BusinessMirror
three-time rotary club of manila journalism awardee 2006, 2010, 2012
U.N. Media Award 2008
www.businessmirror.com.ph
Sports BusinessMirror
C | T, N , mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
HOUSTON MOVES TO 5-0, TOP MIAMI BY 17 POINTS
T
HOUSTON Rockets center Dwight Howard (12) uses his left hand to shoot over Miami Heat forward Chris Bosh. AP
IAMI—James Harden had 25 points, 10 assists and nine rebounds; and Dwight Howard added 26 points and 10 boards, as the Houston Rockets remained unbeaten with a 108-91 win over the Miami Heat, 108-91, on Tuesday. Trevor Ariza added 19 points for the Rockets (5-0), who used a 13-0 run late in the fourth quarter to pull away. Chris Bosh scored 21 points for Miami (3-1). Dwyane Wade added 19; and Shawne Williams and Mario Chalmers each scored 12. Portland’s Damian Lillard snapped out of a shooting slump with 27 points as the Trail Blazers held Cleveland star LeBron James to just 11 in a 101-82 win over the Cavaliers. Lillard was nursing an abdominal strain but had 15 points by halftime. He averaged just 13.7 points on 11-for-41 shooting in the first three games. Wesley Matthews finished with 21 points as the Blazers (2-2) snapped a twogame losing streak. At Los Angeles, Gerald Green scored 26 points off the bench and Markieff Morris had 23 points and 10 rebounds, as Phoenix overcame Kobe Bryant’s 39-point performance to beat the Lakers, 112-106, and keep Los Angeles winless. Isaiah Thomas scored 22 points in a reserve role for the Suns, who survived a fourth-quarter surge led by Bryant to beat the Lakers for the second time in seven days. Bryant went 14-for-37 for the Lakers, who are off to their first 0-5 start since the 1957-and-1958 Minneapolis Lakers lost their first seven games. The Toronto Raptors defeated the Oklahoma City Thunder, 100-88, after DeMar DeRozan scored 16 points and Patrick Patterson had 14. Lou Williams scored nine of his 12 points in the fourth quarter and Tyler Hansbrough got eight of his 12 at the free-throw line as the Raptors improved to 3-1. Serge Ibaka had 25 points and 11 rebounds for a short-handed Oklahoma City. In other games, Pau Gasol had 16 points and 13 rebounds as the Chicago Bulls beat the winless Orlando Magic, 98-90; the Milwaukee Bucks beat the Indiana Pacers, 8781; the Washington Wizards downed the New York Knicks, 98-83; and the New Orleans Pelicans were 100-91 winners over the Charlotte. AP
FIFA RACISM ADVISER FEARS BOYCOTT OF 2018 WCUP AGENT: GRINER CUT BUT OK IN KNIFE ATTACK IN CHINA B D F The Associated Press
WOMEN’S National Basketball Association (WNBA) star Brittney Griner was cut on the elbow by a man in a knife attack in China but didn’t need to go to the hospital, her agent told the Associated Press on Tuesday. Agent Lindsay Kagawa Colas said Griner sustained a small cut as her team was boarding a bus after practice on Monday in what she called a random attack. Colas said the 6-foot-8 (2.03-meter) player was wearing a winter coat and that the knife barely cut her skin. Griner didn’t require stitches. The agent said the man also stabbed one of Griner’s teammates, but that she was wearing two jackets and the knife didn’t go through. Colas said the man was yelling as he chased the players onto the bus. She said he left the scene, then returned covered in blood and was apprehended by Chinese authorities. It was not immediately clear in which city this happened. Griner plays in the WNBA with the Phoenix Mercury. This is her second season in China and first with the Beijing Great Wall. The team was preparing for a road game against Liaoning Hengye.
DOHA, Qatar—International Football Federation (Fifa) antiracism adviser Tokyo Sexwale believes black players could boycott the 2018 World Cup and urged Russian President Vladimir Putin to demand tougher action against racism in football. Sexwale, who was an antiapartheid campaigner and former political prisoner on Robben Island, is against a boycott, but expressed concern in an interview with the Associated Press about the growing number of racist incidents in the Russian league. “There is a threat black players will say they are not going to Russia [for the World Cup]—we can’t have that,” Sexwale said on Tuesday on the sidelines of the Doha Goals conference. “I am talking as a Fifa person and a citizen of the world—it can’t go that far.... Once these things start and you don’t act as leaders, these things snowball.” Although Union of European Football Association (UEFA) has punished Russian clubs for racism at Champions League matches in recent years, the national federation has appeared less willing to tackle abuse. Sexwale is urging his “personal friend” Putin to intervene. “Show that leadership, be the Putin the world knows, be tough,” said Sexwale, a former South African government minister who is an adviser to Fifa’s antiracism task force. “Failure to do so, we could be talking something different about the 2018 World Cup...
RUSSIAN President Vladimir Putin (left) and International Football Federation President Sepp Blatter have to deal with the racism issue in the 2018 World Cup in Moscow. AP
you will have people saying they will not go to Russia.” The Russian Football Union has been criticized for taking no action against FC Rostov Coach Igor Gamula for saying last week he wouldn’t sign a defender from Cameroon because the club has “enough dark-skinned players, we’ve got six of the things.” Gamula apologized after the agent of Rostov defender Siyanda Xulu, a South Africa international, said that five African players on the team threatened to sit out Monday’s training. Sexwale said an apology alone wasn’t enough, pointing to how the National Basketball Association forced Donald Sterling to sell the Los Angeles Clippers and banned him for life over racism. South African Football Association
President Danny Jordaan wrote to Fifa President Sepp Blatter on Monday “expressing concerns,” according to Sexwale. “For the Russian federation to be seen to be serious, we need them to take stern action. The world took stern action against South Africa [over apartheid], it was expelled from Fifa,” Sexwale said, stopping short of calling for Russia to face the same sanction. CSKA Moscow has been forced to play Champions League games without fans this season because of fan abuse toward black players, although Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko maintained last month that Russia has no major racism problem, saying: “I don’t know what there is to be frightened.” But Sexwale said of Moscow: “There
are certain parts if you are my color it’s unsafe....people are scared of going to Moscow.” Sexwale wrote to South Africa’s ambassador to Moscow on Monday to “caution that this is very dangerous.” “If these ultra-ring elements have their way they are threatening the World Cup,” Sexwale said. “The authorities have got to come down on the perpetrators, otherwise the authority is now going to be boycotted by the victim because people will lose confidence in the Russian federation.” Claudio Sulser, the head of Fifa’s disciplinary committee, said in Doha that the organization would deal with any racism at the World Cup. “It’s very critical,” Sulser said. “This is a problem of the society.”
sports
c1
anne rice revives vampire creations in ‘prince lestat’ Pages BusinessMirror
D4 Thursday, November 6, 2014
By Carolyn Kellogg Los Angeles Times
W
block her.” The Anne Rice of today does seem different from the one a fan might have met years ago. She sold her grand new Orleans mansion, the three-story, 47,000-square-foot former orphanage she’d restored, and lives in relative quiet in Palm Desert. Rice is petite, more than 100 pounds lighter than she was at her heaviest (she was an undiagnosed diabetic and has since had gastric bypass surgery). She’s surrounded herself with paintings by her late husband, Stan, forsaking many of the gothic antiques and religious artifacts she once owned. Rice was raised Catholic in a workingclass family in new Orleans and has had an intense, on-again-off-again relationship with the Church. She’s a
believer and admires the Church’s centuries of history, the sense of social justice and its art, architecture and music. But, she says, she “suffered agonies” as a teenager over her priests’ declaration that kissing and necking were a mortal sin. “I’ll never entirely get over the damage done to me by the Catholic attitude toward sex. The hatred of sex, the loathing of it and the denial of the loathing of it,” she says. That seems unusual, perhaps, for someone who writes erotica. “That’s protest,” she says, laughing. “I’m very proud of my erotica.” Initially published under the pen name A.n. Roquelaure, her Sleeping Beauty trilogy is an explicit
www.businessmirror.com.ph
sadomasochism fantasy. “What I write is out-andout pornography,” she says. “I think it’s a fine word. The only reason I don’t use it more often is it gets all misunderstood, and people want to call it erotica.” The success of Fifty Shades of Grey has brought renewed attention to Rice’s Sleeping Beauty books. “They went mainstream because of it. The publishers reissued them for Wal-Mart and Target,” Rice says. “It was a riot, really.” Rice, of course, has thought a great deal about the erotic element of her vampire myth. “The vampire is hyper-romantic, a Byronic hero—a larger-than-life, extremely strong, mysterious, tragic personality,” she says. “It’s Mr. Rochester and Jane [eyre] over and over again.... Basically the vampire is untamed mystery, and that’s what men seem to women. It’s a deep, deep metaphor for sexual difference. every man’s a vampire to us, in a way.” Which makes the reader not the victim but the chosen partner. “I’m sure every boy and girl out there reading a vampire novel is convinced that the vampire would never bite them,” Rice says, rapping at her table on the last three words: never. Bite. Them. In her new novel, vampires live in the modern world, listening to Internet radio and ducking cell-phone paparazzi. Most of them have figured out how to use immortality to their financial advantage, and live in luxurious surroundings. And yet there is a threat that seems to be converging on them from all sides—crowds of young vampires keep getting torched, a terrifying and complete death. “I agonize over some of the dark and cruel things that I write. I want them, for me, to be effective and authentic and dramatic and moral, I guess,” she says. When she lived in Berkeley in the 1960s and 1970s, Rice says, she used to debate with her friends about the demands of art. “If great art is really great art, it shouldn’t depress you. We would argue about, like, the movie The Blue Angel: Is it depressing or is it uplifting? If it’s great art, it should be so uplifting that you come out of it feeling joy.” She explains that she gave up on Breaking Bad because it was too depressing. So is she in the uplifting camp? “not necessarily. I can’t resolve it,” she says. That kind of tension—between tragedy and transcendence— is what it takes to spend half a lifetime writing stories of the glamorous undead. n
By Michael Schaub Los Angeles Times
Pegasus, which had planned to release an anthology called In the Company of Sherlock Holmes, edited by Laurie R. King and Leslie S. Klinger. The book, which features holmes-inspired stories by contemporary writers, is now for sale. Klinger sued the estate and won. The Supreme Court’s decision not to hear the appeal means Doyle’s estate is out of options in the US. The decision does preserve copyright on 10 late Sherlock holmes stories by Doyle but leaves most of the author’s work and characters in the public domain. It also means that holmes fans can occupy themselves by writing their own stories while they’re waiting for the fourth season of the BBC hit Sherlock, which likely won’t debut for more than a year.
Tom Hanks to publish short story collection with Knopf TOM hAnKS—yes, Oscarwinning movie star Tom hanks— will publish a short story collection with Knopf, the publisher announced on Monday. The book of short fiction is still untitled, and its release date has not yet been set. One thing is known about the book: Its stories will be inspired by hanks’s collection of typewriters. In a release, hanks said, “I’ve been collecting typewriters for no particular reason since 1978—both manual and portable machines dating from the 1930s to the 1990s. The stories are not about the typewriters themselves, but rather, the stories are something
that might have been written on one of them.” Last month hanks published his first short story ever in no less than the new Yorker. “Alan Bean Plus Four” was said to be inspired by hanks’s film and television work around the space program—Apollo 13 and From the Earth to the Moon—and not a typewriter. (Maybe a typewriter too. We will see). Asked by new Yorker Fiction editor Deborah Treisman about why he decided to write a short story, hanks replied, “I’ve been around great storytellers all my life and, like an enthusiastic student, I want to tell some of my own. And
I read so much nonfiction that the details stack up in my head and need a rearranging sometimes.” hanks’s long hollywood career includes blockbusters and critically acclaimed films, spanning humor and drama, performing television roles and voicing animated film characters. his movies include Captain Phillips, Saving Private Ryan, Splash, Forrest Gump, Toy Story, Sleepless in Seattle, Philadelphia, and the literary adaptations Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close, Cloud Atlas and The Da Vinci Code.
CARoLyn KeLLogg, Los AngeLes Times
pages
D4
expat living & extended travel abroad Make beautiful of Your church
D
EAR Lord, we believe in You as the work of art created by God to show the greatness of a Savior who makes something beautiful out of the broken pieces of our lives. The Church’s one foundation is You, oh Lord and she is Your new creation. By water and the Word. You gave everything to make something beautiful of Your church. Amen. OUR DAILY BREAD AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
Life BusinessMirror
B C H Los Angeles Times
UESTION: A reader writes that she plans to give up her apartment, store her belongings and live and travel outside the US for a year. “Can you recommend resources on this subject?” she asked. “Might be a topic of interest for a column.” Answer: There’s enough information on this to fill a book, and a quick search using such terms as “expat” and “extended travel” will turn up several of them. The biggest issue is where to start. Here’s what Karen McCann says: “I often tell people that a journey of a thousand steps begins with an online search.” She knows well some of the complications of being abroad. For the last 10 years, McCann, a California native who called Cleveland home, has lived in Seville, Spain. She details her transitions in the books Dancing in the Fountain: How to Enjoy Living Abroad and 101 Ways to Enjoy Living Abroad: Essential Tips for Easing the Transition to Expat Life, as well as on her web site, EnjoyLivingAbroad.com. She notes that traveling abroad for extended periods and living abroad—she has done both—raise slightly different problems, but there is common ground as well. Indeed, traveling abroad may well lead to living abroad, as it did in her case. She and her husband, Rich, were visiting friends in Marbella in southern Spain, when they stopped in Seville and fell in love with it. With a lot of research, the nuts-and-bolts issues such as health insurance and mail delivery will fall into place, she said. It’s the mental adjustments in making the leap that are the larger hurdle. And for that, you’ll need help. Although many people decide that they’re going to hang out only with locals—an “authentic experience” being one of the buzz phrases of travel these days—consider seeking out expats, who can be enormously helpful, McCann said, “in fitting into a new society” if only for a few months. InterNations.org, which has been around since April 2007, sprang from the experiences of its founders, who had lived abroad. Besides the forums, it offers “activity groups” that can be as diverse as “a group for
D1
art lovers...business networking, for parents and children and many more.” There’s also a volunteer group component that gives travelers an opportunity to give back. McCann also recommends Expatica.com and InternationalLiving.com. And to read about her recent three-month, nearly 5,000mile trip through Eastern Europe, go to her blog at www.bit.ly/1tac9ki. Brittney Strange, who writes the blog LifeofanExpatParent.com, agrees that support from people who are like you can be helpful but notes that being with others who were also doing an internship in Britain in 2004 may have made her less likely to dig deeper for information, which was more limited a decade ago. “We didn’t understand universal health care; we never registered with a doctor,” she said. “We didn’t know about banking.” That wouldn’t be an issue today, partly because her knowledge base has grown with time but also because there are many more sources of information that are easier to find and access because “somebody always knows somebody.” Using those connections, however tenuous, should yield specifics. John Henderson, formerly a sportswriter with the Denver Post who decided he would retire in Rome, details some of his challenges in moving from the Rocky Mountain State to Rome in a GoNomad.com post: www.bit. ly/12TSxZ6. Henderson, like McCann, had previous extended travel experience; he had spent time in the Eternal City more than a decade earlier before returning to live la dolce vita, which, he notes, isn’t always dolce. Whether it’s to live abroad or to travel for a period of time, here’s his advice: “If you think you can, do it. It’s better to try and fail than spend your days looking over your shoulder thinking you could have something better than you have.” Yes, it is about logistics when you plan to be away for a period of time. But it’s more about having the mind-set and the heartset (OK, I made up that word but I think it works) to make it happen, and you won’t find that online. Travel requires you to be braver than you think you are, whether it’s for a week or a year, and involves the joy of finding a better, smarter, stronger self that lasts well past the day you put away your suitcase if, indeed, that day ever comes. ■
Work hard, surf harder TWENTY-FIVE-YEAR-OLD Royce Opinion works all week long. From Monday to Friday, he is a senior project development specialist for a real-estate firm. On weekends, he’s swamped with work as well—except it is the kind many of us would only be too happy to have. Opinion moonlights as a weekend operator for a travel company where he gets to do the work he likes best, which is surfing. For many, being tied up with work every day of the week may seem daunting, even frustrating. But if it’s on a leash, Opinion says he embraces working on a weekend with open arms. “I surf whenever my schedule permits. When things get busy, I try to surf at least once a month,” Opinion shares. For him, surfing has gone beyond being a hobby. It’s no longer just the hunt for waves that makes him go back, he says, but the culture and the strong surfing community. “The overall atmosphere is very laidback, people are kind and friendly, and there is an air of serenity and calm about them,” he says. He finds inspiration in Baler, Aurora, natives Rommel “Okoy” Rojo and Wilson “Saddam” Faraon who went on to make a name for themselves in the local surfing scene. He says watching professional surfers on video and in the flesh has helped him learn surfing techniques and improve on his own. Though he says he is not hard-pressed on becoming a pro surfer, he admits, “I wouldn’t mind doing a hang ten in the
coming years.” Looking for the best drop, Opinion has been to a lot of surf spots all over the country. But one surf destination stands out from the rest and remains a favorite: Zambales. “I’ve surfed in Liwliwa in San Felipe, Zambales, for three times and it was an awesome experience every time. Zambales makes for a great surfing destination because it’s the closest to Metro Manila,” he explains. For his Zambales getaways, Opinion chooses to ride Victory Liner buses. The buses are clean and well-maintained, and drivers and conductors are professionally trained, he observes. “Since I have regular work on weekdays, it is important for me to get enough rest when traveling during weekends. A bus that has enough leg room and spacious seats is the ticket to a comfortable sleep,” Opinion says. He also notes that Victory Liner has plenty of trip schedules to many other interesting destinations in Northern Luzon. For travelers who prefer to stay awake during trips and keep busy, Victory Liner offers free onboard Internet access. Victory Liner has also set up an online booking and payment system (www.victoryline.ercom/ reservations) to make trip arrangements easier and more convenient for busy individuals such as Opinion. Now, what inveterate traveler doesn’t appreciate such convenience?
life
By Bianca Cuaresma & Cai Ordinario
T
Is expat living on your horizon? Read up on extended travel abroad
Q
BSP to keep rates as inflation slowed to 4.3% in October
HOW LUPITA NYONG’O GOT OVER.... »D2
Thursday, November 6, 2014
aking the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) to court is still an option that stakeholders may take, according to local and foreign business groups, which hit the agency anew on Wednesday for its new policy that is seen to make the process of claiming value-added tax (VAT) refunds more difficult.
See “BIR,” A4
Sherlock Holmes belongs to us all: Supreme Court declines to hear case IT’S official: Sherlock holmes, Arthur Conan Doyle’s famous detective (and Benedict Cumberbatch’s famous alter ego), is in the public domain. The Supreme Court on Monday refused to hear a case brought by Doyle’s estate, which claimed that authors who wanted to publish stories about holmes needed to pay the estate a licensing fee. This leaves intact a June decision by 7th Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Richard Posner, which held that most of Doyle’s Sherlock holmes stories are no longer protected by copyright. The case started last year after Doyle’s estate demanded a licensing fee from the publisher
P25.00 nationwide | 6 sections 30 pages | 7 days a week
By Catherine N. Pillas
In a news conference held on Wednesday morning, 20 business organizations aired their sentiments on BIR Revenue Memorandum Circular (RMC) 54-2014, which prescribes new rules for VAT-refund claims. The circular mandated a “120+30-day rule” on processing VAT refunds and credits of investors, wherein if a claim for refund is not acted upon by the commissioner in 120 days, it is deemed denied, and the claimant has 30 days within receipt of the denial notification to take the case to the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA). Rina Reyes Manuel, president of the Tax Management Association of the Philippines, said their legal option needs to get the backing of all the concerned stakeholders and must undergo review by all the business groups.
Anne Rice talks about reviving vampire creations in ‘Prince Lestat’ hen Anne Rice published Interview With the Vampire in 1976, she didn’t just launch her own vampire series—her sexy tragic vampire antiheroes launched an entirely new genre. The phrase paranormal romance “didn’t exist when I wrote the vampire novels in the beginning,” Rice says. But the genre, she adds, “is here to stay.” Indeed, after an 11-year break, the grande dame of vampire fiction has revived her famous vampire clan with Prince Lestat (Alfred A. Knopf: 458 pages). That supernatural romance has become a flourishing part of pop culture has been a blessing and a curse. The field is crowded with hits like Twilight and True Blood, and countless other television shows, movies, graphic novels and books, and for a long time, Rice avoided it all. “I was always frightened of being too influenced, and I would get blocked,” she admits. Serving up lunch on formal china in her house, she explains that she thought she had closed the book on her Vampire Chronicles with 2003’s Blood Canticle. After that, she allowed herself to enjoy other people’s vampire stories. “I got less scared in my 60s.... I came to realize we all make our own cosmology, and there are certain traits that are common to all of the fiction in this area. I just grew up.” emotional maturity aside, the 73-year-old author has some of the habits of a teenager. A poster-sized picture of actor Matt Bomer hangs on her bedroom wall— “because I think he’s gorgeous, and I like to look at him,” she trills—and she spends hours a day on Facebook. Unlike most teenagers, her Facebook page has 1.1 million fans. Rice is so engaged—linking to news stories, asking provocative questions and responding to comments—that some don’t believe it’s actually the author. Other writers who have sold more than 100 million books worldwide may have assistants taking care of their social-media presence. “It’s totally me,” she confirms. “I’ve had some pretty nasty exchanges on the page with people who didn’t believe it. I remember one woman came on, she said, ‘I know Anne Rice, I’ve been in her house in new Orleans and you are not she.’ ...I finally got angry enough to
Thursday, November 6, 2014 Vol. 10 No. 29
BIR stirs business uproar yet again
perfect rockets
B R H The Associated Press
n
20 LOCAL, FOREIGN TRADE GROUPS PROTEST REVENUE CIRCULAR ON V.A.T. CLAIMS
INSIDE
PERFECT ROCKETS M
A broader look at today’s business
D1
he Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) assured markets of an unchanged monetary policy in its last policy-setting meeting this year, after the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) reported that the commodityprice growth in the country hit a six-month low in October. BSP Governor Amando M. Tetangco Jr. told reporters early Monday that the recent developments—including the continuous deceleration of inflation to 4.3 percent in October, as reported by the PSA—give room for the central bank to maintain its policy stance for the remainder of the year. “The October inflation print should help keep inflation expectations in check, especially in light of more favorable money-supply conditions as M3 has continued on its deceleration path. These developments give us room to pause,” Tetangco said, in his reaction statement following the PSA’s announcement of inflation in October. Inflation in October has settled to 4.3 percent, slowing down from September ’s 4.4 percent. Against inflation last year, however, October’s print was still an acceleration from the 2.9-percent consumer-price growth in the same month last year. The October’s print of 4.3 percent is the second consecutive month of slowdown for the country’s inflation. Continued on A2
PESO exchange rates n US 44.9570 n japan 0.3955
‘Belenismo sa Tarlac’ The Armed Forces of the Philippines’s belen, made from recycled aluminum and plastic materials collected from junkshops and framed in
bamboo, gets the attention of passersby in Tarlac City. Derived from the Spanish name for Bethlehem, a belen is a tableau depicting the birth of Christ. It is only one of the many Nativity scenes displayed in Tarlac province. Judging of the best belen takes place in the next few days. NONIE REYES
OIL PRICES TUMBLE ANEW ON SAUDI DISCOUNT MOVE
O
il prices slumped to multiyear lows on Tuesday, after Saudi Arabia cut the price of oil sold to the US, a move that is shaking an already volatile market but will likely give the world economy an unexpected stimulus. The 25-percent-or-so slide in oil prices since the summer could boost consumer spending and business investment in many economies around the world as fuel bills fall. But not everyone’s a winner. Oil-producing countries like Russia and Venezuela, which have high extraction costs and whose budgets rely on assumptions of relatively high energy prices, stand to lose out. And lower prices could eventually slow down booming production in the US, offsetting the benefit of lower energy costs for consumers and businesses. US oil dropped another 2 percent on Tuesday to $77.19, at one point falling to $75.84, the lowest level since October 2011. It was trading at $100 a barrel as recently as July. Brent, the international benchmark, declined 2.3 percent, to $82.82, having earlier fallen to $82.08, its lowest level in just over four years.Adam Slater, senior economist at Oxford Economics, reckons the recent fall in oil prices, if sustained, could add around 0.4 percent to gross domestic product (GDP) in the US in two years, and a little less in Europe. China, which is the second-largest oil consumer and on track to become the largest net importer of oil, could see GDP 0.8 percent higher than it otherwise would have been. Continued on A2
Palace still reviewing next move on Calax By Butch Fernandez
M
alacañang on Wednesday remained undecided on whether to green light a rebidding of the P35.42-billion CaviteLaguna Expressway (Calax) project, even as a major business group backed President Aquino’s “inclination” to rebid, while other foreign and local trade groups are resisting the move to void the initial bidding won by the Ayala-Aboitiz consortium. Asked if the government is now ready to proceed and rebid the tollroad project with the Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry (PCCI), the biggest group of Filipino businessmen backing the plan, Communications Secretary Herminio B. Coloma Jr. admitted the Palace has not yet reached a final decision to go ahead or not. Coloma, in a text message to the BusinesssMirror, said the Office of the President is “still reviewing the matter.” The secretary added that any decision the Palace will take on the
COLOMA said that any decision the Palace will take on the Calax project “will be based on legal principles, and will be in consonance with the national interest.”
Calax project “will be based on legal principles, and will be in consonance with the national interest.” The PCCI, in a statement, had affirmed support for the government to rebid the Calax project, saying this would “maximize [the] economic benefits” the state would reap from the toll-road project, given the estimated P8.45 billion it would gain from fresh tender which, PCCI President Alfredo Yao said, could be tapped to bankroll rehabilitation of areas ravaged by Supertyphoon Yolanda (international code name Haiyan).But other Continued on A8
n UK 71.9222 n HK 5.7992 n CHINA 7.3517 n singapore 34.8801 n australia 39.2569 n EU 56.3986 n SAUDI arabia 11.9854 Source: BSP (5 November 2014)