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Go For Gold riders brace for ACC in Uzbekistan

THE Go For Gold Philippines Continental Team is focused on developing its young riders in preparation for bigger races ahead.

Some of these promising Go For Gold cyclists will be tested in the forthcoming Asian Road Cycling Championships 2019 on April 23-28 in Tashkent, Uzbekistan.

Ismael Grospe Jr. and Daniel Ven Carino will spearhead the country’s under-23 squad together with Joshua Mari Bonifacio while Ean Cajucom, Efren Reyes Jr. and Marc Ryan Lago are the talented bets in the junior road race.

“I believe that this group is even more talented than our last group, so I have the expectation that they will surpass our experience last year,” said Go For Gold godfather Jeremy Go.

Mr. Carino is also scheduled to race in the junior individual time trial event with Lago.

Messrs. Reyes, Grospe and Carino gamely showed a glimpse of their potential on the scorching roads of Filinvest City in Alabang in a well-planned race during the recent PRUride Criterium 2019.

“From the start, we are really focused on developing our riders for the future of Philippine cycling,” said Go For Gold project director Ednalyn Hualda.

According to Ms. Hualda, the Go For Gold riders are bound for more international races after the ACC as they aim to earn a shot at qualifying to the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo, Japan.

Other members of the squad are team captain Ronnel Hualda, Jay Lampawog, Rex Luis Krog, Ronnilan Quita, Elmer Navarro, Jericho Jay Lucero and Boots Ryan Cayubit.

Aside from cycling, Go For Gold already has a stable of champions in skateboarder Margielyn Didal, the Philippine dragonboat team from the Philippine Canoe-Kayak Dragonboat Federation and reigning Southeast Asian Games men’s triathlon champion Nikko Huelgas.

Go For Gold is also backing the national athletes from wrestling, sepak takraw and the Philippine Air Force volleyball squad.

San Juan Knights go for jugular in MPBL finals

HISTORY COULD rewrite itself on Monday as San Juan shoots for the national championship of the Maharlika Pilipinas Basketball League Datu Cup with a win against Davao Occidental in Game Four of their best-of-five finals series today at the Filoil Flying V Arena in San Juan City.

The Knights have a chance to repeat the feat it once did in Year 2000 when it won the national championship in the then fledgling basketball league Metropolitan Basketball Association.

Almost two decades since, San Juan could be a national champion anew with a win against Davao Occidental in their 9 p.m. encounter.

Preceding the game at 7 p.m. is the awarding ceremonies where the league’s best individual performers will be feted.

San Juan head coach Randy Alcantara and his troops can sense the Knights’ ascension back to the throne, but they need to slay their opponents who are bent on stopping them and fight for another day.

The Knights are banking on their veterans John Wilson and Mac Cardona as they try to go for the closeout.

For his part, Davao coach Don Dulay said he believes Game Four will down to a game of possessions.

“Each possession is important and we intend to win every one of them,” said Mr. Dulay. “That’s our way of winning Game Four to send the series back to Davao.”

To win, Mr. Dulay knows he needs a more consistent game from his ex-pros.

Mark Yee, an MVP candidate, has been on and off, so is Leo Najorda. Billy Robles has yet to play a breakout game in the series while Bogs Raymundo and Bonbon Custodio have to check their emotions in what has been a highly emotional, highly physical encounter. — Rey Joble

No stopping MPBL

At the maximum, the Maharlika Pilipinas Basketball League (MPBL)still has two games left this season depending on the outcome of the ongoing national finals between San Juan and Davao Occidental. The Knights are enjoying a 2-1 advantage and have a chance to wrap things up with a win at home. A Tigers victory would send the series back to Davao to determine the first-ever National Champion of the Datu Cup.

But while the finals are at the forefront of the sports news, team transactions being done by different teams while preparing for next season have been creating a buzz.

Bacoor and Basilan are two of the busiest teams as they have no plans of slowing down even after wrapping their season.

For the Strikers, it’s a good time to fill in the missing pieces and provide the necessary help for Gab Banal, the front-runner in the MVP derby. Immediately after posting a solid season by making it all the way to the southern division semifinal round, Bacoor surrounded its best player with people who could complement his all-around game.

The biggest acquisition is Michael Mabulac, the starting center of the Laguna Heroes in the soon-to-end season. An MBL All-Star, the 6-foot-5 former San Miguel Beer reserve made his presence felt in the Datu Cup where he averaged a double-double of 14.3 points and 11.3 rebounds per game.

Two more All-Stars were added on their team — spitfire guard Ian Melencio, formerly of Imus and cerebral point guard Paolo Castro, the ex-point guard of the Parañaque Patriots.

Chris Sumalinog will also return to the lineup after his stint with Alab Pilipinas in the ABL while RJ Ramirez, a former guard from Far Eastern University, was also taken in as a homegrown player.

Perhaps, the much-celebrated inclusion is Matthew Aquino, son of former basketball star Marlou Aquino, as their tandem will forge the first-ever father-and-son tandem in Philippine basketball since Robert and Dodot Jaworski.

Like Bacoor, Basilan is making swift moves, tapping the services of former Quezon City Capitals premier point guard Hesed Gabo and ex-pro Tonton Bringas. The team also acquired Bobby Balucanag and Shaq Alanes from Pasay and is awaiting for the release of another marquee player.

Expansion team Albay, the newest to join the fastest-growing regional amateur basketball league, also made its presence felt quickly.

To be coached by Monel Kallos and managed by ex-Emilio Aguinaldo College mentor Nomar Isla, the Volcanoes will be headed by ex-pros Ronjay Buenafe, Alex Nuyles and Jonathan Aldave. There are so many ongoing developments. We saw Big Mac Andaya returning to Valenzuela and Jeff Viernes staying with Batangas despite persistent wooing by other squads.

The Quezon City Capitals are determined to sign up Aaron Black, son of Hall-of-Fame player/coach Norman Black while Bataan, which was reportedly taking a leave of absence, has decided to stay on, but definitely without head coach Jojo Lastimosa.

There’s more to the MPBL and we have yet to see the league wrapping up another successful season under the stewardship of Senator Manny Pacquiao, its founder and chief executive officer, and basketball great Kenneth Duremdes, the league’s commissioner.

Truly, basketball excitement never stops in the MPBL.

 

Rey Joble is a member of the PBA Press Corps and Philippine Sportswriters Association.

reyjoble09@gmail.com

A lost opportunity

“Frustration” was how DeMar DeRozan described what made him throw the ball near referee Scott Foster a little more than halfway through the final quarter of the Spurs’ homestand yesterday. He had just been called for an offensive foul, his third personal in a span of 52 seconds and fourth overall, and he needed to vent after drawing what he believed to be the short end of the stick. No doubt, his emotions were likewise fired up by a double-digit deficit they incurred off an atrocious showing after the half. Unfortunately, he flung the rock a little too forcefully for comfort, leading to his ejection.

That the Spurs could have benefited from DeRozan’s presence in the last five minutes and one second of the set-to they ultimately lost is an understatement. True, they weren’t exactly humming after a superb first quarter in which they made 13 of 19 shots. And true, the 12-point hole they were in at the beginning of the payoff period ballooned to 19 by the time he was forced to hit the showers. But for all his frailties, he was the fulcrum of their offense and crucial to their competitiveness — especially with Game Three Star Derrick White crashing back to earth.

The Spurs aren’t known to delve in moral victories, so they’ll no doubt look back to yesterday’s outing as a lost opportunity. Their Game Two setback was worse, to be sure; they appeared to have control until the Nuggets mounted a late comeback courtesy of Jamal Murray. In any case, they can’t afford to keep wasting opportunities, not against the stacked Nuggets, and not when their style of play doesn’t intrinsically lend to production efficiency. So, yes, their capacity to hit the ground running is a boon. But, yes, their inability to consistently translate their first-mover advantages into actual triumphs is a bane.

Looking ahead, the Spurs need to do a better job protecting the three-point line. In the last three contests, they’ve allowed the Nuggets to make 40 of 84 attempts from beyond the arc — an ingredient for disaster given their lack of personnel capable of doing the same. And because they’re not about to get another breakout performance from an unlikely source to help their cause, they would do well to remind their vital cogs of the importance of composure. The job’s hard enough for them at full complement; it becomes decidedly Sisyphean when they make their own selves their worst enemies. Self-inflicted wounds are a no-no. Bad calls will happen, and it’s not how they react immediately after that will determine their fate. It’s how they don’t.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is the Senior Vice-President and General Manager of Basic Energy Corp.

MORE Senators for rule of law

Rule of law means the law applies equally to unequal people, no one is exempted and no one can grant an exemption. Granting exemptions, say, in the law against stealing or murder automatically leads to the rule of men where the powerful and the mob are exempted from penalties for violating certain rules.

The World Justice Project (WJP) produces an annual study, the “Rule of Law Index” (RoLI), and ranks countries based on their performance on 8 factors and 44 sub-factors. The RoLI 2017-2018 Report involved more than 110,000 households as respondents and 3,000 expert surveyors in 113 countries and jurisdictions, whereas the RoLI 2019 involved more than 120,000 households and 3,800 surveyors in 126 countries and jurisdictions.

WJP’s Rule of law index 2019, East Asia

Bad news #1 is that the Philippines’ global ranking has been deteriorating. From 51st in the RoLI 2015 Report, it is already down to 90th in the RoLI 2019 Report.

These four sub-factors are among the “downers” for the Philippines that dragged down its overall score and ranking:

4.2 The right to life and security of the person is effectively guaranteed.

4.3 Due process of the law and rights of the accused.

8.3 Correctional system is effective in reducing criminal behavior.

8.4 Criminal system is impartial.

gavel

Now comes bad news #2: in this coming May 2019 Senatorial elections, many of those in the Top 12 based on the SWS March 2019 survey may worsen the rule of law in the country if elected. On the other hand, the Otso-Diretso team has a good line up of human rights advocates (Chel Diokno, Gary Alejano, Erin Tañada, Samira Gutoc, Bam Aquino), experts in electoral and international law (Romy Macalintal, Florin Hilbay) and entrepreneurship (Mar Roxas). I wish that many of them will win but many are not in the Top 12, not even in the Top 18.

Independent candidate and former senator Serge Osmeña is another good candidate who should win but is not among the Top 12 in the recent surveys.

A number of recent legislations under the Duterte administration are violations of the rule of law. Like the free tuition in all state universities. If the state should give education subsidy, it should apply this to all tertiary students and not exclude those in private universities.

A pre-requisite market-oriented reforms for efficiency (MORE) in this case is for senatorial candidates with high respect for the rule of law to win. Further deterioration of the Philippines’ ranking, even a standstill in RoLI, is bad news.

 

Bienvenido S. Oplas, Jr. is the president of Minimal Government Thinkers

minimalgovernment@gmail.com

Who not to vote for

In two weeks, the Philippine electorate will cast its vote for 12 senators, the entire cast of the House of Representatives as well as all provincial, city and municipal officials. For those unhappy with the status quo, this is your chance to elect better leaders. After all, the laws and policies put in motion in the next three years will have a ripple effect that will traverse generations. This is why we all need to be circumspect about our selection.

Given what is at stake, this is no time to speak in innuendos or ambiguities. So with your permission, I will be blunt.

To vote according to party lines is neither circumspect nor wise. If anything, it is an indication that one has drank too much of the proverbial cool aide spewed out by a particular political party. We must understand that this election is not about hate for the Aquinos or love for the Dutertes, or vice versa. It is about choosing worthy public servants with the abilities to push the nation forward. Put in another way, this election is about choosing the best and brightest — those with talents and virtues that can be harnessed to build a stronger nation. It is NOT about perpetuating any particular party in power. That would be an incredibly myopic view to take.

The tale has been told many times before. There was a time in history, between our independence in 1946 and the mid-seventies, when the Philippines was among the most advanced nations in Asia. We led the region in most development indexes, be it gross national product, level of infrastructure development, sophistication of human capital (skills, education and literacy), judicial independence, level of development of our manufacturing industries and agriculture, sophistication of corporate governance and the banking system, among many others.

The glory days of the Philippines was due to responsible, competent and selfless governance from leaders, mostly senators, who had the intelligence, foresight and sense of patriotism befitting true statesmen. They were the best among us, all of whom we still speak about today. Among them were Claro M. Recto, Carlos P. Garcia, Eulogio Rodriguez Sr., Lorenzo M. Tañada, Esteban Abada, Jose W. Diokno, Eva Estrada Kalaw, Soc Rodrigo, Jose R. Roy and Jovito Salonga.

These men and women would make headlines for their nationalistic and patriotic policies, even if it compromised their own interest or that of their political parties. They were bold, fearless and determined, always putting the nation’s interest before anything or anyone else. Above all, they were honest and decent.

If we are to make our nation great again, we need to elect senators and local officials who match, if not surpass, the caliber of our former statesmen.

WEEDING THEM OUT
Famed writer Virgilio Velèz wrote…. “From minds enlightened come enlightened laws….. from minds corrupted come corrupted laws”. Corruption is the root of many evils. It is what causes lawmakers to enact statutes that are either self serving or benefit certain sectors at the expense of the greater majority. It is what compels them to abet crime or protect people, sectors or nations who have wronged the state. It is what makes them use the influence of their offices for undue advantage (thereby distorting the level-playing field). Worst of all, it is what compels them to steal what should otherwise belong to the marginalized.

Would you want to be stolen from? Would you like your hard earned taxes to further enrich certain dubious politicians? If not, do not vote for candidates who have been proven corrupt… those who have been convicted by the court of law for plunder. Let us not forget, these people were convicted beyond reasonable doubt. The worse of their ilk are those who refuse to admit or apologize for their deeds. The fact that they show no remorse is a sign that they see no wrong in it and will likely do it again.

Corruption is a character flaw — it is a product of dishonesty, entitlement and a scheming mind. They are a cancer to our system and must be flushed our by radiation. Your vote is that radiation.

The convicted plunders who are running for reelection have had their chance and have proven to be unworthy. To elect them again is like remarrying an abusive spouse.

The unqualified. Let’s get one thing straight. Action stars, clowns or sportsmen who use their popularity (or popularity of their spouse) to get elected, knowing full well that they do not qualify for the job, should be looked upon with trepidation. Beneath the rhetoric of them declaring their desire to serve is a devious ploy to take advantage of our countrymen who don’t know any better.

As voters, we should make sure that the skills and experience of a candidate matches the position he or she is running for.

To be a senator, for instance, one has to have a deep understanding of the law, of macroeconomics, of the principles of social development, of geo-politics and diplomacy. A potential senator must have had a track record of leadership in either or all of these fields. If they do not, he or she will fake it — and faking it means they will be incompetent. They will uselessly occupy precious seats in a policy-making body that could otherwise go to a more deserving candidate.

To elect a showbiz personality or a sportsman to the Senate, Congress or City Hall is like hiring a jester to be your chief accountant or hiring a dancer to be your lawyer. It is the wrong job for the wrong person.

The almost dead. Some candidates are more than eighty five years old and still running for office. To elect them is a waste given their inability to meet the physical rigors of the job. We have seen it before….. geriatric public officials who rule in absentia. In the end, they are represented by their chiefs of staff who make a mess out of the job. Case in point, look at what the city of Manila has become in the last six years.

The almost dead reek of selfishness and entitlement as they are unwilling to give the next generation a chance. They want to enjoy the perks of the job knowing full well that they are incapable of carrying it out. Let’s do them a favor and allow them to enjoy a restful twilight, in their homes.

The entitled dynasty member. A study made by the dean of Ateneo School of Government, Ronald Mendoza, shows a direct correlation between poverty rates and the proliferation of political dynasties. The more entrenched a political dynasty becomes, the higher the probability of poverty, underdevelopment and weaker institutions.

Within local governments, political dynasties are more likely to utilize their budgets doling out scholarships, funeral aid and basketball courts rather than investing in social development programs, economic initiatives and infrastructure. This is because preservation of power becomes the priority, even more important than social and economic development itself. Painful reforms and unpopular but necessary decisions are avoided as they erode political equity.

On the national scene, political dynasties are more likely to vote for populist legislation and in accordance with party lines. Again, to preserve the power of the clan.

Political dynasties have an unfair advantage. Within their disposal are political machines, funds and the many advantages of having other family members in office. The playing field is skewed to the dynasty’s favor. This unfair advantage dissuades aspiring public servants from throwing their hat in the ring. In effect, it decreases the level of political participation among the populace. Dynasties monopolize power by depriving others of a fair opportunity to serve. This is why we have 21-year-old scions becoming mayors and governors while the man with a doctorate degree in public governance is edged out. Political dynasties cause a brain drain of talent among elected officials.

Studies further show that capabilities, values and work ethic rarely improve from generation to generation, especially within powerful families enjoying comfort and positions of influence. More often than not, the second generation simply emulates the habits of the first. So if we want meaningful change, voting for a member of a political dynasty is not the way to do it.

The story of the Philippines is still being written. While the country’s glory days are several decades behind us, we could very well turn our fortunes around and create a new golden age for the next generation. It all boils down to good governance, wise leadership and uncompromised patriotism. As we contemplate who to vote for, let us reject the plunderers, the incompetent, the nearly dead and the entitled scions. Instead, let us vote for the best, brightest and most qualified among us.

 

Andrew J. Masigan is an economist

A rite of passage

A solo bassoon moans a prolonged melancholy cry, as of a dull pain inside the soul. Its plaintive aching and hurting seems from some broken heart whose fears are magnified in the steady thumping of the basses — bows thrust over strings stayed by numbed fingers on the bridge — in repetitive pulses like anxiety gripping the throat. The drums could have pounded the insistent rhythm, but they only offer muffled sympathy.

Wood winds refrain the underlying tension as strings stretch to soften segue to a burst of the brass winds trumpeting a heralding: that signals the frenzied cacophony of all instruments screaming at each other in decibels almost painful to the ear. Then the clash of cymbals and dead silence for seconds — as in a voiceless fall from a cliff. End of tension and start of the spring dances.

The pizzicato of violins suggests a cooling drizzle and the piccolos are birds trilling to the hoped-for Spring. Yet throughout, the orchestra relentlessly layers disturbing undertones of heavily suggestive thrusting and thumping until the final abduction of the Spring virgin in the libretto, when the clapping of percussions thunder violent possession.

It was Igor Stravinsky’s “The Rite of Spring,” closing concert of the Philippine Philharmonic Orchestra in its 36th Concert Season (2018-2019) at the Cultural Center of the Philippines. Stravinsky is not too often played in the Philippines. At the ballet premiere of his controversial and iconoclastic “The Rite of Spring” at Théâtre des Champs-Élysées in Paris in 1913, the scandalized audience rioted and walked out of the theater.

Did you like the concert, Bettina? I was confused, she says. I expected from the title “Rite of Spring” that the music would be light and lilting, apropos to idyllic Spring. The jarring thumping, and then the violent confusion of sounds was like a stampede of wild animals in a dark forest. But Ronnie the poet-novelist and art lover, sage of generations ahead, stated simply: I like Stravinsky. I listen to his music for the grounding of Art to Reality.

Stravinsky wrote his music in the turmoil of world changes. The early 1900s saw an awakening against monarchies and imperialist colonizations and the rise of jealous consciousness for human rights and freedoms. It was the age of assertion and aggression, of revolt and protest. Artists took the lead in freedom of expression, liberal and righteous in shocking the world with avant-garde style and mediums, challenging traditionalists into embracing “modern art.” Pablo Picasso violated sensibilities as he painted grotesque visions of his personal realities upon a world comfortable with romanticized “Realism.” Stravinsky’s dissonance and chaos was the same protest of cubism and distortionism against traditionalism.

Defeat in the Russo-Japanese war (1904–1905) triggered the Russian people’s revolution against monarchic control. And after the Russian defeat again in World War I the people’s revolution reinvigorated and forced the abdication of Tsar Nicholas II, who was later executed together with his family. The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) was established by the Bolsheviks in 1917. Was the rhythmic energy of revolution a rite of passage to the “Spring” or the fantasy of a new life under communism?

Was Stravinsky’s unabashedly libidinous rhythmic energy in “The Rite of Spring” a hyperbole of the naked greed for power and possession, the abduction of the Spring virgin a metaphor — that in a “revolution” or any radical change, there is the dubious “hero” whom the grateful beneficiaries of change install as autocratic leader of their new destiny? Perhaps the constant thumping as the underlying refrain in Stravinsky’s concerto was a foreboding of the common regret after a revolution, or a change: the change may not have been for the better.

You read too much into Stravinsky, Ronnie says. Just enjoy his music. But I agree, Bettina says — “The Rite of Spring” really roused some unknown fear in me.

Why is there this undecipherable, overhanging fear for our country, and for us and our families nowadays? There is indeed the hollow thumping of the heart, the moaning pain and the jarring of sensibilities at the eerie cacophony of mixed signals about justice and the rule of law, about basic principles and values, human rights and even ordinary common decencies. Do we really know what is our reality, in the distortionist control of a “strongman leader” who will not allow dissent or contrary opinion?

The 1986 EDSA Revolution was for change and the ousting of a dictator; how now is the mindless, stupidest surrender of that hard-won freedom to another dictator? That is the crux of our problem: that there was not even a revolution now, and we, the Filipino people (speaking in general), seem to have succumbed to a chaotic “rite of passage,” a change to new values, adjusted “principles,” a revised history and dubious heroes.

Chaotic and dissonant, as purposely devised in Stravinsky’s concerto is the painful sarcasm to a “Rite of (faux) Spring” that ends in violent rape. Why do we allow crass green jokes and foul language that our baser instincts now thump to that hypnotic “rhythmic energy,” dulling our higher faculties against the serial rape of our freedoms and human rights? But there are no transgressions of human rights, we are told.

We accept what we are told. But it can be difficult to decipher what it is we are being told, and what exactly we are accepting. Most jarring, shocking pronouncements are “made in playful jest as his usual hyperbolic style,” as presidential spokesperson Salvador Panelo expectedly explained, of the President’s penchant for “shock effect” in his public rantings about everything and anything. But must he joke, “Let’s just kidnap someone from COA and torture him,” even in extreme frustration that the Commission on Audit takes too long to examine projects? (Philippine Star Jan. 10, 2019). No controls. No checks and balances in this government? Joke only, but torture is somehow admitted.

Then there are those sudden eerie silences, contretemps to the dissonant cacophony and the incessant thumping, at the Stravinsky concerto. In simile, the cliff-hanger silence to our local political situation is the stunning, numbing anxiety about threats, hyperboles and jokes that can be really meant and really acted out.

Strange sounds, like the bassoon’s meandering moan, come from the chill of seeing oppositionists and critics bullied in public investigations that almost literally stripped them naked, in the more than mischievous delight, it would seem, of including their human frailties as corroborative details to heavy accusations of public misconduct. How many oppositionists and critics have been sent to jail? How many more? Can our justice system be called fair and unbiased, in these tremulous times?

That the cymbals may clash to clear the air soon, hoping that this “trial” would just be a rite of passage, or a cleansing — looking towards a new Spring. There is hope. We must vote wisely in the May 13 mid-term elections to install controls and checks to the chaos.

Happy Easter to all!

 

Amelia H. C. Ylagan is a Doctor of Business Administration from the University of the Philippines.

ahcylagan@yahoo.com

Lux in Domino? II

“Lux in Domino?” (BusinessWorld, 14, April 2019, online version), I am happy to note, has stimulated a vigorous discussion, if not an earnest discussion.

The issue is about how the Ateneo administration handled the indignation over the presence of Irene Marcos-Araneta in an art installation exhibit on campus.

In gist, the essay explains why the Ateneo de Manila leadership did not measure up to its standard of shining the light of reason, and may I add, compassion.

Ateneo President Fr. Jet Villarin accepted the resignation of Ms. Yael Buencamino, Areté’s executive director, who personally invited her aunt (by affinity) to the affair in what is known to be open space. But how could Yael be accountable for a wrongdoing when Ateneo had no explicit rules and guidelines that unwelcome the Marcos family? The precedents establish the presence of Irene Marcos on campus, harmlessly attending different types of activities, which the Ateneo community tolerated or could care less.

More importantly, Fr. Villarin’s memo to the community signals exclusion of a person or a family, indeed condemned by many, from Ateneo’s open spaces. But then, this memo goes against the grain. For Ateneo, as a Christian institution and for that matter as part of a civil society, should uphold tolerance, plurality, and compassion.

“Lux in Domino?” is thus a plea to defend tolerance and plural identities.

The feedback to the essay, either in agreement or in disagreement, is most engaging and thought-provoking. I am of course pleased that the feedback, in the main, supports my view. Those who disagree, nevertheless, raise questions that need to be answered through deeper reflection.

I will quote some of the comments from my friends because they are so well said, and they deserve to be read by a wide audience.

From old friend Mike Limjap: “Sayang lang what Areté represents…freedom of the mind. Fr. Jett has placed the institution in a no-win situation.”

From Ser Peña-Reyes, faculty member at the Department of Economics at Ateneo de Manila: “To tolerate does not mean to condone.” Ser also quotes a line said by Al Pacino who played the role of a seasoned and perceptive blind man in “Scent of a Woman:” “And if you think you’re preparing these minnows for manhood, you better think again, because I say you are killing the very spirit this institution proclaims it instills.”

From Pilita Venturanza, a lawyer, a practicing Catholic and an Ateneo alumna: “To me the whole thing smacks of self-righteousness. And this is me, a rabidly anti-Marcos person. The student council stand on the issue is expected since young people are usually very idealistic and tend to think in terms of black or white. But I expected more from the Administration.”

Those who disagree have a common identity with those who agree: They all condemn the Marcos dictatorship.

The basic argument of those who support the position of the Ateneo administration on this issue goes this way: Our institutions have failed us, and the Marcoses have yet to be made accountable for their crimes. Our people, particularly those who suffered from the Marcos dictatorship, have yet to be served justice. In light of the failure of our institutions, we have to find other means to exact justice. Symbolic acts like public shaming are proper.

Moreover, the Marcoses are determined to recapture power, and hence even their smallest actions have to be met head on to prevent them from gaining ground. The Marcoses have only contempt for the people by not acknowledging their crimes and by nonchalantly treating the country as a playground to satisfy their indulgences. As long as the Marcoses have not shown contrition, there can be no compromise.

A friend who disagrees with me argues: “What the Marcoses do now is solely to pursue an agenda — to recapture Malacañang and to restore their political dominance. Give them, any of them, public space to advance that agenda and they will exploit it.”

I can respond to all this in different ways.

A most pragmatic piece of advice comes from Ser as well as from Leah Panaganiban-Castro — my comrade during our student activist days and a fellow alumnus at the School of Economics. Separately, they said, “choose your battles.” Indeed, I would rather redirect our protests towards, for example, exposing the stealth to manipulate the outcome of the election protest towards removing Vice-President Leni Robredo and replacing her with Bongbong Marcos.

The issue though is not just about the tactics of fighting the Marcoses. At its core is how we will remain consistent with our own values. Even the conduct of war has rules that apply to all.

Let us return to the argument of my friend who is most concerned over how the Marcoses exploit public space to return to power. (Ateneo is of course a private institution but it professes to open its doors to the public.)

The argument denies plural identities. It denies Irene Marcos the enjoyment of the arts. It is a stretch of imagination to reduce her visit to the museum to exploiting the activity towards advancing a political agenda. Why will we not allow Irene from appreciating the arts? Is unwelcoming her to an art exhibit the proper way to punish her for the crimes of the Marcos dictatorship?

Denying her public space (or a playground) is an act of suppression and intolerance. The very definition of pubic space means barring no one from such space. Public space rejects special privilege; it is for the use of the majority and the minority, the good and the bad (so long as the bad does not use the space to threaten life or property). By constricting public space, we unconsciously become little Marcoses or Dutertes We claim the moral high ground by remaining true to our values, which include tolerance and civility.

Mon Miranda, a childhood friend of my departed wife Mae, sums up this thorny issue for me: “Basic human decency requires that minimum respect be accorded Irene.”

In the spirit of Lent and Easter, let me quote the relevant biblical passages.

From Matthew 7:12, “So in everything do unto others what you have them do to you, for this sums up the Law and the Prophets.” (Incidentally, Confucian teaching has a similar verse.)

From Luke 6:27-28: “But to you who are listening I say: Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, pray for those who mistreat you.”

We believe in mercy and forgiveness at the same time that we believe in justice. How we reconcile this seeming paradox is always a challenge.

Some will argue that there can only be forgiveness only upon the attainment of justice. But that is not a definitive interpretation. Neither is it the only correct view. From the Exodus (citing from The Oxford Companion to the Bible, 1993), Yahweh is “forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin…yet by no means clearing the guilty, but visiting the iniquity of the parents upon the children and the children’s children.”

Happy Easter!

 

Filomeno S. Sta. Ana III coordinates the Action for Economic Reforms.

www.aer.ph

Fear is the root of all evil

By Raju Mandhyan

IT HAS TAKEN me a while to gather up courage to put down the first few words for this article. I was afraid that people may find it too philosophical, too New Age wisdom or the stuff that Pop Psychology is made up of. The thing that made me get off the fence of indecision was the realization that it was not just the fact that I was fearful of writing about fear but also, to a much larger extent, exposing my own fears; exposing my own vulnerabilities and my softer underbelly. Anyway, now that I have jumped off, let’s fly and hope I land safely.

No, money is not the root of all evil. Wanting it in excess and hoarding it purposelessly might be the causes of doing evil things but it, definitely, is not the root of all evil. If it were the root of all evil then there would have been no evil in the ages when there was no such thing called money. Money, in reality, is just a scorecard of your successes. Sometimes, it continues to score well for people even when they do not play the game of life by ethical rules. And, the reason people do not play the game of life ethically is because they are afraid. They are filled with fears unexplained. In my life, I think about those people that I feel may have wronged me. Then I think about them deeply and compassionately and am able to see their frailties and their fears. The process helps me become forgiving and fearless.

Gandhi claimed that hatred is the root of all evil. Maybe so, but hatred is an accumulation of dislikes, disappointments and distrust. Dislikes, disappointments and distrust are all aspects of fear. We dislike others that may not be similar to us and we fear because they are different they cause us trouble and harm. Still, fear is the root cause. We distrust others because we are in fear of our future welfare and wellbeing when working or dealing with them. Still the root cause is fear. A parent is possessive of her offspring because she is afraid that they might fly out of the nest and she will be left alone. A manager is controlling of his staff because he is afraid they may outgrow him. Driven by these fears we go beyond simple caution but take stronger action which, usually, generates not so happy results which ferment into evil.

Yet beyond our unfounded fear lay newer and brighter horizons. Centuries ago, Plato claimed that “We can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark; the real tragedy of life is when men are afraid of light.” And, he was and still is right. Parents, partners and spouses at the heart-core level know opening up doors for others to grow and go brings us our own freedom. When we hold others down, we too are stalled from moving and growing. Holding down, stalling, playing mind games are all manifestations of fear and they all breed and fester evil. The most malignant output of this inhuman behavior is that we also hold down, stall and sabotage or own creative outputs, our own creative potential.

First, Jim Morrison with his statement, “Expose yourself to your deepest fear; after that, fear has no power, and the fear of freedom shrinks and vanishes. You are free,” nailed it right. Then comes along Marianne Williamson with her “Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness, that most frightens us,” drove the point home. In all that we think, say and do, we ought to take a moment to think about where is that thought, where are those words and actions coming from. What exactly is causing to think, say and do things that breed and foster evil over time? Taking a moment to step back, to think with courage and then act will not prevent us from making mistakes or causing damage but it will help us in lessening pre-meditated expressions and actions which create evil end-results.

Overcoming unfounded fears will unleash our fullest potential. It will move us from feelings of helplessness and weakness into feelings of strength and personal liberation. At work, as in life, coming from courage will help us take bolder steps into empowering others and achieving greater personal success.

 

Raju Mandhyan is an author, coach and speaker.

www.mandhyan.com

Balance of payments in surplus for fifth straight month in March despite ‘hot money’ outflow

THE COUNTRY’s balance of payments (BoP) — which summarizes the Philippines’ economic transactions with the rest of the world for a given period — yielded a surplus for the fifth month in a row as inflows from the national government’s (NG) net foreign currency deposits and the central bank’s foreign exchange operations as well as income from the latter’s investments abroad offset outflows due to NG’s foreign debt payments, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) reported on Wednesday.

The central bank reported separately that foreign portfolio investments — also called “hot money” for the ease by which they are infused and taken out of local markets and which form part of BoP’s financial account — reversed to a net outflow in March from net surpluses a year ago and the preceding month.

BoP posted a $627-million surplus in March that was a turnaround from the year-ago $429-million deficit and 46.8% more than February’s $467-million surfeit.

That led to a year-to-date $3.797-billion surplus that was a turnaround from the $1.227-billion deficit in last year’s first quarter, and compares to the $3.5-billion deficit the central bank has projected for 2019 and the $2.306-billion gap incurred in 2018.

“The reported BoP position reflected the final gross international reserves (GIR) level of $83.61 billion as of end-March 2019,” the central bank said in a press statement.

“At this level, the GIR represents a more than ample liquidity buffer and is equivalent to 7.4 months’ worth of imports of goods and payments of services and primary income. It is also equivalent to five times the country’s short-term external debt based on original maturity (outstanding foreign debt with maturity of up to a year) and 3.5 times based on residual maturity (outstanding foreign debt with original maturity of up to a year plus principal payments on medium- and long-term loans of the public and private sectors falling due in the next 12 months).

BSP Deputy Governor Diwa C. Guinigundo told reporters via mobile phone message: “… [W]e continue to see very encouraging signs in the first two months of the year that OFW (overseas Filipino worker) remittances and tourist receipts would continue to be robust”, adding that “[i]nflows of foreign loans are expected to have also supported the surplus in the March BoP”.

The BSP reported last Monday that the first two months saw money sent home by OFWs grew three percent year-on-year to $4.784 billion.

“If this trend continues, we should be looking at a better BoP position at the end of the year. It should also validate the financiability of the current account deficit we have sustained in the last few years on account of strong economic performance,” Mr. Guinigundo said.

In an e-mail, Security Bank Corp. Chief Economist Robert Dan J. Roces said that the surplus masks the negative current account that includes trade in goods.

The Philippine Statistics Authority reported on April 11 that the country’s merchandise trade deficit grew 16% to $6.708 billion as of February from the $5.763-billion shortfall in 2018’s comparable two months.

“The surplus reflects the high reserves accumulated by the central bank via the capital account; our gross international reserves at an all-time high and foreign investors are coming back, having poured in around $400+ million as of February,” Mr. Roces wrote.

“However, these mask the negative in the current account which measures among others imports and exports where our imports are high and exports are stagnant,” he added.

“Moreover, OFW remittances, also high for the quarter, are part of the current account which goes to show that the remittances are not enough to cover for the trade gap,” Mr. Roces noted.

“On a positive note, our high capital account means we have enough forex reserves to stabilize the peso. And as long as economic growth stays robust, the export sector gets its support after the budget was signed, and our economic fundamentals remain solid, we see a sustained surplus for the year.”

In a separate comment, Michael L. Ricafort, economist of the Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. (RCBC), said via text: “The improvement in the BoP surplus may be attributed to the sustained pickup in net foreign portfolio/net foreign buying in the local financial markets since the start of 2019 amid easing trend on both local inflation and interest rates.”

“BoP surplus may also reflect the sustained growth in the country’s structural US dollar/foreign currency inflows such as OFW remittances, BPO [business process outsourcing] revenues and foreign direct tourism receipts, as well as foreign direct investment inflows.”

HOT MONEY RETREATS
The central bank also reported on Wednesday that hot money net outflows in March ended four straight months of net inflows.

March saw $739-million net outflows that was a reversal of the year-ago $1.132-billion net inflows, as gross inflows went down a third to $1.732 billion from $2.469 billion and gross outflows nearly doubled to $2.471 billion from $1.337 billion.

“About 66.5% of investments registered during the month were in Philippine Stock Exchange-listed securities (mainly to holding firms, food, beverage and tobacco companies, property firms, banks, and transportation services companies); while 33.4% went to peso(-denominated) government securities and the 0.1% balance went to UITFs (unit investment trust funds),” the BSP said in a separate statement.

“The United Kingdom, the United States, Singapore, Luxembourg and Hong Kong were the top five investor countries for the month, with combined share to total at 80.3%.”

The central bank added that gross outflows “may be attributed to large outflows from peso GS amounting to $939 million for March 2019 vis-à-vis the $154 million recorded in February.”

“The US continued to be the main destination of outflows, receiving 76.8% of total remittances.”

That brought first-quarter flows to a $363.4-million net inflows that were less than half the year-ago $766.05 million, as gross inflows edged up 1.3% to $5.204 billion from $5.137 billion and gross outflows grew 10.7% to $4.841 billion from $4.372 billion.

Sought for comment, RCBC’s Mr. Ricafort replied in a text message: “Some profit-taking activities in March 2019 may have ensued after hefty market gains in January-February 2019, partly triggered by slower global economic growth and outlook amid declines in manufacturing gauges of China, Euro zone and in some developed countries… and declines in China’s exports and imports largely due to the adverse effects of the lingering US-China trade war and uncertainties related to Brexit.”

“[G]eopolitical risks related to tensions between India and Pakistan in March 2019 also triggered some profit taking in the local markets. Some profit taking in the local markets also came after the announcement on increased MSCI weighting of Chinese stocks in global benchmarks,” Mr. Ricafort added.

In a separate comment, Nicholas Antonio T. Mapa, senior economist of ING Bank NV-Manila, said that the outflows could reflect investors’ monetary policy expectations.

“Portfolio flows continue to help determine direction for the peso, with the outflow driven mainly by expectations for monetary policy… March’s depreciation trend mirrored the outflow from both the bond and equity markets with the BSP perceived to take on perhaps a more dovish tone to support flagging growth prospects after their ultra-aggressive rate salvo of 2018 to quell supply-side inflation,” Mr. Mapa said in an e-mailed response to questions.

“We can also note that sentiment can help drive the direction for trading with the first two months of the year seeing stark appreciation pressure for the peso even as interest rate differentials between the US and the Philippines remained unchanged. We’ve noted that foreign exchange direction is driven by both interest rate differentials as well as market-assigned probability to a Fed rate hike and thus the peso can remain stable even if actual differentials are maintained for as long as investors believe the Fed to be on hold for the time being,” he added.

“In the coming months, we can expect the peso to still enjoy some appreciation pressure given that investors are no longer expecting the Fed to hike rates in 2019 given the recent adjustment to the Fed’s outlook on rates. This expectation will help drive the flow of funds to emerging markets like the Philippines even if differentials are unchanged or even narrowed.” — Reicelene Joy N. Ignacio

Economic managers tout infrastructure, reform gains to US businessmen

STATE economic managers flew to Washington D.C. last week to showcase the country’s infrastructure developments and economic reforms, in efforts to woo more foreign firms to invest in the Philippines.

Led by Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III and Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Benjamin E. Diokno, key economic officials made the case before 150 executives from top US banking, investment and financial firms at the Philippine Day Forum held on April 11, the government’s Investor Relations Office said in a press release on Wednesday.

At the forum, Mr. Dominguez said that while the Philippines ranks as among the best performing economies in Asia, mere economic growth is not the final goal of all the government’s efforts.

“We seek a more dynamic and competitive economy to bring down poverty rates and create more opportunities for our people,” he said at the conference held at the sidelines of the spring meetings of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.

The Philippine Statistics Authority earlier this month said less Filipinos were mired on poverty in the the first half of 2018. During that period, poverty incidence — the proportion of Filipinos whose incomes fell below the per capita poverty threshold of P10,481 per month — fell to 21% from 27.6% recorded in the first half of 2015.

World Bank Vice-President for East Asia and Pacific Victoria Kwakwa said the country has the “potential to become the next East Asian success story.”

“Its vision to become a prosperous, resilient, middle-class society free of poverty by 2040 is an achievable goal — but one that will require continued reform and investment to open the economy, overcome infrastructure backlog, invest in human capital, and build the resilience of the nation, especially as the threat of climate change increases,” Ms. Kwakwa said in her opening remarks.

The state embarked on an P8-trillion “Build, Build, Build” infrastructure program in an effort to boost economic growth to 7-8% until 2022 from a 6.3% average in 2010-2016. But the first two years of the current administration saw gross domestic product (GDP) growth average 6.45%, and economic managers last month slashed the official GDP growth goal this year to 6-7% from 7-8% due to delayed enactment — just last Tuesday — of the 2019 national budget that left new projects unfunded.

“We are determined to deliver what we say, and to deliver them on time and on budget. All of these infrastructure projects have made the Philippines one of the most attractive destinations of the world,” said Vivencio B. Dizon, president and chief executive officer of Bases Conversion and Development Authority.

The government is pushing for comprehensive tax reform to simplify the regime and generate more revenue to support its infrastructure program and expand social services.

Finance Assistant Secretary Antonio Joselito G. Lambino III said that this is the first time the country overhauled tax system to reduce poverty and inequality and not for deficit or debt reduction.

Signed into law in December 2017, Republic Act No. 10963 or the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion Act — the first of up to five packages — slashed personal income tax rates in order to put more money in households’ pockets but increased or added levies of various goods and services and removed several value added tax exemptions.

The government is also set to implement RA 11213 or the Tax Amnesty Act, enacted on Feb. 14, that will net more tax delinquents into the fold.

However, Senate President Vicente C. Sotto previously mentioned that it was “doubtful at this point” that the Senate could approve any more tax reforms — which have secured lower house approval — in the remaining May 20-June 7 session days of the 17th Congress. Tax reforms approved by the House of Representatives but still awaiting fiat in the Senate Ways and Means committee entail bills to reduce corporate income tax rates and remove redundant fiscal incentives, simplify the tax structure of the financial sector, centralize real property valuation and assessment; increase government share in mining revenues and even higher excise tax rates for alcohol and tobacco products.

BSP’s Mr. Diokno meanwhile underscored the resilience of the domestic economy to external headwinds, as well as the capacity to sustain robust economic growth. “For the Central Bank, it is a matter of careful commitment and timely action. The economy itself is fundamentally solid. Overall macro-economic conditions provide sound basis for cautious optimism,” he said.

On the sidelines of the event, the central bank chief told Bloomberg Television that a cut in benchmark interest rates will be considered on May 9, when the BSP holds its third policy review for this year. — K. A. N. Vidal

Duterte threatens anew to sack MWSS officials

By Charmaine A. Tadalan, Reporter

PRESIDENT RODRIGO R. Duterte has threatened anew to sack Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage System (MWSS) officials if the water shortage continues during the El Niño period.

He also said he will appoint Filipino engineers working overseas to replace current MWSS officials.

“There are millions of Filipinos waiting outside…brighter than you. Kaya lang, hindi lang kilala kasi hindi mga politiko (but they’re not popular because they’re not politicians),” Mr. Duterte said at a campaign rally in Cagayan, Tuesday evening.

“I will not hesitate to replace you all.”

The president on March 20 told MWSS officials and water concessionaires to “shape up or ship out” and even threatened to terminate the concession agreements.

He further criticized the regulating body over its failure to prepare for El Niño.

“It comes with regularity…‘yang El Niño na ‘yan. Ilang tao kayo nandiyan (This El Niño comes with regularity, and how many of you are there?). And you do not prepare for it? And when it comes, walang tubig ‘yung mga tao? (The people don’t have water?)”

Mr. Duterte also repeated his warnings against the water concessionaires. “Why do you have to cause problem for the people when there are things that you can do at once… you derail everything in life,” he said.

“Kaya ako, pagka ganun, wala akong pasensya (On matters like this, I don’t have the patience). Either you can hack it or not. If you don’t, sorry.”

The President was supposed to decide on whether to fire MWSS officials on April 15, but Cabinet Secretary Karlo Alexei B. Nograles said this was moved to April 22.

“April 22 na lang, magre-reflect muna siya (He’ll reflect on it first). It will give him a chance also to study everything,” Mr. Nograles said on Wednesday at the Kapihan sa Manila Bay forum, streamed on Facebook.