BusinessMirror August 02, 2021

Page 1

By Jun Lomibao

T

Sports Editor

OKYO—Eumir Felix Marcial is living up to his lofty billing at the Tokyo Olympics. And he did so emphatically on Sunday. Marcial knocked out fellow pro Arman Darchinyan of Armenia in the first round of their men’s middleweight quarterfinal bout at the Kokugikan Arena, assuring not only himself of a medal in his Olympic debut, but the Philippines’s third medal as well. “It’s muscle memory which I developed through long hours of training under my coaches,” said Marcial, referring to the 1-2 jab-straight textbook punches he used in setting up a jarring right hook that sent Darchinyan out for good with 49 seconds remaining in the opening round.

A minute into the fight, the same 1-2 combination hurt the Armenian, forcing the referee to give him a mandatory standing 8-count. All smiles during the postfight interview, Marcial said he is dedicating his campaign to his dad, Eulalio, who dreamt of his son fighting in the Olympics. “This is my father’s dream, and my dream, to fight in the Olympics,” Marcial said. “And with me assured of a medal, I have overtaken my dream.” Marcial could do even better, just like fellow boxer Nesthy Petecio who’s in the women’s featherweight gold medal play after defeating a taller Italian on Friday. The 25-year-old pride of Zamboanga City fights former tormentor Oleksandr Khyzhniak of Ukraine in the semifinals on Thursday, hoping for a chance to match Hidilyn Diaz’s historic gold medal in women’s

weightlifting. The Kasumigaseki Country Club course, meanwhile, wasn’t that friendly to Juvic Pagunsan. Pagunsan closed out with a one-under par 70 also on Sunday to wind up in 55th place in a field of 60 in the men’s competition of golf, finishing 19 shots behind gold medal winner Xander Shauffele of the US. And Carlos Yulo returns to the Ariake Gymnastics Center on Monday night for the finals of the men’s vault in artistic gymnastics with mission—seek redemption after crashing out of his pet floor exercise in the qualifying round more than a week ago. Yulo ranked sixth in the eight-gymnast final which Yulo’s Japanese coach Munehiro Kugimiya said could be a showdown between South Korea’s Shin Jeahwan and Turkey’s Ahmet Onder. More Olympics stories in Sports, page A12.

TOKYO OLYMPICS MEDAL COUNT RANK

TEAM/NOC

1

People’s Republic of China

23

14

13

50

2

United States of America

20

21

16

57

GOLD Silver Bronze TOTAL

3

Japan

17

5

9

31

4

Australia

14

3

14

31

5

ROC

11

18

13

42

6

Great Britain

10

10

12

32

7

France

5

10

6

21

8

Republic of Korea

5

4

8

17

9

Netherlands

4

7

6

17

10

Germany

4

4

11

19

11

New Zealand

4

3

4

11

12

Czech Republic

4

3

1

8

13

Canada

3

4

6

13

14

Switzerland

3

4

5

12

15

Croatia

3

2

2

7

16

Italy

2

8

15

25

42

Philippines

1

0

0

1

Source: Olympics.com | As of August 2, 2021 | 8:28 p.m8

Marcial knocks out Armenian foe

PHL BIZ SECTOR BRACES

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n

Monday, August 2, 2021 Vol. 16 No. 292

P25.00 nationwide | 2 sections 20 pages |

FOR THIRD ECQ IN NCR By Tyrone Jasper C. Piad @Tyronepiad

NG SUBSIDIES TO GOCCS LOWER BY A THIRD IN H1

T

HE business sector is gearing up for another bumpy ride with the upcoming implementation of enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) in the National Capital Region (NCR) amid the growing cases of Covid-19 Delta variant.

By Bernadette D. Nicolas @BNicolasBM

S

UBSIDIES extended by the national government for the first half of this year settled at P88.3 billion, almost a third down from the same period a year ago. Data from the Bureau of the Treasury showed the amount of subsidies handed out to government-owned and -controlled corporations (GOCCs) from January to June this year was 31.4 percent lower than last year’s P128.7 billion. This was also 50.5 percent below the P178.2- billion program for subsidy releases set by the government during the period, based on the national gover n ment d i sbu rsement performance report by the Department of Budget and

This will be the third time that the country’s capital is put under the strictest form of community quarantine, which is seen to further hamper mobility, employment, consumer spending and demand. While preparations may vary according to industry, the business leaders interviewed by the BusinessMirror pointed out that enforcing ECQ will affect operations. The government announced last week that Metro Manila will be subject to ECQ on August 6-20. “Preparations will obviously vary per sector but some examples are ensuring the workforce are equipped to work from home, stocking up on supplies and ensuring supply chains continue to operate and are disrupted as little as possible,” Management Association of the Philippines (MAP) National Issues Committee Chairperson Rizalina Mantaring said. George T. Barcelon, Philippine Exporters Confederation Inc. (Philexport) chairman, echoed the same concerns with the supply chain, especially for the part of the export-oriented manufacturers. He said that exporters may encounter challenges when it comes to transporting supplies coming outside Metro Manila given the anticipated restrictions. The companies will also need to work around with new schedules of production, considering the ECQ and its impact on mobility of the employees as well, the Philexport official explained. In addition, Barcelon said the firms may need to coordinate with their clients for the potential delays in shipments. “They [exporters] have to tell their buyers of the delay. They might lose some orders,” he said. Continued on A2

PESO exchange rates n US 50.3420

Management (DBM). Total subsidy released during the period was down yearon-year mostly due to the one-time P51-billion Small Business Wage Subsidy Program implemented through the Social Security System in April and May 2020, according to DBM. The budget department also noted in the same report that subsidy fell below the program due to the timing of releases pending submission of special budget releases by the GOCCs, such as the Philippine Health Insurance Corporation (PhilHealth), National Irrigation Administration (NIA), Bases Conversion and Development Authority, National Housing Authority (NHA) and National Electrification Administration. See “NG subsidies,” A2

‘Pandemic scarring’ to dent growth, but PHL has better outlook than others–Oxford

D

Eumir Felix Marcial makes knocking out Arman Darchinyan of Armenia look easy. AP

ECLINES in the country’s economic growth are still expected to linger, even after the global health crisis is over, an international think tank said. In a recent analysis of the Philippine economy, Oxford Economics said the local economy will experience the so-called “pandemic scarring” that will lower the country’s long-term growth. Oxford Economics economist Sian Fenner said they estimate the “the long-run nominal neutral

policy rate” of the Philippines to hit 5 percent, slashing their earlier forecast of 5.5 percent. Oxford Economics defines longrun nominal neutral policy rate as the rate at which the economy is in equilibrium and monetary policy fully normalized. Fenner said the recalibration of their neutral rate forecasts primarily reflects the long-term impact of the pandemic on their forecasts for potential GDP [gross domestic product] growth. See “Pandemic,” A2

n japan 0.4599 n UK 70.2925 n HK 6.4787 n CHINA 7.7970 n singapore 37.2270 n australia 37.2279 n EU 59.8566 n SAUDI arabia 13.4231

Source: BSP (July 30, 2021)


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