BusinessMirror June 20, 2015

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BusinessMirror

THREETIME ROTARY CLUB OF MANILA JOURNALISM AWARDEE 2006, 2010, 2012

U.N. MEDIA AWARD 2008

A broader look at today’s business Saturday 18,June 201420, Vol.2015 10 No. 40Vol. 10 No. 254 Saturday,

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P.  |     | 7 DAYS A WEEK

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LOWER INFRASTRUCTURE SPENDING SEEN DETERRING GOVERNMENT FROM HITTING ECONOMIC TARGETS

Moody’s cuts PHL growth forecast I

INSIDE

T had been long in coming but, finally, global credit watcher Moody’s Investors Service said growth this year, measured in terms of the gross domestic product, should prove slower than projected on account of the government having failed to extend the liquidity boost that the private sector alone cannot provide.

FATHER’S DAY 2015 Pentecost

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EAR Lord, it is good to know that an extraordinary outpouring of the Divine Spirit on all mankind had been foretold by the prophet Joel, but the effect of the fulfillment of such prophesy went beyond every expectation. Pentecost was not just a matter of people speaking previously unknown foreign languages or having visions. It was a new creation. It brought into existence a new mankind, a new people of God—the Church. We rejoice because we belong to the Church. Amen. WORD AND LIFE, FR. SAL PUTZU, SDB AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com

Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com

Life

DOH! LET TV DADS HELP GUIDE YOUR FATHER’S DAY FASHION GIFTS »D2

BusinessMirror

Saturday, June 20, 2015

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FATHER’S DAY 2015

Give Dad some thanks for his successes— and maybe some time for a nap, too B G K | Detroit Free Press

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HEN I first sat down to write this article, I was all set to declare Father’s Day is the biggest snore-fest of the year. Because if you think about it, most of the gifts stores recommend and most of the gifts we buy for Dad are pretty much guaranteed to put him to sleep. Hammocks? Yawn. Scotch, bourbon and other alcohol? Doze. Grills and the requisite accessories? Those lead to grilling, which most often leads to overeating, which leads to a big, fat nap. Trust me, I’ve seen it. And let’s not forget the golf shirt. Just thinking about golf knocks out most people. But playing all afternoon as the sun beats down is exhausting. And watching a game on television, the announcers whispering the play-by-play oh so slowly, is the best sleep inducer since National Public Radio and Benadryl. When I sat down to write, I was set to say that by rendering Dad unconscious, we’re giving him what he really wants—a chance to disconnect and zone out. At least that’s the message we get from the world around us—from advertisements, television, movies and more. Dear old devalued Dad sleeps in his recliner in front of the TV. He dozes off at the first-grade choir concert. He’s asleep at the wheel of life, clueless to the workings of his family and the household. Yes, Homer Simpson, I’m talking about you. And you too, Murray Goldberg, The Goldbergs patriarch who relies on his long-suffering wife for everything. I was on quite a roll—until I thought about the dads I know and realized everything I wanted to write was wrong. It’s true that dads have more leisure time than moms, an average of three hours a week more, according to a Pew Research Center analysis of data from the governmentsponsored American Time Use Survey. At the same time, they’re also taking on more responsibilities at home and with their children. More Dads are staying home with their kids—almost 2 million dads in 2012, according to US Census data. In 1989 1.1 million dads stayed at home. Of those 2 million, 21 percent said they’re staying home to take care of their children. In 1989 only 5 percent of dads surveyed listed caring for their children as their reason for staying home. One of my best friends is a new dad who will care for his infant son when his wife returns to work. My friend has an uncomfortable relationship with his own father, never felt loved by him and spent years drinking too much in an effort to drown past disappointments. Then he got older. His emotional age began to catch up to his chronological age. His mother got sick. As all that happened, my friend

took on more responsibility for his life. He cleaned up his act. He got married. Upon learning he would be a father, my friend signed up for parenting classes. He picked out baby shirts and pants and onesies, declaring them “adorable” and “darling”—words I’d never heard come out of his mouth. He quit chewing tobacco because he doesn’t want to set a bad example for his son. He shaved his beard so the newborn won’t reach for his face, only to grab a handful of prickly whiskers. And while it’s true my friend still laughs at fart jokes (sigh) and pretends he can’t find his way around a grocery store (sigh), he’s more involved with his son, more conscious of his role as father than I ever imagined he might be. He says he wants his son to feel at peace and protected, things he didn’t feel during his own childhood. I thought about another Dad friend who has adult children with whom he is not especially close. He regrets that his divorce from their mother was so acrimonious. He knows he missed out on many aspects of fatherhood, many aspects of his kids’ lives. Which is why he keeps encouraging his son to spend more time with his little boy. As for my own Dad—he was 25 when he came to the US, seeking a new beginning after war left his home in ashes and his future in doubt. He traveled by boat, wearing a cheaply made suit that came apart at the seams during the trip and carrying a dozen bottles of ouzo, a gift for his sponsor and for a distant relative. My Dad spoke no English, but got a job as a janitor and in less than a year was proficient enough in his new language to get a job tending bar. Which is what he’s done ever since. I can’t say my father and I have seen eye to eye on everything. For example, I really dislike lamb—which is practically heresy for someone like myself who is half Greek. I don’t always follow my Dad’s advice in the voting booth. As a kid, I rolled my eyes at his lectures. Grab all the education you can get, he would say, because that’s the one thing no one can take away from you. Of course all these years later I know exactly what my Dad was doing. He—a sixth-grade graduate whose family lost everything during war—was trying to make sure his kids got what he never had. Something that wouldn’t be obliterated by war. In most cases fathers—my own, my father friends, most fathers—want their kids to have what they didn’t. Whether it’s a good education, or a feeling of peace, or a chance to watch their kids grow up. Over the years I’ve bought enough golf shirts and lawn chairs to know that fathers are more complicated than society might have us think. And maybe letting Dad know that he has succeeded— that he did give his kids what he didn’t have—maybe that’s better than all of those things. Of course, a nice nap wouldn’t hurt things, either. ■

LIFE

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HONG KONG FIGHTS BusinessMirror

World The

B3-1| Saturday, June 20, 2015 • Editor: Lyn Resurreccion

PRO-DEMOCRACY protesters shout slogans after lawmakers voted against the election-reform proposals in Hong Kong on Thursday. AP/VINCENT YU

AFTER CHINA’S VOTE PLAN DEFEATED

Hong Kong set for more fights

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ONG KONG faces a prolonged political impasse after prodemocratic lawmakers rejected a China-backed plan for its political future and scuttled the Asian financial hub’s first leadership election.

Twenty-eight of 70 lawmakers voted against the bill, denying Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying the two-thirds majority needed to pass legislation setting up the citywide election. The result was cheered by democracy advocates, who argued the plan would’ve let China’s Communist Party screen out candidates before they reached a popular vote. The defeat provides a consolation prize to the Occupy Central protesters who seized city streets for almost three months last year in a failed effort to pressure President Xi Jinping to drop the candidate vetting. While the result is an embarrassment for China, it also means the next chief executive will be selected by the same panel of elites that has consistently chosen pro-Beijing leaders since the UK returned the former colony in 1997. Failure to resolve the debate will let fester a major source of tension in last year’s protests: the belief that China is encroaching on the “high degree of autonomy” promised to Hong Kong and altering its economic, legal and political systems. “It will mean more governance problems because the public is seeing more Beijing interference in Hong Kong,” said Michael Davis,

city—Li Ka-shing, Lee Shau-kee, Cheng Yu- tung and Lui Che-woo— who have a combined net worth of $80.2 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. Even before the vote, Leung had signaled a desire to get past the political debates that have consumed the city. “It is time to move on,” he said on Thursday, after the proposal failed. “For the next two years, the government will focus the efforts on the various economic development and livelihood issues.” Advocates for political change argue that only a democratically elected chief executive would have the popular mandate to tackle the city’s thorniest issues. Pro-democracy lawmakers called on the government to follow through on past pledges to set up a one-person, onevote election system. “C.Y. may think we’ll put democratic reforms to one side and we’ll move on with economics and livelihood issues, but if you have no trust and no cooperation with the legislature—a fractious legislature confronting you at every turn— then you are not going to get things done,” said Anson Chan, who was Hong Kong’s No. 2 official before the handover and now heads a prodemocracy group. Investors have been unperturbed by the civic turmoil. Since China outlined the voting guidelines that triggered the protests on August 31, the benchmark Hang Seng Index has climbed 8 percent, outstripping the MSCI Asia Pacific Index, which has fallen 1 percent in the period. “The medium-term threat isn’t that Shanghai will suddenly be able to do what Hong Kong is today far better at,” said Paul Serfaty,

a constitutional law professor at the University of Hong Kong. “The Occupy movement is not just about democracy, it is about autonomy and the rule of law.” The defeated proposal would’ve allowed 5 million people to vote for a chief executive from candidates selected by a panel of 1,200 tycoons, lawmakers and industry representatives. Opponents argued the committee would be stacked with Beijing loyalists and people who benefit from the city’s yawning wealth gap and soaring property prices. Democracy advocates complain about China’s creeping influence over the media, schools and courts since the handover. Surging wealth on the mainland has flowed across the border, driving up the cost of everything from housing to consumer goods, while wages stagnate. About half of Hong Kong workers earn less than HK$14,000 ($1,800) a month and 7.7-percent less than HK$5,000, according to government figures. They live in the most expensive housing market out of 378 markets tracked by the consultant Demographia. Hong Kong is home to the highest concentration of multimillionaires of any city on earth. Four of the richest men in Asia live in the

a director of Asian Capital Partners Group, an investment bank that specializes in mergers and acquisitions. “It’s that the vital spirits of Hong Kong people—driven first by their refugee status and later by their hunger for success—will be suppressed as young people grow to believe that the cards are stacked against them,” he said. Meanwhile, Chinese state media blasted Hong Kong’s pro-democracy opposition lawmakers on Friday for being “destroyers” of democratic development a day after they shot down Beijing’s election blueprint for the British former colony. The Chinese Communist Party’s flagship newspaper published an editorial deploring the vote and accusing the pro-democracy camp of being “selfish” and not heeding public opinion in rejecting the government’s election proposals. “The actions of the opposition camp show they are the upsetters and destroyers of Hong Kong’s democratic development process,” the People’s Daily said. The People’s Daily editorial said pro-democracy lawmakers should take “full responsibility” for blocking the proposal but didn’t mention an embarrassing blunder by proestablishment lawmakers that left most of them accidentally unable to vote in support. The 33 pro-establishment lawmakers took out a half-page newspaper ad to “deeply apologize” for walking out moments before the vote in a bungled attempt to prevent a quorum from being reached. They said they wanted more time for an elderly, ailing member to return to cast a vote. But some others remained inside because of miscommunication, allowing the vote to go ahead. Bloomberg News and AP

Thailand reports 1st case of MERS virus

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ANGKOK—Thailand confirmed on Thursday its first known case of the deadly Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) virus, a 75-year-old man who recently arrived from Oman for treatment of a heart condition. MERS has killed 24 people and sickened more than 160 people in South Korea, the biggest outbreak outside the region where it was first seen in 2012. World Health Organization Head Margaret Chan on Thursday praised South Korea’s efforts to contain the virus.

However, the number of people isolated at home and in medical facilities declined from about 6,700 on Thursday to just more than 5,900 on Friday, with more than 5,500 people, so far, released from the quarantine, the Health Ministry said. Thai Public Health Minister Rajata Rajatanavin said two laboratories had confirmed the results. The man has been quarantined at the ministry’s infectious diseases facility and is in stable condition, he said. He said the patient

was traveling with three other family members, who also are being watched at the facility. Public health officials are also monitoring others who were in contact with the man, including nearby passengers on the airplane. Rajata said the man didn’t have any symptoms while traveling to Bangkok, but began to have fatigue and difficulty breathing after he was admitted to a private hospital for treatment of his heart condition. Many people from the Middle East come to Thailand for medical care.

“We advise the public not to panic because the patient and his family members were separated since the beginning,” Rajata said. “Our system is ready and we are monitoring the cases closely.” Thanarak Phalipat, director of the Bureau of Epidemiology, said 59 people who were in contact with the patient have been identified so far by the ministry, including health personnel, hotel employees, passengers who sat two rows in front and behind the patient on the plane, and two taxi drivers. AP

A PRO-EURO protester waves a European Union flag from the parliament during a rally in Athens, Greece, on Thursday. More than 5,000 people attended the rally in support of Greece remaining in the euro. About three-quarters of Greeks support keeping the EU’s common currency, according to recent polls. Greece and creditors failed to reach an agreement on Thursday in troubled bailout talks, with a June 30 deadline looming. AP/YORGOS KARAHALIS

Greece stumbling toward euro exit

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REECE lurched closer to an exit from the euro as a meeting of finance officials to reach a deal over aid dissolved in acrimony, forcing leaders to call for an emergency summit for Monday. As the European Central Bank (ECB) prepared for its own emergency session on Friday to discuss Greece’s liquidity, thousands of Greeks piled outside parliament in Athens asking for the nation to be saved from default as Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras’s government blamed a conspiracy to blackmail Greece for the rancorous breakdown in talks. With the specter of capital controls looming, key players deciding Greece’s fate voiced their exasperation with Greece’s top negotiators while the silence of others, such as German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, also spoke volumes. “The key emergency is to secure a dialogue with adults in the room,” International Monetary Fund (IMF) Managing Director Christine Lagarde said after listening to Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis expound in Luxembourg, on Thursday. “What we lack is a dialogue.” Greece and its creditors—the ECB, the IMF and the European Com m ission— seem f u r t her apart than ever after four hours of closed-door talks. Without a settlement, the ties still binding Greece to the currency bloc may begin to unravel with funding keeping Greek banks afloat under scrutiny. “The extreme economic uncertainty coupled with fears of currency change have driven withdrawals to unprecedented levels, wiping in four days the cushion of about €3 billion of the Greek banking system,” said Nicholas Economides, professor of economics at New York University’s Stern School of Business. Asked if he could imagine

Greece being forced out of the euro, Jeroen Dijsselbloem, the Dutch minister who leads the g roup of euro -a rea f ina nce chiefs, said, “The way it goes now we’re going in that direction.” The Athens Stock Exchange, among the year’s worst performers, plunged this week to its lowest level in almost three years. For Tsipras, there are immediate repercussions. While Greece still has 12 days left before the bailout window shuts, the need for some parliaments to sign off on any agreement the ministers can broker means it’s already too late for them to access aid in time to pay the IMF about €1.5 billion ($1.7 billion) at the end of the month, according to Dijsselbloem. “Let’s say that we do reach an agreement; it’s unthinkable that the implementation and then disbursement will also have to take place before the end of the month,” Dijsselbloem said. “That is simply impossible.” To get its hands on some money, Greece will now look to extract am extension of its bailout agreement at a June 22 summit that will bring Tsipras and Germany’s Angela Merkel, who has tried to smooth out tensions, in the same room. That EU meeting will start at 7 p.m. in Brussels. Increasingly isolated among his European peers, Tsipras was in Saint Petersburg to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin though there was little sign any financial help would come out of it. Economy Minister Alexei Ulyukayev said Russia wasn’t ready to buy Greece’s debt or bonds. The gathering in Luxembourg highlighted the disconnect between what the Greek leadership sees as its truth—vulturous creditors out to squeeze a small, vulnerable country—and what the rest of the euro members say is the reality: Without further belttightening, it’s over for Greece.

THE WORLD Bloomberg News

B31

Sports BusinessMirror

S, J , 

mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao

HENRIK STENSON (left) and Dustin Johnson share US Open lead. AP

ONE MYSTERY SOLVED,

ANOTHER DEEPENS B D F | The Associated Press

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NIVERSITY Place, Washington—One mystery was solved on Thursday in the US Open. Chambers Bay can be as hard as the US Golf Association wants it to be. Henrik Stenson and Dustin Johnson shared the lead at five-under 65, and the other 23 players who managed to break par in a gentle debut of the new golf course off Puget Sound agreed that it likely will only get tougher the rest of the way. Another mystery deepened. Tiger Woods. In a hole deeper than that bunker he found by topping a 3-wood on his final hole, Woods sunk to another low with the highest opening round of his Professional Golfers’ Association Tour career and his worst score by three shots in two decades at the US Open. He shot an 80, which would have been even more shocking if he hadn’t had two scores even worse already this year. “I fought. I fought hard. And that was my number,” Woods said. At least this time he had company. Woods beat only two players in the 156-man field. One of them was Rickie Fowler, who shot an 81. Their scores were hardly a ANOTHER

day, another round in the 80s for Tiger Woods. AP

reflection of the way Chambers Bay was playing. Johnson was flawless and powerful. His only mistake came on his final hole when he pulled a 6-iron on the par-3 ninth over the green and made his only bogey. Stenson, among the cynical of Chambers Bay when he first saw it, birdied four of his last five holes. He poured in a 25-footer on the 18th for his 65. They had a one-shot lead over Patrick Reed. Matt Kuchar, Ben Martin and Brian Campbell, the amateur who just finished his college career at Illinois, were at 67. In the group one shot behind was Masters champion Jordan Spieth, a 21-year-old Texan who has been around long enough to know that anything around par is considered good work at a US Open. “I think if I did it three more times, I’d be in really good position come Sunday,” Spieth said. “No complaints there.’ Rory McIlroy had a rough day. He was frustrated with the bumpy greens and shot 72. Several tees were moved forward. Several pins were in spots where the slopes could be used to get the ball close. Complaints—except for the greens—were at minimum. “My guess was there would be 20 to 30 guys under par after today, and by the end there will be barely any,” Geoff Ogilvy said after his 69. “With a course like this, I would have thought that would be a sensible strategy to keep us all happy on Thursday and then gradually

wear us down.” Woods wasn’t happy, though he managed a few laughs. “The bright side is at least I kicked Rickie’s butt today,” he said. Woods said he was on the right path with his new swing, but it was taking time and he was trying his hardest. That’s the message he gave at Memorial after his 85, yet his struggles were never more exposed than at the toughest test in golf, a major he has won three times. From the side of a hill in deep, yellow grass, he hit one shot in which the club came out of his hand and landed some 15 feet behind him. That would have been an image that defined this day at Chambers Bay—until he got to No. 18 and hit a shot with which millions of hackers could identify. Leave it to Woods to steal the show at the US Open, even if he wanted to hide. Chambers Bay showed off some of its nuances. Camilo Villegas took four shots to get out of a bunker on No. 12 that ruined his birdie-birdie start. Jason Day was motoring along toward the leaders until a stiff breeze showed up off Puget Sound and he left his tee shot on the par-3 15th hole some 15 yards short of the green, buried in the sand just beyond a mound of tall fescue. Day still managed a 68. “It’s only going to get tougher and tougher as the

TIGER AT HIS WORST U

NIVERSITY PLACE, Washington—The US Open used to be the place Tiger Woods showed why he was the best. On Thursday, the tournament exposed him at his worst. Another round full of miscues and flat-out bad shots. Another time signing a scorecard he wouldn’t have dreamed possible in his prime. Woods struggled from the opening hole in a late-afternoon round at Chambers Bay, once again showing startling holes in a game that was once beyond reproach. He finished with a 10-over 80 that left him ahead of only playing partner Rickie Fowler and an assistant club pro named Rich Berberian

Jr. among 156 players in a major championship he has won three times. Worst of all, he embarrassed himself on prime-time TV with a topped 3-wood on the 18th hole that ended up deep in a cavernous bunker that no one with the US Golf Association figured any player would find all week long. If that 12-foot bunker wasn’t deep enough, Woods finds himself in another huge hole: 15 strokes behind the leaders and in serious danger of missing the cut on Friday unless he can come up with a low round. “It’s one of those things, just got to work through it,” Woods said. “I’m trying as hard as I can to do it, and for some reason, I just can’t get the consistency that I’d like to have out there.” A day earlier, he stayed late on the practice range at Chambers Bay trying to groove the

new swing he believes will eventually bring him back to the top again. But Woods couldn’t bring it to the course on a day where he could have made a highlight reel of bloopers and bad shots. He left balls in bunkers, missed 3-foot putts that didn’t come close to the hole. Trying to hit it out of the deep grass on a hill on the eighth hole, the club slipped from his hands and went flying over the hill in a sequence that was comically replayed on social-media sites. He was all smiles while shaking hands with playing partner Louis Oosthuizen and Fowler, but it seemed more like a smile of relief that it was all over. “That wasn’t that bad after my second shot,” he told Oosthuizen as they walked off the green after Woods salvaged a closing bogey. Woods had the same smile as he answered a few questions after his round,

week goes on and everyone knows that,” Day said. “It’s all about the attitude. You have to have a good attitude in US Opens. It’s easy to play yourself out of the tournament real quick here.” The first time Stenson saw Chambers Bay, he walked the course without playing it. The Swede did just fine with clubs in his hand. “One day out of four done, and we’re right there with where we want to be,” Stenson said. “It’s still a long journey until Sunday afternoon.” Johnson lost a chance to win the US Open at Pebble Beach five years ago with an 82 in the final round. He missed out on a playoff at the PGA Championship that same year by grounding his club without realizing he was in a bunker at Whistling Straits. And his challenge at the British Open in 2011 was derailed by a 2-iron that went out-of-bounds on the 14th hole. But coming off a six-month break to get his life in order, Johnson is as imposing as ever. He already has won a World Golf Championship this year. And he likes the look of a big course where he can smash his way around it—and hitting it straight always helps. “I really felt like I swung it well and hit a lot of quality iron shots,” Johnson said. “So the confidence is definitely there. I feel really good about where I’m at going into tomorrow.”

insisting once again that his swing is a work in progress and that he sees hope. He even tried to make light of his struggle by pointing out Fowler finished even worse with an 81. “The bright side is at least I kicked Rickie’s butt today,” Woods said. Woods came to Chambers Bay off a shocking third round at the Memorial earlier this month, when he signed for an 85. But he told reporters on Tuesday that his game was coming together and he had the confidence to compete on the links-style course. Instead, he had the worst opening round of his Professional Golfers’ Association Tour career—by a whopping three shots. “I fought, I fought hard,” Woods said. “And that was my number. I couldn’t grind out any harder than that. So that’s just the way I played and unfortunately it was a high number today.”

Woods is seven years removed from his last major title, the US Open he won on one leg in one of golf’s legendary performances at Torrey Pines. He remains stuck on 14 majors, four short of the mark set by Jack Nicklaus, and he turns 40 in December, a time when history says players struggle to win as much. He arrived at this open a shocking 50-1 pick to win a tournament in which he used to be an automatic odds-on favorite. His first-round performance—where he trailed 15-year-old amateur Cole Hammer by three shots— showed the oddsmakers accurately reflected his chances. Still, he said there was hope. “I know when I do it right, it’s so easy,” he said of his fourth major swing change. “It just feels easy to control, easy to do it, easy to hit all my shots. I just need to do it more often and build from there.” AP

SPORTS

In a credit assessment released on Friday, Moody’s scaled back its growth forecast by half a percentage point to 6 percent, from 6.5 percent or igina lly. For 2016, Moody’s projects local output limited to only 6.5 percent. Both forecasts represent significant reductions from the official growth goal of 7 percent to 8 percent for 2015 and 2016, respectively. “The government’s ambitious growth target may be difficult to achieve in the absence of more ef fec t ive bud get e xec ut ion,” Moody’s said. The government has been faulted

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for its inability to pursue growthboosting infrastructure programs that ensure long-term growth, having implemented only a handful of those projects designed to reinvigorate an economy considered one of the fastest in the region. In the first three months, the local economy managed to expand by only 5.2 percent, sharply lower than consensus forecast exceeding 6 percent, and a performance made worse by the pull of weak government spending and by weak exports during the period. Just this week the government C  A

NEW HITACHI REFRIGERATORS AT ANSON’S From left, Anson’s Emporium Corp. General Manager Rey Flores, Anson’s Emporium Business Development Head Joy Ng, Anson’s Emporium COO Jenny Ng, Hitachi Home Electronics Asia Managing Director Hiroki Nakano, Hitachi Asia Ltd. Philippines Branch General Manager Mitsuhiko Shimizu and Hitachi Home Electronics Asia Board Director Chen Teck Beng offer a toast during the launch of Hitachi’s new refrigerators, which will be available only at Anson’s. ALYSA SALEN

PAL TO ADD TWO BOEING 777 JETS TO FLEET B L S. M

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ONE MYSTERY SOLVED C |

B B C

LAG carrier Philippine Airlines (PAL) is expanding its fleet with the planned lease of two long-range aircraft from Stamford-based aircraft-leasing company Intrepid Aviation, in its bid to cement its position in the long-haul market of Asia’s rising tiger. Jaime J. Bautista, the company’s president, announced on Friday that PAL will add two more Boeing 777-300ERs to its fleet by the second half of next year. The additional planes will bring the legacy carrier’s overall fleet count to 78 aircraft. “These additional B777-300ERs will help us continue to expand our

PESO EXCHANGE RATES ■ US 45.0170

BAUTISTA announced on Friday that Philippine Airlines will add two more Boeing 777-300ERs to its fleet by the second half of next year.

long-haul markets efficiently and economically, while enabling us to provide passengers our trademark Filipino service in the modern, stateof-the-art B777,” he said. Sought for further details, Bautista said the new planes may be used for its operations in the United States and Europe. “The lease rate is confidential.

Boeing 777s can fly to the US and Europe. The delivery is set for October and December 2016,” he said in a text message. For his part, Intrepid Aviation President and CEO Franklin Pray said: “We are very pleased to expand our relationship with Philippine Airlines and work with Boeing to provide PAL with such an outstanding airplane.” The B777-300ER is the most fuel- and cost-efficient airplane in its class today, with 99.5-percent reliability, and is considered one of the most reliable twin-aisle aircraft in the world. “Philippine Airlines’s continued commitment to the 777-300ER is a testament to the airplane’s C  A

Culture of consumption has led to global warming–Pope Francis

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OPE Francis on Thursday called for immediate changes in human behavior to fight global warming and save the environment, saying that damage caused by contemporary lifestyles could leave future generations in a world of filth. In a powerfully worded encyclical, the leader of the Roman Catholic Church chastised those who would deny a human connection to climate change. Francis declared that the planet was, indeed, growing warmer, and that the dangerous trend was due largely to a culture of instant gratification. Tragically, he said, people have grown increasingly self-obsessed,

ever more distant from nature and alarmingly preoccupied with technological novelty. “Doomsday predictions can no longer be met with irony or disdain,” Francis wrote in the highly anticipated encyclical, or teaching document, released on Thursday. “We may well be leaving to coming generations debris, desolation and filth. The pace of consumption, waste and environmental change has so stretched the planet’s capacity that our contemporary lifestyle, unsustainable as it is, can only precipitate catastrophes.” At a Vatican news conference, Cardinal Peter Turkson, who wrote C  A

■ JAPAN 0.3662 ■ UK 71.5140 ■ HK 5.8070 ■ CHINA 7.2520 ■ SINGAPORE 33.7459 ■ AUSTRALIA 35.2853 ■ EU 51.1888 ■ SAUDI ARABIA 12.0049 Source: BSP (19 June 2015)


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