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Sunday, December 22, 2019 Vol. 15 No. 73
P25.00 nationwide | 2 sections 16 pages | 7 DAYS A WEEK
Study shows a new breed of digital homemakers calls the shots in keeping the house in order By Roderick L. Abad
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Contributor
MONG most Filipino households today, kids are not the only ones hooked to the modern digital technologies—even their parents, especially the mothers, now juggle between their nurturing role at home and active engagement with their peers and communities, an Asianparent Philippines study revealed. Digital-savvy
ONCE a woman becomes “familied,” one would assume that all her attention would be focused on her husband and children. This, in turn, will keep her away from her parents, siblings, and even circle of friends. Nonetheless, theAsianparent Philippines found it the other way around. The study actually discovered that they remain connected to them online and at a longer duration. To wit, about 31 percent of the respondents shared that their screen time has rather increased by 4 hours after becoming a mom. “Their preferred mobile communication is messaging apps at 62 percent,” Perlas said after sharing the survey results during a forum dubbed “Tap Into Moms 2019” held recently at the Bonifacio Global City in Taguig. “They are online when the kids go to bed. That’s at 9 p.m.” MK Bertulfo of Filipina Homebased Moms, an online community with over 165,000 members here and abroad, is among the 28.08 percent of survey participants who agreed with the time for moms to go online. “9 p.m. is the scheduled posting of the Facebook webinars, or trainings that we do for them, and there are a lot who really watch them at that time,” she said in mixed Filipino and English. During this period, 33 percent of mothers engage with fellow moms through the app’s community feature or on social media. With this in mind, Perlas advised
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Based on the results of its 2019 Philippine Digital Moms Survey, the parenting app bared that maternal heads of the family have evolved from being merely plain housekeepers to empowered digital homemakers, who have the authority to decide on family matters at their fingertips. So who are the digital Filipino moms? The study showed that they are in their 20s—very young yet dynamic. In fact, 64 percent of 1,038 respondents are millennials, or those at the age of 21 to 30. About 32 percent of them are between 21 and 25, and 13 percent are as old as 26 to 30. More than half or 55 percent of those who were surveyed in the app are pregnant, with majority of them in the first trimester. Those who already have a child are at 45.13 percent, while those with at least two kids are at 25 percent. Age-wise, 62.8 percent of them have little ones who are very young at 0 to 3 years old, while 37.2 percent are already 4 and above. The subjects of the research mostly finished their tertiary education at 65.2 percent. High-school graduates, on the other hand, are almost 19 percent. Having their own family, though, did not hinder them from pursuing their chosen career. Around 33.94 percent of them are working full time, while 55.73 percent are “stay-at-home moms,” or SAHM, so as to still take care of the house. Given these profiles, theAsianparent Philippines Regional Head of Content Carla Perlas described them as educated, smart and wise.
Continued on A2
Macau chooses China riches over democracy, unlike Hong Kong By Jinshan Hong & Iain Marlow
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Bloomberg News
ACAU has long provided Chinese leaders with a glimmering showcase for the virtues of obeying Beijing. The former Portuguese colony has marched on to become the world’s largest gambling hub over the past few decades, surpassing its more rebellious brother Hong Kong along the way. President Xi Jinping is expected to use a visit marking 20 years of Chinese rule over Macau this week to send a message to the protest-stricken financial hub some 50 kilometers to the east: work with us and get rich. “Jobs are chasing after Macau people, instead of the other way around,” said Alexandra, a 29-yearold human-resources worker in Macau, who declined to give her last name. “Young people can see a much brighter future here than in
Hong Kong. They are indifferent, or even cold, toward politics.” During his visit, Xi will likely highlight a raft of recent policies intended to help diversify Macau’s tourism industry while—in a possible signal to Hong Kong—establishing a yuan-denominated financial market there. On Tuesday, an article in the state-run Xinhua News Agency stressed that Macau’s patriotism toward the mainland— including Chinese flags flying from schools—have helped the region achieve strong growth and falling unemployment. “More than just stable, Macau has achieved an economic miracle,” the article said. “People
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PEDESTRIANS cross the street in front of the Grand Lisboa casino in Macau, September 28, 2019. BLOOMBERG
in Macau know that the future of Macau and the mainland are closely linked together.” While Hong Kong and Macau share the Cantonese language, a common past as European trading outposts and a similar promise of autonomy from Beijing, they couldn’t look more different to the Communist Party. Today, the enclave of 670,000 people ranks as the world’s second-richest territory in terms of per capita economic output, after Luxembourg, according to data compiled by the World Bank. By that measure, it’s almost 80 percent wealthier than Hong Kong. Macau has suffered little of the unrest that has gripped Hong Kong since the latter attempted to pass legislation earlier this year allowing extraditions to mainland China. Unlike Hong Kong, the government passed a Beijing-mandated national security law a decade ago, and hasn’t seen mass protests since the government withdrew legislation Continued on A2
n JAPAN 0.4634 n UK 65.8949 n HK 6.4966 n CHINA 7.2225 n SINGAPORE 37.3819 n AUSTRALIA 34.8689 n EU 56.3208 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.4981
Source: BSP (December 20, 2019 )