefits to the disemployed, to senior citizens, to the vulnerable. Selfishness is what drives people to go out, even if they tested positive of COVID-19. Selfishness is what makes people do away with face masks and only because they wish to exercise “their freedom as individuals.” Selfishness is what makes people treat government as their own, pushing for their own agendas, playing politics, throwing professional ethics as well as merit and integrity in public service out the window.

Krugman concludes that “rational policy in a pandemic, is about taking responsibility.” Without this, it is not the virus, but selfishness that would kill us.

If we do not rectify our stance, like the US, we too will fail the marshmallow test of “sacrificing the future because (we did not) show a little patience.” As the crack in the narrative widens, time is also running out on us. The crack threatens to swallow us and all progress whole. To address the crack in the narrative, we — private and public citizens alike — must change our personal and collective narrative of selfishness.

We must focus, focus, focus on this pandemic of a problem, defeat it, and get over it. This is the only way we can hope to resume meaningful economic activities.

 

Diwa C. Guinigundo is the former Deputy Governor for the Monetary and Economics Sector, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP). He served the BSP for 41 years. In 2001-2003, he was Alternate Executive Director at the International Monetary Fund in Washington, DC. He is the senior pastor of the Fullness of Christ International Ministries in Mandaluyong.

Post-Lenten Calvary

As ardently observed as Christmas in these Catholic isles, Lent was all of four months ago, but ABS-CBN broadcaster and former Philippine Vice-President Noli De Castro recently described what his network is currently going through as a “calvary.”

De Castro was responding to the most recent episode in the ABS-CBN Via Dolorosa: a plot being hatched by certain congressmen to seize the land, buildings, and equipment of the network in Quezon City and to crush the Lopezes by compelling them to pay the government nearly P2 trillion for a tax evasion offense the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) itself had declared they were not guilty of.

In plotting the seizure of ABS-CBN assets, these learned gentlemen are sending to the business community the disturbing message that they and their enterprises, like the Lopezes and their businesses, can always be harassed out of existence once they offend the Duterte regime. Expect would-be foreign investors to think twice about doing business in the Philippines — and some who are already here to seriously think about pulling out.

A Zoom meeting posted on Facebook showed three House members discussing that scheme. That virtual meeting apparently took place shortly after this same clique and its fellows, despite overwhelming public support for it (75% according to Social Weather Stations), killed a bill renewing the network’s franchise. They thus consigned its 11,000 employees and their families to the legions of Philippine unemployed and denied millions of Filipinos who don’t have cable a vital source of information on the pandemic and other issues of public relevance via the free TV and radio services of ABS-CBN.

So outrageous is the planned takeover and tax levy that one congressman and a senator said it would be illegal for the House to do either, and that whatever claims against the network owners these worthies still had is best brought to the courts. Another law-maker said doing so would be a form of oppression. And no, it wasn’t a member of the ineffectual so-called opposition in the Senate who said so. It was conservative senator and occasional Duterte ally Richard Gordon who correctly gave that scheme its appropriate name: oppression, which more tellingly translates in Filipino into pangaapi. Even Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin, Jr. called what the House trio was planning to do thievery and warned them via Twitter that breaking into the network compound would be trespassing.

If as wealthy as they are, the Lopezes can be bullied and oppressed, so can the less affluent, and especially the poorest Filipinos. Pang-aapi and inaapi (oppression and being oppressed) are in fact the key words to describe what the regime is doing — and what is happening to millions of families in the country of our sorrows. For example, in a heartbreaking instance so symbolic of the inhumanity and cruelty at the core of State policy, a Manila court denied a political prisoner’s plea that she and her newborn be detained in a hospital instead of the Manila City Jail where the both of them would be in danger of contracting COVID-19. Not only was that plea denied; the court even separated mother and child.

Those who would dismiss what happened to them as an isolated case should realize that the shutdown of ABS-CBN has not only added to unemployment. It has also made providing for their children’s food, clothing, shelter, educational, health and other needs even more problematic.

One senator even added insult to injury. He made the less than brilliant suggestion that the 11,000 men and women soon to be former employees of the network “just look for other jobs.” But even in non-pandemic times jobs are so difficult to come by that hundreds of thousands of men and women have been forced to leave the country for employment even in war-torn countries and other places whose names they cannot even pronounce.

Even the overseas employment option has been denied Filipino nannies, nurses, domestics, construction workers, seamen and other workers. Because of the global pandemic, thousands of OFWs have also lost their jobs abroad and are desperately trying to survive where they are or to return home, where their present and future have never been as bleak.

Meanwhile, because of the closure of tens of thousands of business enterprises, millions of workers still in the country have already lost their livelihoods. They and their children are hungry and desperately looking for some means to get by. But to their calvary have been added not only the threat of contracting COVID-19 but also that of being arrested, fined from P1,000 to P5,000, and detained for not wearing the face masks many who literally don’t even know where the next meal is coming from cannot even afford to buy.

Broadcaster De Castro pointed out that it would only be common sense for anyone to realize that arresting people for not wearing face masks and hauling them off to the country’s overcrowded jails defeats the purpose of requiring them to use face masks and observe physical distancing so those already infected would not transmit the disease to others, since they would be more likely to contract the disease in the hell-holes we call Philippine prisons, and even while being transported to them.

But common sense is apparently not all that common in a regime whose response to the pandemic has basically been limited to intimidation and coercion as decreed by a president whose buzz words are “kill, kill, kill,” “shoot them dead,” and “arrest them all.” Not only are the country’s streets teeming with armed-to-the-teeth police and military personnel; even combat military vehicles have been deployed in some of those streets to intimidate the populace.

To escape both hunger and oppression, tens of thousands of Filipinos, with their families in tow, are also trying to flee the National Capital Region for the provinces, but are ending up stranded in such places as the piers and the domestic airport. Several thousands have been moved like cattle to Manila’s Rizal Memorial Stadium, where they’re packed so cheek-by-jowl that they and their children are more than likely to add to the 85,000 (as of July 30) of their countrymen already infected with COVID-19.

The only glimmer of hope in this pit of darkness is that after four harrowing years, what is happening to them and around them is awakening more and more Filipinos to the urgency of defending free expression, press freedom, the right to know, and freedom of assembly, the suppression of which, despite the pandemic, have been and are still the priorities of the current regime. The tipping point in the making of this awareness is what happened, and what is still likely to happen to ABS-CBN; the passage of the brazenly oppressive Anti-Terrorism Act; and the undeniable failure, as a group of University of the Philippines professors noted, of what passes for a policy to contain the transmission of the COVID-19 virus.

Thousands of Filipinos have thus made known their sentiments through noise barrages, petitions, statements of support for free expression, press freedom and human rights, and other means, with, in one incident, even some in the military no longer applauding the Commander-in-Chief’s rants and bad jokes, in the process recalling to us all in these times of disorder and sorrow that if Lent (death and suffering) has come, Easter (the resurrection) cannot be far behind.

 

Luis V. Teodoro is on Facebook and Twitter (@luisteodoro).

www.luisteodoro.com

Lockdown’s ever changing moods

Or rather, moving goalposts. Normally those resorting to it do so because their cause is weak. Or with regard to important issues, a losing argument. Thus, environmental activists went from preventing pollution to preventing depleting resources to preventing global warming to preventing climate change. Or abortionists, contraceptives, euthanasia activists going from eugenics to population control to “compassion” to being a “choice.”

Now, the pro-lockdown crowd is doing the same to justify the lockdown: from to flatten the curve, to avoid overwhelming hospitals, to squashing the curve, to complete testing, to wait for a vaccine, to save every single life.

The ambiguity of each term provides the added benefit of being easily sidestepped or argued against, particularly whenever the public perceives that such a goal is becoming dangerously close to being attained.

ON CASE FATALITIES
Interestingly, now that people are beginning to recognize the actual low lethality of COVID-19 and that hospitals around the world are actually not being overwhelmed, the pro-lockdown crowd are now resorting to questioning the fatality (CFR or IFR) numbers’ significance vis-a-vis positive case numbers, dismissively explained away as the “logical” course of the death rate going down because testing is going up.

The low lethality rate of the coronavirus, particularly when compared with other causes of death in the Philippines, has been discussed elsewhere and will not be repeated here. Suffice to say, as journalist Alex Berenson demonstrated, using the Center for Disease Control data, of COVID-19’s similarities with a Category 2 flu season. For which no lockdowns were issued for the latter.

In any event, the argument that the CFR will go lower because more tests are happening misses the point: the lethality of the coronavirus is actually much lower than previously reported, and data on the CFR should be read alongside pneumonia or flu, as well as other causes of mortality, when making policy decisions.

When asked for comment, Dr. Jude Verzosa, Chief Medical Officer for Rainier Health Network, former adjunct Assistant Professor at AT Stills University, who specializes in population health management, pointed out that “it is easy to misinterpret the decreasing CFR in the Philippines and minimize it as a consequence of more testing.” Nevertheless, “the CFR is a poor forecast model because it is used for worst-case scenarios. Policymakers should be way past discussing CFR at this point. Moreover, focusing only on death as a measure of the effect of the pandemic overlooks morbidity and mortality from other causes as well, including poverty.”

Indeed, looking at the data from the Department of Health (DoH), we have (as of July 16, marking the fourth month of the lockdown), shows 1,643 COVID-19 designated deaths. Which makes it, on average, 411 deaths per month. Compare that with the 300 Filipino deaths monthly by suicide, or the 1,000 from car crashes. From the DoH’s own 2018 data, 2,038 die from tuberculosis, 2,775 diabetes, 2,788 hypertensive diseases, 4,745 cerebrovascular diseases, 4,817 pneumonia, 5,039 cancer, and 6,178 from ischemic heart disease.

And also compare all that with the 4 million Filipinos infected with the Spanish flu in 1919 — 80-90,000 Filipinos died from that flu in that period.

UNICEF reports that 2,850 children die monthly from malnutrition. In 2019, between Jan. 1 and Oct. 19, 371,717 dengue cases, with 1,407 deaths, were reported through the DoH routine surveillance system, with a CFR of 0.38%. Of the deaths, 535 were children five to nine years old.

We didn’t shut the economy then for those deaths. And neither were schools.

But apparently we’re moving to a ridiculous policy conclusion that the only justified reason for the lockdown to be lifted is if the human race is rid of death for all time.

ON MILD AND ASYMPTOMATIC CASES
That we have an above 90% mild or asymptomatic COVID-19 cases should be welcome news. But not so for the pro-lockdown crowd. They’re “spreaders!” they shout. But that again misses the point: It is the less than 1% presumably that would need COVID-19 designated treatment and facilities, which is data good to know for policy making. The problem — as is likely happening — is when mild or asymptomatics with a non-COVID-19 serious health condition needing hospital care is lumped into the COVID-19 hospital occupancy count, which not only raises public fears but screws up decision making.

On this issue, Dr. Verzosa says that “emerging data suggests that there is no conferment of lasting B cell immunity from COVID-19 (though studies on T cell-mediated protection shows enormous promise. But I digress). The argument on lockdowns preventing herd immunity may be challenging to defend. However, this does not mean the opposite; that because there may be no lasting immunity, lockdowns are necessary.”

ON HOSPITAL OCCUPANCY RATES
One valid cause for concern is that the NCR COVID-19 hospital occupancy is rising to critical levels. But even then, there is a bit of a red herring mixed in that. As of July 22, four months had already gone by since the pandemic started. Which means time to prepare, stock-up, gather more data, and gain experience. There is therefore a disconnect and a problem when the NCR is allowed to register rising numbers of 76.4% COVID-19 hospital occupancy (with ICUs at 74.18%), while the national COVID-19 hospital occupancy rate is at a stable 52.8% (with ICUs at 53.29%), with an above 99% of the cases being mild or asymptomatic cases, and an IFR of .2%. This is palpably not a COVID-19 problem. This is mismanagement.

For context, Dr. Verzosa points out that “the way hospitals utilize beds in the United States is very different from the Philippines. There are strict clinical eligibility criteria that must be met prior to a patient’s admission to the medical floors, so insurance coverage is assured. The length of hospital stay is monitored and audited as well. Even stricter criteria exist for ICU admissions. As an example, a patient being admitted for chest pain suspicious of a heart attack needs to be evaluated and treated for the same within a three-night stay from the time of presentation, or risk the institution getting penalized for poor quality care from national governing bodies and non-payment from the insurers. These guardrails are meant to set high expectations on care quality and timeliness of its delivery based on evidence-based standards.

“That said, in the Philippines, the important thing to discuss by policymakers and insurers with the hospital administrators is not so much the occupancy rate of the hospitals in a region but rather HOW the beds are utilized. It will likely be that more beds can be made available for the right kind of cases, like COVID-19 patients with severe symptoms.

“This may not sit well with my physician colleagues in the Philippines because admissions are a source of payment there, and physicians are share-holders of their affiliated hospital(s). The problem is more profound than that of the effects of the pandemic. In fact, the pandemic sadly highlights it. As you have said, it may be mismanagement. It also is likely the structure and the economics of healthcare in the Philippines. (Not that healthcare here in the US is not a disaster in itself for other reasons, too).”

LOCKDOWNS DON’T WORK
And we finally move to the core issue: Do lockdowns work? No, they don’t.

Study upon study shows it has no effect on the overall containment of the pandemic, particularly mortality levels. In this regard, one thing that really helped the Philippines is its youthful demographic: median age of 25.7 years old, with 90% of the population between 0-54 years of age. It is most likely this reason why the Philippines has a low deaths per million (17.28, at a low 75th place). This despite having one of the most populous, densest cities in the world.

As Dr. Verzosa points out: “Evolving data suggest that … community/country lockdowns do not seem to decrease mortality from COVID-19. Though we know it slows down the rate of transmission, it does not reduce the risk of dying from the disease overall. Creating policies centered only on death as a measure of the effect of the pandemic overlooks morbidity and mortality from other causes, many of which cannot yet be fully appreciated. The only way out of a lockdown is to consider data on the morbidity and mortality of a plummeting economy as well as non-COVID related diseases as its indirect effect.”

Even The Lancet now recognizes this fact. A study published July 21 found that lockdowns have no effectiveness on the virus’s overall mortality rate: “Lockdowns were not associated with reductions in the number of critical cases or overall mortality.” The WHO representative in the Philippines was also reported saying that contact tracing, instead of hard lockdowns, should be the focus.

Lockdowns don’t work. That much is certain. If one looks at the top 10 countries with most deaths per million (as of July 24), eight imposed strict lockdowns and all 10 have median ages far higher than the Philippines. Most of the deaths Sweden had were from the elderly population, which was the same result that strictly locked-down New York had.

Dr. Verzosa best sums it up: “You can’t replace poor population health management with a lockdown.”

 

Jemy Gatdula is a Senior Fellow of the Philippine Council for Foreign Relations and a Philippine Judicial Academy law lecturer for constitutional philosophy and jurisprudence.

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It’s not just anti-vaxxers who worry about vaccines

By Therese Raphael

WITH ANY LUCK, one of the handful of promising COVID-19 vaccines currently going through human trials will meet with regulatory approval, maybe even in time for winter. One thing worrying public health officials, though, is what happens if a significant number of people don’t want to be vaccinated.

Vaccines are responsible for saving millions of lives every year, and yet there has always been a small but hardcore contingent of anti-vaxxers that rejects the science or buys into conspiracy theories about immunizations. Unfortunately, their ranks are growing during the current crisis. National health authorities, along with the World Health Organization, are engaged in a furious game of whack-a-mole as they try to knock down the conspiracy theories and correct misinformation.

Countering the anti-vaxxers is important work, but it’s only part of the picture. The bigger danger is a broader vaccine hesitancy: What if rational people who get their flu shots and vaccinate their children, and who are eager to be part of the solution to this pandemic, have worries that public health authorities and governments don’t address?

The World Health Organization lists vaccine hesitancy as one of its top 10 global health threats. One in six UK respondents to a June YouGov survey said they definitely or probably would not get vaccinated. A CNN poll in May showed a third of Americans would not try to get a vaccine if it existed. Like everything else in the US, opinion on a vaccine varies along party lines, with 81% of Democrats and only 51% of Republicans keen to get vaccinated.

Some of the skepticism reflects a mistrust of Big Pharma, some of it a mistrust of government. Some of it is simply because it’s been a long time since we lived in fear of the many diseases that vaccines now protect against.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the US’s top infectious disease expert, has said that a vaccine that is 70% to 75% effective but taken by only two-thirds of the public would not create the herd immunity necessary for economies to get back up and running. So governments have a lot riding on not only securing an immunization program but on making sure people take part.

However, if a vaccine over promises, if the risks are not clearly explained or if there are problems with delivery, it could further undermine trust in authorities, institutions and even experts, with far-reaching consequences for public health and the economy. It’s hard to imagine another time when there was so much riding not just on the science, but on how it’s communicated.

One hurdle for healthcare authorities is convincing people that a vaccine produced at lightning speed is no less safe than one that would normally take more than a decade to develop. They will have to be clear about where the uncertainty lies. For example, it’s impossible to know from even large clinical trials how vaccines will affect people with a range of different conditions; if vaccines will have adverse long-term effects; or what the impact of repeat doses might be if, as many expect, booster shots are required.

Most advanced countries have developed systems for reporting adverse consequences of vaccines and medications precisely because there is uncertainty in their effects across different populations and over time. The US has the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System or VAERS; the UK has the yellow card scheme. While established vaccines have been linked to some rare cases of serious illness, researchers have not found a link between established vaccines and adverse impacts in most cases. This hasn’t stopped incorrect information from spreading. Confused and irresponsible messaging hasn’t been helpful either.

“The fact that it’s being crunched into such a short period has been a cause for concern,” says Oksana Pyzik, a senior teaching fellow at the University College London School of Pharmacy. “We can’t really afford to cut corners in this process, specifically because there is so much momentum behind an anti-science movement.”

There are other concerns, apart from efficacy and safety, that governments will have to monitor, notes Pyzik. One is the risk of fakes. The WHO says one in 10 medical products circulating in low- and middle-income countries is falsified or does not meet standards. Falsified medicines lead to poisoning, untreated disease, and other hazards. And COVID-related fraud, from masks to medicine, is booming, the United Nations has found. Vaccines will be a target, too. Officials have already discovered a fake Israeli coronavirus vaccine being sold in South America.

Any doubts over the quality of a vaccine, which can also be affected by inadequate storage or transport, will impact trust. And that trust was being sorely tested even before the pandemic. In the US, a near epidemic of overprescribing, especially of opioids, has increased skepticism of both doctors and drug companies. Black and minority communities hit hardest by COVID-19 might have the most reason to line up for vaccines, but vaccination rates are lower among minority groups because of lower levels of trust from historical abuses.

None of this is to suggest that vaccinating isn’t the right choice for society and individuals. Researchers and pharmaceutical companies are moving at a breakneck pace in this outbreak for very understandable reasons. The recent surge of cases in Europe and elsewhere underscores the imperative of finding a way past this pandemic.

“It’s understandable that people are more concerned about new vaccines, but all prospective COVID-19 vaccines are undergoing extensive testing to ensure they are effective and safe,” writes Dr. Mary Ramsay, the head of immunization at Public Health England, via e-mail.

If people are to have confidence in regulators’ declarations that a vaccine is “safe and effective,” much will depend on governments acknowledging their concerns and being transparent about both the benefits and the unknowns. Pretending science doesn’t contain uncertainty serves neither the scientists nor public health.

BLOOMBERG OPINION

Cignal starts role as new home of NBA in the PHL

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

THE National Basketball Association resumes with its 2019-2020 season on Friday in a “bubble” setup in Orlando, Florida, and along with it Cignal TV marks its first day serving as the new home of the league in the Philippines.

And it is a role that the country’s most subscribed pay TV provider cannot wait to do, believing that it is a partnership that is suited for both parties and something Filipino NBA fans can benefit from.

Cignal, along with Smart Communications, Inc., on Monday officially acquired the rights to broadcast the NBA games through free-to-air, satellite television and over-the-top streaming.

The deal covers the remainder of the 2019-20 season to be played at the ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex in Orlando, Florida, where the 22 qualified teams will be holed up throughout the tournament.

It took a while for Cignal to get the rights to broadcast the NBA, taking over from Solar Entertainment, but it is said the wait was worth it and that its subscribers and the general public should be excited of its offering. “We will deliver NBA content, not just for our pay TV subscribers but to the general public. Everyone will have access to the NBA through our channels TV5 and ONE Sports. But of course, you get the best NBA experience on TV if you’re on Cignal,” said Cignal TV and TV5 President and CEO Robert Galang.

Under the deal, Cignal subscribers will be able to access a new channel called NBA TV Philippines starting July 31, airing an average of two games per day, along with shows directly from NBA TV in the United States, including flagship program NBA GameTime. The channel’s coverage goes all the way up to the NBA Finals, and is the only destination on TV where fans can watch the games in high definition.

Free TV channels TV5 and ONE Sports, meanwhile, will be airing games on Saturday and Sunday for TV5 and every Friday and Monday for ONE Sports. Coverage begins on July 31 and extends to the NBA Playoffs for both channels, with the NBA Finals airing exclusively on TV5.

Cignal’s marketing head Guido Zaballero further explained that NBA TV Philippines will be available to Cignal postpaid subscribers on plans 520 and up. For prepaid, Mr. Zaballero said loads 600 and up will get the channel 262 HD feed and loads 450 and above will get the channel 96 SD feed.

The channel will also be made available as an add-on for P200 a month, on both Cignal (channel 262 HD) and SatLite (channel 52 SD), the company’s mass-market Pay TV brand. The channel will be offered two months free of charge for new subscribers who switch to Cignal at the start of the season, until the end of the year.

“The NBA is a huge piece of the puzzle, basketball is so loved here in the country and having it pretty much completes our basketball offering since we also have the PBA (Philippine Basketball Association),” said Mr.  Zaballero in an earlier interview with BusinessWorld.

NBA games today will see the New Orleans Pelicans versus the Utah Jazz at 6:30 a.m. and the Los Angeles Lakers against LA Clippers at 9 a.m. On Aug. 1 the Portland Trail Blazers battle the Memphis Grizzlies at 4 a.m. and the Boston Celtics jostle with the Milwaukee Bucks at 6:30 a.m.

The NBA suspended its season on March 12 because of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic.

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