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A broader look at today’s business n
Tuesday, October 7, 2014 Vol. 9 No. 360
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LOW GOV’T SPENDING, REFORM LAGS, SNAIL-LIKE RECONSTRUCTION TAGGED AS CAUSES
World Bank: PHL growth to slow
INSIDE
save space, think vertically
Life
beautiful things
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ear Lord, whenever we think of beautiful things, we should always count ourselves in them. The best use of beautiful things is to live life simply and love sincerely. The best expression of beautiful things is there is time for everything. The best time to use beautiful things is when we love endlessly. amen! rick warren and Louie M. Lacson Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
Strong debutS of ‘gone girl,’ ‘AnnAbelle’ booSt box office
BusinessMirror
Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
A room furnished by IKEA exhibits the ingenious use of vertical space through the shelves placed atop a built-in daybed.
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An ultimate in space-saving is the creation of more room via the loft, where a whole new level is added. Leather chair by IKEA.
save space, think vertically By Samito Jalbuena | the.beast@zoho.com
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T may come as a surprise, but there are rare individuals who never seem to throw away their junk. Such people have been featured in television specials as “wonders” of the natural world. In their homes are piles of stuff reaching as high up the ceiling. For most, it sounds horrific, but there is a lesson we can learn from their carefully constructed habitats: Minimize the horizontal and maximize the vertical.
Organizing the home and saving space should go hand in hand. No matter how big or small your space, they all have a tendency to get cramped over time. It’s a law of nature to find room to stuff our acquisitions. Before you search for precious “acreage” in your abode, take a look upwards to see if you can employ some underutilized vertical space for your storage needs and, perhaps, fit in a few
design flourishes, too. Stacking up things shouldn’t be an alien concept. Think of that bunk bed you crashed in at college, or explain why those high-rise buildings have been erected heads and shoulders all over the city. There is no more room, except up. The space over our heads is a resource that
should simply go to use. Making the most of overhead room is a stroke of spacesaving genius. STACKABLE STORAGE MODuLAr storage solutions, such as stackable boxes made of plastic or wood, offer the convenience of prefabrication. These bins and dispensers work well to conceal stuff, while their construction into stackable shapes—with quite a number having contraptions that allow them to latch atop one another—provide a boon to the space hungry. Other than that, one can find modular solutions that can be suspended from a ceiling, mounted to a wall, or hooked over a door. The only problem is that searching for piled stuff often means “deconstructing” the whole “installation”. This is where good planning comes in the form of solutions that sit comfortably on their own level or are attached to a frame that makes access easy. Like skyscrapers, such solutions offer a hierarchy of “floors” for optimum search and find with a minimum of inconvenience.
SHELVES SheLveS are as natural as vertical space stations, and, these days, there’s a universe to choose from. With prefab units available in nearly any height you can imagine, the sky is often the limit to our choice of options. Shelves aren’t just for the wall; they can be placed in a closet or under stairs. The possibilities are endless, especially with the custom designs that decorators can think of. Also effective for the meager office, shelves provide a boon when desk space is cluttered. By organizing work stuff into two sets—the things always needed and the things needed in priority—we can get a better grasp of work-related materials. Things always needed, such as pens, staplers, calculators and the like, are best laid on the desk, while things needed in priority are cascaded from the shelves to the desk and back in the order of need. LOFTS AND BUNKS We’ve talked about shelving and stackable bins, but these options aren’t the only way people are going vertical. In the home, as well as the office, installing lofts and overhead bunks enables the creation of mezzanine “levels”, a boon to the search for space,
if ceiling height allows. In terms of construction, think of a loft as an oversized platform that acts much like another floor added to a room. That said, it must be able to hold the weight of humans and, then, some. Meanwhile, bunks are just like lofts, except for their smaller size. The traditional bunk bed has undergone a transformation in recent years into the loft bed. Loft beds keep the top bed but lose the bottom bed in favor of a space that can be converted into an office workstation, wardrobe or storage area. But, an ultimate in space-saving is the creation of more room via the aforementioned loft. Through this solution, a whole new level is added. Its inclusion and design, however, requires the prior approval of municipal and city authorities who are responsible for making sure the construction is in line with structural and safety standards. One will have to seek the advice of an architect and civil engineer when setting about the task. The search for space can lead to a number of vertically minded variables. It’s time we shut our eyes to the merely horizontal and open our minds to the air space above.
Modern deco sTYLe
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he mood in the early 20th century was optimistic and hopeful—there was a sense of excitement and expectancy in the air, a time of anticipating a future full of promise. It was during this time that Art Deco started to emerge, and the aesthetic translated seamlessly into the realm of interior design. Like the mood of society at the time, Art Deco’s aesthetic was sparkling and bright. It was associated with sleek, symmetrical shapes and bold bright colors like yellow, purple, ruby and turquoise. Furniture and other household items had a futuristic, modern look. Sweeping curved lines and angular shapes were a common sight. everything was modern and elegant. The fascination with Art Deco never seems to go away, and Our home’s Modern Deco collection brings the style’s visual drama into contemporary lifestyles with accent pieces in decorative designs, playful colors and shapes. There are Modern Deco accent chairs in bright colors and artsy designs, as well as side tables with an emphasis on details—each piece ready to make a statement in your home.
BoLd and bright orange Ansel accent chair.
sLEEK black Ethan side table
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The Modern Deco collection is available at the newly renovated Our Home branch at SM Megamall and in other Our Home branches.
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AdorABLE Asha accent chair will bring Art deco’s visual drama to your home.
ThIs purple Amanda accent chair will create a conversational piece in your home.
hong kong protests subside after tumultuous week BusinessMirror
World The
B3-1 | Tuesday, October 7, 2014 • Editor: Lyn Resurreccion
EID’L ADHA IN EGYPT
Egyptians celebrate after the early morning prayers marking Eid’l Adha, a three-day Muslim holiday that started on Saturday across much of the Middle East, in Cairo, Egypt. It commemorates the willingness of the Prophet Ibrahim—or Abraham as he is known in the Bible—to sacrifice his son in accordance with God’s will, though, in the end, God provides him a sheep to sacrifice instead. Parents often buy new clothes for their children for the holiday. AP/HUSSEIN TALLAL
Hong Kong protests subside after tumultuous week
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ONG KONG—Passionate student-led protests for democratic reforms in Hong Kong subsided on Monday but a few hundred demonstrators remained camped out, vowing to keep up the pressure on the government until officials show they are sincere in responding to their demands. Schools reopened and civil servants returned to work on Monday morning after protesters cleared the area outside the city’s government headquarters, where they had gathered for more than a week. About 25 protesters, mostly students, refused to budge from the site, and some say they plan to stay for as long as they can. Another couple hundred of protesters remained in the Mong Kok area, where some scuffles broke out over the weekend. Parts of a main thoroughfare through the heart of the business district remained closed. Student demonstrators say they have taken early steps to begin talks
with the government on their demands for wider political reforms, but actual negotiations have not started and many disagreements remain. Tens of thousands of people, many of them students, have poured into the streets of the semi-autonomous city since September 28 to peacefully protest China’s restrictions on the first direct election for Hong Kong’s leader, promised by Beijing for 2017. The protests are the strongest challenge to authorities in Beijing since the former British colony returned to Chinese rule in 1997. China has promised that Hong Kong can have universal suffrage by 2017, but, it says, a committee of most-
PEOPLE walk to work on a main road in the occupied areas surrounding the government complex in Hong Kong on Monday. Hong Kong’s civil servants returned to work and schools were reopened as a massive pro-democracy protest that has occupied much of the city center for the week dwindled. AP/KIN CHEUNG
THAI KING HAS GALLBLADDER SURGERY
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dition has improved: his heart rate has decreased, his blood pressure in a normal range, his fever has decreased.” Worries about the revered king’s health and succession have contributed to Thailand’s political instability of the last eight years. The king spent almost four years in the hospital until leaving in August last year. When he was admitted in 2009, doctors said he was suffering from a lung inflammation, though he also suffers from a variety of ailments usually associated with age. Thais hold great affection for Bhumibol, who took the throne in 1946 and is revered as a moral authority who stepped in repeatedly over the years to unify the country despite his lack of a formal political role. His fading from public life and the palace’s perceived role in the nation’s latest political battles that started in 2006 have tarnished the institution in recent years, undermining what had previously been near-universal respect
ANGKOK—Thailand’s 86-year-old king underwent surgery to have his gallbladder removed, and doctors said the procedure went well and the monarch’s overall condition had improved since he was hospitalized three days ago, a palace statement said on Monday. King Bhumibol Adulyadej, the world’s longest reigning monarch, was admitted to a Bangkok hospital on Friday night with symptoms of fever and an increased heart rate, and blood tests showed signs of an infection. In a statement on Monday, the palace said additional testing, including a computerized axial tomography scan, showed the king’s “gallbladder was inflamed and very swollen” and doctors performed a 75-minute laparoscopic operation on Sunday night. “The operation went well. His condition is satisfactory,” the statement said, adding that he was being treated with intravenous antibiotics. By Monday morning “his overall con-
ly pro-Beijing figures must screen candidates for the top job. The protesters also are demanding the resignation of Hong Kong Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying, the city’s current leader, but he has refused to step down. Some activists disagree with the partial withdrawal at government headquarters, and an alliance of students say they will keep up their protests until details of the talks are worked out. They say they will walk away from the talks as soon as the government uses force to clear away the remaining protesters. Alex Chow, a student leader, said he was not worried about the crowd dwindling. “Because people need rest, but they will come out again. It doesn’t mean the movement is diminishing. Many people still support it,” Chow said. But Louis Chan, who still plans to stay at the government headquarters for “as long as he can,” is not sure achieving universal suffrage—the students’ original goal—is now likely. “I think it was possible, but, now, I don’t think so because they [the Hong Kong government] don’t give any response and China is also very much against this,” he said. Police said they had arrested 30 people since the start of the protests. Protesters, meanwhile, complained the police were failing to protect them from attacks by mobs intent on driving them away. AP
IN this May 25, 2012, photo, Thai King Bhumibol Adulyadej (center, front) is pushed on a wheelchair as he arrives with Queen Sirikit (second from right) and Princess Sirindhorn (right) at a pavilion in Ayutthaya province, central Thailand. AP
was closely and actively involved in his country’s development efforts. Open discussion of the monarchy is also constrained by strict lese majeste laws that make criticism of the monarchy punishable by up to 15 years in prison. AP
for the royal institution. The king’s health has also raised concerns about what will happen after his passing. Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn does not command the same respect and affection as the king, who
Underwater search resumes for Malaysian airliner
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YDNEY—The hunt for Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 resumed on Monday in a desolate stretch of the Indian Ocean, more than six months after the jet vanished. The GO Phoenix, the first of three ships that will spend up to a year hunting for the wreckage far off Australia’s west coast, is expected to spend 12 days hunting for the jet before heading to shore to refuel. Crews will use sonar, video cameras and jet fuel sensors to scour the seabed for the Boeing 777, which vanished for reasons unknown on March 8 during a flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing with 239 people onboard. The search has been on hold for four months so crews could map the seabed in the search zone, about 1,800 kilometers west of Australia. The 60,000-square-kilometer search site lies along what is known as the “seventh arc”—a stretch of ocean where investigators believe the aircraft ran out of fuel and crashed. Officials analyzed transmissions between the plane and a satellite to estimate
where it entered the water. Two other ships being provided by Dutch contractor Fugro are expected to join the Malaysian-contracted GO Phoenix later this month. The ships will be dragging sonar devices called towfish through the water about 100 meters above the seabed to hunt for the wreckage. The towfish are also equipped with sensors that can detect the presence of jet fuel, and are expected to be able to cope with the dizzying depths of the search zone, which is 6.5 kilometers deep in places. If anything of interest is spotted on the sonar, crews will attach a video camera to the towfish to film the seabed. Australian Transport Safety Bureau Chief Commissioner Martin Dolan, whose agency is leading the search, has expressed cautious optimism that the plane will eventually be found. “We’re confident in the analysis and we’re confident that the aircraft is close to the seventh arc,” he said. AP
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brazilian taxi-booking app sashays into corporate market Editor: Armin A. Amio • corp@businessmirror.com.ph
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By Rizal Raoul Reyes
The best thing is, they don’t need to pay the fare. Claiming to be the largest taxibooking application (app) in the world, ETI will introduce in Philippine cities in the latter part of the
year a business-to-business platform targeting corporate clients. “We are bullish on our Easy Taxi Corporate [ETC] platform because it can provide efficient service to employees and employers, as well,
service would be done in batches. Prior to its launch in the Philippines this year, the ETC service was first introduced in the United Arab Emirates. “After this, we will be introducing it to Malaysia and Singapore,” he said. Aside from the Philippines, Easy Taxi has also presence in Hong Kong, Taiwan, Vietnam, Indonesia, Singapore, Pakistan and Thailand. The app is available in 11 languages, including Tagalog. “We are also giving a focus on all investing countries to determine if their markets are mature,” Vaz said. He said the Philippines has one of the biggest potentials for ET as “many Filipinos have a stronger purchasing power brought by the economic boom enjoyed by the country
in recent years.” To solidify their presence in the Philippine market, Vaz said their Philippine team, led by CEO Danilo Torres, is currently building up networking relationships with local taxi operators. “Easy Taxi will go and dig deep into the taxi community to basically understand how the system works,” Vaz said. He added that ET has to take different approaches, because the market conditions in the countries where it operates are different. In Brazil ET is using socialmedia platforms, such as Facebook and Twitter, Vaz explained. Meanwhile, marketing and promotions are done through the malls, printed media and public
relations. Asked about the presence of two other taxi-booking apps, Vaz said he believes the Philippine market “is not yet saturated.” “I think competition is better, because it makes things cheaper and better. As taxi companies, we want to introduce innovations and services for the benefit of the consumer.” As far as Easy Taxi is concerned, Vaz said the goal is to make company the first option in transportation. Founded in April 2012 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Easy Taxi became the pioneer in online taxi service in Latin America. Currently available in 27 countries and more than 120 cities, the app has “globally redefined taxi booking.”
Progress Software keen on financial verticals market in Asia AMD banks on mobile chip for better notebook biz share By Dennis D. Estopace
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MERICAN multinational semiconductor company Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (AMD) is banking on its mobile microchip to reverse a lower market share in the notebook business. “The Philippines is a very strong market for us. We have a very good share in the desktop [component business]. We want to do likewise or replicate it for the notebook, as well,” Ryan Sim, general manager for AMD Far East Ltd., told the BusinessMirror. Citing data from IDC Corp., Sim said AMD’s desktop component grabbed 40 percent of the Philippine market in the second quarter of this year. This means 4 in 10 desktop computers sold in the country from April to June runs on AMD’s microprocessor. Sim didn’t say, however, how many of these computers are. Sim said AMD’s notebook business market share is “lower.” Hence, the company is banking on its “Performance Mobile” Accelerated Processing Unit (APU) launched recently in the Philippines to grow its local notebook market share. Codenamed “Kaveri,” the fourth-generation AMD A-Series APU family is designed for ultra-thin and high-performance mobile PCs for both personal and professional use, according to Sim. He claims the processor offers better compute performance, enhanced graphic acceleration and optimal power use. Sim said Acer and Lenovo notebook computers are the first brands in the domestic market at present that carry AMD’s 2014 A-Series APU Processor lineup and incorporated with the AMD Radeon R-Series. Meanwhile, AMD also recently demonstrated its Embedded R-Series 64-bit ARM-based multicore system-on-chip for network functions virtualization (NFV) solution. “Our demonstration of a NFV solution on ARM will help advance the development of telecommunications and network-infrastructure products,” a statement quoted Dilip Ramachandran, senior director of marketing, communications infrastructure solutions, AMD Embedded Business Unit, as saying. “The increasing growth in Linux-based applications, and the advanced power and performance of AMD 64-bit ARM processors will help enable our customers to rapidly develop products and introduce new services with improved productivity and reduced costs.” Ramachandran explained that the NFV is a network architecture concept based on virtualizing classes of network node functions into building blocks. “These blocks can be interconnected to create communications services, but this process is complicated and requires long development cycles, must adhere to industry standards for quality and performance and relies on expertise of hardware and software specialists.” AMD demonstrated the world’s first NFV solution powered by a 64-bit Advanced RISC (reduced instruction set computing) Machines, or ARM, based processor, including traffic between ARM and x86 architectures, at the ARM Tech Con in Santa Clara, California, on October 2.
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OP executives of business rules management (BRM) system software-maker Progress Software Corp. expressed keen interest on the financial verticals market in Asia. “Southeast Asia’s next, that’s what we’re focusing on more,” Asia Pacific and Japan Managing Director Stephen McNulty said in a news conference in Singapore. McNulty spoke before the Bedford, Massachusetts-based firm reported on September 25 that 6.22 percent, or $4.93 million, of its thirdquarter 2014 revenue from continuing operation of $79.274 million was contributed by Asia. But while the firm reported income from continuing operations was $11.1 million compared to $7.2 million in the third quarter of last year, contribution of Asia slid by 4.7 percent from 5.171 million. The company opened its Japan office last year and supported start-up firms in India in September. McNulty also said in the news conference in mid-September that they are encouraging independent software vendors in Asia to participate in a contest for start-ups called ExtremeTech Challenge, which Progress Software is supporting through its own contest within that contest. Participants in that contest will receive free development licenses, free product training and mentoring, Chief Technology Officer Mark Allen said in the same news conference. The winner will receive $25,000 in market development funds, with the two runners-up receiving $5,000 in marketing development funds each, according to a company news brief. Participants must, however, use the firm’s products, like Corticon BRM software.
processing could become automated. Corticon provides them with lower cost and greater agility as against doing this, making some decisions, manually.” Allen, who developed Corticon while in the medical industry, said the product has a “patented algorithm that performs and scales very well with increasing amount of data you’re processing.” “Rules interact with one another in complex ways. But the complexity increases as the rules increase. So what we have is a BRM that allows businesses to solve much more complex problems.” Citing a quiet period prior to the announcement of the firm’s thirdquarter 2014 performance, Allen and McNulty declined to provide details on Progress Software’s plans for Asia. Nonethelles, McNulty said the firm has been in talks with financial verticals in the Philippines and that Progress Software’s Japan office “has been doing good.”
digital life
HITeCH SCare John Murdy, executive producer of Halloween Horror Nights at Universal Studios Hollywood, during a tour of the mazes that are being set up around the theme of the horror movie an American Werewolf in london in Universal City, California, on September 12. Story on page B4-3. anne cusack/Los angeLes times/mct
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golden double Sports BusinessMirror
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| Tuesday, OCTOber 7, 2014 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
U.S. WOMEN WIN WORLD BASKETBALL GOLD MEDAL
GOLDEN DOUBLE
Next up for the Americans is the 2016 Olympics in Rio. There’s no reason to think they won’t be a heavy favorite for a sixth straight gold there.
YORDENI CABALLEROS (center) bats while his friend Duani Rojas (right) and his coach Kiomai Aguiar watch during a game of street cricket in the neighborhood of San Miguel del Padrón in havana, Cuba. AP
By Doug Feinberg
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The Associated Press
STANBUL—After dominantly winning another world championship, the US women’s basketball team left no doubt of the gap between the Americans and the rest of the world. And with so much young talent in the system, it might be a while before anyone can catch up. Maya Moore scored 18 points and earned Most Valuable Player honors as the Americans beat Spain, 77-64, on Sunday to win a second straight world title. With Moore, Brittney Griner, Tina Charles and a host of others still yet to reach their primes, it’s a scary thought. “This was a great first taste,” Griner said. “It leaves me hungry for more. I’m going to pin this medal up on my wall. It’s the biggest thing I’ve ever won.” With the exception of the Australia game, when Griner got in early foul trouble, the 6-foot-8 star was exceptional in making the all-tournament team. She had the first dunk in tournament history in the opener against China and dominated on both ends of the court. “She has potential to be one of the best ever,” Coach Geno Auriemma said. “She is very coachable and picks things up very quickly.” Next up for the Americans is the 2016 Olympics in Rio. There’s no reason to think they won’t be a heavy favorite for a sixth straight gold there. That Olympics could be the last go-round for Sue Bird and a few others, but with the young core still intact, as well as players like Chiney Ogwumike, Breanna Stewart and Elena Delle Donne in the pipeline, it will be hard to see the US not continuing this run for a long time. Bird became the most decorated player in world
CRICKETERS fIGhT fOR fOOThOLD IN BASEBALL-MAD CUBA
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AVANA—The ball bounced off the pavement and Yordeni Caballero swung, whacking it with a soft thud and hurling his bat to the side as if he’d hit a home run. As the seven-year-old raced down a streetturned-cricket pitch, his coach shouted instructions about a sport that’s barely known in Cuba. The Caribbean is divided between baseball-playing countries with US ties and cricket-playing islands that once belonged to the British Empire. Nowhere is more baseball-crazy than Cuba, but even here, a tiny but passionate group of men is trying to win people over to cricket, baseball’s slowerpaced, more courtly British relative. Mostly descendants of sugar-cane workers who migrated from other islands in the early 20th century, Cuba’s cricket partisans subsist on homemade
and donated equipment from the embassies of cricket-playing countries. They recruit players from the streets and teach them rules of the new sport, while exploiting baseball-honed skills such as batting and running bases. The offspring of immigrants from the island of Martinique, Kiomai Aguiar said he played baseball and basketball as a child, then switched to cricket at 16, falling in love with its leisurely pace and courtly interactions between players. He now coaches Caballero and other youths playing pickup games in San Miguel del Padron on the outskirts of Havana “It’s a game that forces you to think, to organize, to do things deliberately. At the same time, there’s respect and unity among the players,” said Aguiar, a 35-yearold unemployed maintenance worker. “There’s not a single cricket pitch in Cuba, so we play where they let us, on a soccer
field, a baseball field, a running track.” Cuba has organized cricket in six of its 16 provinces, with 1,150 registered players throughout the country of 11 million, said Barbara Delarra, an official with Cuba’s National Sports Institute. “Youngsters like it because it’s similar to baseball, with pitching, batting and fielding. It’s a new sport and appealing to youngsters frustrated with baseball,” she said. Cricket is also part of the cultural identity of Caribbean migrant communities in Cuba, the descendants of some 250,000 workers from Jamaica, Dominica and other British colonies who moved to sugar towns in eastern Cuba where they attended Protestant churches, ate spicier food and played cricket. “They kept a lot of their identity,” said Jorge Giovannetti, chairman of the Department of Sociology and
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In its October East Asia Economic (EAP) Update, the World Bank said the Philippine economy, as measured by GDP, is now seen to expand by only 6.4 percent in 2014 and 6.7 percent in 2015. In the April EAP, the World Bank forecast the country’s growth to reach 6.6 percent this year and 6.9 percent next year. The World Bank said it also expects the country’s growth to reach 6.5 percent in 2016, which is below the government’s target of 7.5 percent to 8.5 percent. “This lower growth was due to weak government consumption and the decline in public construction [i.e., infrastructure spending],” the World Bank added. “In the near term, the Philippines is expected to maintain growth at 6.4 percent in 2014 and 6.7 percent in 2015. These projections hinge on the implementation
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Mark allen, chief technology officer of Progress Software Corp., gestures as he explains the benefits of Corticon, a decision-and rules-based management system software, in a news conference in Singapore on September 11. allen said the automation of a single decision-making task through Corticon is improved 10 times during the task’s initial development. Dennis D. estopace
Progress is raising the stakes for ISVs, challenging them to build their applications using our development tools like Corticon, Allen said. Corticon, which competes head to head with IBM Corp.’s WebShere ILOG in the BRM market, simplifies and automates decision-making processes, Allen explained. For example, a 35-year-old skydiver could be appraised automatically for an insurance-risk premium, thereby helping insurers cut steps and costs. “There are no coding rules. It’s not programming. It’s like using a spreadsheet so we can take people with no programming experience and background, and in a matter of three days teach them to be as productive as somebody who is a programmer,” Allen said. He cited as another example the processing of claims that could take to only seven from 21 manual steps with the use of his firm’s BRM software. “Eighty-five percent of claims
By VG Cabuag
‘CHINA’S SLUMPING ECONOMY TO DRAG DOWN EAST ASIA’
Tuesday, October 7, 2014 B4-1
during their travels,” said Gustavo Vaz, ETI co-founder and global chief operating officer. Vaz said ETC is their latest service, and will be introduced in the Philippines before the year ends. Under the scheme, ETC will be the taxi provider for a company. Upon enabling of the application, a user books a cab using a mobile phone. The app also allows users to track the whereabouts of the cab they booked. “You don’t need to pay the fare because our taxi drivers will not charge you,” Vaz said. Vaz ex plained the company charged with a monthly fee by ETI would pay for the fare. According to Vaz, taxi fares will be recorded in the app, which will serve as the basis for payment to ETI. He said the launch of the ETC
MEGAWORLD BUILDING UP INVENTORY IN PASIG, QC
he Philippines’s weak gross domestic product (GDP) growth in the first quarter and the government’s slow spending have prompted the World Bank Group to trim its economic forecast for the country this year and in 2015.
See “PHL growth,” A2
Brazilian taxi-booking app sashays into corporate market T may teach employees how to do the samba later but for now—or at least by December—Brazilian firm Easy Taxi Inc. (ETI) would make booking a cab for company staff less difficult as its officials said.
By Cai U. Ordinario
Anthropology at the University of Puerto Rico and an expert on Caribbean migration to Cuba. “They kept some of their diet, they kept some of their religious heritage, and cricket is part of it, as well.” Cricket is most deeply rooted in the eastern province of Guantánamo, home to many of Cuba’s immigrantfounded communities, where cricket is frequently taught to children in after-school athletics programs despite the lack of standard equipment. “If we don’t have a bat, we make it from a stick. If there’s no ball, we make it from rags,” said Eliecer Brooks, the descendant of Jamaican immigrants who plays for Guatánamo’s cricket team. “We’ve wanted to maintain this tradition because it’s beautiful to remember one’s roots.” AP
championship history with Sunday’s gold. She has won three gold medals and a bronze in her career. “It was a great win for us,” Bird said. “We had one goal the entire time this team’s been together and that’s win a gold medal. A lot of people see a lot of talent and think it’s going to be easy and it’s not. Whenever you can win a gold medal and it’s a tough journey, everyone’s happy. I’m definitely proud of this team.” Lindsay Whalen added 12 points for the United States (6-0), which hasn’t lost in a gold-medal game in the world championship since 1983, when it was beaten by the Soviet Union, 84-82. Except for a hiccup in 2006, when the Americans lost to Russia in the semifinals, they have won every Olympic and world championship game since 1996. If not for that upset in Brazil, the US would have five straight world titles. “I know when I hear 2006, it still makes me mad,” Bird said of her only bronze medal. The Americans jumped out to a 13-point lead in the game’s first four-and-a-half minutes. Spain (5-1) could only get within seven the rest of the way. Moore was the key in that early burst, scoring 11 points during the opening 18-5 run. Her threepointers barely moved the net as the Americans blitzed Spain, which was making its first appearance in the championship game. “It’s always a focus, we want to punch first,” Moore said. “I put pressure on myself and the starting five, we put pressure on ourselves to get a good start, set the tone for the game.” The Spaniards rallied within 24-17, but then Whalen took over. She had nine points during a 13-0 run by the Americans spanning the end of the first and start of the second quarter to make it a 20-point game. Whalen ended the first quarter with a spectacular drive that ended with a floater in the lane right before the buzzer. “We knew that we had to come in and provide a spark and I had an aggressive mentality,” Whalen said. The Americans led 48-29 at the half and by 25 points in the second half before Spain closed the game with a 14-2 run. “It’s sweet to have a silver medal around your neck as we are one step closer to a gold,” said Sancho Lyttle, who led Spain with 16 points. “But it also hurts because we know we were almost there.”
sports be hard to see the US not continuing a golden »runITforwilla long time. AP
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he World Bank lowered its forecasts for growth in developing East Asia this year and next, as China’s expansion moderates and policy-makers brace for tighter global monetary conditions. The region is forecast to grow 6.9 percent in 2014 and 2015, down from 7.1 percent projected in April, the Washington-based lender said in its East Asia and Pacific Economic Update released on Monday. China will expand 7.4 percent this year and 7.2 percent next year, compared with 7.6 percent and 7.5 percent previously forecast, the report showed. Data released last month showed China’s industrialoutput expansion at its weakest since the global financial crisis, while moderating investment and retail-sales growth underscore the risks of a deepening economic slowdown, led by a slumping property market. Significant uncertainties remain that could affect the region’s growth, including downside risks in the euro area and Japan; a sharp tightening in global financial conditions; and international and regional geopolitical tensions, the World Bank said. “The best way for countries in the region to deal with these risks is to address vulnerabilities caused by past financial and fiscal policies, and complement these measures with structural reforms to enhance export Continued on A8
PESO exchange rates n US 44.7570
Eastwood City, Megaworld’s first township project, joined the commemoration of the Feast Day of Saint Francis of Assisi and World Animal Day with the annual pet-blessing ceremony on Sunday, attracting hundreds of people who brought their pets for the blessing rites. JENZINE ALCANTARA
egaworld Corp. said it may accelerate the development of its Woodside City project in Pasig City, as many of its tenants in the nearby Eastwood City, the company’s first township project, clamor for an expansion of their respective operations. Jericho Go, the company’s senior vice president, said the first of the two twin towers in the 12.3-hectare property is set for completion by 2016 or 2017, a year ahead of the original plan of between 2018 and 2019 opening. “The good news is the tenants that we have here in Eastwood City are saying they need to grow further, and they are asking where we can grow. [So] we offered Woodside City, and they said perfect,” Go said, adding that the current plan will add some 30,000 square meters to 40,000 sq m of new office space. “So, hopefully, even though we are still two to three years down the road, we might be able to sign up a client already,” Go added. Megaworld, controlled by billionaire Andrew Tan, is also expanding the 17-hectare Eastwood City by another 1.5 hectares. Eastwood, in Libis, Quezon City, is just 3.2 kilometers away from Woodside City, where the former Ajinomoto factory on C-5 Road in Pasig City was located. “Now they’re saying finish Eastwood, and then let’s go there. But, See “Megaworld,” A2
Daang Hari-Slex link done by Feb–Francia FRANCIA: “We’re really able to go full blast in February this year, because that’s when the right of way on the Slex side was cleared.”
By Lorenz S. Marasigan
T
he private concessionaire for the P2.01-billion Daang Hari-South Luzon Expressway (Slex) link aims to complete the thoroughfare by February next year, a company executive said. “It is not yet complete, but we’re making really good progress. So we expect that by February we could complete the project,” AC Infrastructure Holdings Inc. President John Eric T. Fran-
cia said, when asked for updates on the road venture. He said his firm, the infrastructure arm of Ayala Corp., wan-ted to finish the construction of the expressway by December this year, “but with all the [bad] weather that we’re experiencing now, it’s hard to catch up.” “We’re really able to go full blast in February this year, because that’s when the right of way on the Slex side was cleared. The agreement with our contractor was, once they start
constructing in full blast, they would deliver within a year— that’s really the standard schedule for that,” Francia added. “December would have been a fighting target, but given the strong rains and floods that we were having, unfortunately, it’s too much of the stretch to expect that,” he stressed. Commercial operations, Francia said, would depend on how fast the Toll Regulatory Board approves the group’s proposal.
See “Daang Hari-Slex,” A8
n japan 0.4128 n UK 72.2602 n HK 5.7656 n CHINA 7.2774 n singapore 35.2029 n australia 39.2709 n EU 56.7026 n SAUDI arabia 11.9311 Source: BSP (3 October 2014)