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‘WTO deal useless sans reforms’ T
SILVER LININGS IN YEARLONG SEARCH FOR FLIGHT MH370 Perspective
By Catherine N. Pillas
BusinessMirror
SILVER LININGS
he trade-facilitation pact that the Philippines is set to approve must be coupled with broader measures to ease trade, such as the improvement of the country’s infrastructure, according to a lead economist at the Asian Development Bank (ADB).
No plane, many discoveries in yearlong search for Flight MH370
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ELLINGTON, New Zealand— The yearlong search for Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 has turned up no sign of the plane, but that doesn’t mean it’s been unproductive. It has yielded lessons and discoveries that could benefit millions, including coastal Australians, air and sea travelers and scientists trying to understand ancient changes to the earth’s crust. The knowledge gained, so far, is of little comfort to family and friends of the 239 people still missing from the plane, which vanished last March 8 during a flight from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, to Beijing. While finding the plane remains the top priority for searchers and investigators, what they’re learning along the way may prove valuable long after the search ends. Benefits of the work so far include:
they will give scientists a better understanding of areas that during earthquakes are susceptible to underwater landslides, which can create or exacerbate tsunamis. He said the information will help scientists pinpoint areas along Australia’s west coast that are particularly vulnerable to tsunamis and enable better warnings and predictions for coastal residents.
NEW UNDERWATER MAPS
KNOWING the topography of the ocean floor also helps scientists predict ocean currents, Minchin said. That can help with everything from predicting where a disabled boat might drift in a search-and-rescue mission to understanding how marine species spread to new areas. He said it can even help scientists understand how heat is distributed through the ocean, which could be used by meteorologists to help fine-tune weather forecasts.
IN the Indian Ocean west of Australia, where experts believe the plane crashed, scientists have been mapping the sea floor to aid in the search for wreckage. Previous maps relied on satellite data, which gave only rough estimates of the ocean’s depth. Now, using sonar readings from ships, scientists have mapped an area the size of Nebraska and have discovered previously unknown trenches and underwater mountains that rival the height of any on Australia’s surface. Searchers are getting even more detailed sonar readings using small underwater vehicles called “towfish” that are towed just above the seafloor. Scientists from around the world are eagerly anticipating the release of the three-dimensional maps and data once the search is completed.
BETTER TSUNAMI PREDICTION
STUART MINCHIN, a divisional chief at Geoscience Australia, said that when the maps are released and further analyzed,
Harvard Business Review Press Logo april 2010 v2-4
IMPROVED SEARCH AND RESCUE
BETTER PLANE TRACKING
ONE thing the airline industry learned from Flight MH370 is that more tracking is needed, even for planes expected to fly over land for their entire journeys. The International Civil Aviation Organization, which is part of the United Nations, has proposed that airlines be required to get position updates from each of their planes every 15 minutes. That requirement is expected to be in place by November 2016. A more stringent requirement would seek updates every minute if a fire is
detected or the plane makes an unusual move, such as suddenly dropping or climbing in elevation. That would apply only to jets manufactured after 2020. Australian Transport Minister Warren Truss said on Sunday that his government’s airspace agency will work with Malaysia and Indonesia to test a new method, which would enable planes to be tracked every 15 minutes, rather than the previous rate of 30 to 40 minutes. However, even if such a system had been in place for Flight MH370, it would not have made it possible to track the plane because transponder and other equipment were switched off. Because investigators still don’t know what happened to Flight MH370, airlines have no information to help them update their mechanical systems or fl ight-training techniques.
IMPROVED MULTINATIONAL SEARCHES
CAPT. Chris Budde, maritime operations director for the US Navy 7th Fleet, said that when it helped out on a multinational search for another missing plane last
December, things went more smoothly thanks to lessons learned from the hunt for Flight MH370. The latter search was for AirAsia Flight Q2-8501, which plunged into the Java Sea near Indonesia, killing all 162 people aboard. Budde said tasks like establishing common radio frequencies between nations and determining who to contact onshore for search assignments were completed more efficiently after Indonesia studied and learned from Malaysia’s experience. “These events are tragic, but they do help build cooperation and regional stability as militaries work together,” he said. He said the US Navy fleet also managed to modify its technology on the fly in the search for Flight MH370, by tweaking its sonar equipment to detect, at short range, pings from an airplane’s black boxes. It was able to use that tweak a second time in the search for the AirAsia plane, he said, albeit without success in either instance.
POSSIBLE SATELLITE IMPROVEMENTS
THE search exposed some of the limitations
One year ago, Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 vanished, taking the lives of 239 passengers and crew. Airlines and regulators spent the past year debating how much flight tracking is necessary to reassure travelers another plane won’t disappear. Now a plan is moving forward that would require airlines, by the end of 2016, to know their jets’ positions every 15 minutes. GPS: Shows pilots their position but not normally used by air traffic controllers
Secondary radar: Picks up transponder from aircraft. That signal provides the aircraft’s flight number, altitude, airspeed and destination
Terminal radar control (TRACON)
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NEW RULES:
Planes required to give updates every 15 minutes
Air route traffic control (ARTCC)
The departure controller is located in the TRACON facility. He or she uses radar to monitor the aircraft and must maintain safe distances between ascending aircraft.
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of satellite images, said Joseph Bermudez Jr., the cofounder of Longmont, Colorado-based AllSource Analysis. Over the long term, he said, it may prompt companies to improve the technical capabilities of their satellites— for instance, by having them detect different and enhanced light wavelengths. Many people assumed that, like in the movies, they could scour satellite images to see the plane veering off course or spot its wreckage. In reality, Bermudez said, commercial satellites aren’t generally aimed to take images over remote stretches of ocean and when they do, the images are often unclear and need experts to decipher them. He said there was such high interest in the plane’s disappearance that amateurs around the world studied satellite images on crowd-sourcing web sites to identify between 2 million and 3 million possible sightings of the plane or its debris. “Not one of them was correct,” he said. He added that people need to be better trained in reading such images before they are turned loose on the task. Improved image quality, he added, could also help.
A WINDOW INTO HISTORY
New air safety rules
AIRCRAFT TRACKING Primary radar: Can only show approximate position. No radar coverage150 miles from land
When a plane leaves TRACON airspace, the departure controller passes the plane off to the center controller (ARTCC controller). Every time a plane gets passed between controllers, an updated flight progress gets distributed to the new controller.
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NEW RULES: Airlines would be responsible for getting updates from their planes every 15 minutes. That could be via ground radar, by satellite while flying over oceans or having the pilots verbally report their location over radio.
ROBIN BEAMAN, a marine geologist at Australia’s James Cook University, said the underwater maps will help show scientists how Earth’s crust stretched and pulled apart millions of years ago, a process that is continuing today and is slowly pushing Australia away from Antarctica. “It’s fitting the pieces of the puzzle back together. And it’s not just an academic exercise,” Beaman said. “The great gas resources for Australia are in the west, and if you fit that jigsaw back, you get more of a picture of how those gas resources were created.” Dave Gallo, the director of special projects at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts, said less than 8 percent of the underwater world has been explored. “It’s more daunting than looking on Mars because there’s no light,” he said. “So we’re in a completely unknown world in mountains that are the most rugged on earth. There’s no maps, so it’s all basic, pure exploration with a mission that not only are we exploring, but we’re also looking for an aircraft.” Minchin said that everybody involved in the search continues to hope the plane will be found. “If not, there is a silver lining,” he said. “The data will be useful to science for many years to come.”
perspective
*A second phase to the proposed rules is that, any plane with 19 seats or more, built after 2020, would be required to automatically transmit its location every minute if the plane deviated from its route, made an unusual move such as a sudden drop or climb in elevation, or if a fire was detected. Pilots could not disable the system. Sources: AP, Howstuffworks.com, BBC
Graphic: Greg Good, TNS
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data monopolists like google a threat to the economy Page 2
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DATA MONOPOLISTS LIKE GOOGLE ARE THREATENING THE ECONOMY
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HE White House recently released a repo rt about the danger of big data in our lives. The report’s main focus was the same old topic of how big data can hurt customer privacy. However, big data holds many other risks. Chief among them, to my mind, is the threat to freemarket competition. As ever-increasing amounts of data are collected by businesses, opportunities arise to build new markets and products based on this data. Th at is all good. But what happens next? Data becomes the barrier-to-entry to the market and thus prevents new competitors from entering. As a result of the established player’s access to vast amounts of proprietary data, overall industry competitiveness suffers. Th is hurts the economy. Federal regulators must ask themselves: Should data that only one company owns, to the extent that it prevents others from entering the market, be considered a form of monopoly? For example, Google revolutionized the search market in 1996 when it introduced a search-engine algorithm based on the concept of web site importance. But most modern search engines are based on algorithms combining thousands of factors. Today the most prominent factors are historical search query logs and their corresponding search result clicks. Studies show that historical search improves results up to 31 percent. But new players cannot enter the market and compete with the established players who have deep records of user behavior.
This dynamic isn’t limited only to Internet search. Given the importance of data to every industry, data-based barriers to entry can affect anything from agriculture, where equipment data helps farms improve yields, to academia, where school performance data improves education. Even in medicine, hospitals specializing in certain diseases become the sole owners of medical data that could be mined for a potential cure. The biggest corporate players have the biggest data advantage. McKinsey calculates that in 15 out of 17 sectors in the US economy, companies with more than 1,000 employees store, on average, over 235 terabytes of data— more data than is contained in the entire Library of Congress. We need to start thinking about data as a strategy. It should adhere to the same competitive standards as other business strategies. Data monopolists’ ability to block competitors from entering the market is not markedly different from that of the oil monopolist Standard Oil, for example. Perhaps the time has come for a Sherman Antitrust Act —but for data. Studies have shown that around 70 percent of organizations still aren’t doing much with big data. If that’s your company, you’ve probably already lost to the data monopolists. Kira Radinsky is the chief technology officer and cofounder of SalesPredict.
Homework that helps coaching stick TEAM LEADERS NEED BETTER DATA, FASTER M S B M V
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TUDY performance inside any organization and one finding leaps out at you: the variation in performance between two teams in the same organization doing precisely the same kind of work. Whether that performance is measured as perperson productivity, quality, employee engagement, customer satisfaction or accidents on the job, you still find significant range in the performance metrics. Your team leader is the one who makes the difference. Performance and engagement are created in the context of a team and a team leader, or not created at all. The most important decision an organization makes on any subject is not strategy, marketing or capital allocation. It is who you make team leader. So you might think that the tools and processes that address performance and engagement inside an organization would focus on serving the team leader. But they don’t. Our entire suite of people systems misses its most important audience. Take employee engagement. Though the company can provide support and tools, the actual work environment is in the hands of each team leader. Yet, the data on employee engagement first goes to human resources for vetting, and then to senior management, where patterns are explained and improve-
ments celebrated. Often months pass before the data cascades down to team leaders, where, inevitably, the information is dismissed as too stale or too abstract, with the broad patterns irrelevant. To build engagement in our organizations, we need to redesign our system so that it delivers real-time data to the right audience: team leaders. Similarly, the intended audience for most performance management systems is the organization, not the team leader. Once broad priorities have been communicated, the team leader’s chief concerns are: a) what are the strengths and capabilities of each team member? and b) how can I focus each person on the right outcomes this week and the next? It’s a challenge to design tools that are simple, agile and flexible enough to support team leaders in answering these questions, but it will be impossible if we don’t keep in mind whom the tools are actually for. Designing these tools for team leader means they will be constantly in use, and will generate real-time, reliable data. Th is is the brass ring for any organization—to be able to see, right now, which teams are most productive and engaged, and which aren’t.
ANAGERS can have a powerful, positive impact on their employees’ performance, engagement and development through coaching. When skillfully done, coaching can help employees clarify goals and make progress toward achieving them. But many managers stop the coaching process at the end of each conversation. You’re likely to get better results if you end each session with something for your employee to work on independently—homework. Coaching homework might come
in the form of an inquiry to ponder, an assignment to complete or an experiment to try. Occasionally, you might also agree on homework for yourself, such as seeking authorization for training expenditures. Homework should help an employee make progress toward achieving a goal that he cares about. So it’s important to discuss what behaviors and experiences are likely to help achieve those goals, as well as what metrics can measure progress. Assignments vary according to the type of coaching. For example, performance coaching homework
often focuses on practicing a skill (such as facilitating team meetings) or devising and implementing a solution to a performance challenge (such as delegating work). To dentify meaningful homework for career development, for example, start by asking questions about the employee’s goals: ■ What would you like to learn during the next quarter? ■ What projects would you most like to work on? ■ How would they serve your goals? ■ In what ways do you think you could add greater value to the organization?
■ Improvement in what skill would have the biggest impact on your career development? Effective coaching homework is always employee-centered. The homework should never be busywork that creates low-value tasks. It’s a best practice to have the employee record and share what he did, including any challenges, and what the results were. In addition to boosting your employee’s learning, homework will also help you develop as a coach.
Monique Valcour is a professor of management at EDHEC Business School in France.
Why people trust human judgment over algorithms
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OU’D think after years of using Google Maps we’d trust that it knows what it’s doing. Still we think, “Maybe taking the back roads would be faster.” That’s an example of what researchers call “algorithm aversion.” This phobia can be costly, from getting stuck in traffic to missing a sales target to misdiagnosing a patient. Algorithms make better assessments in a wide range of contexts. If people understood that, they should be more trusting. But in a paper published last year, Berkeley Dietvorst, Joseph Simmons and Cade Massey of the Wharton School found that people trust algorithms
less if they’ve seen them fail, even a little. And they’re harder on algorithms than they are on other people. To err is human, but when an algorithm makes a mistake we’re not likely to trust it again. In one experiment, participants were asked to look at MBA admissions data and guess how well the students performed during the program. Some participants were shown data on how well their earlier guesses had turned out, some were shown how accurate an algorithm was, some were shown neither and some were shown both. Participants who were shown the algorithm’s results were less likely to bet on it, even if they were also shown their own performance, and could see that the algorithm
was superior. And they were much less likely to believe that the algorithm would perform well in the future. This finding held across several similar experiments in other contexts. When given the choice between betting on the algorithm or on another person, participants were still more likely to avoid the algorithm if they’d seen how it performed and, therefore, inevitably, had seen it err. Participants explained that “human forecasters were better than the model at getting better with practice [and] learning from mistakes.” Never mind that algorithms can improve, too. If showing results doesn’t help avoid algorithm aversion, allowing human input might. In a forth-
coming paper, the same researchers found that people are significantly more willing to trust and use algorithms if they’re allowed to tweak the output a little bit—say, revising a prediction up or down by a few points. This capability made them more likely to bet on the algorithm, and less likely to lose confidence after seeing how it performed. Of course, in many cases, adding human input made the final forecast worse. We pride ourselves on our ability to learn, but one thing we can’t seem to grasp is that it’s typically wisest to trust that the algorithm knows better.
MONDAY MORNING
Marcus Buckingham provides performance management training to organizations. He is the author of the forthcoming StandOut 2.0: Assess Your Strengths, Find Your Edge, Win at Work.
Walter Frick is an associate editor at Harvard Business Review.
© 2013 Harvard Business School Publishing Corp. (Distributed by The New York Times Syndicate)
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Dr. Jayant Menon, ADB lead economist for trade and regional cooperation, said the World Trade Organization (WTO) trade-facilitation agreement (TFA) the Philippines is eyeing for ratification should not just be a stand-alone measure to ease trade flows. “ Trade fac i l it at ion ra nges from narrow measures aimed solely at easing border restrictions to a much broader set of policies: from increasing customs efficiency to complex institutional and regulatory reforms. Unfortunately, the TFA is closer to the
WEALTHY AND WISE Sports BusinessMirror
By K.C. Niña Pusing
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| Monday, MarCh 9, 2015 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph
SRI LANKAN DIVE Sri Lanka’s Angelo Mathews dives to field the ball while fielding against Australia during their Cricket World Cup Pool A match in Sydney, Australia, on Sunday. AP
AND WISE After his final two injury-plagued seasons with the Lakers, Pau Gasol has missed just four games all season. The Bulls went 1-2 while he nursed a minor left-calf strain in November and won the February 27 contest he missed to illness.
By KC Johnson
Chicago Tribune HE 25-year-old All-Star shooting guard is out three to six weeks with a left-elbow injury. The 26-year-old former Most Valuable Player is sidelined four to six weeks after having arthroscopic right-knee surgery. The 30-year-old big man labored through offseason left-knee surgery and missed one game to soreness from that and nine more to an illness and ankle issues. Even the fellow 34-year-old sat for 19 games with a right-ankle injury. Anyone who guessed Pau Gasol would be the healthiest from a starting five also featuring Jimmy Butler, Derrick Rose, Joakim Noah and Mike Dunleavy should have gone to Las Vegas, which is where the Bulls’ brass was last summer when they signed the free-agent Spaniard during summer-league action. “I’m just happy that I’ve been able to stay healthy,” Gasol said. “Don’t want to jinx it, right?” Right. After his final two injury-plagued seasons with the Lakers, Gasol has missed just four games all season. The Bulls went 1-2 while he nursed a minor left-calf strain in November and won the February 27 contest he missed to illness. Other than that, Gasol, who turned 34 last July, has proven remarkably durable. “We try to work to prevent injuries, prepare yourself for the marathon that the National Basketball Association [NBA] season is,” he said. “So far it has been great this season. I couldn’t be happier with my health situation. It has been really positive and has allowed me to play at a high level every game.” There is luck involved, to be sure. And Gasol empathized with his teammates’ various plights. But this healthy 14th season is exactly what Gasol needed after missing 55 games his last two seasons in Los Angeles. Gasol endured—deep breath here— patella tendinitis in his knees, a concussion, a strained groin, the rupture of his fascia and a scary bout with vertigo. This laundry list turned one of the most earnest and accessibly friendly players in the league occasionally sullen. “I’m not a happy man when I’m injured. My mood changes quite a bit. I have my dark days when I’m just pissed off,” Gasol said. “It’s frustrating. Being injured stops you from doing what you love and helping your team on the floor. You have to be patient but it tests your patience. It’s hard to stay positive. “But you have to do the work, focus on the rehab and do whatever you can to get yourself healthy and back on the floor as soon as possible.” Before the last two seasons, Gasol had proven durable. Six times in his first 13 seasons, Gasol played in at least 78 games, including three 82-game seasons.
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Gasol also missed just one game in the lockout-shortened, 66game season. This current run of health began with activity. Gasol got into game shape training with and playing for the Spanish national team in last summer’s Fiba World Cup. “That was the plan,” Gasol said. “The World Cup gave me good confidence and rhythm going into the season and this new stage of my career.” Gasol also worked with his personal trainer and personal strength coach. “Reenergizing myself and putting myself in this position with my mind right and the motivation were factors that also helped,” he said. Good health has led to good statistics. Gasol has matched his career scoring average with 18.3 points and his career-high 12.1 rebounds per game ranks third in the NBA. Gasol also leads the league with 41 double-doubles, just two shy of his career-high. “I’m just glad that I’m playing at this level,” Gasol said. “I always take pride on consistency and efficiency. That’s what I’ve strived for my entire career. I want to continue that. That’s my thing. “I’m never satisfied with what I’ve done. I’m an ambitious man. And I want to continue to prove to be special.”
NBA RESULTS New Orleans 95, Memphis 89 Philadelphia 92, Atlanta 84 Miami 114, Sacramento 109, OT Cleveland 89, Phoenix 79 Indiana 92, New York 86 Minnesota 121, Portland 113 Milwaukee 91, Washington 85 Houston 114, Denver 100
GASOL is healthy and » PAU at the top of his game. AP
SIXERS SURPRISE P
HILADELPHIA—Hollis Thompson and Luc Mbah a Moute scored 19 points apiece and the Philadelphia 76ers surprised the short-handed Atlanta Hawks, 92-84, on Saturday night. Nerlens Noel had 11 points and 17 rebounds to help the 76ers win for the second time in 11 games. Philadelphia (14-49) entered with the National Basketball Association’s (NBA) second-worst record. Jeff Teague had 17 points to pace Atlanta, which had its six-game winning streak snapped.
The Hawks (49-13), who came in with the best record in the league, rested starters Paul Millsap, Kyle Korver and DeMarre Carroll—taking more than 41 points out of their lineup. In Cleveland LeBron James tied Cleveland’s career assists record and scored 17 points in the Cavaliers’ 89-72 victory over Phoenix. James tied Mark Price at 4,206 assists in the third quarter. James was six-for-16 from the field and had eight assists and six rebounds to help the Cavaliers win their 13th straight at home and move into a tie for second with Chicago in the Eastern Conference. Timofey Mozgov led the Cavaliers with 19 points, and Tristan Thompson had 15 points with 12 rebounds. Markieff Morris scored 16 points for Phoenix. Dwyane Wade scored 28 points, Tyler Johnson added 24 and Miami erased a 12-point, fourth-quarter deficit to beat Sacramento, 114-109, in overtime in Miami. Johnson’s three-pointer as the shot clock was expiring with just under a minute left put the Heat up four. Wade added a pair of free throws with 31.2 seconds remaining as Miami won its third straight home game—almost unbelievably, its longest such stretch of the season. DeMarcus Cousins had 27 points and 17 rebounds before fouling out for Sacramento. Rudy Gay scored 27 points, and Ben McLemore added 20. In Denver James Harden scored 28 points, Corey Brewer had 24 and the Houston Rockets snapped a three-game road losing streak with a 114-100 victory over Denver. Trevor Ariza had 19 points and Donatas Motiejunas added 18 for the Rockets. Wilson Chandler had 26 points for Denver. The Nuggets are 2-2 under interim coach Melvin Hunt. Tyreke Evans scored 26 points, Anthony Davis added 23 points and 10 rebounds, and New Orleans overcame an 18-point deficit to beat Memphis at home, 95-89. Eric Gordon scored 16 points, including two free throws with 24.5 seconds left, to help New Orleans win for the seventh time in nine games and pull a half-game behind Oklahoma City for the last playoff spot in the Western Conference. Jeff Green had 20 points for Memphis. Kevin Martin scored 29 points and Ricky Rubio hit a big three-pointer on their home court with a minute left to help Minnesota snap a four-game skid and end Portland’s winning streak at five games, 121-113. Rubio had 13 points, 15 assists and eight rebounds, and his late three gave the Wolves a 109-102 lead. Gary Neal scored 27 off the bench and Andrew Wiggins added 18 points. Damian Lillard had 32 points, eight assists and seven rebounds, and LaMarcus Aldridge added 21 points and eight rebounds for Portland in its first game since losing Wesley Matthews for the season to an Achilles injury. In New York Rodney Stuckey scored 17 points, George Hill made the tiebreaking three-pointer with 2:34 left, and Indiana beat New York, 92-86, for its season-best fifth straight victory. Hill had 15 points and David West finished with 14 points and 11 rebounds for Indiana. They have won 11 of 13 and came in tied for eighth place in the Eastern Conference. Andrea Bargnani scored 21 points for the Knicks. They lost their third straight to drop to 12-49. In Milwaukee Khris Middleton scored 30 points and hit a key three-pointer from the corner with 40.8 seconds left, and Milwaukee beat Washington to snap a four-game losing streak, 91-85, over the Wizards. Middleton had missed a three but the offensive rebound was tracked down by center Zaza Pachulia, who flipped a pass back to Middleton for a successful follow. Paul Pierce led the Wizards with 14 points. AP
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narrow definition, focusing on the more basic trade procedures,” Menon said. He said the $1-trillion hike in global trade, resulting from the ratification by membercountries of the WTO, may be an “ambitious assumption.” While the Philippines’s approval is a welcome move and will contribute to boosting trade, the larger problem of infrastructure must first be addressed. “These measures will mean little if the physical infrastructure is not improved concurrently, Continued on A2
CHINA WILLING TO WORK WITH PHL ON SEA row Special to the BusinessMirror
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hina said peace and cooperation with its neighbors in the region are key components to the larger task of securing a fairly high growth rate for itself, alongside the plan to attain a high level of social development for the world’s secondlargest economy. “China is willing to work with the Philippines to move and bring our bilateral relations to new heights,” Chinese Ambassador to the Philippines Zhato Jianhua said at the China Spring Festival held at the Makati Shangri-La last Friday. Its foreign minister, however, defended China’s right to construct on its claimed territories in the South China
PESO exchange rates n US 44.1590
Sea, and won’t accept criticisms from others about its “legal and reasonable” work. “China is carrying out necessary construction on its own islands, and that isn’t directed against and won’t affect anyone,” Wang said at a briefing in Beijing. “We are not comparable to some countries that like to build illegal houses on others’ territory.” Wang didn’t say what construction he was referring to, though China has reclaimed land around a reef known as Fiery Cross on the disputed Spratly Islands, building out an area large enough for an airstrip, according to IHS Jane’s. China claims about 90 percent of the South China Sea, parts of which are also contested by Brunei Darussalam, Continued on A12
Financial-Stability MEETING The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) hosted the eighth meeting of the Financial Stability Board Regional Consultative Group for Asia (FSB-RCGA) in Bohol from March 2 to 4. A news briefing at the close of the meeting was conducted by FSB-RCGA cochairmen Masamichi Kono (right), vice commissioner for international affairs at the Financial Services Agency of Japan; and BSP Governor Amando M. Tetangco Jr. (center), with FSB Deputy to the Secretary-General Rupert Thorne. Issues discussed during the meeting include the FSB’s policy priorities, work plan and financial-stability issues affecting Asia. They also discussed the implementation of international reforms and ways to strengthen cooperation among Asian financial authorities.
‘House to OK resolution granting P-Noy emergency powers today’
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he congressional bicameral committee tackling President Aquino’s bid to address the anticipated power shortfall this summer was likely to approve the joint resolution on emergency powers today. Liberal Party Rep. Reynaldo V. Umali of Oriental Mindoro, chairman of the House Committee on Energy, said the bicameral committee would reconcile the differences of the Senate and the House versions of the measure, as they set to resume deliberations today. “Most likely, we will approve the
resolution [today],” he said. After approval, Umali said the bicameral version will be sent back to both houses of Congress for the legislators to ratify the measure prior to submission to the President. Last week the bicameral committee failed to approve the joint resolution, after both houses expressed divergent views on the nopass-on scheme and time frame of the special powers. The Legislative chamber wanted the government primarily to use the so-called Interruptible Load Program (ILP) in generating addi-
tional power capacity. However, the Senate said the adoption of the ILP would cost consumers P7 to P8 per kilowatt-hour more under its version of the emergency powers. But the lower chamber pushed for the no-pass-on scheme in using the ILP, as it eyed tapping the Malampaya Funds for subsidy. On the time frame, the Senate wanted the special powers extended until 2016, while the House of Representatives only wanted it operational from March to July. See “Emergency powers,” A2
n japan 0.3676 n UK 67.2939 n HK 5.6948 n CHINA 7.0472 n singapore 32.2140 n australia 34.5505 n EU 48.6985 n SAUDI arabia 11.7754 Source: BSP (6 March 2015)