BusinessMirror November 20, 2014

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BusinessMirror

three-time rotary club of manila journalism awardee 2006, 2010, 2012

U.N. Media Award 2008

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Life

The responsibility of parents

WHAT CHILDREN NEED FROM PARENTS AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com

iWitness personal-safety app could be a lifesaver NOBODY to walk you back to your hotel or car after dark? This personal safety app may offer some peace of mind. ■ Name: iWitness ■ Available: iOS, Android ■ Cost: $2.99 per month, $29.99 per year ■ What it does: It connects to emergency services and records your whereabouts. It is set up to work in 146 countries. International users can select the region, and the app automatically localizes to the emergency equivalent of 911. ■ What’s hot: Although there’s no substitute for common sense and being street-smart, having immediate access to a 911 call and a record of your situation add a second layer of personal security. Arm the iWitness app, and at the touch of a button or the screen, or by shaking the phone, you can start recording your predicament (for five minutes) and/or call 911. ■ What’s not: Be careful with the 911 feature if you’re testing the app. Once it’s armed, all it takes is a touch of the screen. When I tried to close out of the app, the “calling 911” alarm sounded. Luckily you have five seconds to cancel if it’s not a real emergency. ■ Worth it: I put this app in the most-used area of my phone. Even if you use it only once, it could be a lifesaver. LOS ANGELES TIMES

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WILLIAM GIBSON COAXES THE FUTURE... »D4

BusinessMirror

Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com

Thursday, November 20, 2014

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Euros or dollars? The wrong choice will cost you B C H Los Angeles Times

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NEW way has been devised to part tourists from their money. And guess what? It’s mostly legal. The practice is called “dynamic currency conversion,” and it is not your friend. It works this way: You go to pay your dinner check in, say, France. The merchant asks whether you would like to pay in euros or dollars. “How thoughtful,” you think, “Someone is trying to help me overcome my conversion aversion and tell me in US dollars how much I owe.” The merchant isn’t helping you overcome your math problem; he’s helping himself to a few extra of your dollars. He’s banking on the fact that you don’t know what the exchange rate is. If you did, you would see that the dollar exchange rate you’re getting probably is lousy. Guess who gets the difference between the real rate and what you’re paying? Hint: Not you. And, by the way, the merchant is supposed to ask you whether you want this conversion done; sometimes he doesn’t, which is contrary to rules that are almost impossible to enforce because there are so many points of sale. Does it matter which currency you choose? Yes, it does. The currency you should choose when you’re in a foreign country generally is the currency of the country you’re visiting, whether it’s euros, pounds, pesos or whatever. Do you have to know what the rate of

exchange is for that day to make an intelligent choice? In a word: no. All you must know is that if you choose US dollars, you’re probably going to get hosed. How can merchants justify this practice? Kevin Yuann, director of credit cards for NerdWallet, a personal finance web site, explains that expressing a total in US dollars is painted as a “convenience” for the traveler. He’s not defending the practice, mind you; in fact, he has run afoul of it. “I was paying for a restaurant bill—this was in Italy— and because I’m aware of dynamic currency conversion, I realized there was a 5-percent fee for using that [total in US dollars],” he said. He told the waiter he had not authorized a bill in US dollars. The waiter, he said, stared at him blankly. Finally, the manager got involved, and the matter was resolved. You might then ask: Would it matter if I was using a credit card that doesn’t charge a foreign transaction fee? The answer is: not really. The dynamic currency conversion fee is separate from a foreign transaction fee, which can add as much as 3 percent to your bills. What’s the big deal over a few dollars? The big deal, says Odysseas Papadimitriou, chief executive of personal finance web sites www.CardHub. com and www.WalletHub.com, is that the fees add up. If you spend $1,500 abroad, and you’re not paying attention to the dynamic currency conversion and foreign transaction fees, you could be out as much as $150 on that $1,500 you’ve spent. You might as well light that money on fire. Now that you know you can say no to dynamic

currency conversion, what about the blasted foreign transaction fees? About 90 percent of credit-card charge them, Papadimitriou says; carry one that doesn’t. You can find a list of credit cards that can be filtered to distinguish those with no foreign transaction fees at www.lat.ms/1x9XcTe. What can you do to protect yourself? The experts offer these suggestions: ■ Familiarize yourself with the exchange rate and carry a calculator (there’s one on your smartphone, or you can use an exchange-rate app) to calculate what you’re being charged. If the amount is negligible, you may want to choose dollars for the convenience, which is how it’s positioned in the first place. ■ Pay close attention to your bill at the point of sale. If dynamic currency conversion is in play, the merchant is supposed to ask you whether you want to pay in the local currency or in dollars, but that doesn’t always happen. If you get a dinner check in dollars, for instance, ask that it be changed. ■ Keep your receipts. If you are paying in the local currency and a charge shows up on your monthly creditcard bill that suggests you’ve been charged in dollars, dispute the charge with your credit-card company. ■ The easiest way to avoid the conversion, of course, is to pay cash, although that comes with its own concerns about exchange rates, automated teller machine fees and, of course, getting pickpocketed. There is, then, no perfect solution to money abroad, except to be aware of others who will part you from it. ■

Resorts World Manila president named Hotel Personality of The Year

Local French community awaits this year’s Beaujolais Nouveau

SKAL International Makati, an organization promoting global tourism and friendship, recently awarded Travellers International Hotel Group Inc. (Travellers) President Kingson Sian as Hotel Personality of the Year. The annual SKAL Tourism Personality Awards Night, now on its 24th year, celebrates the achievements of exemplary personalities in the Philippine tourism industry. As operator of the first integrated resort in the country, Resorts World Manila (RWM), Travellers is now on its fifth year of operation and is currently undergoing expansion projects to accommodate the influx of foreign visitors in the coming years. In photo: SKAL International Makati Director Farid Schoucair (left) and Consul General/SKAL President Robert Lim Joseph (right) award Kingson Sian the Hotel Personality of the Year award at the Cantonese restaurant Passion in RWM.

TONIGHT, lucky oenophiles at the Tent City of The Manila Hotel will be able to taste this year’s harvest of Beaujolais Nouveau, the young wine from France, part of the more than a million cases sent around the world to celebrate this now traditional ritual in the world of wines. “Unlike some wines that must be aged, Beaujolais Nouveau is only about two to three months old and must be drunk at that age,” Bernard Flour, Soiree Beajolais committee chairman and past president of French Chamber, told the BM during the news conference and Sponsor

B R M

Appreciation Night for Soiree Beaujolais 2014: Tradition and Innovation, held on November 6 at the hotel’s Roma Room. For the past 23 years, Le Club, or the French Chamber of Commerce in the Philippines, celebrates Soiree Beaujolais to welcome the harvest and arrival of this young wine, and share with its friends this year’s flavor and aroma. The Tent City has been booked to accommodate 1,500 guests from the diplomatic corps, and corporate and social circles. It is also a happy reunion of all French nationals based in the country. “At one minute past midnight every third Thursday of November, more than

a million cases of Beaujolais Nouveau begin their journey from little villages and towns, especially the Beaujolais region of Morgon, Brouilly, Macon Villages, and Cinsault Rose, through a sleeping France and eventually to Paris for immediate shipment to all parts of the world,” goes the opening invitation for Soiree Beaujolais. Yearly, the Soiree Beaujolais adopts a highly visual theme for its events, and this year would be such icons of France as the Moulin Rouge, the Loire castles, and the streets of Paris. This year’s theme is “Tradition and Innovation.” France, as an old country, maintains its cultural tradition but at the same

time remains in the leading edge of innovation, such as the fabrication of spacecraft, airplanes, automobiles, underwater equipment, smart information technology, as well as the arts, cinema, fashion, footwear, jewelry and more. Le Club President Cyril Rocke will welcome the guests tonight night, while French Ambassador Gilles Garachon will deliver the keynote speech and lead the Chamber board of directors, headed by Soiree Beaujolais committee chairman and past president Bernard Flour, in the uncorking of the new bottles, and declaring the arrival and formal tasting of Beaujolais Nouveau.

life

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The World BusinessMirror

Catholic Diocese offers plan to settle abuse claim

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ELENA, Montana—The Roman Catholic Diocese of Helena has filed a bankruptcy reorganization plan that proposes a $16.4-million settlement for hundreds of people who said clergy members sexually abused them for decades while the church covered it up. This May 4, 2013, file photo released by starpix shows revlon brand ambassadors Emma stone (left) and Olivia Wilde at the 16th Annual EiF revlon run Walk For Women’s Cancer research, in new York. AP

Revlon tries to turn heads with new marketing push

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EVLON is looking for love to spice up its brand recognition. The beauty products maker is launching its global “Love is On” marketing campaign, hoping to regain its lofty spot in the pecking order of cosmetic brands. The campaign features television, print and digital ads, a social-media push and an interactive Times Square billboard that lets people share “love moments.” The new campaign, announced on Tuesday, arrives with the retailer facing growing competition from companies like L’Oreal and Estée Lauder. There also have been a number of new faces in executive offices at Revlon over the past year or so, as the New York company has attempted to reenergize growth. Revlon Inc. named Lorenzo Delpani as chief executive officer last fall and also has changed chief financial officers and CEOs. Late last year, the company said it would leave China and trim more than 1,000 jobs as part of a costcutting measure. Besides its namesake brand of makeup and hair dye, Revlon also makes cosmetics under its Almay and SinfulColors brands. Revlon shares climbed 45 cents to $33.20 in midday trading on Tuesday, while broader indexes also rose slightly. The stock had climbed 31 percent so far this year, as of Monday’s close. AP

The plan, filed late Monday, calls for the 362 victims identified in two lawsuits filed in 2011 to receive a minimum payment of $2,500 each. An abuse-claims reviewer will determine the actual payment based on the severity and long-term effects of the abuse. The plaintiffs’ attorneys, unsecured creditors and any future abuse claims also will be paid out of the trust. “As attorneys for the victims, we are relieved that this long battle is finally coming to an end,” Seattle attorney Timothy Kosnoff wrote in an e-mail to the Associated Press on November 14. He expected the plaintiffs to be paid early next year. The plan calls for insurance companies to contribute $14.4 million to

the trust, while the diocese is asking the court’s approval for a $3.5 million loan so it can contribute $2 million to the trust and cover administrative expenses and operating expenses. The settlement was reached through mediation, but it still must be approved by the creditors, including the plaintiffs in the lawsuits who said they were abused from the 1940s to the 1970s. Bishop George Leo Thomas expressed “his profound sorrow” and apologized to the victims in a news conference in January announcing the settlement. “I know the pain is real, the pain is in the present tense, and in the name of the church, I want to say I’m sorry and we’re sorry as a church,” Thomas

said at the time. The plan also calls for a wrongfuldischarge lawsuit filed by former Butte Central teacher Shaela Evenson to be allowed, with any judgment being subject to the limits of an insurance policy. Evenson sued after being fired from the Catholic school for being unmarried and pregnant. In March, she gave birth to a son, the first child for her and her partner, Marilyn Tobin. The diocese issued a statement on Tuesday saying it could not immediately comment on the plan, which does not accept any liability for a 2012 lawsuit filed against the Ursuline Sisters of the Western Province. The proposed $3.5-million loan from Placid Enterprises Llc. would be secured by diocese-owned buildings, including the bishop’s $367,000 residence, other property and Legendary Lodge, a church camp on Salmon Lake valued at $3.6 million. The loan has a 5-percent interest rate and requires monthly payments of nearly $14,600 for five years. The diocese said it was minimizing expenses and, with increased donations, was confident it could successfully reorganize its finances, the filing said. Helena’s diocese was the 11th in America to seek bankruptcy protection in the face of sexabuse claims. AP

NRC chairman: Work needed to finish Fukushima changes

Fast-tracked bill would shield execution drug

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OLUMBUS, Ohio—A bill that would shield the names of companies that provide Ohio its execution drugs continued its swift move through the state legislature on Tuesday as opponents questioned a key defense of the measure. Those opponents got a minor boost when an official with the attorney general’s office seemed to suggest he wasn’t aware of any threats against such companies—the main defense of the bill. Democratic Rep. Matt Lundy had asked Thomas Madden, an assistant attorney general, if companies in Ohio had expressed fear of threats. Madden said he couldn’t speak to the issue. Lundy said he wanted examples because he believes the reality of such threats may not be real. The state public defender’s office and the American Civil Liberties Union of Ohio also question whether such threats have ever been substantiated. Ohio would have to have contracted with a company for such threats even to exist, said attorney general spokesman Dan Tierney, who deferred further questions to the state prisons agency. “Nobody can be threatened if they’re not performing the act in question to begin with,” Tierney said. AP

AkirA OnO, plant chief for the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant of Tokyo Electric Power Co., speaks to the media at the main earthquake-proof building at the tsunami-crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant in Okuma, Fukushima prefecture, northeastern Japan, on november 12. AP

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TLANTA—The outgoing chairman of the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission said on Tuesday the industry must finish making the safety changes required after a nuclear disaster in Japan, and it faces unresolved questions over how to store nuclear waste as existing plants close. Allison Macfarlane became the agency’s leader in July 2012 after the stormy tenure of former Chairman Gregory Jaczko, whose management style was described as bullying by fellow commissioners and staffers. A geologist, Macfarlane will start teaching on January 1 at George Washington University. Macfarlane said the agency must follow through on changes required after the March 2011 crisis at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant in Japan. Tsunami waves disabled the plant’s electrical and cooling systems, causing a meltdown and explosions that flung debris and radiation into the environment. “We as regulators need to do what we think is right,” Macfarlane said in an interview during a

nuclear industry conference in Atlanta. “And if we think something is required, and this is something we’ve learned as a result of the Fukushima accident, we need to tell the industry to do it.” Among the changes, the nuclear industry has set up centers in Memphis and Phoenix that can quickly send emergency gear to a stricken plant. Some plants will install vents meant to prevent explosions during extreme accidents. Regulators are reviewing updated earthquake and flooding hazard assessments for plants across the country. Earlier this year, Macfarlane lost a vote on whether spent nuclear fuel should be removed more quickly from water-filled storage pools. After used nuclear fuel is removed from a reactor, it must be cooled in water for several years. By law, the US government promised to dispose of that used fuel, but it never has. As a result, spent fuel continues to accumulate in pools. Experts have long been concerned that accidental water loss in a cooling pool could cause the old fuel to over-

heat, potentially combust and release radiation. NRC staffers concluded the costs of placing that spent fuel in special casks on land outweighed the safety gains from removing it from the pools, and a majority of the NRC’s commissioners agreed. Macfarlane said the issue deserved more study. T he NRC faces a radica l ly changed market. Just a few years ago, the utility industry anticipated building a wave of new nuclear power plants. Instead, natural gas prices plummeted and demand for electricity tumbled during the Great Recession and lackluster recovery. Three nuclear plants in Georgia, South Carolina and Tennessee are being built. Some nuclear vendors have struggled to meet strict quality control rules. “I think this is new for the industry in general because they haven’t had nuclear construction in this country for so long,” Macfarlane said. Macfarlane said the NRC will need rules for power companies that are taking existing nuclear plants offline because the facilities are no longer viewed as economic. AP

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Right-to-die advocate’s mom blasts Vatican remarks

This undated file photo provided by Compassion & Choices shows Brittany Maynard, a terminally ill woman who decided to end her life early under an Oregon law. she died on november 1. AP

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ORTLAND, Oregon—The mother of a right-to-die advocate responded angrily to criticism from the Vatican of Brittany Maynard’s decision to end her life early under an Oregon law written to let terminally ill patients die on their own terms. Days after Maynard’s November 1 death at age 29, the Vatican’s top bioethics official called her choice “reprehensible” and said physician-assisted suicide should be condemned. Maynard’s mother, Debbie Ziegler, issued a sharp written response on Tuesday. She said the comments from Monsignor Ignacio Carrasco de Paula, head of the Pontifical Academy for Life, came as the family was grieving and were “more than a slap in the face.” Her response was made through Compassion & Choices, an advocacy group that Maynard worked with in her last days. Maynard suffered from terminal brain cancer and in the spring was given six months to live. She moved to Oregon from Northern California with her husband and parents because Oregon allows terminally ill patients to die using lethal medications prescribed by a doctor. Maynard used her story to speak out for the right of the terminally ill to end their lives on their own terms. A media campaign by her and Compassion & Choices sparked a national debate. Five US states allow patients to seek aid in dying: Oregon, Washington, Montana, Vermont and New Mexico. Some religious groups and social conservatives, including the American Life League, also have criticized Maynard’s decision.

Pope Francis denounced the rightto-die movement on Saturday, saying euthanasia is a sin against God and creation. Thinking of euthanasia as an act of dignity provides a “false sense of compassion,” Francis said. He didn’t refer specifically to Maynard’s case. In the letter, Ziegler called her terminally ill daughter’s decision to die a human-rights issue. Maynard’s family has since moved back to California. “My 29-year-old daughter’s choice to die gently rather than suffer physical and mental degradation and intense pain does not deserve to be labelled as reprehensible by strangers a continent away who do not know her or the particulars of her situation,” Ziegler wrote. Ziegler encouraged people to consider all the options when faced with an incurable, debilitating, painful disease. “The ‘culture of cure’ has led to a fairy tale belief that doctors can always fix our problems,” she wrote. On Thursday, the day Maynard would have turned 30, Compassion & Choices plans to release a video she made before her death. The group also will call for expanded laws that allow the terminally ill to end their lives. Oregon was the first state to make it legal for a doctor to prescribe a life-ending drug to a terminally ill patient of sound mind who makes the request. The patient must swallow the drug without help; it is illegal for a doctor to administer it. More than 750 people in Oregon had used the law to die as of December 31, 2013. The median age of the deceased is 71. Only six were younger than 35. AP

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loans mobsters made to businesses in northern Italy and Switzerland that were unable to get credit otherwise. In a separate intercepted phone call, one suspect says to tell someone reluctant to repay money: “I will cut his head off.’“ Milan prosecutor Ilda Boccassini said the video shows how “the force of tradition” helps the ‘ndrangheta, a global cocaine-trafficking organization, to thrive. Suspected mobsters are seen kissing each other on the cheek in greeting. The ‘ndrangheta, rooted in the southern Calabrian region, has spread north as it invested illicit revenues. In another scene, four males huddle together as words of a loyalty oath are repeated. “Right in this holy evening, in the silence of the night, under the light of the stars and under the splendor of the moon, I create the holy chain... the holy society,” one man says. AP

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ARE BACK By Mike Bresnahan

BRYANT, LAKERS BOOK RARE VICTORY OVER HAWKS

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TLANTA—Kobe Bryant scored 28 points as the Los Angeles Lakers won for only the second time this season, beating the Atlanta Hawks, 114-109, in the National Basketball Association (NBA) on Tuesday. Bryant’s biggest shot came with one minute and 11 seconds remaining, when he backed in against Thabo Sefolosha and made a fadeaway jumper despite being fouled. Bryant completed the three-point play, giving the Lakers a 108-102 lead. “Man, oh man, that’s a lot better,” Lakers point guard Jeremy Lin said. “It’s been a rough start to the season.” The Hawks had a chance to force overtime after the Lakers (2-9) failed to put it away at the line. But Los Angeles smothered longrange threat Kyle Korver, leaving Pero Antic to take an open three-pointer. It clanked off the rim and the Lakers grabbed the loose ball to seal the victory. In other games, Milwaukee topped the struggling New York Knicks, 117-113; Utah beat Oklahoma City, 98-81; and New Orleans defeated Sacramento, 106-100. Milwaukee’s Ersan Ilyasova had 20 points as the rebuilding Bucks improved to 6-5 on the season—the first time in more than a year the team has had a winning record. New York cut a 26-point deficit to 115-113 with 7.9 seconds left, but Milwaukee managed to hold on. Zaza Pachulia added season highs of 14

Los Angeles Times

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THIS TIME, KOBE DELIVERS points and 13 rebounds for Milwaukee, while Carmelo Anthony had 26 points for the Knicks. In Salt Lake City Alec Burks had 20 points and a career-high 14 rebounds, and Enes Kanter added 16 points and 15 boards for Utah, which enjoyed a 55-44 edge on the glass. Playing without the injured Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook, Oklahoma City has lost three straight and seven of nine. Jeremy Lamb led the Thunder with 19 points. New Orleans’s Anthony Davis had 28 points and nine rebounds to lead the Pelicans past the Kings in a matchup between two of the Western Conference’s most surprising teams this season. Ryan Anderson scored 22 points for the Pelicans, who outscored the Kings 31-15 in the third and improved to 6-4 on the year. DeMarcus Cousins had 24 points and 17 rebounds for Sacramento. AP

KOBE BRYANT drives against Atlanta’s Jeff Teague during the Lakers game against the Hawks on Tuesday. AP

TLANTA—A simple reason for a rare Los Angeles Lakers victory was the return of Nick Young, the self-proclaimed “Swaggy P” always one step and two laughs ahead in life. “It’s like my swag just rubbed off on everybody,” he said after bringing some desperately needed scoring to the Lakers. But the story was more than Young, more complex than the return of one in a 114-109 victory on Tuesday over the Atlanta Hawks. It started with a long meeting at the team hotel after the Lakers arrived here on Monday night. The topic was their defense. Lack of it, really. Thought-provoking questions were lobbed from Coach Byron Scott to the players. Are we asking you to do near-impossible things? Are you thinking too much about this defense? Players shook their heads and committed to improvement after being rallied by none other than Ronnie Price, a training-camp signee whose contract was only partly guaranteed. It’s not a joyful occasion to allow 109 points in a National Basketball Association (NBA) game, though the Lakers were giving up an average of 112 before the night began and rolled over two days earlier, surrendering 136 to Golden State. Their effort against Atlanta was “much better than it had been the last three or four games,” Scott said. So was their balance, another plot line through a brutal start for the Lakers (2-9). Kobe Bryant had 28 points on 10-for-18 shooting, Carlos Boozer had 20 points and Jordan Hill scored 18. Young had 17 points and Jeremy Lin added 15. “I thought it was excellent,” said Bryant, who made more than 45 percent of his shots for the first time this season. He also become the fourth NBA player to score 32,000 points, now perched 291 behind Michael Jordan. Seemingly nothing comes easily for Bryant nowadays, or without criticism, so he was asked if he heard the chatter that his shot volume was so high this season because he wanted to pass Jordan. “There’s always something, especially with me,” Bryant said. “First, it’s ‘I can’t come back and play.’ Now it’s, ‘Well he’s not playing well enough.’ Well you just said I’d be in a wheelchair and I wouldn’t be able to play at all. I won’t even waste my time trying to shut people up.” Young was the opposite, eager to stimulate debate by happily putting himself No. 1 on the list of greatest shooters of all time. “I might be me at the top,” he said. “Me, Ray Allen, Reggie [Miller], then I might throw in one of the players from Golden State. It depends.” Um. Larry Bird? “He’s, like, top 5 right now. He’s probably No. 5.” What about your coach? “Byron could shoot? I didn’t know that.” That might earn some extra sprints at practice. But the ebullient Young, who is nowhere near the top 5 and knows it, will probably be forgiven. Paul Millsap had 29 points for the Hawks (5-5), who were in deep trouble with a 17-point second-quarter deficit, the Lakers’ early defense a key factor.

DUEL FALLS FLAT M

ANCHESTER, England—The highly anticipated duel between Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo fell flat as the world’s two best players lasted just 45 minutes of Portugal’s last-gasp 1-0 win over Argentina in an international friendly on Tuesday. With Messi and Ronaldo substituted at halftime after low-key performances, many in the crowd at a half-full Old Trafford had lost interest by the time Raphael Guerreiro dived to head in the winning goal in the first minute of injury time. Stationed on the right wing, Messi only showed glimpses of the brilliance he produces regularly for Barcelona, although he struck a close-range shot against the post in the 11th minute. Ronaldo’s presence was even more fleeting for Portugal at the ground where he spent six years playing with distinction for Manchester United from 2003-2009. Aside from a neat back-flick near the halfway line and blazing a shot over the bar from 10 meters out, Ronaldo barely made an impression—except for when he missed the ball with a swing of his famous right boot and kicked Argentina midfielder Lucas Biglia in the stomach instead. This was hardly a night when the great rivals demonstrated their credentials ahead of the latest Fofa world player of the year vote, and there was a smattering of boos when it was announced at the start of the second half that they would not be reappearing. It was the 27th time Messi and Ronaldo came up against against each other—and surely the most underwhelming. “We had planned with Lionel after he played the whole match [of last week’s 2-1 win] against Croatia that he should only take part in the opening 45 minutes,” Argentina Coach Gerardo Martino said. Guerreiro’s goal came from the only clear-cut chance Portugal created. A long-range shot deflected

off Eder and rebounded out to the right wing, where Ricardo Quaresma controlled and crossed for the substitute striker to head unmarked past Argentina goalkeeper Naheul Guzman from 6 meters. “We knew when we play against a team like that, it is very difficult,” said Portugal midfielder Nani, who is currently on loan from United at Sporting Lisbon. “We defended the result but tried to win the game as well, and in the end we had a bit of pressure and we won the game.” Nani left his mark on his return to Old Trafford, stamping on the right foot of Argentina midfielder Angel Di Maria—the man replaced Nani in the United squad this season. Di Maria required treatment but played on. “It was a tough blow, a tough knock,” Martino said. “It actually cut the skin a little bit. We are having a look at some x-rays that were taken, but we don’t think that it is too serious.” Martino has lost two of his five matches in charge of Argentina since taking over after the World Cup in Brazil. Messi, who has always planned to end his career at Barcelona, meanwhile, is hinting that might not happen. In an interview published on Tuesday by sports newspaper Ole, the 27-year-old Argentine says: “While I always said that I would like to stay there [Barcelona] forever, sometimes not everything happens the way you want.” Messi indicated that the club’s current situation—with losses on the field and a new coach in Luis Enrique—could change things. He says “Barcelona is a very big club. And when you lose two games in a row, problems begin to crop up and critics come out from all sides...crazy stuff, the same as with the [Argentine] national team.” Barcelona failed to pick up any silverware last season.

CRISTIANO RONALDO and Lionel Messi (inset) barely make an impression. AP

SPORTS

By Bianca Cuaresma

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GOOD TIMES

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| Thursday, November 20, 2014 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao

BOP still below par despite Oct’s $24-M surplus

This time, Kobe delivers BusinessMirror

he 2014 Investment Priorities Plan (IPP), the new roster of preferred economic activities that are entitled to government fiscal and non-fiscal incentives, has been approved by President Aquino, the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) said on Wednesday.

See “IPP,” A8

Italian mobsters take secret oath in police video

OME—Recruits for Italy’s ‘ndrangheta crime syndicate have been caught on video taking a loyalty oath, swearing “under the splendor of the moon,” in a ceremony secretly recorded by police in what investigators called authorities’ first such glimpse of the ritual. Carabinieri paramilitary police in Milan on Tuesday released video of what they said were two “convivial” get-togethers of suspected mobsters at a farmhouse in Castello di Brianza, northern Italy, with one recruit as young as 17. The oath reminds the recruits that traitors are expected to kill themselves and to keep an extra bullet handy in case it comes to that. Investigators did not explain how they managed to film at the ceremony. Prosecutors said it was the first time authorities have obtained video of an ‘ndrangheta initiation ritual. The same investigation led to 38 arrests. The probe concentrated on

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The trade department said it added another preferred activity to the preliminary list of seven priority areas earlier presented by the Board of Investments (BOI). Trade Undersecretary Adrian S. Cristobal Jr., in a text message, confirmed that the Chief Executive has “approved as recommended” the much-delayed IPP last month. The BOI earlier released a draft list of preferred activities, namely, manufacturing, agribusiness and fishery, services, economic and low-cost housing, energy, public infrastructure and logistics, and publicprivate partnership (PPP) projects. Hospital projects were included in the 2014 IPP’s final version. Manufacturing activities include motor-vehicle assembly, engineered products, chemicals including fertilizer and pesticides, copper wire rod, paper pulp, tool and dye.

CATHOLIC Diocese OFFERS PLAN TO SETTLE ABUSE CLAIM B3-4 Thursday, November 20, 2014

Tuesday, Thursday,November November18, 20,2014 2014Vol.Vol.1010No.No.4042

P-Noy inks long-delayed 2014 IPP

EUROS OR DOLLARS? THE WRONG CHOICE WILL COST YOU EAR God, of course, producing children is only the beginning of the responsibility of parents. At first, human babies are almost entirely dependent, but as they grow, they need more than physical attention. They need help to develop mentally, emotionally, morally, economically and spiritually. As parents, we have the responsibility to bring our children closer to God daily. Amen.

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HOSPITAL PROJECTS LATE ADDITION TO LIST OF PREFERRED ACTIVITIES eligible FOR PERKS

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A broader look at today’s business

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he country’s balance of payments (BOP) remains under pressure to keep its position afloat the surplus line for the year, with the latest report from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) showing the Philippines still has a multibillion-dollar deficit in the first 10 months of the year. The recovery continues, however, as the central bank reported on Wednesday that the country’s transactions with the rest of the world for October alone hit a surplus of $24 million. The month’s surplus is larger than the $5-million BOP surplus seen in the same month last year. It is, however, smaller compared to the previous month’s surplus of $98 million. While the country has been recording a monthly surplus since July, the excess has been steadily declining to contribute less and less to the country’s BOP position for the entire 10-month period. In particular, the October surplus was not enough to push the country’s 10-month deficit to the surplus territory. Latest data from the central bank showed that the country is still at a $3.408-billion deficit in the Continued on A8

PESO exchange rates n US 44.9390

p-noy in singapore President Aquino shares his views during the open discussions at a meeting with business executives at the Hibiscus Room of the Shangri-La Hotel Singapore on Wednesday as part of his official visit to Singapore. With the President are Secretary to the Cabinet Jose Rene D. Almendras, Foreign Secretary Albert F. del Rosario and Trade Secretary Gregory L. Domingo. See related story on A5. Malacañang Photo

U.N.REPORT: DEMOGRAPHIC SHIFT MAY BOOST GROWTH

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he United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) said on Tuesday that changing demographics, mainly in Africa and Asia, could lead to rapid economic growth if there is sufficient investment in young people. The agency said a “demographic dividend” can happen when a country’s working-age population is larger than its elderly and young populations who are dependent. “Today’s record 1.8 billion young people present an enormous opportunity to transform the future,” the fund’s Executive Director Babatunde Osotimehin said. “Never again is there likely to be such potential for economic and social progress.” He said 90 percent of these young people live in lessdeveloped countries where they face obstacles to their rights to education, health and a life free from violence. A staggering 57 million are out of school, and young people today account for two in five of the world’s unemployed, he said. In its State of World Population 2014 report, the UNFPA said demographic shifts taking place in about 60 developing countries, primarily in Africa and Asia, are opening a window for a demographic dividend. The size of the dividend depends largely on the investment those countries make in young people to realize their full potential, the report said. Osotimehin said at the launch in London that the report makes the case “for urgent investment in young people so they may be engaged in their communities and Continued on A8

Although in recession, Japan vows continued ODA to PHL By Lorenz S. Marasigan

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Conclusion

okyo, Japan—In addition to investing in human-capital development, Japan’s official development assistance (ODA) to the Philippines must also respond to the changing face of poverty, Foreign Secretary Albert F. del Rosario said. “The scourge of poverty afflicts millions, not only in poor countries, but also in middle-income and higher growth economies. On top of this, poverty is exacerbated by the increased severity of climate change-induced disasters. I believe, therefore, that ODA must continue to target poverty alleviation as an effective means for addressing social inequality and promoting sustainable development,” he stressed. Del Rosario noted that the natural calamities that ravaged the Philippines in the past quarters signal the need for better disaster resilience, which, in turn, requires financing. “Given the mega disasters, which we feel may be the new norm, we are

looking for assistance very badly in terms of building a country that is disaster-resilient. Moving forward, funding for disaster resilience could be embedded in development assistance,” he said. Overall, del Rosario said the Philippines is in need of good governance, a key ingredient in attaining inclusive economic growth. “We need assistance in providing for good governance, improving our competitiveness and building a disaster-resilient community,” he emphasized. Japan International Cooperation Agency (Jica) President Akihiko Tanaka welcomed these requests, but stressed the importance of completing the current projects that the two countries are pursuing. “First thing that we need to do is to implement what we have already agreed upon. The tasks that we are facing in the coming years are infrastructure, and the consultation of the government of the Philippines, which are priority areas,” he said. “We are very positive in designing many projects in line with what Continued on A2

n japan 0.3846 n UK 70.2801 n HK 5.7952 n CHINA 7.3414 n singapore 34.6324 n australia 39.2446 n EU 56.3445 n SAUDI arabia 11.9780 Source: BSP (19 November 2014)


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BusinessMirror November 20, 2014 by BusinessMirror - Issuu