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A Philippine social protection and economic recovery plan

By Alfredo R. Paloyo, Cielo D. Magno, Karl L. Jandoc, Laarni C. Escresa, Ma. Christina F. Epetia, Maria Socorro Gochoco-Bautista, Emmanuel S. de Dios

THE WORLD is facing its biggest public health crisis in a century. Managing this crisis via a lockdown requires an intentional contraction of the economy of unprecedented proportions. This deliberate and unavoidable drawdown in market activity will put businesses at risk of destruction, with hundreds of thousands of Filipinos likely to lose their sources of livelihood. Many households will be plunged into poverty. Without assistance, those who are already poor will find themselves at the literal threshold of life and death as they battle both the virus that is ravaging their health and well-being, and the economic hardship that will almost certainly exact a social — if not physical — death. Even those who are currently economically stable risk joining the ranks of the vulnerable.

The government must act quickly to ensure that businesses can survive, jobs are secure, and the most vulnerable members of society are protected. The message must be decisive and formidable: “We will not let businesses fail, and we will not let people go hungry — whatever it takes.”

Our plan begins with recognizing that the economic contraction is immediate and sharp — but temporary. There will be a real output loss in the economy, but this is necessary to contain the spread of the virus. The objective is to alleviate the economic, social, and psychological hardships caused by the reduction in economic activity and to minimize any permanent damage to the economy. Doing this will involve providing emergency financial and non-financial aid to the most vulnerable households, guaranteeing continuity for businesses and maintaining the employment of their workers, and creating an economic environment which will allow the economy to recover quickly and continue on a growth trajectory when the public health crisis eventually wanes.

SOCIAL PROTECTION
The pandemic has thrust into the limelight the woeful state of our social insurance system, which was already insufficient even without the extraordinary demand on resources today. Community quarantine, which is the policy measure of choice to control the spread of the virus, has made it impossible for millions of people to make a living and who will now go hungry if the government does not act. The dire situation could transition into a rapid and total dismantling of social cohesion if radical actions are not taken swiftly and decisively.

Secure supply chains and ensure that essential services remain open. The supply chains for food and essential nonfood items, such as water, electricity, medicines, packaging materials, soap and disinfectants, etc., must be secured. Essential services provided by financial institutions, food and beverage outlets (groceries, supermarkets, and public markets), pharmacies, public utilities, logistics, and obviously, medical institutions like hospitals and clinics should continue to be provided. Restaurants and fast-food chains can continue to operate with take-out and delivery options only. Online and network delivery services that cater for households’ food and nonfood needs should be encouraged to operate and given full rein. Emergency services should continue to function, as well as fire and police departments. The government can continue to provide its essential services with a reduced workforce. Public transportation — at least along arterial roads — should be available, but with enhanced enforcement of social distancing to the extent possible. Local governments, which have superior local knowledge, should be given the flexibility to manage their transportation requirements within reasonable bounds.

Immediately distribute emergency financial and non-financial aid to the most vulnerable. An increase in payments to poor households already identified in the government’s conditional cash-transfer program (4Ps, Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program) should be easy to administer. The government, however, must now quickly identify new households that have been thrust into poverty by the pandemic so that cash can be distributed to them too. Mobilize the disaster-relief infrastructure to distribute noncash benefits, especially food, water, and medicine. Immediately distribute food and nonfood vouchers to poor communities to be claimed at any supermarket or grocery. Special attention must be paid to the nutritional needs of young children, whose deprivation now can have consequences for their physical and mental development. Tulong Panghanapbuhay sa Ating Disadvantaged/Displaced Workers (TUPAD) is another existing community-based program that the government should fully administer now. It can cover both the formal and informal sectors. Currently, the maximum assistance under this program is 30 days. It should be made flexible to cover the unemployed if quarantine goes beyond 30 days. The goal is to ensure that no one goes hungry. People assured of their survival will be more likely to adhere to the extraordinary regulations meant to protect their and the community’s health.

Provide vulnerable households with financial relief. The extension of the tax-filing deadline is a good first step, but more can be done. A moratorium on foreclosures and utility payments during the quarantine period is essential for households earning below a certain income threshold and only for primary residences. These payments can be collected over an extended period at a later date at 0% interest. Rolled over credit-card debt should not incur any interest if the credit limit is below a certain amount. Individuals should be allowed to withdraw their contributions from the Social Security System (SSS), Government Service Insurance System (GSIS), and Pag-IBIG up to ₱50,000 to be repaid over an extended period at 0% interest. Conditional on businesses not laying off their workers, employees who are furloughed because of the pandemic should continue to receive their salary in full for the first two weeks, and then 80% of their pay thereafter. The government and the employer can share this burden, with the employer taking a larger share in the beginning and the government increasing its share moving forward. Work-related expenses for those who work from home should be deductible from taxable income, with rules to be liberally applied for one fiscal year. The government can provide subsidies to affected workers, including those whose wages are paid on a daily basis and own-account workers whose monthly income are below the food threshold. We estimate the two-month subsidy to reach ₱25.55 billion in Metro Manila and ₱310.23 billion for the whole country (although these are subject to revisions given changing conditions).

Protect the health of individuals. That Philhealth commitment to cover all testing and treatment related to COVID-19 is a good step. Employers should find ways to allow their employees to work from home as much as possible. Paid sick leave should be extended to a minimum of 14 days for the duration of the crisis, with the government covering 80% of the salary for the first seven days and 100% thereafter. Tariffs and nontariff barriers that apply to personal protective equipment (PPE) and other essential medical equipment to fight the COVID-19 pandemic should be suspended with immediate effect. Occupational licensing restrictions should be relaxed to allow nursing and medical students close to finishing their degree to assist in the efforts to combat the disease. National and local governments must stand ready to take over hotels, motels, and other accommodation services to use their beds should the health crisis require it. The military must be locked and loaded to rapidly build temporary treatment facilities and to provide medical assistance via their trained engineers and medical personnel.

The government must continue to pay its obligation to contractors of institutional Contract-of-Service (COS) workers. Institutional COS workers include janitorial and other support services of government agencies. The government must ensure their salary throughout the quarantine period even if they do not report for work.

Enforce anti-price gouging and anti-hoarding laws. The government must enforce anti-price gouging and anti-hoarding policies for essential products including personal protective equipment, alcohol, medicine and vitamins during the quarantine period.

Provide support to agriculture and ensure its supply chains are unimpeded. Luzon produces 47% of agricultural value added in the country. Therefore, the lockdown of the island can disrupt agriculture and its related activities. Moreover, Filipinos in rural areas are the poorest and therefore more vulnerable to income shocks. The government should provide support to farmers, either through input subsidies or access to markets, so that they will continue to produce during this crucial time. In addition, agricultural supply chains should be unimpeded by checkpoints due to the lockdown. As and when shortfalls become inevitable, the government should be ready to import more or incentivize the private sector to do the same.

Mobilize local governments. Local governments must be tapped to ensure regular sanitation of public places. They should ensure support for vulnerable constituents including senior citizens and persons with disabilities (PWDs) who may have limited access to essential resources including food and medicine during the quarantine period. They can create short supply chains of goods in their communities or be the main procurer of goods of small farmers. This can contribute to food supply resilience within their communities. They can provide transportation to essential workers. They can establish mobile markets and mobile kitchens. They can also be the main partner of the Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE) in implementing TUPAD and tap the TUPAD beneficiaries to provide essential services (e.g., sanitation, food/grocery delivery to elderly and PWDs, transportation for frontliners). They should provide decent isolation centers for persons under investigation (PUIs) and persons under monitoring (PUMs) especially for those coming from urban poor communities. Local governments can apply the Local Government Code provisions on emergency purchases (Secs. 366 and 368) to procure necessary supplies including testing kits for their constituencies. This will enable them to conduct mass testing pursuant to the World Health Organization (WHO) directions. Provincial governments should consider regulating the flow of people in and out of their territorial boundaries without hampering the flow of essential goods and services.

Put in place a coherent, comprehensive, and compassionate containment plan for Metro Manila and its vicinities. Due to its high density, Metro Manila as the epicenter of the COVID-19 spread comes as no surprise. Therefore, under the leadership of the National Government, we suggest that there must be close coordination between the Metro Manila Council and neighboring spillover cities and municipalities in order to enact a coherent, comprehensive and compassionate containment plan. This will ensure that supply chains will not be disrupted, transport of essential medical personnel will not be hampered, contact tracing will be more efficient, transboundary movement of workers will not be blocked, and information will be shared seamlessly, among others.

Anticipate the spread. All efforts are now focused on Metro Manila but within a short period, we are bound to see an increase in the number of infected individuals in the provinces. While this has not happened yet, the national government should allocate funds to improve the capability of provincial hospitals to respond and treat the most vulnerable patients. Local governments should exert efforts to identify the most vulnerable in their communities, particularly the elderly and those with comorbidities, and state universities with laboratories that are capable of handling COVID-19 testing should be tapped. Mass testing should be done, with priority given to those at the highest risk and showing symptoms.

PRESERVE JOBS AND BUSINESSES
To combat the spread of the virus, it is necessary — indeed, it is optimal — to drastically scale back economic activity. Consumers and workers are in isolation, ill, caring for somebody who is ill, or dead. Demand will decrease because people are incapacitated; supply will also decrease because businesses will have to shut down. However, while the economy is in a state of hibernation, some bills will still have to be paid and everyone still has to eat.

A flagrant contagion or a lockdown will, in either case, handicap the ability of businesses to intertemporally substitute expenditure. That is, facing liquidity constraints, an otherwise solvent firm may be forced to go bankrupt. Unable to meet payroll and nonpayroll requirements, businesses will pull the plug and shut down, depriving millions of Filipinos of their only source of livelihood. If that occurs during this period, the accumulated knowledge of business processes, relationships, products, and firm-specific human capital will be destroyed.

The message the government should send to businesses should be loud and clear: “Do not worry, secure your workers — the government will provide you with the means to get through this crisis.” The plan for businesses should center on preventing the shutdown of firms facing liquidity constraints. When the economy’s engines restart after the public health crisis, surviving businesses will be able to quickly resume operations, and this is what we want if we are to fast-track the recovery.

Workers’ jobs must be preserved. To do this, businesses must be able to pay their workers’ salaries even if they are not working. A special kind of unemployment or furlough insurance can kick in, as discussed above under SOCIAL PROTECTION. Employer contributions to SSS, GSIS, Philhealth, and Pag-IBIG can be shared with the government. The amount covered by the government can be varied depending on the non-working duration, and the replacement rate (the share of the original salary covered) can be adjusted. Hourly-wage earners and employers can come to an agreement to reduce hours and maintain pay if it will prevent separation from the firm. Those workers in the gig economy can declare themselves as unemployed and be entitled to the same benefits based on their income history. Workers that have been detached from the labor market may find their skills have depreciated; support for retraining and upskilling via the Technical Education and Skills Development Authority (TESDA) should be provided.

Small- and medium-scale enterprises (SMEs) must be provided tax relief. Depreciation can be enhanced and accelerated, although the benefits will materialize later upon filing the return. A significant proportion of capital investments should be expensed, perhaps with a cap at ₱1 million. The Department of Finance (DoF) should explore if temporary adjustments to the provision on net operating loss carry-forward can mitigate the financial stress. The Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) has taken a good first step in extending the deadline for filing tax returns. The package concentrates on SMEs because large firms are much more adept at accessing credit markets, both national and international. They are able to raise outside equity. SMEs do not typically have the necessary expertise to tap into the credit and stock market.

We must improve the ease and cost of doing business. The government can suspend penalties for late filings and returned checks for at least one month. Payments for business permits and other clearances can be deferred and collected at 0% interest.

The government should provide emergency loans to SMEs with the view of incentivizing them to retain their workforce. These loans can be channeled through existing financial institutions with the support of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP). Businesses who apply for the loan will have their revenue losses covered — perhaps based on the previous years’ performance for older firms, and based on accounting records for new ones. These loans shall be paired with tax credits from the government conditional on maintaining employment. If full employment cannot be sustained, then tax credits can be made proportional to the reduction in full-time employment (FTE) hours. Participating businesses can have their net profits capped to minimize the incentive to inflate it by depressing nonlabor variable costs. The BIR can set up a new office to ensure compliance with the intention of the loan.

The tax and non-tax support is intended to be of limited duration, and it must be targeted. The negative shock differentially affects industries, so targeting aid is paramount. For example, restaurants, travel, leisure, hospitality, and retail are taking on an enormous share of the burden of community quarantine. Businesses operating in these sectors should receive the aid first before we begin to consider supporting other sectors, if at all. Targeting is difficult, both when applied to businesses and to households, but the gravity of the situation suggests that we should distribute the aid as quickly as possible. The benefit of the package reaching its intended recipients outweighs the cost of some of it leaking to those who do not need it at all — to an extent. The government should regularly evaluate whether any of the benefits can be lifted in due course.

Exporters and importers should receive support. The economic slowdown of other countries means that markets for our exported goods will be cut off. Moreover, disruptions in the global supply chain will affect imports of raw materials or other intermediate inputs. This will hurt the ability competitiveness of our firms (even the large ones in economic zones) and put the jobs of hundreds of thousands of workers at risk. Measures to alleviate their loss include credit guarantees, special credit windows/facilities for business, loan repayment holidays/loan restructuring, providing an “employment maintenance fund”, and reducing tariffs to stem the cost surge of imported inputs.

The airline industry should receive direct financial relief. The increasing number of countries imposing travel restrictions have already caused a number of international airlines to furlough their workers and to cancel close to 90% of their routes (if not a total grounding of the fleet). Domestic airlines may be temporarily exempted from paying excise taxes and other fees typically associated with their operation. The option of a total bailout can be placed on the table, with a national government equity stake. We emphasize it again here: support to businesses should be on the condition that these businesses will not lay off their employees. Job separation during this period must be, as much as possible, voluntary. When the eye of the storm has passed, and economic activity is ready to pick up again, we want our businesses to still exist, and we want them to be able to reemploy their workers as quickly as possible. Our plan goes a long way in ensuring that is the path we are on.

“LIQUIDITY BAZOOKA”
The BSP should be ready to deploy unconventional monetary policy measures and provide the economic resources necessary to deal with this crisis.

Although the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas made the welcome move to lower the policy interest rate and expand its discount lending facilities, and earlier also, reduced the reserve-requirement ratio, these moves may not suffice to help the economy stay the course under a crisis in which people are quarantined and businesses are in hibernation (as they should be).

The significant role of the BSP in any crisis is to shore up confidence in the market and fully commit to its position as the lender of last resort given its monopoly power to print money. The Reserve Bank of Australia, the European Central Bank, and the US Federal Reserve have all committed to do “whatever it takes.” The BSP should likewise send a strong message to the country that it will do the same: there should be no such thing as off-limits in its commitment to see the economy through this crisis by providing the ammunition to ensure that liquidity and credit markets do not dry up.

The government can issue long-term bonds to finance the expenditure it needs in order to mitigate the crisis, and the central bank can “print money” by buying this debt, effectively monetizing it. The BSP itself can now issue its own securities and purchase them, a more direct way of “printing money” that may have the added benefit of not inflating the government’s fiscal debt/GDP ratio. BSP purchases of any type of long-term bonds will produce a salutary effect of having bond yields decline in addition to injecting liquidity. Some of the government bonds to be issued can be directed toward a Commercial Paper Funding Facility. The BSP can follow the lead of the US Federal Reserve and buy up the commercial paper of firms in order to ease their liquidity constraints and help them maintain employment of their workers. If the charter of the BSP prevents it from buying commercial paper, it can issue its own securities for this purpose, in cooperation with the Treasury.

Supporting businesses and getting the economy back to normalcy quickly will prevent the public health crisis from birthing a financial crisis, with the BSP having to bail out banks because of massive borrower defaults on loans.

“FISCAL STIMULUS” IS THE WRONG CONCEPT
The COVID-19 pandemic is — first and foremost — a public health issue. The specific coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2, that is ravaging countries like Italy, China, and Iran is contagious and deadly. As far as we know, no one is immune, a cure does not exist, and there is no vaccine — yet. Left unchecked, the rapid spread of the disease within a population can overwhelm a country’s health services system, leading to even more deaths. Epidemiologists suggest that strong measures to mitigate the spread of COVID-19 are necessary to flatten the curve — that is, to slow down the transmission of the virus within the community so as not to overwhelm the health system. Apart from a strict quarantine or a lockdown, public health professionals also propose social distancing: people should not gather in large groups and a person should maintain a distance from someone else of at least 1.5 meters. This buys medical researchers time to develop a reliable treatment and an effective vaccine.

Community transmission — when someone tests positive for the virus without having been in contact with someone with a confirmed infection or having come from a high-risk area — is already occurring in the Philippines. This has shifted the strategy of the DOH from contact tracing — identifying the people who have been in contact with someone who tested positive to the virus — to community-level quarantine. The radical measures include, among others, closing schools, shutting down public transportation, and restricting travel spatially (checkpoints) and temporally (curfews).

Under a community quarantine, it makes little sense to speak of a “fiscal stimulus package”, an unfortunate choice of words. For in times like these, even Keynes the bon vivant must sit in quarantine. The point, on the contrary, is to freeze the economy — to retreat into hibernation as public health demands. We do concur with the view, already expressed by some in the business sector, that extraordinary sums of public money may need to be spent now and in the near future. But this should be done under no illusion of normalizing — much less raising — economic activity. Rather, such sums should be spent to save people’s lives, provide subsistence, preserve employment, and affirm social solidarity, even while the economy is at a standstill and waits for the storm to pass.

TRANSPARENCY AND ACCOUNTABILITY
The Executive Branch should be given adequate resources to perform its duties and exercise prerogatives to respond to this pandemic. We have existing laws that allow for such during national emergencies. The Executive Branch has existing funds that have appropriations under the General Appropriations Act (GAA), such as the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Fund (Republic Act No. 10121) and the Presidential Contingent Fund. There must be transparency in the use of these funds. Even as we allow for a degree of flexibility, we should reaffirm the Constitutional principle that the power of the purse belongs to Congress and cannot be abdicated. If additional funds are necessary, the Executive Branch must present a clear budgetary plan to Congress. Blanket legislation allowing the Executive Branch to reallocate or realign any appropriation of the GAA violates the Constitution and upends Congress’ fiscal responsibilities.

CONCLUSION
The public health solution comes at an economic cost: individuals and businesses will now have to face what is undoubtedly an enormous liquidity gap. The US economy has been characterized as entering an Ice Age, and Denmark is said to be “freezing” its economy. Life will change for the vast majority of individuals, at least for some time.

There are lessons to be learned here. We highlight a few. One, we have not given enough attention to paid sick leave. Second, distributing aid is difficult when a large share of the population is “unbanked” (without an account) and are without a national ID. Third, there are hurdles to the ease of doing business that can be relaxed. Fourth, we have not solved our mass transportation problem in this country. Finally, we believe democratic principles, such as the separation of powers between branches of the government, can be maintained while solving a crisis even as enormous as this.

The goal of any plan should be to bridge this gap so that we can come out on the other side. In this sense, what we are advocating is a social insurance package, even though it has some features of a fiscal stimulus. The success of the plan should not be evaluated on the basis of whether it stimulated aggregate demand; that is not the objective. Instead, the question to be asked is, “Were we able to minimize the economic hardship of those who were forced to retreat for the collective good?

Seven years of uninterrupted and respectable economic growth and the enactment of crucial revenue-enhancing measures in the past three years have provided the fiscal space needed to stem a crisis such as this. The economic managers estimate the loss from COVID-19 at ₱187 billion, and to fight this, we should be prepared for the deficit to increase to at least 5% of GDP. This crisis is sui generis and is not caused by a weakness in our economy, but rather an external shock that will hopefully subside in a few months. Spending at least on the different social protection and economic recovery programs outlined above will protect our people, avert a recession, and arrest the misery that COVID-19 will bring.

Ultimately, all these prescriptions should be done under the principles of good governance. Transparency and accountability should always be exercised and the balance of power maintained. There is no reason for a crisis in public health to turn into a crisis of social Institutions.

 

A.R. Paloyo is a Senior Lecturer in Economics at the University of Wollongong (Australia). C. Magno, K. Jandoc, L. Escresa, M.C. Epetia, M.S.Gochoco-Bautista, and E. de Dios are faculty members of the University of the Philippines School of Economics (of which Paloyo is also an alumnus). The views expressed here are personal and must not be attributed to any of our employers. We benefited from public plans proposed and thoughts shared by the following: Steven Hamilton (The George Washington University) and Stan Veuger (American Enterprise Institute), Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman (University of California Berkeley), Wojciech Kopczuk (Columbia University), Arindrajit Dube (University of Massachusetts Amherst), Benjamin Hansen (University of Oregon), Ricardo Reis (London School of Economics and Political Science), Tyler Cowen (George Mason University), and Claudia Sahm (Washington Center for Equitable Growth). We also received comments from Scott Cameron, Angela Danila, and Paul Diaz. Correspondence: alfredo@paloyo.net; Twitter: @AlfredoPaloyo. The latest version of this document is available here: https://bit.ly/2JiD10p.

DoH confirms 73 more cases; 6 more COVID-19 patients die

THE Department of Health (DoH) reported 73 more novel coronavirus cases on Sunday, bringing the total to 380 infections with 25 deaths.

Health Undersecretary Maria Rosario S. Vergeire traced the increase to laboratories being able to test more samples.

“We have extended the capacities of our laboratories, that is why there was an increase in confirmed cases,” she told radio DZBB. “That means we’ve been able to catch up with the backlogs.”

Six more patients aged 34 to 81 have died, bringing the total deaths to 25, DoH said in a separate bulletin.

Four more patients aged 26, 38, 51 and 73 had recovered, bringing the total of those who have gotten well to 17, it added

Not all tested patients had been admitted in hospitals because some who have mild symptoms or don’t show them at all were isolated in their houses or left in the care of their local government units, Ms. Vergeire said.

She also said the spike in the number of infections could also be artificial and only due to the entry of delayed results.

Five national sub-laboratories were now processing 50 to 300 tests daily together with the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine (RITM), DoH said on Saturday.

These laboratories are San Lazaro Hospital and Baguio General Hospital & Medical Center in Luzon; Vicente Sotto Memorial Medical Center in the Visayas; and Southern Philippines Medical Center in Mindanao.

The Western Visayas Medical Center and Bicol Public Health Laboratory will undergo proficiency testing for a week before these can start testing samples.

DoH said the University of the Philippines-National Institutes of Health, which developed a detection kit that is being field-tested, was also testing “overflow samples” from RITM.

Meanwhile, the government was finalizing arrangements for the designation of three state hospitals that will exclusively treat coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) patients.

The agency earlier called for volunteer doctors and nurses for the three so-called referral hospitals — Philippine General Hospital in Manila, Lung Center of the Philippines in Quezon City and Jose N. Rodriguez Memorial Hospital in Caloocan City.

This followed an appeal from private hospitals whose staff and resources have been strained by the number of COVID-19 patients and suspected cases in their facilities.

“These three hospitals still have existing patients so we can’t rush the process,” Ms. Vergeire said.

Also yesterday, the Health department said its chief Francisco T. Duque III had tested negative for the virus. He was tested after being in close contact with a COVID-19 patient, it said. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas

Country headed for complete collapse if quarantine ignored

THE Philippine healthcare system could collapse unless Filipinos strictly comply with President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s order for a Luzon-wide lockdown and similar quarantines imposed by other provinces, according to a political consultancy firm.

In a statement, Publicus Asia, Inc. noted that the country only has 106,000 hospital beds, and an overload of confirmed infections would weaken its healthcare system.

“Metro Manila and perhaps even the entire Philippines, which has a national hospital bed capacity of only 106,000, is headed towards a potentially debilitating overload of local and national health care systems as the rate of transmission of COVID-19 cases remains at a sharp upward trajectory,” it said. “Therefore, it is evident that immediate action must be taken to reduce COVID-19 exposure risk by massive amounts.”

Publicus Asia said the Philippines does have the financial or technical capabilities to adopt the mass testing and individual isolation strategy employed by South Korea to arrest the spread of the virus.

“The most feasible and proven strategy available would be to implement widespread lockdown policies such as those implemented in Hubei, China and Italy,” the consultancy firm said, citing its “data-driven report.”

It said conducting business-as-usual operations in Metro Manila without any restrictions on travel, work, school and outings, along with a lack of deliberate social distancing would cause an overwhelming majority of Metro Manila residents to test positive for COVID-19 in less than a month, assuming a moderate infection rate of 10%.

Meanwhile, creating an environment in Metro Manila with the lowest possible exposure risk would slow the spread of the virus more than nine times to 150 days or five months, it said.

But as stringent as the enhanced community quarantine for Luzon may be, “it still does not reduce exposure risk down to the minimum Level 1, Publicus Asia said.

Global estimates indicate that only 20% of COVID-19 cases are severe enough to require in-patient treatment in hospitals, it said.

This would equate to a demand of 24,998 hospital beds in Metro Manila on a single day for treatment of COVID-19 cases, it said. The metro has an overall bed capacity of 29,000, it added, citing the Health department. — VMMV

Economic loss from Luzon lockdown may hit P1.157 trillion

PRESIDENT Rodrigo R. Duterte’s order to lock down Luzon amid a novel coronavirus outbreak could lead to P1.157 trillion in losses, as economic activity virtually comes to a halt, according to a congressman.

Economic growth could also slow to 2.57% this year, Albay Rep. Jose Maria Clemente S. Salceda told a news briefing on Sunday.

The country could have experienced a recession had Mr. Duterte not enforced the Luzon-wide quarantine, he added.

Mr. Salceda said the economy could still grow faster than other countries once the enhanced community quarantine is lifted.

Congress will try to muster enough quorum during a special session on Monday to pass a bill that will allow Mr. Duterte to realign funds.

Meanwhile, Cabinet Secretary Karlo Alexei B. Nograles said visa-free privileges for foreigners would be suspended during the lockdown in Luzon.

Visa-free privileges based on visa waiver agreements, those under Executive Order 408, holders of Hong Kong and Macau SAR passports, Macau-Portuguese passports and British National Overseas passports had also been suspended starting March 22, he said at a news briefing.

Foreigners with visas issued by Foreign Service Posts will also not be allowed to enter the country unless they are officials from accredited Foreign Government and International Organization and their dependents.

Visas of foreign spouses and children of Filipino nationals will also be exempted from the suspension, Mr. Nograles said. — Gillian M. Cortez

Filipinos in Brunei, India latest COVID-19 patients abroad

TWO MORE Filipinos abroad have tested positive for the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) reported Sunday.

This brings the number of overseas Filipinos afflicted with COVID-19 to 123 from 121 as of March 21, based on Department of Health (DoH) data.

One of the new patients is currently confined in a health facility in Brunei Darussalam. The patient is in a stable condition, according to the Ministry of Health.

The other is in India and currently confined in a hospital in Mumbai. The Filipino arrived in India early March and brought to the hospital after experiencing difficulties in breathing.

“The Philippine Embassies in Brunei Darussalam and in India are in close coordination with the Ministry of Health of Brunei Darussalam and the Philippine Consulate General in Mumbai, respectively,” the DFA said in a statement.

In a separate development, DFA Secretary Teodoro L. Locsin, Jr. said on Sunday that he alerted the Inter-Agency Task Force on a donation for 50,000 rapid test kits.

“My friend wants to donate 50,000 COVID-19 leg/lgM Rapid Test. It’s produced by Healgen, manufactured by Zhejiang Orient Gene Biotech Co. Ltd,” Mr. Locsin said in a social media post Sunday.

“He has certificate of export of medical product. I said ‘hold it.’ Will ask China Embassy if this is registered in China FDA (Food and Drug Administration).”

He also said that the test kits will be released once accredited by the DoH and if the kits are provided to “private hospitals at the frontlines.” — Charmaine A. Tadalan

PAGCOR seeks resumption of casino operations for high rollers, home-based POGOs

PHILIPPINE Amusement and Gaming Corp. (PAGCOR) Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Andrea D. Domingo called on the Inter-Agency Task Force on Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF) to allow the resumption of three “high-earning” gaming operations to raise more funds for the government’s efforts against COVID-19.

She identified these as junkets, e-junkets, and Philippine Offshore Gaming Operators (POGOs) that will work from home.

“Sana lang, IATF, aralin din ‘yung windows of opportunities kung saan pwede mag-generate ng revenues nang hindi makaka-contribute sa problema ng COVID at makakatulong pa (Hopefully the task force will study other opportunities where the government can generate more revenues to help in the fight against the pandemic without contributing to the problem),” Ms. Domingo said.

The PAGCOR chief explained that “junkets” and “e-junkets” of big casinos cater to foreign high rollers and are “segregated,” with some games can even be done via telephone.

The gaming areas are also sanitized while social distancing can be observed as tables for VIPs only accommodate one to two players, she added.

Meanwhile, POGOs can be compared to operations of business process outsourcing (BPO) that were allowed by the government to operate from their homes.

If these three operations will continue, Ms. Domingo said PAGCOR could regain around 50% to 60% of its revenues which will then be remitted back to government and add to the funding pool of COVID-19.

POGOs and gaming operations of casinos are among the establishments that were temporarily suspended by the government during the month-long lockdown of Luzon island. — Beatrice M. Laforga

DICT warns courier service providers violating COVID-19 protocols

THE DEPARTMENT of Information and Communications Technology (DICT) on Sunday warned Private Express and/or Messengerial Delivery Service (PEMEDES) operators who violate the government’s guidelines on handling and delivering basic goods and necessities amid the Luzon-wide community quarantine.

The DICT said it received several complaints regarding the actions and protocols of some PEMEDES operators.

“The DICT advises all PEMEDES operators to strictly comply with the guidelines and directives… [if they want to] continue their operations for the delivery of basic goods and necessities amidst the Luzon-wide enhanced community quarantine,” the department said.

The department said social distancing of couriers or messengers is mandatory and should be strictly observed.

It said operators are also obliged to ensure that their staff is equipped with precautionary and protective equipment like face masks, gloves, and alcohol, among others.

“Violation or non-compliance will be sanctioned with the appropriate penalties which may include the suspension or revocation of the Government Authority granted to the PEMEDES Operators, after due process,” it added.

President Rodrigo R. Duterte on Monday last week announced a month-long “enhanced community quarantine.”

Under the rules, the movement of people would be limited to accessing basic goods and work, while police and quarantine officers will be present at border points.

The Department of Trade and Industry earlier said supermarkets, drugstores and banks would remain open, while cargo vehicles transporting basic goods would be allowed to cross the checkpoints unhampered. — Arjay L. Balinbin

Maynilad, Manila Water suspend meter reading, billing

WATER concessionaires Maynilad Water Services, Inc. (Maynilad) and Manila Water Company, Inc. (Manila Water) have temporarily suspended their meter reading and billing activities amid the enhanced community quarantine due to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.

The monthly water bills for the affected customers of both water companies will be computed based on their average consumption for the past three months.

Any difference from the actual consumption will be applied and adjusted to subsequent bills once actual reading of meters resume.

West zone concessionaire Maynilad started its temporary suspension last March 20 and will last until the end of the quarantine period on April 14.

Maynilad covers the cities in the western part of Metro Manila such as Caloocan, Pasay, Parañaque, Las Piñas, Muntinlupa, Valenzuela, Navotas, Malabon, and some areas of Manila, Makati, and Quezon City.

The company also serves some cities and towns in Cavite province.

Meanwhile, east zone provider Manila Water started its suspension last March 17 and will be in effect until further notice, or when the government officially ends the enhanced community quarantine declaration.

Manila Water covers the cities in the eastern part of Metro Manila such as Mandaluyong, Makati, Pasig, Pateros, San Juan, Taguig, Marikina, and parts of Quezon City and Manila.

It also covers several cities and towns in the province of Rizal.

Both water concessionaires encourage payments via online banks or mobile fund transfer channels.

This move by the two water providers is in accordance with the approved policy of the Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage System-Regulatory Office on the application of average billing. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

Lawmaker calls for toll fee exemptions for COVID-19 response operations

A LAWMAKER has called for the suspension of toll fee collection on operations related to the government’s response on coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).

“I am urgently requesting the management of NLEX (North Luzon Expressway), SLEX (South Luzon Expressway), and other connecting tollways for the immediate waiving of toll fees on operations related to our response on COVID-19, specifically on the delivery of foods and transport of medicines,” Iloilo Rep. Janette L. Garin said in a statement Saturday.

Under the enhanced community quarantine in Luzon, Ms. Garin said only government vehicles on official business are exempted from the payment of toll fees.

“Tandaan din po natin na (Let us remember that) samples from different hospitals need to be sent to RITM (Research Institute for Tropical Medicine) for validation. Bawat byahe po papuntang RITM ay umaabot ang toll sa higit-kumulang (Every trip to RITM costs them about) P350,” she said.

The former Health secretary noted that with the exemption from toll fees, “we are providing vigorous support for all humanitarian activities to uplift the morale of our kababayans (countrymen).”

In January, San Miguel Corp. (SMC) waived its toll fees at SLEX and the Southern Tagalog Arterial Road (STAR) for vehicles involved in relief operations in areas affected by the Taal Volcano eruption. — Genshen L. Espedido

NFA assures enough rice supply for NCR

THE National Food Authority (NFA) has completed the prepositioning of rice stocks and is now awaiting delivery and disbursement in strategic areas across Metro Manila amid the enhanced community quarantine measures implemented in Luzon, the agency said Sunday.

In a report to Agriculture Secretary William D. Dar, NFA administrator Judy Carol L. Dansal guaranteed that there is enough rice supply to meet the requirements of the National Capital Region (NCR) for the next two weeks, with additional supply readily available depending on the demand.

NFA currently has 400,000 bags or 20,000 metric tons (MT) of rice stored in its warehouses around Metro Manila.

Based on NFA data, Metro Manila’s daily rice consumption is at 110,000 bags, with NFA’s market participation pegged at 7%, while the private sector and household inventories were at 93%.

Ms. Dansal said NFA’s market share is expected to increase by 20% once local government units (LGUs) start purchasing their rice needs from government-owned warehouses because of the enhanced community quarantine.

He added that they will prioritize LGUs for the sale of NFA rice.

NFA has also prepositioned 15,000 bags of rice to augment the requirement of Cavite province. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

#COVID-19 Regional Updates

LUZON

Cagayan officials assure district hospitals ready; 14,000 persons who came home under monitoring

HEALTH and local government officials of Cagayan have given assurance that the district hospitals around the province are ready to handle suspected COVID-19 cases with isolation rooms set up and medical workers briefed. As of March 21, there is one patient at the Cagayan Valley Medical Center confirmed to have the new coronavirus disease. Governor Manuel N. Mamba, in a statement on the province’s Facebook page, stressed the call for people to stay at home as 14,000 persons are under monitoring around the province. These people are mostly those who came home from Metro Manila following the declaration of an enhanced community quarantine in the entire Luzon island on March 16.

NO TESTING KITS
Mr. Mamba also underscored that there are asymptomatic persons who can spread the virus, but “dahil sa walang testing kit sa lalawigan, hindi agad nalalaman kung ang isang indibidwal ay positive carrier nito (because there are no testing kits in the province, we cannot immediately determine if a person is a positive carrier of the virus). Meanwhile, Provincial Health Officer Carlos D. Cortina III said aside from the isolation rooms in the district hospitals, vehicles for transporting patients are also on standby. The province has at least nine district hospitals, including the Northern Cagayan District Hospital, Baggao District Hospital, Alfonso Ponce Enrile Memorial District Hospital, and the Aparri District Hospital.

VISAYAS

Taxi, tricyle ban takes effect under Iloilo City ‘lockdown’

ALL public transportation, including taxis and tricycles, are now covered by the ban in Iloilo City, which has been placed under “lockdown” by Mayor Jerry P. Treñas on March 19 to prevent the spread of the new coronavirus disease known as COVID-19. “We want to use lockdown to better emphasize the need of the people to stay in their homes and practice the enhanced community quarantine and to limit the movement of people,” he said in a press conference. Public Safety and Transportation Management Office (PSTMO) head Jeck D. Conlu announced on Saturday that taxis and tricycles, which were previously allowed to continue operation, will no longer be allowed to ply the streets starting 8 p.m. Sunday. The PSTMO has earlier accredited several jeepneys that will be allowed to continue providing public transport service. Mr. Conlu also said that the city government will be providing free transport services to ferry the workers exempted from the community quarantine rules. “We will be providing three modern jeepneys and one bus of the city government. We re still in talks with other bus companies for the additional units,” he said. As of March 21, there is one confirmed COVID-19 case in Iloilo province, coming from the town of Guimbal and currently being treated at a hospital in Iloilo City. The patient is the second positive case in the Western Visayas Region, with the first in Bacolod City. — Emme Rose S. Santiagudo

@RONNELRIVERAPAGE

MINDANAO

GenSan’s evacuation complex being readied as COVID-19 quarantine center

GENERAL Santos City’s evacuation center, located at the Rajah Buayan Air Station, is being prepared as a quarantine area for patients under investigation (PUI) of COVID-19. Mayor Ronnel C. Rivera, in a statement on his Facebook page, said the facility, which can accommodate 120 patients, will be used should there be a rise in the number of PUIs. “While we are fighting na hindi makapasok ang (to prevent the entry of) Corona Virus sa city, we are still preparing for the possibility na just-in-case dadami ang ating (in case there will be an increase in the number of PUIs,” he said. The city, which still has zero confirmed cases of the new coronavirus as of March 21, was placed under enhanced community quarantine last week. Ryan M. Aplicador, deputy incident commander of the city’s Inter-Agency Task Force for COVID-19, said General Santos City’s medical professionals and private hospitals have committed to help operate the quarantine center. “The LGU (local government unit) will provide the supplies and equipment and the Philippine Medical Society General Santos Chapter and the Philippine Hospital Association General Santos Chapter promised to provide personnel,” Mr. Aplicador said.

CENTRAL KITCHEN
Meanwhile, the Department of Education will also open its central kitchen at the Datu Dalid Acad Elementary School to prepare food for the frontliners and other responders. Schools Division Superintendent Romelito G. Flores said he will also activate the volunteer parents to augment the kitchen workforce. Department of Health-Soccsksargen Region data as of March 20 shows there are 784 persons are under monitoring and on home quarantine, of which 177 are in General Santos City. The region has one confirmed COVID-19 patient, confined at the Cotabato Regional and Medical Center. Two persons under investigation have died, but their test results for the disease are still pending.

SPMC in Davao City suspends outpatient operations to prevent overcrowding

THE SOUTHERN Philippines Medical Center (SPMC), the biggest state-run hospital in Mindanao located in Davao City, is suspending its Outpatient Department (OPD) operations beginning Monday until further notice. SPMC Chief of Hospital Leopoldo J. Vega, in a text message, said this is “a temporary measure to contain” the spread of COVID-19 by preventing overcrowding. SPMC is considered a high volume hospital with 1,500 beds and an average capacity of 2,200 outpatients a day. It has been identified as a COVID-19 hospital for severe and critical patients. As of March 21, Davao City has two persons confirmed positive of the coronavirus disease 2019, a couple with travel history in Metro Manila. They are currently asymptomatic and are on home quarantine. They will be undergoing re-testing. One SPMC patient who was considered a person under investigation, a 71-year old from Matanao town in Davao del Sur who died March 15, tested negative of COVID-19. SPMC is preparing to serve as satellite laboratory for “diagnosis and identification” of suspected COVID-19 patients in Mindanao. It is the only hospital in Mindanao equipped with a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) machine that allows real-time diagnosis of COVID-19 and other infectious diseases. — Maya M. Padillo and Carmelito Q. Francisco

Nation at a Glance — (03/23/20)

News stories from across the nation. Visit www.bworldonline.com (section: The Nation) to read more national and regional news from the Philippines.

Nation at a Glance — (03/23/20)

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