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Tuesday, November 18,17, 2014 10 10 No.No. 40 Wednesday, December 2014Vol.Vol. 69
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PHL FLOATS REGION-WIDE PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP PROGRAM SUPPORTED BY DIALOGUE PARTNERS
PAPAL VISIT 2015
Asean PPP platform looms T By Cai U. Ordinario
he Philippine government is encouraging its counterparts in the Asean region to create a regional PPP Center based here, and explore the possibility of creating a fund to support public-private partnership (PPP) projects in the region.
28 DAYS INSIDE
BAD CELL-PHONE ETIQUETTE AT CONCERTS The Immaculate Concepcion
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EAR Lord we just celebrated the feast of The Immaculate Conception. God freely chose Mary from all eternity to be the mother of his son. In order to carry out her mission, she herself was conceived immaculately. This means that, thanks to the grace of God and in anticipation of the merits of Jesus Christ. Mary was preserved from original sin from the first instant of her conception. If some people do not believe in this belief, let the power of her Son Jesus relive in each mother the true meaning of a real mother. Amen. COMPENDIUM OF THE CATECHISM OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH, FR. SAL PUTZU, SDB AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
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INSTAGRAM SAYS IT HAS 300 MILLION USERS... USERS »D2
BusinessMirror
Wednesday, December 17, 2014
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Bad cell-phone etiquette at concerts here to stay B O L. G Austin American-Statesman
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HEN you think you may be the oldest person at a lengthy music concert, you have a lot of time to sit and think. And to peoplewatch. A few weeks ago, when I went to San Antonio to see Enrique Iglesias and Pitbull perform, I was suddenly sad about where technology has taken us. This was one of those gigantic Alamodome concerts, so large that there were DJ sets between the opening act (a baller named “J Balvin”) and the two headlining sets. Of course, there were cell phones. Tens of thousands of them, in the hands of fans desperate to get a good still shot or to shoot some video to commemorate the performances. And why not? Many of our cell phones take better photos and video than point-and-shoot cameras did just a few years ago, and it’s a cheap, fast way to create a memento. Have you seen how much concert T-shirts cost? The cell phone pics are instantly sharable, too. If you can get a decent wireless connection while surrounded by so many people, you can send your photos to the babysitter and to friends, post them on Facebook or Instagram, then regale your friends on Monday morning with a hand-held concert slideshow. What’s not to like? Let’s start with the obvious. Unless you have amazing seats and incredible photographic timing, your concert
photos and videos almost always look awful. They’re grainy and washed out; the stage lights at most concerts turn performers in your images into fuzzy mauve blobs. That tiny LED flash on your phone? If you’re further than a few feet from the stage, it does absolutely nothing to improve your images and video. And nobody cares about the photo you shot of an empty stage before the concert started unless you happen to be friends with lots of set designers. At this
Pitbull/Enrique Iglesias show, however, I saw even more egregious mobile-device behavior, stuff that went from distracting to annoying and disruptive. It included: ■ The long-range stage selfie: I witnessed so many fans with seats high up in the stands mosey down the aisle to take a group selfie with their friends, positioning the camera so that the very distant stage was in the background. Of course, with flash enabled in the dark, this means the subjects of the photo will be
washed out while the stage will appear as a distant blur. No matter! These aisle-blockers, who got in the way of people trying to watch the show with their own eyes, were incessant. ■ The cell phone tower: This happens at almost any concert now. An amateur videographer holds their phone up above the crowd, two-handed, to record video of an entire song. And, maybe, it’s just a demographic reality in San Antonio, but it seemed like every phone I saw was one of those giant Galaxy Note devices or the new iPhone 6 Plus. Yet, my concert ticket said nothing about my seat having an obstructed view. ■ The tower of tablet: The only thing worse than having your view blocked by a human cell phone tower is someone doing the same thing with an iPad. Yes, people take iPad photos and video at concerts. No, they don’t seem to realize how silly they look. ■ The flashlight mode field of lights: Back in the day (ask your parents, kids), fans held up lighters during ballads at concerts. That’s long been replaced by the flashlight mode on cell phones. During the Iglesias set, cell-phone lights created a faux galaxy of stars in the crowd. It’s actually a very nice effect as long as you’re not the person surrounded by bright lights shining right next to your face. I thought, perhaps, I might just have Old Man Crankiness setting in; instead of telling kids to get off my lawn, I’m evolving into the guy who yells at people to put their cell phones away at shows. But I know I’m C D
Andre Paras tapped as new Globe Prepaid ambassador NINETEEN-YEAR-OLD Andre Alonzo Paras, or Andre Paras, proves that there’s more to his instant celebrity status, towering height and good looks. Standing at 6 feet 3 inches, Andre Paras is a young man who wears many hats. Currently, he plays his game in the entertainment industry as he reinvents himself from being a star player of the San Beda Red Lions to becoming one of the country’s rising stars and a popular video jockey (VJ) of MTV Pinoy. Andre first appeared on local TV when he starred in a Filipino teen rom-com based on a bestselling novel published on Wattpad. His love for acting also led him to be part of GMA’s hit afternoon soap The Half Sisters. On the side, he is also a regular performer and host in the network’s Sunday noontime variety show Sunday All-Stars. Aside from basketball, acting and hosting, Andre also pursues his passion for music with his stint as an MTV Pinoy VJ. With this new career, he regularly updates himself with the latest songs, artists and music videos, making him an effective and relatable host, especially to his young audience. With his irresistible charm and talent, Andre makes a conscious effort to constantly reinvent himself to prove that he is a man of his own. He is quickly gaining popularity on social media, where he shares his latest projects, activities and interests, using his Twitter and Instagram accounts to connect with his fans and followers, inspiring today’s youth to achieve their dreams without being afraid to be heard and seen. Leading telecommunications company Globe Telecom saw this potential on Andre, making him the perfect ambassador for its Globe Prepaid brand (www.globe.com.ph/prepaid), (www.globe.com.ph/prepaid the digital brand for the youth. “We are happy to have Andre as the newest endorser of Globe Prepaid. He best represents the brand because he is a very flexible artist and he is not afraid of reinventing himself in pursuit of his many passions. Being a digital brand for the youth, Globe Prepaid is in constant pursuit to give our customers offers that suit their budget, lifestyle and needs, as well as free access to premium content they truly love,” Globe Senior Vice President for Consumer Mobile Marketing Issa Cabreira says.
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PHL PROPERTY SECTOR WILL CONTINUE TO GROW IN 2015 ANDRE PARAS
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These were among the recommendations of local officials at the first Asean PPP Networking Forum currently happening in Manila. The forum is being conducted in support of the Master Plan on Asean Connectivity, which seeks to address the region’s infrastructure constraints ahead of the Asean Economic Community (AEC). “Our dialogue partners, the 10 of them—Australia, Japan, the European Union, South Korea, Canada, etc.— are becoming more and more interested in PPP, so much so that they keep on coming to us wanting to discuss how we can expand PPP projects. So you start from the Philippines and then you expand this on an Asean-wide basis, and it becomes a giant PPP destination. This is the Asean vision,” Ambassador Elizabeth P. Buensuceso, the country’s permanent representative to the Asean and a member of the Asean Connectivity Coordinating Committee, said in a news briefing on Tuesday. Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Arsenio M. Continued on A2
BusinessMirror
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OIL FALLS AS U.S. PLAYERS SEEN INCREASING OUTPUT
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Philippine property sector will continue to grow in 2015
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projects have been sold, while 6 percent remain unsold. For the current year, he said 93 percent of the units were already sold out. The high demand continues beyond 2014 as 81 percent and 83 percent have been sold for 2015 and 2016, respectively. These projects covered the mid-range to high-end condominium developments of major property developers. The business-process outsourcing (BPO) industry was the biggest client for office space in 2014 accounting for more than 50 percent to 60 percent of the total take-up. The information technology sector accounted for 11 percent take-up. Shiela Lobien, head of leasing of JLL Philippines, said over 180,000 square meter in total were transacted for leasing in 2014 by the company. The biggest transaction was a 51,500-sq-m lease to a multinational BPO at the Bonifacio Global City (BGC). “The BGC is the most logical choice for a BPO because it is accessible to Makati and its new buildings are ready and equipped for such requirements,” she said. “The BPO is minimally affected by economic and political situations and it will continue to buoy the office space industry as BPO companies continue to demand BPO-ready buildings in secure locations where there is an ample supply of talent at lower costs,” she said. Lobien said the office space reached a historic high in 2014 as supply take-up and precommit-
RIVEN by the continued positive outlook on the economy leading to a stable investment, the Philippine property sector will enjoy another banner year in 2015. Claro Cordero, head research and consulting of Jones Lang LaSalle (JLL), said the other growth drivers of the property sector are the projected expansion of the offshore and outsource industry to cope with the increasing demand for outsourcing services and the healthy inflow of remittances from overseas Filipino workers (OFWs), which will continue to perk up the demand for more housing units. In his presentation during JLL’s recent news briefing in Makati City, Cordero said 2014 was a banner year for the residential sector as approximately 204,300 units were completed in Metro Manila during the year. As far as the supply of residential condominiums in Metro Manila is concerned, Cordero said there was increase in the supply of new units to 41,819 units from 21,540 units in 2013. The new supply is classified to mid-end market prices ranging from P980,000 to P1.5 million.
He said OFW remittances growing 6.1 percent year-on-year as of September 2014 will continue to drive the demand for the residential sector. “By the year-end of 2014, remittances will reach $24 billion,” Cordero said. “OFW remittances are expected to grow at around 7 percent from 2014 to 2017,” he added. Megaworld Corp. has the biggest market share for projects with 34,000 units, followed by SM with 28,600 units and DMCI with 21,700 units. In sales take-up across all horizontal and vertical projects, Ayala Land Inc. had the biggest value with P80 billion, followed by Megaworld with P70 billion. Vista Land emerged third with a total value of P39 billion. Furthermore, Cordero said the sales of key residential project of major developers continues to be healthy as it registered an average of 73-percent take-up rate from 2015 to 2020. In 2013, 94 percent of the
ments reached 500,600 sq m as of end of November 2014. Pasig City had the highest take-up among the Metro Manila cities taking 25 percent of the pie, followed by Quezon City (24 percent) and BGC (22 percent). The take-up is high as the total vacancy rate across Metro Manila business districts is only 4 percent. “A single-digit vacancy rate is very good for the economy,” she shared. Lobien said the affordable rental rate is also one of the factors why foreign investors start their operations in the country. For instance, she said the affordable rates in BGC continue to attract major locators particularly in the BPO sector. She said there was an increase of only 1 percent in office rental rates from P790 per sq m in the fourth quarter of last year to P800 in the same period of 2014. “Even with the affordable rates prevailing at the BGC, there is no oversupply as vacancies are easily taken up. At the moment, there is equilibrium at the BGC,” she said. The prime area of Makati Commercial Business District continues to be the most expensive office space posting a 14-percent increase with a rental average of P1,200 per sq m in December 2014 from a rate of P1,050 per sq m in the same period last year. In terms of location, BGC emerged as the top choice for BPO operations with 35 percent. Quezon City came in second with 28 percent; and Makati City ranked third with 21 percent.
ALABANG WEST TO BE THE
SOUTH’S GAMECHANGER
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EW Beverly Hills-themed township is set to beef up Southern Manila’s vibrant growth and progress The South that people know will no longer be the same as Alabang West, the 62-hectare ownship of Global Estate Resorts Inc. (Geri), subsidiary of the country’s prime real-estate giant, Megaworld, is developing in Southern Metro Manila. Alabang West will be the game-changer in the South, as it brings a plusher and more modern lifestyle, creating a new perception of the rising business and residential district. “For the longest time, the South has been quiet,” said Rachelle Peñaflorida, vice president for sales and marketing, Megaworld GlobalEstate Inc. “Alabang West will bring back the attention to the South, and help develop the booming commercial and business district there.” Alabang West is another township development that offers residents the best of a commercial and business lifestyle. It will be along Daang Hari in Las Piñas City. Aside from its commercial area, Alabang West will also offer an exclusive village among the elite for which it has allotted 788 available lots that range from 250 square meter to 800 sq m each. Alabang
West will integrate a Beverly Hillsthemed lifestyle into its commercial, retail and residential developments. Residents will enjoy posh amenities that include a firstclass clubhouse, complimenting the offerings of the township’s world-class Rodeo Drive shopping strip—all in one neighborhood. Alabang West is Megaworld’s 15th township in its portfolio which includes the 18-hectare Eastwood City in Quezon City, which is the country’s first cyberpark; 25-hectare Newport City in Pasay City, home of Resorts World Manila; 34.5-hectare McKinley West, 50-hectareMcKinley Hill, 15.4-hectare Uptown Bonifacio and 5-hectare Forbes Town Center in Fort Bonifacio; 28.8-hectare The Mactan Newtown in Lapu-Lapu City, Cebu; the 72-hectare Iloilo Business Park in Iloilo, 12.3-hectare Woodside City in Pasig City; and 11-hectare Davao Park District in Davao; as well as the 350-hectare Suntrust Ecotown, under its wholly owned subsidiary Suntrust Properties Inc. and Geri’s 561-hectare Southwoods City in the boundaries of Cavite and Laguna; 150-hectare Boracay Newcoast in Boracay Island; and the 1,300-hectare Twin Lakes in Tagaytay. www.megaworldcorp.com.
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Century sets 2015 opening for Centuria Medical Makati
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ULLISH on the prospects of medical tourism and the outpatient health-care industry in the Philippines, premium property developer Century Properties Group Inc. said it has started unit turnovers this December at Centuria Medical Makati—its 28-story outpatient medicalinformation technology facility at Century City in Kalayaan Avenue, Makati City—in time for its 2015 opening. The $70-million medical facility has close to 700 medical suites for physicians of different outpatient medical
practices. Inclusive in the 700 units are over 7,000 square meters that Century will retain for its own leasing portfolio. Hi-Precision Diagnostics will operate Centuria’s diagnostic laboratory. Other facilities and services that will complement the practice of doctors within the building include an Executive Health Screening Program, a Radiology Center, a hospital-grade Day Surgery Center and Recovery Suites. Century Properties said that the building is expected to open in 2015 after the tenants complete their unit fit outs.
The building is designed with warm and welcoming interiors, and a grand lobby that will welcome both local patients and medical tourists. IT capabilities will support the medical practice of doctors and enhance the patient experience, from electronic medical records and picture archiving communications systems, paperless documentation to an organized patient queuing. “Centuria is a new-age medical arts building that goes beyond providing clinic spaces to doctors. It provides
the support medical facilities and IT tools so that doctors can focus on delivering quality care to their patients,” said Century Properties Chairman Jose E.B. Antonio, who personally saw through the Centuria project to maximize the country’s opportunities for medical tourism. “The growth opportunities for health care and medical tourism are tremendous. We are here to seize this opportunity and put Centuria in the spotlight as the newest platform that will take these sunrise industries to the next level in the Philippines,” he added.
Situated in front of the Century City Mall, Centuria Medical Makati has the supreme advantage of location. It completes the integrated development of Century City, which comprises premium residential towers, offices and the mall. The building is also close to hotels, major banking institutions, and the Makati Central Business District. To further facilitate ease of visit, ample parking space, valet and travel booking services will be provided. A medical concierge will attend to local and foreign patients.
want economic growth? lessen inequality The World BusinessMirror
news@businessmirror.com.ph
Wednesday, December 17, 2014 B3-3
Want economic growth? Lessen inequality
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B A.D. M| Inter Press Service
ARIS, France—For years, many policy-makers, including economists, have clung to the belief that if states do nothing to boost income equality, market forces will cause wealth to trickle down to the poorest citizens and contribute to overall growth.
That theory is now being increasingly debunked as experts affirm that the broadening gap in income is creating far-ranging problems for many societies. In a new report published on December 9, researchers at the Paris-based Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) argue that “reducing income inequality would boost economic growth.” Their research shows that countries where income inequality is decreasing actually “grow faster than those with rising inequality,” and the analysts would like to see governments take stronger action to reduce inequity. “The single biggest impact on growth is the widening gap between the lower middle class and poor households compared with the rest of society,” says the report titled “Trends in Income Inequality and its Impact on Economic Growth,” and “Education is the Key: A lack of investment in education by the poor is the main factor behind inequality hurting growth.” According to Michael Förster, a senior analyst in the OECD’s Social Policy division, one reason “the poor and lower middle classes are being left behind in unequal societies” is
that they do not have the resources to spend on their own or their children’s education, compared with wealthier citizens. He said that governments needed to revise strategies that are based on outdated economic theories. “The common assumption used to be that the more you did to enhance equality, the more you would hinder growth,” he argued. “So the idea was that if you take too much from the top earners, through taxes, you would have less growth. We haven’t found evidence for that. What we have found is that increasing inequality is bad for growth.” For example, rising inequality is estimated “to have knocked more than 10 percentage points off growth in Mexico and New Zealand over the past two decades up to the Great Recession,” the OECD said. Meanwhile, in the United Kingdom, Italy and the United States, the “cumulative growth rate would have been 6 percentage points to 9 percentage points higher had income disparities not widened.” OECD Secretary-General Angel Gurría said that this “compelling evidence” proves that addressing high and growing inequality is “critical to promote strong and sustained
INEQUALITY out in the open. A.D. MCKENZIE/IPS
growth” and needs to be at the center of global policy discussions. “Countries that promote equal opportunity for all from an early age are those that will grow and prosper,” he added. However, some scholars maintain that the consequences of inequality are hard to prove. American economist Jared Bernstein and others have pointed out that it is difficult to establish a firm connection between the inequities in education and economic growth. These analysts acknowledge that wealthier parents do spend more overall on educational tools and “goods,” and that children from rich families often study at elite institutions in contrast to children from poor backgrounds who may attend lower-quality
schools, but they have disagreed on the social or economic effects. With the “new evidence”, OECD researchers say that the main means through which inequality affects growth is by “undermining education opportunities for children from poor socioeconomic backgrounds, lowering social mobility and hampering skills development.” “People whose parents have low levels of education see their educational outcomes deteriorate as income inequality rises. By contrast, there is little or no effect on people with middle or high levels of parental educational background,” the OECD said in a statement. According to researchers, anti-poverty programs will not be enough to create greater equality
of opportunities in the long term. Essential measures will include “cash transfers and increasing access to public services, such as high-quality education, training and health care,” the OECD said. Förster stressed that the inequality study focused on income and not wealth. But recent discussions have centered on both, particularly in France since the election of Socialist President François Hollande in May 2012. Soon after his election, Hollande announced plans for a 75-percent tax on all income over €1 million, and a watered-down version of the plan was approved by French courts a year ago, even as many wealthy families fled to Belgium and elsewhere.
Climate change creates new geography of food B F O
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IMA, Peru—The magnitude of the climate changes brought about by global warming and the alterations in rainfall patterns are modifying the geography of food production in the tropics, warned participants at the climate summit in the Peruvian capital. That was the main concern among experts in food security taking part in the 20th session of the Conference of the Parties (COP20) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), held from December 1 to 12 in Lima. They are worried about rising food-prices if tropical countries fail to take prompt action to adapt. The International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) estimates that climate change will trigger food price hikes of up to 30 percent. The countryside is the first sector directly affected by climate change, said Andy Jarvis, a researcher at the International Centre for Tropical Agriculture, or CIAT, who specializes in low-carbon farming in the CGIAR Research Programme for Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security. “Climate and agriculture go hand in hand and it’s the climate that defines whether a crop will do well or poorly. The geography of where crops grow is going to change, and the impacts can be extremely negative if nothing is done,” Jarvis told Tierramérica during the Global Landscapes Forum, the biggest parallel event to the COP20. Crops like coffee, cacao and beans are especially vulnerable to drastic temperatures and scarce rainfall and can suffer huge losses as a result of changing climate patterns. One example: In the Sacred Valley of the Incas in Peru, where the greatest biodiversity of potatoes can be found, higher temperatures and spreading crop diseases and pests are forcing indigenous farmers to grow potatoes at higher and higher altitudes. Potato farmers in the area could see a 15-percent to 30-percent reduction in rainfall by 2030, according to ClimateWire.
REGINA ILLAMARCA and Natividad Pilco, two farmers preserving potato biodiversity in Huama, a community in the department of Cusco, in the Peruvian Andes, and whose crops are being altered by global warming. MILAGROS SALAZAR/IPS
Another illustration: In Central American countries like Costa Rica, Guatemala and Honduras, a fungus called coffee rust is decimating crops. The outbreak has already caused $1 billion in losses in Central America in the last two years, and 53 percent of coffee plantations in the area are at risk, according to the International Coffee Organisation (ICO). Latin America produces 13 percent of the world’s cacao and there is an international effort to preserve diversity of the crop in the Americas from witches’ broom disease, which can also be aggravated by extreme climate conditions. At the same time, switching to cacao can be a strategy for coffee farmers when temperatures are not favorable to coffee production, according to the CGIAR consortium of international agricultural research centers. “At the COP, the idea discussed is to keep global warming below 2°C, as the most optimistic goal,” Jarvis told Tierramérica. “But that practically implies the total displacement of the coffee-growing zone. Two degrees will be too hot. The current trends indicate that prices are going to soar. As production drops and supply shrinks, prices go up. The impact
would also lead to a rise in poverty.” In Nicaragua, where coffee is a pillar of the economy, a 2-degree increase in temperatures would lead to the loss of 80 percent of the current coffeegrowing area, he said. According to a CIAT study, “By 2050 coffee-growing areas will move approximately 300 meters up the altitudinal gradient and push farmers at lower altitudes out of coffee production, increase pressure on forests and natural resources in higher altitudes and jeopardize the actors along the coffee-supply chain.” As the climate heats up, crops that now grow at a maximum altitude of 1,600 meters will climb even higher, which would affect the subsistence of half a million small farmers and agricultural workers, according to the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). The UN Food and Agriculture Organisation Assistant Director General for Forestry Eduardo Rojas said at COP20 that climate change is already endangering the food security, incomes and livelihoods of the most vulnerable families. “Resilient agriculture is more environmental because it doesn’t use nitrogenous fertilizers. But no matter
how much we do, there are systemic limits. We could reach a limit as to how much agriculture can adapt,” he told Tierramérica. Rojas called for an integral focus on landscapes in the context of climate change, to confront the challenge of ensuring adequate nutrition for the 805 million chronically malnourished people around the world. However, agricultural production will at the same time have to rise 60 percent to meet demand. The executive director of the USbased Earth Innovation Institute, Daniel Nepstad, noted that the largest proportion of land available for food production is in the tropics. “The growth in demand for food, especially, in the emerging economies is going to outpace the rise in production. The countries in the world with the greatest potential are in Latin America,” said Nepstad, who added that the innovations to mitigate the impact of climate change on food are happening mainly outside the scope of the UNFCCC. The director general of the Centre for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), Peter Holmgren, said agroforestry is an approach that reconciles agriculture, forest conservation and food production without generating greenhouse-gas emissions. “The main reason forests are disappearing in this region is agriculture, it is the expansion of commercial agriculture,” he told Tierramérica. “We have a lot of research going on that seeks more resilient and more producing varieties of different crops and livestock. We call it climate-smart agriculture. There is a lot of political commitment to reduce deforestation and direct the investments in agriculture in different ways. However it seems that agriculture is still outside the negotiations in the COP itself.” As well as agroforestry techniques, agricultural weather report services with forecasts of up to four to six months are ways to contribute to adaptation to changing-climate patterns. CIAT’s Jarvis argued for the need for the diversification of crops and the increase in support with policies to support agriculture.
Economists of different political colors have argued about whether the increased taxation is good for the economy, and the debate has grown more heated with last year’s publication of Capital in the Twenty-First Century by renowned French economist Thomas Piketty. A lecturer in Paris and internationally, Piketty advocates a global tax on wealth. He has carried out studies showing that income inequality has grown in many countries, alongside 30 years of declining tax levels. The gap is particularly marked in the US, but even in “egalitarian” France, the top 1 percent earned an average of €30,000 monthly in 2010, compared with €1,500 per adult of the poorest 50 percent. According to the OECD, a similar situation exists in many of its 34 member-countries, which include European nations and others, such as Mexico, Chile and the US. “Today, the richest 10 percent of the population in the OECD area earn 9.5 times the income of the poorest 10 percent; in the 1980s, this ratio stood at 7:1 and has been rising continuously ever since.” Bucking the trend, income inequality has been falling in Chile and Mexico, but the incomes of the richest are still more than 25 times those of the poorest in these two countries. The OECD’s Latin American Economic Outlook 2015, produced with regional partners and also launched on December 9, focuses on the role of education and skills, and experts said more needed to be done to “raise educational standards and address persistent and substantial socioeconomic inequalities.” Förster told Inter Press Service that the organization hoped governments would consider the findings as a basis to change policy, “otherwise we won’t get out of the current situation.”
E.U. MAY SCRAP ENVIRONMENTAL PLANS AMID FOCUS ON GROWTH B I W Bloomberg
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AJOR pieces of environmental legislation are among scores of draft laws the new European Commission is considering scrapping as part of a pared down agenda for next year. Jean-Claude Juncker, the former Luxembourg prime minister who became president of the European Union executive last month, was set to release his legislative to-do list on Tuesday in Strasbourg, France. His agenda may include withdrawing a proposal intended to cut air pollution, another that would limit landfill waste across the EU, and other initiatives drafted before Juncker’s team took office on November 1, according to a document obtained by Bloomberg News. The Juncker commission, which came in after a surge in populist, anti-EU sentiment in May’s Europe-wide elections, has vowed to cut what it considers unnecessary laws as part of an attempt to focus on stimulating economic growth and employment. “There is a need to clear the decks,” the commission said in the draft version of its 2015 work program. “Proposals are of no use if they are simply sitting dormant on a negotiating table.” The commission may withdraw or modify 80 pieces of legislation, many of which it says are obsolete or ones on which the EU national governments and the 28-nation bloc’s parliament have failed to agree upon, according to the plans. As well as the environmental legislation, the proposals that could be canceled range from laws to regulate the prices of medicinal products to increasing competition in ground-handling services at airports.
ducing emissions of pollutants including sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides before 2020 and 2030 deadlines. According to the provisional 2015 work program, the legislation could be redrafted as part of a broader set of climate measures. A law to boost the so-called circular economy, which would cut packaging and landfill waste, including introducing a 70-percent target by 2030 for the recycling of municipal waste across the bloc, is also in line for withdrawal. “Europe needs to be ambitious, including on environmental and social standards, but it would be pointless if we were wasting our time and energy on proposals that have no chance of being adopted,” Commission Spokesman Natasha Bertaud told reporters in Brussels on December 12. “We are considering to propose to withdraw a number of proposals which do not match the commission’s political priorities or which are out of date.”
world Nitrogen oxides
THE air-pollution law that the previous commission team proposed in 2013 is aimed at re-
Juncker’s list
TOP of Juncker’s list of priorities is a €315-billion investment plan, which the commission will combine with additional measures to remove barriers to project funding. With the EU lowering its growth forecasts for the bloc, unemployment at 11.5 percent and the European Central Bank considering more stimulus as inflation matches a five-year low, the commission says all proposed laws should be consistent with its objective of renewing the flagging economy. The commission also has plans to modernize copyright rules, boost cybersecurity and come up with “a new approach to legal migration.” The EU commissioners would take a final decision on the work program for 2015 during a meeting in Strasbourg on Tuesday.
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il extended losses from a five-year low amid speculation that United States producers may further increase output as they battle the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) for market share. Futures dropped as much as 1.2 percent in New York, after closing at the lowest level since May 2009 on Monday. US crude drillers are benefiting as costs fall almost as quickly as prices, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc. Brent in London, the benchmark grade for more than half the world’s oil, may decline to $50 a barrel in 2015, a Bloomberg survey of analysts showed and as a preliminary Purchasing Managers’ Index in China slid to a seven-month low in December. Oil has slumped almost 45 percent this year, as the Opec sought to defend market share amid a US shale boom that’s exacerbating a global glut. The group, responsible for about 40 percent of the world’s supply, will refrain from curbing output even if crude drops to $40 a barrel, according to the United Arab Emirates. “It seems like the market is no longer able to
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mini santa claus A storekeeper arranges Santa Claus figurines, with prices starting from P150, at a store in Dapitan, Manila. The store owner said sales are still going briskly as Christmas Day approaches. ALYSA SALEN
Pope Francis ‘vulnerable’ in popemobiles P ope Francis will use two popemobiles with no bulletproof capabilities when he visits the country in January, making himself “vulnerable, open and accessible” to the people. Fr. David Concepcion, head of the transportation committee for the papal visit, said Pope Francis prefers an open vehicle, for it symbolizes his being vulnerable, open and accessible to the people, just like the Church. “This is a sign of his sympathy and [his desire to] reach out to the people. This is also what Pope Francis wants to remind the people what kind of Church [we have]—vulnerable,” he told reporters in a news briefing. Second, the popemobile is “open”, as Pope Francis wants to hear the crowd on the streets. Last, Concepcion added: “Accessible—so that he can stop and alight from the vehicle whenever he wants.” Manila Archbishop Luis Antonio Cardinal
Tagle said the popemobile’s design would be a surprise. Palo Archdiocese Vicar General Msgr. Bernie Pantin said the pope will hold a Mass at the Tacloban Airport grounds. He is expected to arrive around 9:30 a.m. at the Tacloban Airport. After the Mass, Pope Francis will go to the Archbishop’s Residence in Palo for a lunch with 30 survivors of Supertyphoon Yolanda (international code name Haiyan) and the 7.2-magnitude quake in Bohol last year. Of the 30 survivors, 15 are from Leyte; five from Borongan in Eastern Samar; five from Calbayog in Samar; and five from Tagbilaran in Bohol. The pope will also have a 30-minute siesta, according to the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines web site, after which he will bless the Pope Francis Center for the Poor in Palo and meet 50 persons with disabilities, orphans and elderly. The Pope Francis Center, which was briefly used as an evacuation center for people affect-
ed by Typhoon Ruby (international code name Hagupit), will have an orphanage, a home for the aged and a dispensary. It will be run and maintained by the Kkottoongnae Brothers and Sisters of Jesus, a Korean religious congregation “committed to witnessing God to the world and saving souls by practicing Jesus’ love.” Pantin said the Korean religious will take care of the orphans, the elderly, the sick and the dying. About 50 persons may be accommodated per facility, he said. The pope will go to the Palo Cathedral after his lunch and encounter with the poor, then meet with the priests, religious and laity who survived Yolanda. He will lead Vespers and give a short message. After that, Pope Francis will then go out of the sacristy and go to the Palo Cathedral mass grave for his private prayers, before heading for the Tacloban Airport and return to Manila. CM Ciriaco
n japan 0.3788 n UK 69.7866 n HK 5.7571 n CHINA 7.2090 n singapore 34.0131 n australia 36.7039 n EU 55.5044 n SAUDI arabia 11.8930 Source: BSP (16 December 2014)