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Thursday 18,December 2014 Vol. 1023, No.2015 40 Wednesday, Vol. 11 No. 76
he Philippines and the European Union (EU) announced on Tuesday that they have agreed to start formal negotiations for a free-trade agreement (FTA), three years after laying down the foundation for it.
amaia steps advocates for cleaner environment
Outgoing Trade Secretary Gregory L. Domingo and EU Trade Commissioner Anna Cecilia Malmström said they “share the ambition” to conclude an FTA that covers a broad
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PHL, EU launch formal FTA talks T
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range of issues, including the elimination of customs duties and other barriers to trade, services and investment; access to public procurement markets; and protection of
intellectual-property rights. The prospective FTA would also include a comprehensive chapter that will ensure that closer economic relations between the Philippines and the EU go hand in hand with environmental protection and social development. “The EU is one of the country’s largest trading partners and investment sources. We would like to lock in the duty-free market access we obtained through the EU-Generalized System of Preferences Plus [GSP+] last year, and expand this preferential Continued on A2
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BSP HIKES FDI FORECAST FOR 2016 TO $6.3 BILLION
By Bianca Cuaresma
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he influx of foreign direct investments (FDI) in the country is expected to improve in 2016, due largely to the improvement in the local and global economic conditions, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said. With this, the BSP hiked its projection of FDI in the country to $6.3 billion in 2016. This is higher than the projected FDI inflows to the country in 2015, at $6.3 billion. “The expected FDI in 2016 is seen to amount to $6.3 billion, which is higher than the $6 billion for 2015. This is in line with the sustained positive developments in the domestic economy and some improvement in the global economic conditions, as
well as the implementation of PPP [private-public partnership] projects that were awarded earlier—in 2014 and 2015,”BSP Department of Economic Research Director Zeno Ronald Abenoja said. FDI are long-term investments placed by nonresidents into the country in search for long-term prospects, making them less volatile and more coveted than foreign portfolio investments. The January-to-September FDI inflows stood at $4.53 billion, as reported by the central bank earlier, after the investments surged to a record-high monthly volume of $1.5 billion in September. “The surge in FDI inflows in September 2015 reflects investor confidence in the country’s strong See “BSP,” A2
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Wednesday, December 23, 2015 b2-3
German steps up deportation of failed asylum-seekers
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AMBERG, Germany—Faced with an unprecedented inf lux of refugees and growing anxiety among voters, German authorities have stepped up the depor tation of fai led asylum-seekers. New figures show that the number of deportations almost doubled this year from 2014. By the end of November, authorities had deported 18,363 people whose asylum request had been rejected, compared to 10,884 in all of last year. “[T he increase] can be explained on the one hand simply by the increasing number of people who are getting negative [asylum] decisions,” Interior Ministry Spokesman Johannes Dimroth said on Monday. But the trend is also affected “by the states’ increasing willingness to carry out these procedures,” he said. The task of handling asylum requests falls to Germany’s 16 states and some have been more r igorous in apply ing the law than others. Bavaria, the state that most asylum-seekers first set foot in, more than trebled its deportations to 3,643 in the first 11 months of 2015 from 1,007 last year. The conservative government there has been particularly forceful in pushing to limit the number of refugees coming to Germany— estimated at about 1 million this year—and speed up deportations of those already in the country. E a r l ie r t h i s y e a r B av a r i a opened a special center for people unlikely to get asylum. Situated on a former US Army barracks in Bamberg, 50 kilometers north of Nuremberg, the Arrival and Return Facility II currently houses about 850 people. Almost all are from western Balkan na-
tions, chiefly Albania, followed by Kosovo, Serbia, Bosnia and Macedonia. Germany considers them to be safe countries where individuals are unlikely to face the kind of persecution that would warrant asylum. Some were sent to the center straight from the border, others have been in Germany for more than a year. Most said economic hardship made them travel to Germany. “In Serbia there’s no work,” said Elvis Asani, a Roma from Serbia who is being sent back with his wife and children. “So we thought we go to Germany and work a little bit.” “I go back, but we have no home,” Asani said when asked what he would do in Serbia. “Where shall we go with three kids?” Since the center was opened in mid-September, the 15 staff processing asylum requests haven’t issued a single permanent residency permit, officials said. Meanwhile, 463 people were deported voluntarily and 170 were forcibly deported. Decisions are made within five to 10 days. “We don’t want to paint a discouraging picture, we want to paint a realistic picture,” Stefan Krug, an official with the regional government of Upper Franconia, said on Monday. “The mood ahead of Christmas is obviously a bit depressed,” he added. “But all in all it’s peaceful.” Dimroth said, unlike in previous years, none of Germany’s states have suspended deport at ions for t he w i nter — a nd says federal authorities also see “no place for a halt to deportations.” Authorities are planning to increase the Bamberg center’s capacity to 1,500 by the end of December, and to 4,500 by the end of March. AP
NYC unveils new rules vs gender discrimination
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EW YORK—Restaurant owners can’t require ties for male diners only. Gyms can’t tell clients which locker room to use. And in most cases, an employer can’t put “John” on a worker’s ID if she prefers “Jane.” New York City’s Human Rights Commission is establishing what advocates called some of the most powerful guidelines nationwide on gender-identity discrimination, releasing specifics on Monday to flesh out broad protections in a 2002 law. “ Today’s guidance makes it abundantly clear what the city considers to be discrimination,” which can lead to fines of up to $250,000, Commissioner Carmelyn P. Malalis said in a statement. Officials said complaints about genderidentity discrimination have risen in recent years but couldn’t immediately provide statistics. Some cities around the country have added transgender people to antidiscrimination protections, and New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo did, likewise, for his state this fall. Other communities have rebuffed them: Houston voters this fall defeated an ordinance that would have established nondiscrimination protections for gay and transgender people. “New York City vaults to the front of the line” with its new guidelines and strong legal framework for human-r ights complaints, said Michael Silverman, executive director of the Transgender Legal Defense and Education Fund. “These are real, every day struggles for transgender people.” T he g uidelines apply to many businesses, landlords and employers. Public schools already have their own, somewhat similar rules. Some religious institutions and private clubs can be exempt.
Groups representing restaurateurs and landlords didn’t immediately respond to inquiries about the new provisions, nor did a major fitness-center chain. An estimated 25,000 transgender or gender nonconforming people live in the city, officials said. Besides overall bans on discrimination in housing and hiring, the new guidelines speak to such specifics as balking at using the personal pronoun of someone’s choice—“Ms.” or “Mr.,” for instance. Commission officials say they understand there can be honest mistakes, but repeating them, refusing to correct them or ridiculing the person can be a violation. The rules also declare that transgender people can’t be denied access to the restroom or locker room where their gender identity belongs, at their discretion. Unisex, single-occupancy bathrooms are suggested but not required. Objections from fellow patrons or employees “are not a lawful reason to deny access,” the guidelines say. Officials point to existing harassment and sex-crime laws to address any concerns about sexual predators gaining access to intimate settings, a concern raised during the Houston referendum, though its supporters called the problem minimal. New York’s rules also address topics ranging from health coverage to employee dress codes. They needn’t be reduced to one unisex outfit, but a business can’t require dresses or makeup for women only, for instance, or bar only men from having long hair. Federal courts have upheld gender-specific dress requirements in some cases, but the commission says that such differentiation “reinforces a culture of sex stereotypes” and that there’s legal room for the city to set its own guidelines. AP
Refugees walk through a deportation center in Bamberg, germany. Hundreds of asylum-seekers, most of them from western Balkan nations who have had their applications rejected, are awaiting deportations. Nicolas armer/dpa via ap
China’s M&A boom in S. Korea advances Xi’s economic dream
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ompanies in China are merging with and acquiring (m & a) their south Korean counterparts at a record pace, tapping into one of the world’s most innovative countries to accelerate president Xi Jinping’s push for an economy led by technology and consumer services. Chinese investments in Korean companies soared 119 percent this year to $1.9 billion, led by deals in the insurance, technology, health care and cosmetics industries, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The acquisition spree is likely to accelerate as China seeks to hasten a transformation away from smokestack industries that South Korea began more than 20 years ago, according to Samsung Asset Management Co. and Hyundai Securities Co. South Korea’s spending on research, patents and postsecondary education made the country No. 1 on the Bloomberg Innovation Index in 2015 versus China’s global ranking of 22. Listed Chinese companies, whose cash reserves rose 12 percent from a year ago to 15.2 trillion yuan ($2.3 trillion), are taking advantage of Korean
know-how to serve a domestic consumer market that now accounts for more than half of the country’s economic expansion. “The proximity and the high level of technology available in Korean companies make them more attractive to China,” said Bernard Aw, a strategist at IG Asia Pte. in Singapore. “Chinese companies are snapping up acquisitions because they are sitting on a good cash hoard.” Anbang Insurance Group Co. agreed to buy Tongyang Life Insurance Co. for 1.13 trillion won ($934 million) in February in this year’s biggest deal, while Champ Investments Ltd. acquired a stake in Jeju Semiconductor Corp. for $35 million. Jumei International Holding Ltd. made a $125 million cash investment in cosmetics maker It’s Skin Co. and biological researcher Dream Cis Co. lured a $23 million injection.
R ese a rc h - d r ive n K ore a n companies are spearheading a “creative economy” envisioned by President Park Geun-hye, helping revive growth in Asia’s fourth-largest economy. Medical and consumer companies based in the country dominate the top 10 performers on the MSCI Asia Pacific Index this year, with Hanmi Science Co. surging eightfold after clinching deals to sell lung cancer and diabetes treatments overseas. Celltrion Inc. more than doubled after developing an arthritis medicine. Acquiring new technologies could help Chinese companies meet demand for a growing domestic market. Consumption accounted for more than 58 percent of the nation’s expansion in the first nine months of the year, versus 43 percent for investment. Retail spending climbed 11.2 percent in November, its fastest pace this year. “Entertainment, media platforms or games companies are among sectors they are targeting,” said Lee Seung Jun, managing director for active investment at Samsung Asset Management in Seoul, the nation’s largest fund manager. Chinese companies “need cutting-edge technology and high-end design for quality of growth.” The benchmark Kospi dropped 0.1 percent at 9:07 a.m. in Seoul. Chinese investment in Korean companies remains comparatively small.
China’s acquisitions involving companies worldwide jumped 83 percent in 2015 to $516 billion, as buyers snapped up premier assets ranging from the world ’s big gest-lug gage handler to Italian tire brand Pirelli and C. SpA. The AsiaPacific region represented 87 percent of the total, followed by Europe at 5.9 percent. Investors betting that Chinese investment will lead to sustained share-price gains may be disappointed, said Im Sangkook, Seoulbased head of portfolio strategy team at Hyundai Securities. Redrover Co. has fallen about 4 percent since Suning Universal Co. agreed to invest $10 million in the company on June 15. Chorokbaem Media Co. has given up most of an 89-percent rally sparked by DMG Entertainment and Media Co.’s investment of $21 million on September 29. “People tend to blindly pursue these names without considering the synergy effect or actual fundamental improvement,” Im said. Still, Chinese deals in Korea are likely to increase as the country’s increasingly affluent middle class spend more on health care, entertainment and technology, according to Li Xiaoyang, a professor at Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business in Beijing. “The booming middle class in China tends to care about brands and quality,” Li said. “Korean firms tend to emphasize quality and efficiency, which are lacking among Chinese firms.” Bloomberg News
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Former Miss Universe Paulina Vega (center) reacts before taking away the flowers, crown and sash from Miss Colombia Ariadna Gutierrez (left) before giving it to Miss Philippines Pia Alonzo Wurtzbach at the Miss Universe pageant on Sunday in Las Vegas. Gutierrez was incorrectly named Miss Universe. AP/John Locher
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OGOTÁ, Colombia — For Colombians, Sunday might have been the ugliest night in the beauty business. For a few brief minutes, this looksobsessed Andean nation thought it had held on to the Miss Universe crown for the second year running. But when the pageant’s host, Steve Harvey, announced that he’d made a mistake and that the honor belonged to the Philippines, the mood turned
into that of a jilted prom queen. The gaffe made the front page of most of Colombia’s dailies, sent the Internet into overdrive, and may be sparking a lawsuit. Barranquilla’s El Heraldo splashed “Universal Error” across its front page, while Bogotá’s ADN read: “Miss Universe for Three Minutes.” By Monday, the Twitter hashtag #Lacoronaserespeta—“the crown must be respected”—was the trend-
ing topic in Colombia, as social networks seethed with memes and conspiracy theories. One popular clip focused on a moment where a spectator in the Miss Universe audience seems to be handing Harvey an envelope shortly after the flawed announcement. For many, that was dubious proof of a rigged event. “It wasn’t a mistake by Steve Harvey, it was a dirty humiliation, a See “Colombia,” A2
Jan-Oct PHL tourism earnings up 8.24% T Support for legal abortion at highest in 2 years
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ASHINGTON—Support for legal abortion in the US has edged up to its highest level in the past two years, with an Associated Press (AP)-GfK poll showing an apparent increase in support among Democrats and Republicans alike over the last year. Nearly six in 10 Americans—58 percent—now think abortion should be legal in most or all cases, up from 51 percent who said so at the beginning of the year, according to the AP-GfK survey. It was conducted after three people were killed last
month in a shooting at a Planned Parenthood clinic in Colorado. While support for legal abortion edged up to 40 percent among Republicans in this month’s poll, from 35 percent in January, the survey found that Republicans remain deeply divided on the issue: seven in 10 conservative Republicans said they want abortion to be illegal in most or all cases; six in 10 moderate and liberal Republicans said the opposite. Count 55-yearold Victor Remdt of Gurnee, Illinois, among the conservatives who
think abortion should be illegal in most cases. He’s adopted, and says he “wouldn’t be here talking” if his birth mother had opted for abortion rather than adoption. Remdt, who’s looking for work as a commercial driver, said he’d like to see abortion laws become more restrictive, but adds that he’s not a one-issue voter on the matter. John Burk, a conservative Republican from Houston, Texas, is among those whose position on abortion is somewhere in the middle. He reasons that banning
the procedure would only lead to “back-alley abortions.” But he’s open to restrictions, such as parental-notification requirements and a ban on late-term abortions. Burk, a 59-year-old computer programmer, said he tracks his beliefs on the issue to his libertarian leanings and the fact that he’s not religious. He doesn’t see the nation coming to a resolution on the divisive issue any time soon, saying hard-liners on both sides of the question are entrenched and “they’re never going to change.” AP
ourists visiting the Philippines in the first 10 months of the year generated P186.89 billion in revenues, an 8.24-percent increase from the P172.66 billion recorded in the same period last year, the Department of Tourism (DOT) reported on Tuesday. Tourism Undersecretary Benito
C. Bengzon Jr. told reporters in an interview that the target tourism receipts by the end of this year is approximately P270 billion. “People now really have to start looking at a different perspective,” Bengzon said, referring to how tourism-performance indicators did not rely on tourist arrivals or
PESO exchange rates n US 47.3020
headcount alone, but also on receipts and job generation. “The focus is not so much in headcount,” he added, noting that it was more important to sustain the tourism brand. In October receipts amounted to P18.13 billion, 21.52 percent higher than the P14.92-billion earnings re-
corded in the previous year’s receipts. From the July-to-October period, receipts acquired double-digit gain, with September posting the highest growth. January recorded the biggest receipts of P22.48 billion. In October alone, the average daily expenditure for foreign tourists was See “Tourism earnings,” A2
n japan 0.3904 n UK 70.4138 n HK 6.1019 n CHINA 7.2988 n singapore 33.6095 n australia 33.9399 n EU 51.6585 n SAUDI arabia 12.6065
Source: BSP (22 December 2015)