JAPAN LOOKING AT RECORD BUDGET TO HELP ECONOMY HIT BY RECESSION
J
apan plans a record budget for next fiscal year to support an economy that fell into recession after Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s government increased sales tax. Government ministers and the ruling coalition parties approved the ¥96.34-trillion ($814billion) budget proposal for the 12 months starting April 1 at a meeting in Tokyo on Monday, Finance Minister Taro Aso told reporters. Japan, fighting to rein in the world’s heaviest debt burden, will see tax revenue rise to the highest level in 24 years, while new bond issuance declines to the lowest since 2008. Abe has already boosted public-works spending and support for small businesses through a supplementary budget for the current year. “The budget will continue to grow each
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe (left) speaks during a New Year’s party jointly hosted by the country’s leading business organizations in Tokyo last week. AP
2006, 2010, 2012
U.N. Media Award 2008
www.businessmirror.com.ph PAPAL VISIT 2015
Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
Life
T
»D3
Tuesday, January 13, 2015
By Samito Jalbuena
T
D1
cREatINg the perfect home environment has never been easier with mandaue Foam Furniture store’s presence on the Web.
Furniture-shopping now just a click away the bed or any other furniture with great ease. Thanks to their innovative approach to customer satisfaction, perfected through 40 years of providing customers with quality and value-formoney products, Mandaue Foam Furniture Store continuously strengthens its brand presence through a diversification of distribution channels, starting with an aggressive campaign to expand its factories and showrooms to no less than 19 locations nationwide. The step to creating a virtual storefront was only a natural extension of their commitment to making the life of the Filipino more comfortable. Thus, the lifestyle store’s complete range of furniture and accent pieces are now available at an electronic whim. From sofa sets and coffee tables for the living room, to office cabinets and other nifty storage solutions for the home office, the portal has it all. For utmost convenience, Mandauefoam.ph also delivers to various locations in Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao. One may have a design solution hauled posthaste to one’s doorstep by filling out the shipping form together with one’s payment details as one checks out. Truly, Mandaue Foam Furniture Store’s online shop is your one-stop shop for easy and convenient furniture shopping.
the.beast@zoho.com
HE modern convenience of technology has made cocooning all the more comfy. With traffic jams occurring all over the city at all times of the day, one does not want his sense of serenity to be wrecked by long sojourns to the brick-and-mortar retail store. With convenience in mind, a local retailermanufacturer has answered the call for efficient product placement right in your home. Now, furniture shopping is made easier than ever. Thanks to Mandauefoam.ph, a lovely couch, bed, or dining set is easily achieved without breaking into a sweat. It’s just a click away through the friendly convenience of one’s computer or mobile device. By simply visiting the site, one may enjoy the benefit of easy access to a wide range of beautifully designed furnishings available at cost-effective price points. In just a few minutes, nay, seconds, one can compare items, check product reviews and purchase
Make room in your house for presents By Vicki Payne
The Charlotte Observer
G
rEaT design is all about editing; getting rid of what doesn’t work and keeping what does. I think this topic falls perfectly into this theory. It’s a question all of us face after Christmas: “Where the heck are you going to put all this new stuff? after years of struggling with this issue, I’ve finally found the solution. This week, make room while doing something charitable for those less fortunate than you. I know I can hear you already saying, “I am too busy this week. I have no time for another task.” Trust me—this is the best use of your time and the process is quick, fun and painless. It’s a family project. You are going to break your entire house down into two areas, personal and common spaces. It will only take one hour. Start by enticing your family. Explain to them that great treasures await, but first we have to make room. Give each person a large shopping bag. Instruct them to go to their rooms and remove all the old, worn, unwanted items from their dressers and closets.
They just have to remove enough items to stuff the bag completely full. any item that are beyond being useful to others get pitched into a garbage bag. Make it a game. Set the timer for 40 minutes for individual rooms and instruct them to ask themselves these questions regarding the things they have: Does it fit? Is it stained or torn? Do I ever wear or use it? ring some jingle bells and send off your little elves to pitch the old in anticipation of the new. Next, the common areas. Each family member gets a cardboard box and an assignment, based on age, to tackle the clutter in playrooms, family rooms, coat closets and kitchen cabinets. Time to pitch all those plastic butter tubs and chipped glasses and plates. recycle old magazines and newspapers. Set the timer for 20 minutes and let the editing begin. The reward? Take a ride to a local charity or thrift store to deliver the shopping bags of reusable items and then stop for pizza at their favorite restaurant. This will give you an opportunity to talk about how lucky your family is to have a home and gifts to share over the holiday season.
Continued on A2
n Designer and home improvement expert Vicki Payne is host and producer of “For Your Home,” available on PBS, Create TV and in national and international syndication. Reach her at ForYourHome.com.
LiFE
D1
3 million march in France vs terrorism BusinessMirror
World The
B3-1 | Tuesday, January 13, 2015 • Editor: Lyn Resurreccion
LARGEST IN FRENCH HISTORY
3 million march in France vs terrorism
P
Fifty world leaders led the procession, walking at the head of a march that began at the Place de la Republique, the symbolic heart of French democracy, and quickly became so large that it paralyzed the heart of the city and took on a life of its own. “Paris is today the capital of the world,” French President François Hollande said. News agencies reported that more than 3 million people across France participated in marches, described as some of the largest
demonstrations in the nation’s recent history. Rallies held in sympathy were also reported in dozens of cities around the world—including Berlin, London, Buenos Aires, Madrid and Brussels. Among those who joined the procession in Paris were Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, British Prime Minister David Cameron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
PARIS Mayor Anne Hidalgo (front row, from left), President of the European Commission Jean-Claude Juncker, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Malian President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita, French President François Hollande, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi, Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko and other dignitaries, heads of government and heads of state march during a rally in Paris on Sunday. More than 40 world leaders, their arms linked, marched through Paris to rally for unity and freedom of expression and to honor 17 victims of three days of terrorist attacks. AP/CHRISTOPHE ENA
Ambassador Jane Hartley represented the United States, the US Embassy told the Agence FrancePresse news service. Hollande and Netanyahu later attended a ceremony at Paris’ Grand Synagogue to commemorate the victims of an attack on Friday at a kosher grocery that left four hostages dead, one of the three strikes
last week. The other victims were 12 people killed on Wednesday at the offices of Charlie Hebdo, a satirical magazine, and a policeman killed in southern Paris on Thursday. The march in Paris was both a robust repudiation of terrorism and a ringing endorsement of freedom of expression and the craft of journalism.
French people from all walks of life participated in the highly symbolic gathering, standing in solidarity against an assault that shocked the nation and highlighted the threat of Islamic terrorism across Europe. Some have called last week’s attacks France’s September 11, referring to the terror attack in the US in 2001. “We came here to defend the fundamental values of France and to display to the world our rejection of barbarism,” said Elisabeth Pilate, a Parisian grandmother present with her daughter and several grandchildren. “France rejects terrorism completely.” At the march, thousands of Je suis Charlie—I am Charlie—signs were hoisted in commemoration of the attack on the offices of Charlie Hebdo, site of the initial violence. The magazine apparently was attacked because of its mocking caricatures of Islam and the Prophet Muhammad, among the irreverent publication’s many targets. But there were also large numbers of placards and signs declaring “Je suis Juif ”—I am a Jew—in recognition of the grocery store attack and others that stated Je suis policier—I am police. Los Angeles Times/TNS
Divers retrieve 1 of 2 black boxes from crashed AirAsia jet
P
ANGKALAN BUN, Indonesia—Divers retrieved one of the black boxes on Monday from the AirAsia plane that plummeted more than two weeks ago into the Java Sea, a major breakthrough in the slow-moving hunt to recover bodies and wreckage. The flight data recorder was found under part of the plane’s wing and brought to the surface early in the morning, said Henry Bambang Soelistyo, head of the national searchand-rescue agency. Divers began zeroing in on the site a day earlier after three Indonesian ships picked up intense pings from the area, but they were unable to see it due to strong currents and poor visibility, said Suryadi Bambang Supriyadi, operation coordinator at the national search and rescue agency. He earlier said the black box was lodged in debris at a depth of about 30 meters, but Soelistyo did not provide additional details about the discovery. Searchers will continue to scour the seabed to try to locate the other black box, the cockpit voice recorder,
CREW members of Crest Onyx ship prepare to unload parts of AirAsia Flight QZ8501 from a ship at Kumai port in Pangkalan Bun on Sunday. A day after the tail of the crashed AirAsia plane was fished out of the Java Sea, the search for the missing black boxes intensified on Sunday with more pings heard. AP/ACHMAD IBRAHIMA
which is believed to be emitting a separate signal between two meters and 20 meters away, he said. “Hopefully, it can be retrieved within hours today [Monday],” Supriyadi
Ayala Land nets ₧16 billion from top-up placement By VG Cabuag
P
A MILLION people marched through Paris on Sunday in a massive show of unity and defiance in the face of terrorism that killed 17 people in France’s bleakest moment in half a century. News reports say more than 3 million people across France participated in marches, described as some of the largest demonstrations in the nation’s recent history. AP/LAURENT CIPRIANI
ARIS—More than 1 million people filled the boulevards and avenues of central Paris on Sunday, marching arm in arm in a display of national unity after a string of attacks that killed 17 people and dramatized France’s vulnerability to terrorism.
By Catherine N. Pillas
This is in lieu of the income-tax holidays (ITH) of up to eight years currently enjoyed by BOIregistered firms. The DTI and DOF, long at loggerheads over the nature of perks that should be given to new qualified investments, have been directed by Congress to immediately come up with a compromise provision on the tax break under the fiscal incentives rationalization bill. In an interview, Trade Secretary Gregory L. Domingo said the earlier proposal to scrap the ITH and replace it with lower corporate income tax has moved forward, with the DTI and DOF agreeing on a maximum effectivity period of 15 years.
Golden Globes 2015 RoUndUP
BusinessMirror
said from Pangkalan Bun, the town closest to the site on Borneo island. He added that diving conditions were not favorable. The two instruments are vital to
understanding what brought Flight 8501 down on December 28, killing all 162 people on board. They provide essential information, including the plane’s vertical and horizontal
speeds, along with engine temperature and final conversations between the captain and copilot. The flight data recorder will be taken to Jakarta, the capital, for analysis. It could take up to two weeks to download its information, said Nurcahyo Utomo, an investigator at the National Committee for Safety Transportation. Officials recovered the aircraft’s tail on Saturday, the first major wreckage excavated from the crash site. They were hopeful the black boxes were still inside, but learned they had detached when the plane crashed into the sea. On Sunday the ships detected two strong signals near each other. Search efforts have been consistently hampered by big waves and powerful currents created by the region’s rainy season. Silt and sand, along with river runoff, have created blinding conditions for divers. On Sunday Soelistyo said divers located the wing and debris from the engine. Officials initially were hopeful it was the main section of the Airbus A320’s cabin, where many of the corpses are believed to be entombed. AP
S. KOREA’S PARK READY TO MEET KIM JONG UN WITH NO CONDITIONS
S
OUTH Korean President Park Geun-hye said she is willing to meet with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, and the country’s nuclear weapons program wouldn’t be an obstacle to holding the first Korean summit since 2007. “There are no preconditions,” including nuclear disarmament, for a summit between the two countries, Park said on Monday at a televised news conference, warning Kim should drop his nuclear pursuit in order to achieve an eventual unification. Park also urged the North Korean leader to agree to resume the reunions of families that remain separated more than 60 years after the end of the civil war that left the peninsula divided. Relations on the Korean peninsula have been complicated by North Korea’s push to develop nuclear weapons and its threats to use them against the South. In recent months there have been some signs of easing tensions. In October North Korea sent three members of Kim’s inner circle to meet with Park’s chief security adviser. That led to the first talks between their military generals since 2007. North Korea’s official Korean Central News Agency said on January 10 that the country could suspend nuclear tests if the US stopped joint military exercises in South Korea. State Department Spokesman Jen Psaki called the offer “inappropriate,” saying in an e-mailed statement that another test would be a violation of the North’s obligations under United Nations Security Council resolutions and a 2005 agreement as part of sixnation disarmament talks. South Korea has said the North must end its pursuit of nuclear arms and acknowledge it attacked the South’s Cheonan warship in 2010, among other concessions, before it can resume large-scale economic assistance seen under former President Roh-moo Hyun. Roh participated in the last summit when he met Kim’s father, Kim Jong Il, in Pyongyang in October 2007, a year after the North conducted its first successful nuclear test. Park has repeatedly called on Kim to embrace her idea of building a joint peace park inside the demilitarized zone since taking office in February 2013. Last year she started a government campaign to prepare for unification, saying that it could be an economic “bonanza” for both nations, even as a declining number of South Koreans view it as necessary. Bloomberg News
World
P25.00 nationwide | 8 sections 36 pages | 7 days a week
he Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) and the Department of Finance (DOF) have found a common ground on the grant of tax breaks, finally agreeing to give Board of Investments (BOI)-registered companies the privilege of paying only 15-percent income tax for 15 years.
FURNITURE-SHOPPING NOW JUST A CLICK AWAY WORD OF LIFE, FR. saL putzu, sDb aND LOuIE m. LacsON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
Tuesday, 18,2015 2014Vol. Vol.1010No. No.9640 Tuesday,November January 13,
nn
DTI, DOF finally agree on tax perks
INSIDE
H
A broader look at today’s business
B.O.I.-REGISTERED FIRMS TO PAY ONLY 15% INCOME TAX FOR 15 YRS IN NEW draft bill
2 DAYS
“Rescue team”
See “Japan,” A2
BusinessMirror
three-time rotary club of manila journalism awardee
eRe we are lord, sinful, wounded and frail, but with a burning desire to be part of Your "rescue team" that brings Your love and hope to a confused, sinful and wounded world. Hold our hands, lord, and teach us to walk and preach with You, then we will feel and think that we can be partners in Your saving work. Amen!
year as it gets increasingly difficult to curb social-welfare spending due to Japan’s aging population,” said Kyohei Morita, chief Japan economist at Barclays Plc. “Given the risk that the economy will be hurt by a sudden decline in public-works spending in the latter half of 2015, the government might have to draft another extra budget.” Tax revenue for the next fiscal year is projected to rise to ¥54.53 trillion and cover 57 percent of the budget, up from 52 percent. New bond issuance will decline to ¥36.86 trillion, Aso said. While the sales tax has increased, the government has plans to reduce corporate taxes by 3.29 percentage points over two years.
B3-1
roperty developer Ayala Land Inc. on Monday said it raised some P16 billion from the top-up placement of its common shares being held by its parent firm, conglomerate Ayala Corp. The company said, in its disclosure to the Philippine Stock Exchange, that proceeds of the transaction, which reduces Ayala’s holdings in its property arm, will be used for its expansion projects. For the year, the developer is setting aside some P100 billion as its capital-expenditure budget. Ayala Land said the top-up placement involves the selling of its 484.84 million common shares at a price of P33 apiece, below its Friday’s close of P35 per share. The company’s share price fell by about 3 See “Ayala,” A2
PESO exchange rates n US 44.9460
Vin d’Honneur President Aquino delivers his message during the New Year’s vin d’honneur at the Rizal Hall of the Malacañan Palace on Monday. The annual reception, which marks the 28th vin d’honneur since the 1986 Edsa Revolution, was attended by government officials, members of the diplomatic corps, officials of international organizations and businessmen. Malacañang Photo/ Benhur Arcayan
GET READY TO WEAR SHORT PANTS AT WORK IN SUMMER
O
ffice workers in the Philippines could be donning shorts for work this summer as air conditioners are dialed back to cut electricity demand and stave off blackouts. At least that’s one scenario suggested by Energy Secretary Carlos Jericho L. Petilla, as the government and private offices, malls and factories are asked to set their air conditioners at 25 degrees Celsius (77°F). “If we can go to work in shirts and short pants,” that could help cut power use, Petilla said in an interview last week. Shopping malls and factories have already been warned to get ready to use their own generators, as the blackouts that plague the country each summer are forecast to worsen in March and April. That’s when demand typically surges as temperatures reach as much as 40°C. Continued on A8
Airlines start removing fuel surcharges on CAB order By Lorenz S. Marasigan
Z
hea Katrina Estrada, 20, fills water bottles up with P5 coins to finance her personal trips. She usually travels around the Philippines, reveling in the Pearl of the Orient’s natural beauty. Traveling on limited budget, she usually buys plane tickets that are on sale. “The ‘piso fare’ from local airlines are really helpful, especially if you want to go to places that are far from Luzon—those that you cannot go to by land,” she said over the phone. “I
only go for low fares since I travel on limited budget.” So when she learned from the BusinessMirror that the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) ordered in December last year the removal of the fuel surcharge from airfares, Estrada, a Web-content writer for an information-technology company, was thrilled. “It’s good news. Personally, I feel happy about it because I would have to pay less for the fare. This also means that more people will get to travel,” she said. See “Airlines,” A2
n japan 0.3793 n UK 68.1606 n HK 5.7956 n CHINA 7.2393 n singapore 33.7104 n australia 36.8470 n EU 53.2251 n SAUDI arabia 11.9712 Source: BSP (12 January 2015)