W.H.O. faulted for Ebola failures as Obama taps czar
Ebola armor Protective suits shield health care workers from bacteria, viruses and other hazards. Users are most vulnerable to contamination when removing the gear. Here are the steps used by Doctors Without Borders, which has been responding to Ebola outbreaks in Africa for decades.
Steps to remove protective gear
T
he World Health Organization (WHO) bungled efforts to halt the spread of Ebola in West Africa, an internal report revealed on Friday, as President Barack Obama named a trusted political adviser to take control of America’s frenzied response to the epidemic.
U.N. Media Award 2008
Hand washing occurs nine times in the removal process.
Wash gloved hands
Spray front and back of apron and suit with chlorine disinfectant.
Wash gloved hands
Remove outer gloves and put in a biohazard container.
Wash gloved hands
Wash gloved hands
Disinfect boots and remove
Open suit
Remove suit
Remove mask
Remove gloves
Wash bare hands with 0.05% chlorine.
Wash gloved hands Remove goggles
Ebola travel ban sought by U.S. lawmakers opposed by Companies
2006, 2010, 2012
Wash gloved hands
Remove apron
GlobalEye»C3
three-time rotary club of manila journalism awardee
Disinfect outer gloves with 0.5% chlorine solution.
Wash gloved hands Remove hood
Sources: Medecins Sans Frontieres, Centers for Disease and Prevention, World Health Organization Graphic: Lorena Iñiguez Elebee, Los Angeles Times
© 2014 MCT
BusinessMirror
www.businessmirror.com.ph
week ahead
Foreign exchange
n Previous week: The local currency traded at a straight downward trend for the entire week last week, starting Monday at 44.795 to a dollar. The peso further shed value, closing at 44.82 against the US dollar and 44.825 versus the greenback on Tuesday and Wednesday, respectively. The peso lost 4.5 centavos in value on Thursday’s trade to hit 44.87 to a dollar. The peso closed the week’s trade on Friday to hit 44.91 to a dollar. This is the weakest value of the peso for the month. n Week ahead: Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Deputy Governor for the Monetary Stability Sector Diwa C. Guinigundo said the peso is being affected by the negative sentiment stemming from the expectations of a slower global growth this year. Guinigundo said that if both Europe and Japan will continue to post soft growth, capital flows will head back to the direction of the US, prompting further strengthening of the dollar in the future.
Balance of Payments (B.O.P.) (September 2014) Monday, October 20
n August BOP: The country’s BOP position—or the broad measure of the Philippines’ economic dealings with the rest of the world— registered a surplus of $114 million in August this year. While this is a sharp turn-around from the BOP deficit of $318 million seen See “Outlook,” A2
A broader look at today’s business
n Sunday, October 19, 2014 Vol. 10 No. 11
P25.00 nationwide | 7 sections 32 pages | 7 days a week
Neda Board’s newly approved infra projects to bolster inclusive growth By Cai U. Ordinario
T
HE projects recently approved by the National Economic and Development Authority (Neda) Board will increase the poor’s access to various infrastructure facilities, as well as social and economic services.
Yellen sounds alarm on widening economic inequality in America While the recovery from the 2008 Great Recession is gaining momentum in the U.S., the wealthiest are seeing far more gains than the rest of the population, continuing a trend in widening income inequality in the country.
PESO exchange rates n US 44.8180
billion. However, the biggest project in terms of cost, the P122.8-billionworth Laguna Lakeshore Expressway-Dike Project, has already been approved by the Neda Board in a previous meeting. What was approved in the Laguna Lakeshore Expressway-Dike Project on Friday was merely the request of the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) to allow the project to proceed under a hybrid contractual arrangement pursuant to Section 2.9 of the Revised Implementing Rules and Regulations of the Build-OperateTransfer Law. Further, the Neda said the Neda Board also amended the approval of the requirement of a Department of Justice opinion regarding the delineation of the jurisdictions of the Laguna Lake Development Authority and the Philippine Reclamation Authority over the reclaimed land of the project areas. Meanwhile, the 12 new projects approved by the Neda Board on Friday include the P8.55-billion Flood Risk Management Project for Cagayan de Oro River; the P4.01billion Metro Manila Interchange
Top 1%
Before the Great Recession
Top 10% to 1%
In the decades leading up to the 2008 recession, more than four-fifths of gains in income in the U.S. went to the top 10 percent, far more than in any other industrialized country; share of income growth, 1975-2007 Denmark
Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Arsenio M. Balisacan said increasing the access of the poor to these facilities and services is key to realizing the Philippines’ goal of achieving inclusive growth. Balisacan earlier said that apart from low incomes, the lack of access to social services, such as education and health, makes millions of Filipinos poor. “These approved projects will significantly contribute to the infrastructure investment needed to sustain growth, and make it inclusive. The projects will allow Filipinos to have more access to social and economic opportunities. The transportation and port projects will improve the mobility of people and the efficiency of the flow of goods and services,” Balisacan said. “Also, some of these projects will instill or enhance resiliency of many areas against climate-related risks and disasters.” The Neda Board approved 12 new infrastructure projects, worth P183.8 billion, after a meeting chaired by President Aquino on Friday. On Friday the Palace announced that the projects approved by the Neda Board amounted to P303
By Martin Crutsinger | The Associated Press
The rich and the rest
Sweden
Spain
France
72
70
68
Norway N. Zealand Australia
90%
72
Bottom 90%
Canada
U.S.
70 50 34 18
Since the Great Recession
While incomes fell across the board as a result of the recession, in the U.S., they recovered quickly for those at the top and stagnated for virtually everyone else; percent change in real incomes, 2008-2010* Denmark Sweden Spain France Norway N. Zealand Australia Canada U.S. 22.8%
By 2012, gains hit 13.9%
9.0 2.0% *Latest data for most countries
3.5
8.2
–6.5
0.3 –0.7 –0.5
–1.3
–3.9
Behind the income gap
+5.2
4.2
0.3
0.1
–8.3
–1.0
–6.8
Two factors that contribute to widening inequality are income tax policies that favor the wealthy and low minimum wage
Tax rates
Minimum wage
Top statutory personal income tax rate (includes Social Security, Medicare taxes), 2012
At $7.25, or $15,080 yearly for a 40-hour work week, the U.S. minimum wage is below the poverty threshold of $15,730 a year for a family of two; minimum wage as a percentage of median wage, 2012
Denmark Sweden France Belgium Neth. Spain Austria Japan U.K. Finland Portugal Greece Italy Ireland Canada Israel Germany Australia Iceland U.S.
60% 57 54 54 52 52 50 50 50 49 49 49 49 48 48 48 48 48 46 42
U.S. Japan
37.8% 38.3
Spain
44.2
Canada
45.1
Neth.
46.9
U.K.
47.2
OECD avg. Australia France
48 52.7 61.5
NOTE: U.S. rate from 2003-2012; raised for 2013 tax year to 46 percent
© 2014 MCT Source: Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development Graphic: Pat Carr
W
ASHINGTON—Federal Reserve (the Fed) Chairman Janet Yellen sounded an alarm on Friday about the widening economic inequality in the US, suggesting that America’s long-standing identity as a land of opportunity was at stake. The growing gap between the rich and everyone else narrowed slightly during the Great Recession but has since accelerated, Yellen said in a speech at a conference in Boston on economic opportunity. And robust stock-market returns during the recovery helped the wealthy outpace middle-class America in wages, employment and home prices. “The extent and continuing increase in inequality in the US greatly concerns me,” Yellen said. “By some estimates, income and wealth inequality are near their highest levels in the past hundred years.” Yellen’s extensive comments on economic inequality marked an unusual public departure for a Fed chairman. Her predecessors as head of the US central bank tended to focus exclusively on the core Fed issues of interest rates, inflation and unemployment. Indeed, the Fed’s mandate doesn’t explicitly include issues like income or wealth disparities. But since taking over from Ben Bernanke in February, Yellen has made clear she is deeply concerned about the financial challenges that ordinary workers and families face. Throughout this year, she has stressed the need for the Fed to keep rates low to boost economic expansion and hiring. She has said that the unemployment rate, now at 5.9 percent, doesn’t fully reflect the health of the job market: Yellen has expressed concern, for example, about stagnant incomes, the number of part-time workers who want full-time jobs and the many people who See “Yellen,” A2
Continued on A2
n japan 0.4216 n UK 72.0942 n HK 5.7773 n CHINA 7.3195 n singapore 35.2149 n australia 39.3727 n EU 57.3939 n SAUDI arabia 11.9479 Source: BSP (17 October 2014)