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A broader look at today’s business TfridayNovember 18, 2015 2014 Vol. Vol.10 10No. No.189 40 Thursday, April 16,
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Opposition to perks cut mounts
GOING, GOING... FLOWN A teacher who has come from God
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NOVELS FOCUS ON GRITTY REALISM, ANGER, LOSS, FAMILY DYSFUNCTION »D4
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Thursday, April 16, 2015
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Going, going...flown
New lifestyle rewards program offers free flights at your fingertips
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THE newest lifestyle rewards program in the country, GetGo was recently launched to enable customers to easily earn rewards points, which they can redeem and use to book local or international flights within the Cebu Pacific network, for free. Photo shows members of the media with GetGo General Manager Nik Laming (center), who all flew to Cebu City for the GetGo launch.
TRIP to Cebu may inch you closer to Hong Kong, while your next banking transaction may be your way to Singapore. In line with its 19th anniversary, Cebu Pacific Air (CEB) has launched the brandspanking new lifestyle rewards program GetGo. Through it, CEB flyers, who can avail themselves of a membership at GetGo’s user-friendly web site (www. getgo.com.ph) with a one-time payment of P150, can earn redeemable reward points and use it to book local and even international flights within the CEB network, and have access to other exclusive promos and add-on services from the country’s largest carrier. Members of the airline’s previous membership program, CEB Club, are automatically made GetGo members. “In 19 years we have been fortunate enough to develop a solid base of frequent fliers, with 1.4 million CEB Club members and 630 corporate accounts. We will be able to serve them with GetGo,” CEB President and CEO Lance Gokongwei said in a media statement. “Now, our frequent fliers can get rewarded with more benefits and free flights.” According to GetGo Director for Marketing Allan Florendo during the rewards program’s launch at Mövenpick Hotel Mactan Island in Cebu, there’s a huge market for the program and for CEB, which enjoyed off-the-chart numbers in 2014 by flying 17 million passengers. “Filipinos love to travel,” he said, citing that 60 percent of the 1.4 million CEB Club members in their database actively purchase tickets and average three trips a year. As for the top-tier group, he noted that frequent fliers even fly nine times a year via CEB.
Aside from this, Laming said they are aggressively closing deals with other partners to introduce more opportunities to earn points via conversion and, ultimately, offer free flights to their members. “We’ve had healthy and positive discussions with a whole range of different potential partners with the view to really fulfill the promise that you just need to do whatever you do every day, like banking and shopping for groceries, and being able to translate all that into a free flight,” he said. Even better, GetGo reward points don’t expire. The account will remain active as long as it has earned at least one point in the last 12 months. “Unlike some of the programs out there, we don’t give you just a year to earn them, only to take them away,” Laming said. The new rewards program will also be featuring a plus cash-payment scheme that enables members to top their points with cash to redeem free flights. There’s also a point-pooling system that is tailored to Filipinos, who, according to Laming, “love to be together. They love to eat together, travel together. There’s a large family community here.” The pooling system enables members to organize circles of up to eight people and share points in one account. This way, earning rewards can be made faster.
‘GRATEFUL AND GENEROUS’ GETGO, which was launched in November 2013 as Cebu Pacific’s loyalty program, is founded on the brand values of “being fun and down-to-earth,” a rewards program that is both “grateful and generous.” “We don’t want members to take a lifetime to get a small reward. We want to make it accessible as much as possible to the majority of Filipinos,” said GetGo General Manager Nik Laming, who has over 20 years of experience in the customer loyalty management industry spread across major loyalty projects in Asia, Europe and the US. Fueled by this sense of generosity, the program has set favorable mechanics for its members. The most obvious way of earning GetGo rewards points is through traveling with qualifying CEB and Tigerair flights, where one earns 1 point for every P5 spent on base fare and select add-ons.
GOING FOR SOMETHING BIG DESPITE being created by CEB, Laming said they
wanted to come out with a separate rewards brand that’s not identified with the airlines. “The heritage of the program remains at Cebu Pacific but we are new, we are independent and we are all about making it easy for people to get free flights from doing what they do every day,” he said. “We didn’t want to call it ‘Cebu Pacific Rewards’ or anything to do with Cebu Pacific because we want this program to be used by other companies, by other partner organizations as their own and the name is very descriptive about the brand: You go out, you buy things, get things, and then you get your opportunity to go. We also want to get going right from the GetGo, so there’s a number of considerations that went behind the brand.” He added that, more than just a frequent flyer program, GetGo’s vision
is “to be the leading lifestyle loyalty program in the country that offers a compelling value proposition in form of travel, with CEB as anchor to attract and retain customers through free flights.” Expounding, Laming said they are actually looking to be the country’s premier rewards program. “SM Advantage has 6 million members, but we flew 17 million passengers last year so there’s that big opportunity. We want to be able to overtake that,” he said. “When you talk about rewards, when you talk about travel, when you talk about free flights, we want it to be GetGo.” n
Demand for travel agents grows despite surge in web sites
THE Internet is teeming with travel web sites that can lock in the lowest airfare, find you a plane with onboard Wi-Fi and even hook you up with a travel companion. With so many online sites to choose from, why is there a growing demand for human travel agents? A new report from the American Society of Travel Agents found that 74 percent of its members have at least one employee or independent contractor, the highest percentage since 2010, when the rate was 77 percent. In fact, the report said travel agent salaries are on the rise and some agents are worried they won’t find experienced agents to hire in the future. One possible reason for the rising demand is that travelers are
overwhelmed by the online travel web site choices and are looking for a professional to make sense of it all. “Travel agencies are seeing an influx of new customers who want a professional, vetted travel professional to cut through the Internet clutter for them,” said Zane Kerby, president of the American Society of Travel Agents. “If you searched online for ‘hotels in the Caribbean’ or ‘European riverboat cruises,’ for example, you’d find hundreds if not thousands of entries.” NICOLE KIDMAN CRITICIZED FOR ETIHAD AIRWAYS TIES ACTRESS Nicole Kidman is drawing fire from flight attendants for her latest role as the face of Etihad Airways, the state-owned carrier of the United Arab Emirates. But there may be more to this story than meets the eye. Kidman, who was named a United Nations (UN) goodwill ambassador for women in 2006, is featured in a new ad for Etihad that promotes the luxury and sophistication of the carrier. The Association of Professional Flight Attendants (Apfa) says her UN work is at odds with what the group says is poor
treatment of women by Etihad and the UAE, where men are allowed to physically discipline their wives. “The Apfa must respectfully ask that you—as a leading advocate for women around the globe—not lend your voice, your image and your good name to Etihad Airways, the second-largest airline in the UAE,” the flight attendants said in an open letter to Kidman. Only a week earlier, the union took a shot at Etihad for another reason. The group complained that Etihad and two other Persian Gulf carriers unfairly compete with US airlines by relying heavily on subsidies from their government owners. They have urged the US government to restrict the carrier’s access to American airports. Responding to the criticism of Kidman, Etihad said the airline treats all workers fairly and recently received a 93-percent approval rating from its employees in an independent survey. “Our commitment to the welfare, safety and well-being of the diverse group of men and women who have worked so hard to make Etihad Airways great is one of our airline’s top priorities,” Etihad said.
LIFE
HUGO MARTIN, LOS ANGELES TIMES
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BRAVELY WORLDCLASS Show BusinessMirror
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REELING
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ET them. T They’re ready. Knock ‘em dead! Those were the strong, blunt words of encouragement coming from Rovilson Fernandez and Marc Nelson, the hosts of Asia’s Got Talent Talent on cable TV’s AXN channel. They were addressed to this young woman in a red sweater, black pants and red pumps. Predictable fashion taste. What would come next was the most unpredictable performance this side of the world. The words were rough as the girl was sweet. The young woman stood tentatively at the center of the stage. She looked like she was thinking whether to stand straight or to do a contraposto, that position made famous by ancient statues where one leg of the figure seemed ready to go forward. This prompted David Foster, one of the judges, to remark how she looked a little nervous. To this comment, the woman admitted that indeed she was—because one of her favorite artists was in the audience and in fact was one of the judges. The Taiwanese-American judge and pop star Vanness Wu stood up with his arms spread and acknowledged what the woman just said. The woman smiled and pointed to Foster and said, “And that’s you.” The crowd roared in laughter. A connection was made. This woman introduced herself as Gerphil Geraldine Flores, from the Philippines, in that liquid accent young Filipinos learn to cultivate to show high education. Where did this woman come from? The tentative gestures were only that, tentative. “The stage is yours”—that command from Foster were all this woman needed to own the stage. It was all hers. The somber tone of the orchestral music was dirgelike. No one expected what the song was because the intro didn’t give any hint what the song would be all about. The voice came out, floated was more like it. Molasses and marshmallow, a bit of amber and a surfeit of aroma. The voice had a scent, redolent of chamber halls and dark castles and blue mountains and horizons that spoke of hope and love. It was a voice that could not be ignored. Classical is the safest description for such a voice but that would be a simplistic reckoning of this voice and body performing a song that was otherwise all cliché and cloying. But the young woman was enunciating the words as if summoning everyone’s understanding of the song. After negotiating the text, the singer carried the words through that voice, which climbed high and plummeted to the shadows, and glided over meadows of emotions. The story had a narrative and this woman was telling and retelling the story. Each plot and feeling were gathered in a family of notes that were remarkably different from each other. The face, initially too cute for comfort, was getting all the light. Purity was not anymore overrated. It was a cause for saints and sinners and all those in between who believe that music can
heal, save and bring one person to fame. Flores scaled the range of the arrangement. Melanie C of the once wildly famous Spice Girls, and one of the judges, was caught by the camera with her eyes wide open in sincere admiration. Then Anggun, another judge, had her hands frozen in mid-air as she stopped an applause in order to hear more. The notes went higher once more and as the woman added passion to a pure reading of the theme song to a film about the mafia, the crowd roared. Foster pointed a finger at the singer as if saying, “You are good and you are killing us with the song.” Then the song was finished. The best part was yet to come. The judges voted and when Melanie C said yes, the crowd erupted in a cheer. Also giving their approval were Vanness Wu and Anggun. Finally, David Foster was the only judge left to render his verdict. The crowd wanted more. The crowd, going for this unknown from the Philippines, wanted Foster to push the gold button that would make Flores go straight to semifinals. Foster kept looking at the crowd, then quickly moved his hand. The button got pushed, the stage went gold, and brilliant confetti came pouring down on the singer. The camera panned toward the singer’s mother whose hands covered her face as she wept. On cue, the song “One Moment in Time” played. It was all schmaltz and sensation, carnival and circus. This was an audition but the ending was more that of a boxing bout, the invisible enemy of false artistry and lack of openness to all kinds of musical forms as well as ignorance were all TKOd. Foster satisfies the metaphor by climbing up the ring and hugging the winner. Foster raised the arm of Flores. A story was told. A great artist was born. The obsession that Filipinos can be world-class is validated in good taste and not through a paranoia of nationalism and ethnic pride. There is a back story to the victory of Gerphil Geraldine Flores. She was in the first season of Pilipinas Got Talent T on ABS-CBN, the one won by Jovit Baldovino. From the start, the talent and persona of Flores was not really taken seriously by the hosts, Luis Manzano and Billy Joe Crawford. Part of the problem, with due respect to the Philippine edition, was her packaging. She carried the name “Fame,” which became the butt of the limited humor of the two hosts. Then again, “Fame” as a name should not have been a problem in our culture, where people could be called “Lucky” and “Billy Joe.” The first time Flores sang, Manzano at the wing turned to the mother of the singer and asked if Flores was undergoing a crisis (“ (“May pinagdadaanan ba siya?”). The judges, Kris Aquino and Ai-ai de las Alas, except Freddie Garcia, could not seem to accept the presence of a classical singer in their midst. The audience, however, appeared to like the “unusual” style of Flores. With due respect to the Philippine edition, the repertoire decided upon by the then-19-year-old singer called for dramatizations that looked out of place in an
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GERPHIL GERALDINE FLORES sings her heart out on Asia's Got Talent.
otherwise accessible field of acrobats and copycats. There is another problem though that needs to be addressed by this kind of reality show—a set of judges that has a wide range of tastes and knowledge not only of musical forms but of other artistic modes, be these of the so-called high or popular culture. One cannot stop by talking of a lack of accessibility. The duty of the judges, given their onerous responsibility to give not assessment but judgment, is to enable the audience as well to learn new things. To bring them to a level where their spirit can be buoyed by the power of art. There is a word for this that can work for all of us: level up. One cannot go wrong when one levels up, so why opt for a leveling down. Then, there was a concept bandied about by the Pilipinas Got Talent T judges regarding songs that are age-appropriate. This concept was not applicable to
which caught the attention of various international media organizations around the world. Besides TV5 stars, the station ID features various iconic locations where Filipinos usually celebrate and nurture happiness during the summer season—from the historic parks of Luneta and Quezon Memorial Circle to the pristine beaches of Subic. The three-minute station ID is aired during signs-on and -off TV5’s programming.
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“Please step back,” he gently asked one gentlemen during one chaotic hole on Sunday. “Thank you.” All this and afterward, during his acceptance speech, he may have become the first Masters winner who said he wanted to “thank the food-and-beverage workers.” His parents say that these sorts of actions, not the golf, are what make them so proud. This sort of perspective was the gist of his father Shawn’s pregame talk with Jordan on Sunday morning. They spoke at the house the entire family shared. Where else would Jordan stay this week? “I wanted him to know what I thought was important,” Shawn said. “I told him, ‘You know, you’re going to face some adversity out here...and this is the Masters...but it’s still just a game.’” It is a game that Spieth has been dominating seemingly since he mowed a circle of grass into a sort-of putting green in his front yard as a kid. Check out the online video clip of the 14-year-old Spieth saying, “My ultimate goal, I want to win the Masters.” After he won two US Junior Amateur championships and led the University of Texas to a national title, it was a game that brought him to his knocking knees last spring when he blew a two-stroke lead in the final round of the Masters, losing to veteran Bubba Watson. “It stings right now, but the only thing I’m thinking about is, when am I getting back next year? That’s what’s on my mind,” Spieth said during last year’s postmatch interview. Sure enough, he showed up here with a vengeance, grabbing the first-round lead and ignoring the constant charges from players he once only dreamed of meeting. “Since he was 15, everybody was always saying that he would be the next Tiger Woods, but, like, whatever,” said his friend Hickok. “We never actually thought it would happen this fast. This is nuts.” What was nuts, according to all the golf experts, was that second shot on the 13th hole that resulted in a birdie that gave him a five-stroke lead and the confidence to finish it. “When you’re watching it in the air, it felt like an eternity, you’ve seen so many things go wrong here,” Geller said. “Thankfully,ww he yelled at it just enough and it covered.” You see? While everyone has been joking about Jordan Spieth talking to his ball, it turns out the ball has actually been listening, during a week when the voice of golf’s future became the voice of a champion. Cool is one word for it. Dominant is another. Spieth is the first golfer to lead this tournament from start to finish in 39 years. He is only the second golfer in the Masters’ 79-year history to lead by as many as three strokes after the first round and never allow anyone to get any closer. “How easy he’s making it look, yeah, absolutely I’m surprised,” Rose said. Surprised is one word for it. Crazy is another. While Spieth might not officially be the youngest to win here—Tiger Woods was younger in 1997—he certainly acts the youngest. He is surely the first Masters winner who spent Saturday night preparing for his final round by playing ping-pong with hometown buddies who were holed up in a nearby Motel 6. After putting away the paddles, he watched the movie Forgetting Sarah Marshall. “It was on TV, that’s why,” he said. “And it’s one of the greatest movies in the world.” He is also surely one of the few Masters winners who walked off the 18th green with his arms wrapped around his mother and father, who joined most of his family to cheer his final putt. This group included his grandfather Donald, who insisted on climbing out of his motorized scooter and walking unsteadily toward the green to hug his grandson. It was his win, too. On Friday Spieth and his grandfather had prepared for the weekend by playing cards. “I know he’s now the Masters champion and all that, but let me tell you, he’s still just 21,” said Carter Hickok, a Dallasarea hometown friend. When Spieth took off his cap in public for the first time in four days on Sunday, his thinning hair and weary eyes made him look much older. But during the week, with a golf club in his hands, he was joyfully all kid. He constantly talked to his ball. He casually debated his caddie Greller, a former sixthgrade math and science teacher who says this job is easier because he only has to deal with one kid. “A lot of things I used as a teacher, believe me, I use out here with Jordan,” Greller said. Spieth refreshingly congratulated his playing partners on good shots, most notably smiling and giving a thumbs up to Rose on Sunday after a nice approach out of the rough. Spieth is also politely aware of fans, never saying anything worse than “Dang!” and always using his manners when asking them to move. B B P Los Angeles Times
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UGUSTA, Georgia—They came at the kid in waves, the world’s best golfers grabbing and clutching for four sweltering days, swarming him with green jackets and Claret Jugs and Wanamaker Trophies and glares. Jordan Spieth took their punches, all of them, sticking out his 21-year-old chin from the top of the Masters leaderboard and absorbing every bit of Tiger’s teeth, Rory’s resilience, Lefty’s left. Finally, under the cloudiest of skies on Augusta National’s 13th hole late Sunday afternoon, the kid cemented his place in golf history by punching back. It was his second shot on a long par-five. He was more than 200 yards from a green surrounded by sand and woods and a tributary of Rae’s Creek. He was leading the tournament by five strokes. He should have laid up in front of the water. He should have played it safe. He didn’t. He took a chance. He went for the knockout. He swung from his heels and screamed. “Go hard! Go hard! Go hard!” he cried, as the ball sailed through a cool breeze. “Go!” The ball went. It carried the tributary, landed within 14 feet of the flag, and made the statement that resounded for the rest of the tournament. “He’s fiery,” his caddie Michael Greller said later. “He’s got that killer instinct.” And today Jordan Spieth has that oversized, old man’s green jacket draped around his shoulders after becoming the second-youngest person to win the Masters, with a tournament record-tying 18-under-par 270, four shots ahead of major winners Phil Mickelson and Justin Rose. The debutante ball that began on Thursday ended in a Sunday night waltz for the ages. He wore white pants that didn’t get dirty. He wore a boyish expression that never changed. He was Tiger without the bleeps. He was Rory without the fold. The golf world now has its future on Spieth dial. This new era will be played by Jordan Rules. On the same weekend Ben Crenshaw retired, the sport has a new Texas two-putter who is equally gentle, but quietly tough. “All in all,” Spieth said, “it’s really cool.”
The golf world now has its future on Jordan Spieth dial. This new era will be played by Jordan Rules. On the same weekend Ben Crenshaw retired, the sport has a new Texas two-putter who is equally gentle, but quietly tough.
from Dallas—seniors at Texas, TCU and LSU. They became what Spieth described as “white noise” during the evening when he wanted to take his mind off golf. “It felt like we were back home on a random weekend,” Spieth said. “I couldn’t partake in what they were doing. But it was fun to watch.” His father played baseball at Lehigh. His mother played basketball at Moravian College in Pennsylvania. His younger brother, Steven, is a 6-foot-6 shooting guard at Brown. And then there’s Ellie, his 14-year-old sister with neurological issues that place her on the autism spectrum. Ellie reminds Spieth and the rest of the family what matters in life. She was at the TPC Boston last year with the whole clan, bragging about her big brothers, having a ball. Players have to take a shuttle through the woods to the eighth tee. When Spieth spotted Ellie in the gallery, he called to her. She ran to the cart and sat on his lap for the ride, and it was hard to tell who was having more fun. AP
A rising star grounded in normalcy
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UGUSTA, Georgia—The green jacket is all Jordan Spieth needs for an identity. He is the Masters champion. It’s just not going to help him get rid of a nickname he picked up late last year from a few Professional Golfers’ Association (PGA) Tour players that goes against the way he was raised and irritates him more than a three-putt bogey. Golden child. “It was either Colt Knost or Robert Garrigus.... I’m not sure who started with the nickname,” Spieth said on Tuesday during a break in his New York media tour. “But it’s not nice what I say to them when they say it to me. I’ve been working on trying to keep it quiet. And this week isn’t going to help.” It surfaced again even before he teed off in his record-setting win at Augusta National. Brooks Koepka was talking about a Tuesday practice round in which Spieth could do no wrong.
They were walking off the 13th tee when they looked over at James Hahn hitting his tee shot to the par-3 12th. As the ball was in the air, Spieth told his group, “This is going to be a hole-in-one.” And it was. On the 17th, Spieth hit a shot that was an inch from rolling down to the bottom of the green. It stayed up, and he rolled in a 30-footer to close their match. If that wasn’t enough, he has a game with caddie Michael Greller in which they toss a ball on the green toward the cup. Spieth made it on the first try. Koepka finished the story, smiled and said, “He’s the golden child.” No doubt, Spieth has done some extraordinary things for a 21-year-old. The stories have been told countless times, yet they are no less amazing. Spieth started his first year as a pro with no status on any tour and ended it playing alongside Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson in the Presidents
Cup. The first time he played with Mickelson, he closed birdie-birdie-birdie-eagle for a 62. Playing with Woods for the first time in a practice round at the Presidents Cup, he made a hole-in-one. In his Masters debut, he played in the final group at age 20. And now a green jacket for the golden child. “He’ll be fabulous for the game,” Graeme McDowell said. Most appealing about Spieth is the simplicity of his life and the toughness in his game. He is 21 and old school. Spieth has had the same swing coach since he was 12 and his father took him to see Cameron McCormick at Brook Hollow in Dallas. He uses social media, instead of being consumed by it. Spieth has the same girlfriend he met in high school, Anne Verret, who graduated from Texas Tech last December and now works on fundraising projects for a youth golf program in Dallas. He spent last week with three of his best friends
JORDAN SPIETH cements his place in golf history by punching back. AP
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| THURSDAY, APRIL 16, 2015 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
BusinessMirror
Sports
FUTURE IS NOW!
IS NOW!
SPORTS
OREIGN businessmen in the country continue to speak out against proposed measures to streamline the incentives granted by the investment-promotion agencies (IPAs) currently being vigorously pushed by the Department of Finance (DOF) to plug revenue leakages. tax (CIT) to the existing incentives menu that includes income tax holiday (ITH) of up to eight years. “When the idea came up of having a ‘15 for 15’ reduced CIT, that can only be considered as an addition, because we have to be pragmatic to the needs of the companies,” said C A
CHINA’S ‘SELFIMPOSED’ SLUMP CONTINUED IN Q1
Flores and her choice of spiritual songs, in the same way we can’t question the bristling imitation done with aplomb by Jovit Baldovino of Queen’s “Too Much Love Will Kill You.” The concept is too 1970s. With six-year old girls—and boys—belting “Let It Go” as if Frozen were an ice-cream brand, this ageappropriate concept is a dud. Reality shows are for extreme realities. Take it or leave it. But all that is gone—a bad dream, a certified nightmare. Witness the scenes via YouTube postings and be part of a parochial attitude common to our TV presentations. What matters now—packaging or not—is that Gerphil Geraldie Flores is on top of the world, insofar as Asia having talent is concerned. There are other lessons to be learned as well—and one is that one can only go global if the judges are only, truly global. n
Derek Ramsay leads summer fun on TV5 CALLING itself the Philippines’s Happy Network, TV5 is making waves among television viewers and netizens with its Summer Station ID, which was launched on Sunday. Dubbed as “Happy Ka Dito This Summer,” TV5’s Summer Station ID encapsulates what the network stands for—creating happy meaningful connections among the TV public with a different kind of viewing experience that is central to the lives of Filipinos. Said TV5 President and CEO Noel C. Lorenzana, “The station ID is carried over from our ‘Happy Ka Dito’ campaign launched last year which signaled our decision to veer away from the norm and focus on producing a mix of light and meaningful entertainment programs, world-class and actionpacked sports programs that bring Filipinos together as one nation.” The summer station ID features TV5 stars led by Derek Ramsay and other prominent TV5 personalities who have come together to further intensify the network’s goal of spreading cheer and happiness to every Filipino in time for the summer season. The fun unfolds to the tune of “Sama-Sama sa Ligaya” performed by Urbandub’s Gab Alipe and multiawarded Filipino-American hip-hop duo Q-York. The same song became the anthem of TV5’s “Happy Sa 2015: Philippine New Year Countdown,”
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The European Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines (ECCP) echoed the call of the American Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines (AmCham) to expand the list of fiscal perks, instead of limiting them. In particular, the ECCP supported AmCham’s proposal to include the planned reduced corporate income
Bravely world-class... and with a vengeance TITO GENOVA VALIENTE
P. | | 7 DAYS A WEEK
FOREIGN CHAMBERS ONE IN SAYING INCENTIVES MENU SHOULD BE EXPANDED NOT NARROWED
INSIDE
EAR Jesus, You were still at the beginning of Your apostolic life and have already been making a tremendous impact on people, particularly because of the miracles You have been performing. The interest You have aroused was not limited to the simple people. Even the religious authorities, including the Sanhedrin, though shocked by You driving the traders out of the temple, realized that You are “a teacher who has come from God” (John 3:22 ). One of them, Nicodemus, went personally to see You secretly at night to try to know more about Your teaching and identity. Amen.
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HINA’S economic slump deepened, as manufacturing and retail sales cooled in the first quarter of this year, stepping up pressure for Beijing to keep the world’s second-largest economy on track. Growth declined to 7 percent, from the previous quarter’s 7.3 percent, official data showed on Wednesday. It was China’s weakest performance since the global financial crisis, when growth tumbled to 6.1 percent in the first quarter of 2009. Much of China’s decline has been self-imposed, as communist leaders try to steer the economy to more sustainable growth based on domestic consumption, instead of trade and investment. But an unexpectedly sharp downturn over the past year has
PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 44.6340
fueled fears of job losses and social tensions. Beijing has cut interest rates twice since November and launched targeted measures to help exporters and other industries. Economists note that China still depends on governmentled spending on construction to drive growth. “We still are relying on a traditional growth engine, and that is declining,” said a spokesman for the National Bureau of Statistics, Sheng Laiyun, at a news conference. “We are in transition between the old and the new growth models.” On Tuesday the country’s top economic official, Premier Li Keqiang, warned at a meeting with businesspeople and economists that China faces “downward S “C ,” A
BEATING THE DEADLINE Taxpayers rush to the Bureau of Internal Revenue Regional Office in Quezon City to beat the last day for the filing of income tax returns. NONOY LACZA
Remittances shift to recovery mode after 4.2% growth in Feb B B C
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ASH sent by Filipino migrant workers slightly rebounded from its six-year-low slump in January this year—but remained below expectations in February this year, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) reported on Wednesday. Overseas Filipino workers’ (OFWs) cash remittances that coursed through banks summed up to $1.88 billion in February 2015, 4.2 percent higher than the $1.8-billion remittances sent by OFWs in February last year. This pushed the two-month total of remittances at $3.69 billion this year, growing at merely 2.4 percent from last year’s $3.604 billion— about $2.8 billion of these were from
MAPA: “In the past few months, we’ve seen a strong US dollar against major currencies, like the euro and GBP [British pound]. ”
land-based workers, while $900 million were from sea-based workers. While the month’s growth is a rebound from the disappointing 0.5percent growth in January, it is still slower than the 5.9-percent growth rate seen in February last year. The two-month cumulative
growth of 2.4 percent is also slower from the same two-month cumulative growth in 2014 at 6 percent. It is also below the government’s annual remittance growth assumption at 5.5 percent and below market expectations during the period. In previous research notes to its clients, Singapore based DBS Bank said remittances will likely return to about 5 percent in February, while Standard Chartered Bank forecasted a 4.5-percent growth to its clients. The BSP said the slowdown of remittance growth in recent months could be due to the base effect, as remittances last year were relatively high because OFWs sent money intended for the rehabilitation and C A
n JAPAN 0.3737 n UK 65.9601 n HK 5.7583 n CHINA 7.1854 n SINGAPORE 32.8288 n AUSTRALIA 34.1134 n EU 47.5531 n SAUDI ARABIA 11.9014 Source: BSP (15 April 2015)