PBS documentary on Filipino Americans in May

 

Don’t miss this ! Set your DVRs and Tivos:

 

Little Manila: in California’s Heartland” documentary will be shown by KVIE, Channel 6 on Wednesday, May 28th at 7:00 pm.

 

San Francisco Bay area

KQED Channel 9 and KTEH 54 on Sunday May 4 at 1:30 PM

 

New York

WNET Channel 13 on Sunday May 4, at 7:00 PM

 

Los Angeles

KLCS Channel 58 on May 1st at 11:00 PM

 

Boston

WGBH channel 2 on Friday May 30, at 7:00 PM

Saturday May 31, at 12:00 :PM

Saturday May 31 at 8:00 AM, 2:00PM

 

    

For more Filipino American history and/or to take part in recording your community’s history, contact the Filipino American National Historical Society (FANHS). Click here http://www.fanhs-national.org/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Update on rice: Filipinos have a new organic brand

 

Speaking of diabetes among Filipinos … eating too much of a good thing — in this case rice — may be one of the culprits.  No doubt, this will not change with a brand new organic rice being promoted, the Doña Maria Premium Rice. If it can be produced cheaply because it is grown locally, it may help feed the multitude of Filipinos for generations to come. Read more below.

 

 

Doña Maria Premium Rice: An Emerging Filipino Brand

 

Source: Manila Bulletin Online http://www.mb.com.ph/BSNS20080430123028.html

 

Being in a country where rice is the staple and where news of a looming rice crisis has become a national concern, a Filipino rice brand promises to offer not only quality grains but also the benefits of naturally-cultivated hybrid rice.

 

Considered one of the best in the market today, Doña Maria Premium Rice offers three variants developed naturally through proven rice technology and practices pioneered by SL Agritech to give the public new ways to enjoy hybrid grains that are not genetically modified.

 

Through the continued advancement of its rice processing, SL Agritech began promulgating its own hybrid rice seeds and cultivating its harvest in its private rice technology farm in Laguna, ensuring the high quality of its grains packaged into the brand variants.

 

“The Doña Maria brand is the result of years of hard work and dedication, with SL Agritech employing proven and time-honored agricultural techniques to successfully combine the best features of the world’s most-recognized premium rice variants,” stated Henry Lim, SL Agritech Chief Executive Officer, who had named the brand in honor of his mother.

 

Lim explained that the Doña Maria Jasponica Rice combines the fragrant aroma of Jasmine Rice and the excellent eating quality of Japanese rice. When cooked, the grains achieve a soft, sticky and chewy texture enhanced further by its aroma.

 

Doña Maria Jasponica Brown Rice, on the other hand, offers the healthy benefits of brown rice to the Jasmine-Japanese rice mix. High in fiber with no cholesterol and fully-flavored by the natural nutty texture of brown rice, the variant is the perfect alternative for health-conscious, rice-loving Filipino families.

 

Not to be outdone, the Doña Maria Miponica Rice is a combination of the clear, translucent, long and slender grain quality of Milagrosa and the exceptional eating quality of Japanese rice. Fluffy and sticky with a pleasant, delicious aroma, Miponica Rice is easy to cook and stays soft throughout.

 

Lim also revealed that aside from its Laguna farm, the company also regularly taps farmers in Nueva Ecija and other parts of Luzon to grow the variants

 

“We recognize the role of our farmers as our partners in helping build up a sustainable, yearly harvest of hybrid rice. That is why aside from providing them with our seeds; we also invest in educating them on modern rice farming techniques to help them benefit more from our hybrid rice,” said Lim.

 

Aside from its adherence to product quality, Lim also stressed Doña Maria’s goal of making premium rice more affordable for the common consumer. All three variants come in two, five, 10 and 25-kilo packs.

 

Currently, the Doña Maria brand can be found in most major supermarkets and rice retailers in Metro Manila. Future plans of the pioneering rice producer include expanding its distribution to the provinces and other countries around the world.

 

For inquiries, log on to http://www.sl-agritech.com.

Diabetes among Filipinos

 

I hope you will find this information equally interesting …

 

 

The UCLA Center for Health Policy Research has just released a study that links the risk for obesity or diabetes to where people live. The key finding: people living in neighborhoods crowded with fast-food and convenience stores but relatively few grocery or produce outlets are at significantly higher risk of suffering from obesity and diabetes (Click here for more info http://www.healthpolicy.ucla.edu/pubs/files/Designed_for_Disease_PB_042908.pdf).
 

Very little Filipino-specific data on diabetes and obesity are widely available, but those that exist show that FIlipino Americans look more similar to Blacks than they do Whites when it comes to the number of people with hypertension and diabetes (Click here for more info http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/407432_4).
  
According to one non-governmental group, there is a diabetes crisis in the Philippines (http://www.operationdiabetes.com/crisis.htm). See below the alarming figures:

10th
The Philippines ranks 10th among countries with the highest diabetes incidence worldwide.
6 Million
Estimated number of Filipinos who know they have diabetes.
another 6 Million
Estimated number of Filipinos who have diabetes but do not know they have it. Health experts believe many more have impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) and are prone to diabetes.

 

* Image from morphizm.com

Whoo-hoo! Senate passes Filipino-friendly vet bill

 

                                                                                                                                           

SENATE PASSES VETERANS BENEFITS ENHANCEMENT ACT OF 2007

Comprehensive bill expands support for disabled veterans, job training,

and provides historic Filipino veterans equity

 

WASHINGTON, D.C.U.S. Senator Daniel K. Akaka (D-HI), Chairman of the Veterans’ Affairs Committee, elatedly applauded his colleagues in the Senate for passing S. 1315, the Veterans Benefits Enhancement Act of 2007 by a vote of 96 to 1.  Prior to voting on final passage of the bill, the Senate debated an amendment to remove a provision providing a limited pension for Filipino World War II veterans residing in the Philippines.  This amendment was defeated by a vote of 56 to 41, with Akaka leading the charge for the Filipino veterans’ pension.    

 

“The Filipino veterans of World War II fought bravely under U.S. military command, helping us win the war only to lose their veteran status by an Act of Congress.  I commend my colleagues for supporting those veterans who stood with us,” said Akaka. 

 

Akaka continued, “I am also very pleased that the Veterans Benefits Enhancement Act of 2007 can finally move forward.  This bill makes needed improvements to veterans’ benefits by expanding and increasing support for veterans, their families, and their survivors.  I urge my colleagues in the House to act swiftly on this much needed bill.”

 

This comprehensive, budget-neutral omnibus veterans’ benefits bill was approved by the Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs last June and reported to the full Senate last August. 

 

The Veterans Benefits Enhancement Act of 2007 would provide a veterans’ pension to Filipino veterans of World War II residing in the U.S. and in the Philippines.  Under the proposed bill, veterans residing in the Philippines would receive a smaller pension than those residing in the U.S., to account for differences in cost-of-living in the two countries.

 

The Veterans Benefits Enhancement Act of 2007 also includes a multitude of improvements to veterans’ benefits, including provisions to:

 

1) Establish a new program of insurance for service-connected disabled veterans;

2) Expand eligibility for retroactive benefits from traumatic injury protection coverage under Servicemembers’ Group Life Insurance;

3) Increase the maximum amount of Veterans’ Mortgage Life Insurance that a service-connected disabled veteran may purchase;

4) Provide individuals with severe burn injuries specially adapted housing benefits; and

5) Extend for two years the monthly educational assistance allowance for apprenticeship or other on-the-job training

 

The bill now moves to the House of Representatives.

Grade the Bush years

 

  

“As far as history goes and all of these quotes about people trying to guess what the history of the Bush administration is going to be, you know, I take great comfort in knowing that they don’t know what they are talking about, because history takes a long time for us to reach.”— George W. Bush, Fox News Sunday, Feb10, 2008
  

Spoken like a clown … The NY Times a while back solicited reader opinion on the Bush years (see article below).  If the page is no longer active, feel free to post your opinion — your grade or personal story — of the Bush years here on this blog, instead. If the link is still active, please add yours; mine is #111 (see “Comment” below).
 

There are those who will likely compare him to Millard Fillmore, James Buchanan, Andrew Johnson, and Franklin Pierce, also former U.S. presidents whom some regard to be the worst of the presidential worst. Will Bush come in dead last?

 

While I have low admiration for Bush 43, my blog is not hostile to those who support the man. So don’t feel censored if you like him. Feel free to post your side of the story; I encourage you to do so.

 

… But if you support this catastrophic dumb-ass, you must know that you are dumber than he is!!!

 

 

The Bush Presidency: The Historians (Start to) Weigh In

By The NY Times Editorial Board  http://theboard.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/04/14/the-bush-presidency-the-historians-start-to-weigh-in/

 

The nonprofit History News Network is reporting that in an informal survey of 109 historians, 98.2 percent considered President George W. Bush’s presidency to be a failure, while 1.8 percent called it a success.

 

On the question of whether he is the worst president in history, there was greater difference of opinion: 61 percent said he was, while others disagreed or are withholding their opinions. (The survey also made clear that James Buchanan has some work to do rehabilitating his whole catapulted-the-nation-into-Civil-War reputation.)

 

We take most unscientific surveys with a large grain of salt, and this certainly falls into that category. On the other hand, we like the idea of historians starting to think about the George W. Bush presidency, and how it fits into larger patterns of American history.

 

We’d be interested in knowing more about the 1.8 percent of historians who regard this presidency as a success.

 

Given the disastrous Iraq War, the sub-prime mortgage meltdown, the economy hurtling toward recession, the huge budget deficits, the plummeting dollar — to name just a few problems — these historians sound a lot like the 20 percent of dentists who don’t recommend sugarless gum for their patients who chew gum.

YOUR HELP IS NEEDED!: Senate votes on Filipino American WWII Veterans (aka Veterans Benefits Enhancement Act)

At 12:00 PM EST today, April 22, 2008,  the US Senate will take a vote to proceed to debate S.1315 the Veterans Benefits Enhancement Act. Below is a link to a short video clip of Senator Reid speaking in favor of the Filipino veterans provision.

 http://democrats.senate.gov/dpc/dpc-video.cfm?vid=042108reid-2

Friends,

Senator Burr and Senator Craig both just spoken out AGAINST the veterans.  LET THEM KNOW THIS IS NOT OK!!  There are 30 hrs of debate available.

Senator Burr’s phone number is 202-224-3154

Senator Craig’s phone number is 202-224-2752

 

Call the Capitol Switchboard at (202)224.3121 or check online directory at
 http://www.congress.org/congressorg/directory/congdir.tt
 
Or log on to http://www.veteransequitycenter.org/legislative.htm to find list of Senators and their corresponding fax number and contact information.
 
MESSAGE SHOULD BE:
“I urge you to support  our Filipino World War II veterans and to vote in favor of S. 1315 Veterans Benefit Enhancement Act.  Yes on S.1315 as is.- oppose amendements to the bill.”

 

Dear Senator ________________,
 
 I urge you to support our Filipino World War II veterans and to vote in favor of S. 1315 Veterans Benefit Enhancement Act.
 
We must correct the grave injustice done to Filipino veterans when they were divested of their rightful US veteran status.
On July 26, 1941 when the Philippines was a colony of the United States, President Roosevelt issued a military order calling all organized military forces of the government of the Philippines into the service of the Armed Forces of the United States.

 

The Filipino veterans are those individuals who responded to the call of President Roosevelt and served under the U.S Armed Forces during World War II. They fought as American nationals under the American flag and under the direction of the US military leaders.

These veterans have been waiting for far too long.  Let us not forget these heroes.  Support cloture on the motion to proceed and VOTE YES ON  S. 1315.
 
Sincerely, __________________________
 
Name
ADRESS

Attack Ads: Whether to twist or redirect, they stand for voter manipulation

We will hear the loud and incessant barking of ‘attack ads’ very soon as the fight between Clinton and Obama remains close (despite the nearing Democratic Party convention) and as we approach the inevitable battle between the Republicans and Democrats for the Presidency.

 

But this is not what motivates me to speak up. What does motivate me is what bothers me – and that is the likely manipulation of Asian Pacific Islander (API) and Filipino American voters as these ‘attack ads’ run with far more frequency between now and November.

  

Absent fact-checkers, especially for API and Filipino American communities whose ethnic media cannot mount the needed resources to unpack the truthfulness of the ‘attack ads’ to come, voters will be manipulated, indeed. APIs make-up a wedge community, after all: simultaneously critical and dispensable. 

 

‘Attack ads’ manipulate – they twist issues and redirect public attention — because that is what they are designed to do. And the players of the political campaign game do not police themselves because doing so brings little incentive: candidates attack their opponents to sway voters in order to win the election, the media air ‘attack ads’ then write about them in order to sell news, and, finally, interest groups condemn them in order to rally their base and grow in power.

 

 All stakeholders in the political campaign game are complicit because as they behave rationally in the political campaign game, inadvertently or not, they promote and consummate the dirty process of voter manipulation. 

 

We all have a responsibility to defend against the voter manipulation to come. Manipulating voters erodes the principles of democracy for it cheapens the vote and inherent in a manipulated vote is a naked attack on voter independence. For what is democracy if its citizens are not independent voters and a government does not derive its powers from its free-thinking citizens but in spite of them?  

 

 

So what are API and Filipino American bloggers to do? For one thing, blog the fact-check and invite our communities to think critically. 

On the eve of the Pennsylvania primary, Obama gloves are off

As you must have learned, Sen. Obama is getting noticed for going negative on Sen. Clinton; the rags are talking about it, including The NY TImes.

What I think is likely to happen — what I’m hoping will happen — is that this next chapter in Sen. Obama’s campaign, his strategy of fighting fire with fire, will help ease the criticism of his campaign as being too idealistic, maybe even naive from the perspective of others.

I’m hoping it will communicate the decent humanity he has grown to represent, as people still on the fence about him understand and appreciate the honesty of his explanation for taking this negative, more muscular turn. In the NY Times article referenced below, Sen. Obama says, “if you get elbowed enough, eventually you start elbowing back…” Yo ucan’t help but feel for the guy, and inversely, you can’t help but feel contempt for Sen. Clinton’s chosen path to the nomination.

Instead of the gaffes each campaign has made, instead of twisting these as symbolic measures of ‘character’, I submit that the a better test of character, of integrity, of trustworthiness, is an honest evaluation of the Obama and Clinton campaign strategies and how they differ in delivery and class. Don’t you agree??? If not, lapel pins, instead, then??? Georgie Snuffalafagus, you’re a dimwit!

And as voters focus on who has been elbowing him too much (i.e., Clinton), I’m hoping they will reprimand her with their votes.

We’ll see Tuesday night.

Read the article titled “In Push Before Vote, Obama Sharpens Tone” published by The NY TImes by clicking this link. 

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/21/us/politics/21dems.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin

April 16 Obama-Clinton debate

Who among you watched last night’s debate in full? I have one word about it: Asinine!

My favorite question was the one about the flag pin. It was a fascinating question, clearly inspired to take us to the heart of how to select a deserving future president. Bravo, ABC! The world was watching, and with the fervor of a hack, you showed them what we value most — entertainment, intrigue, hollow controversy.

Old Bill’s boy, George Snuffalafagus, did journalism and the ABC network a great disservice.  For those who missed it, I will be posting the transcript in a few days as quickly as I find it.

BTW, if you need a flag pin, check out this site.

http://www.united-states-flag.com/amflpin.html

What a Filipino looks for in a president

Here’s my view on what a president should be; and it is a view applicable whether one is in the US or in the Philippines, or anywhere else.

1) Must have an inspiring vision of the world. A president is more than a political operative, more than a bureaucrat. A president should be able to inspire us to be better versions of ourselves, and as a result, inspire a country to be better than its self. A president should be able to mobilize our collective imagination in service of improving our lives and that of others.

2) Must be, above all things, a thinker. In addition to being a doer, too, a president should be smart enough to know that effective government relies not only on efficient action but more importantly on disciplined, strategic thinking. This is, after all, the purpose for high office: to move the body politic in a well-thought out, best possible direction given the many forces that obstruct the path. A statesman, unlike a politican, is a philosopher king.

3) Must live by a clear set of principles. Politics is a field so dirty and corrupting that it is easy, I would imagine, to be degraded by it, transformed by it and not always for the better. Religiosity is a good visible measure of having principles but not the most reliable. How many times have we seen the religious fall because of their lack of principles? A better measure is spirituality, as demonstrated by the way one treats others, ones relations, the company one keeps, the way one chooses to daily live life.

It’s official: Global inflation rears its ugly head

Inflation, Spanning Globe, Is Set to Reach Decade High

By ANDREW BATSON
April 10, 2008; Page A1

Source: The Wall Street Journal  http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120778643316903397.html?mod=hpp_asia_pageone

Inflation is back.

After several years of relative stability, a wave of rising prices is washing over the world economy.

It comes at a most inconvenient time. The Federal Reserve is sharply cutting U.S interest rates — the opposite of the usual response to rising inflation — to prevent the housing bust and credit crisis from causing a deep, prolonged recession. That’s making the global response to inflation more complicated.

Consumer prices in the U.S., Europe and other rich countries are projected to rise 2.6% this year, the highest inflation rate since 1995, the International Monetary Fund said Wednesday. In the U.S., consumer prices in February were 4% above year-ago levels. The 15 countries that share the euro currently see inflation of 3.5%, a decade high and well above the European Central Bank’s preferred range. Even Japan, long plagued by flat or falling prices, is seeing modest inflation.

Rising prices for food, energy and other raw materials account for much of the pickup in inflation rates. High food and energy costs hit developing countries — where consumers spend a larger share of income on those necessities — particularly hard. In recent weeks, protests over rising costs have shaken countries from Vietnam, where prices are up 19.4% from last year, to Egypt.

On Wednesday, the World Bank estimated global food prices have risen 83% over the past three years, threatening recent strides in poverty reduction. The IMF forecast consumer prices in emerging and developing countries will rise 7.4% this year, the most inflation since 2001 though still well below the double-digit levels of the recent past.

Some of the factors driving inflation vary from country to country: union-negotiated wage hikes in Germany, pork shortages in China, an electricity squeeze in South Africa, pay rises for civil servants in India.

But the fact that inflation is rising almost everywhere suggests some of its causes are global. As crops are sold for alternative-energy production, food prices have soared: The price of rice, the staple for billions of Asians, is up 147% over the past year. Increasing demand for natural resources among developing economies such as India and China has pushed up prices for raw materials world-wide. Oil-supply constraints have sent crude-oil futures surging above $112 a barrel Wednesday, a new record, resulting in rising fuel and transportation prices.

The weakening U.S. dollar is another source. Not only is it pushing up prices of American imports, it is transmitting inflation to the dozens of economies that link their currencies to the U.S. dollar, from Saudi Arabia to Hong Kong to Mongolia. Because of their currency pegs, these economies are forced to track Fed rate cuts even if they aren’t facing recession. That is putting upward pressure on their prices. Additionally, years of easy credit earlier this decade — the result of a global quest to avoid falling prices, or deflation — are a contributing factor.

An increasingly global economy may also be a culprit. Globalization got some credit for low inflation in recent years: The economic rise of China, India and the former Soviet Union helped expand the global work force and increase manufacturing capacity, holding down the prices of many goods. But the economic boom in emerging markets also means their currencies and prices are steadily rising, boosting the prices rich countries pay for imports from those poorer countries.

“Overall, the effects of globalization have ceased — probably in the long term — to be spontaneously disinflationary,” Christian Noyer, governor of the Bank of France, said last month.

Rising prices cut consumer spending power, especially among the poor. They can also stir bad memories of dislocation caused by previous bouts of inflation. Fears of inflation, in turn, can spur more of it: If households and companies come to think of rising prices as normal, that can create self-fulfilling expectations that keep inflation high. Inflation clouds the price signals that let market economies function and makes it harder for businesses to plan.

“It’s hard to reverse inflation expectations once they’ve risen,” says Kenneth Rogoff, a Harvard University professor and former chief IMF economist.

Food and Energy

For now, rising food and energy prices are inflation’s prime drivers. Core inflation, a measure that excludes volatile food and energy prices, is not rising as quickly as overall inflation. But commodity-price gains are beginning to work their way through the global economy. Even if commodity prices stay where they are, global inflation could continue rising for months to come as companies react to previous price rises.

The world’s largest iron producer, Brazil’s Companhia Vale do Rio Doce, known as Vale, got its customers to agree to a 65% price increase on ore from its main mine this year, far larger than last year’s 9.5% increase. That led steelmakers like Baosteel Group Corp., China’s biggest, to raise product prices by 17% to 20% in recent months.

“It will have a pretty big effect on our material costs,” Jim Owens, chief executive of Caterpillar Inc., the big U.S. maker of construction equipment and engines, said on a recent visit to Beijing. Caterpillar is preparing price increases of up to 5% on its products to take effect by July.

In St. Louis, Solutia Inc. is raising prices for resins used to make laminated glass by up to 40%, blaming climbing costs for materials, energy and transportation. “We are now at a point where sourcing raw materials at continuously higher prices makes no sense for our business, unless the effects are passed on,” said Solutia Vice President Luc De Temmerman.

Kimberly-Clark Corp., maker of household goods, began raising prices in February between 4% and 7% for some paper products, including Huggies diapers, Cottonelle bath tissue and Viva paper towels. Hershey Foods Corp. raised the selling price of its chocolate bars 13% in February after boosting prices between 4% and 5% in April 2007. Hanesbrands Inc., which owns the Champion and Hanes apparel lines, has warned that sustained high cotton prices could filter through to retail prices.

Pricey Cab Rides

In Temecula, Calif., Gary Byler, owner of Southwest City Coach, has raised the fares for his four-taxi fleet for the first time in the 10 years he has been in business. His base fare has gone from $1 to $2.50 and the per-mile charge from $2.50 to $2.75. “Insurance costs have gone up 40%. Fuel prices have doubled,” he said.

Just as there is variation in the level of inflation — from 1% in Japan to 17% in Latvia — countries’ responses to it vary. Central bankers in the U.S and the United Kingdom are focusing on the risks of recession, so they are cutting rates even at the risk of fueling inflation. Others are attempting to drive inflation down: Central bankers in Australia, Chile, China, Colombia, Hungary, Poland, Russia, South Africa, Sweden and Taiwan all have raised interest rates recently.

The trade-off between maintaining growth and fighting inflation is particularly difficult in Europe, where banks are also under strain and inflation is picking up. The European Central Bank considers inflation a bigger worry than the fallout from the U.S. credit crisis. It fears soaring energy and food prices will spill over into wages and other prices. So despite persistent money-market tensions, the ECB has refused to cut rates. It is expected to hold that line in its meeting Thursday.

Flash Point

Germany‘s recent wage gains are a flash point. Last week, some two million German public-sector workers won a nearly 8% pay raise over two years, their biggest settlement in 16 years. In March, some 93,000 German steelworkers won a 5.2% wage hike, while train drivers picked up an 8% pay increase spread over two years.

In Slovenia on Saturday, some 10,000 protesters from across the Continent gathered at a conference of central bankers to agitate for higher wages. They got a cold response. “It would be an enormous mistake to imitate Germany,” ECB president Jean-Claude Trichet told a news conference afterward, noting recent German wage restraint allowed workers there some space to catch up.

In the U.S., Fed officials are concerned that food and energy prices have increased inflation even though the economy is sliding into recession. But they are generally confident that inflation will recede as rising unemployment prevents workers from winning wage increases.

Handling social pressures from inflation is tricky. China has raised minimum wages to moderate inflation’s impact on living standards, but Premier Wen Jiabao has also promised the government will ensure that average inflation this year won’t accelerate past last year’s 4.8%.

That’s intended to reassure people like Monica Li, a 40-year-old travel agent in Beijing. She says her daughter’s kindergarten just raised its fees to cover higher costs for lunches. Now Ms. Li is worried that costs for health care and housing are also headed upward. “It could really be a problem for us if inflation today, which is mainly in food and other necessities, leads to a series of chain reactions,” Ms. Li says.

Countries have long tried to buy stability by fixing their currencies, more or less tightly, to the U.S. dollar. Now those decisions are contributing to inflation in Asia and the Middle East. Central banks in countries with strict dollar pegs must follow the Fed’s rate cuts: If they don’t, investors seeking higher returns would move money to these countries, placing upward pressure on their currencies and imperiling their dollar pegs. Hong Kong has mirrored the Fed’s recent rate cuts, igniting the local property market. Housing prices there were up 31% from a year earlier in January, and rising rents are now feeding inflation.

Countries that both peg their currencies and export commodities are experiencing an inflationary double whammy. As nations from the Middle East to Mongolia earn income from selling resources, rising commodities prices are stimulating the local economy and feeding inflation. Meanwhile, these economies are feeling the effects of rising global prices for food and raw materials. Inflationary pressure is further heightened as their central banks match Fed rate cuts.

Problems in Mongolia

This complicates life even on Mongolia’s steppes, where many people are nomadic herders and food prices tend to fluctuate by season and weather. The country’s currency, the togrog, is unofficially pegged to the U.S. dollar, boosting prices. As the country’s income from copper exports surged, inflation reached 15.1% at the end of 2007.

Similarly, inflation is stoking instability amid the Middle East’s energy-fed boom. In Qatar, a rich emirate jutting into the Persian Gulf, surging revenue from natural-gas sales have led to more government spending. This year’s budget is 46% higher than last year’s, and more than four times the spending of just six years ago. Much of that is going to build highways, airports, infrastructure and schools. Says Yousef Hussain Kamal, Qatar’s finance minister: “The surplus is huge.”

So is inflation, at 13.7% on the year in the last quarter of 2007. In part that’s because Qatar followed its currency peg and moved in step with the Fed’s rate cuts. The region’s low-paid expatriate work force was hit hard. While local inflation means higher food and housing costs, the value of workers’ savings — which they often send home to families — is sinking with the dollar. That has triggered strikes and riots in the United Arab Emirates by construction workers.

Commodity exporters with more flexible currencies have been better at containing rising prices. Inflation in Canada, a big oil producer, has been lower than expected, at just 1.8% in February year-on-year. The central bank attributes that in part to the surge in the Canadian dollar, up 17% against the U.S. dollar in 2007. Australia, a major exporter of coal and iron ore, has also seen its currency rise, and its central bank has been steadily raising rates to cool the economy. Inflation was 3% in December.

“Australia has done all right because the currency has been quite strong, and interest rates are high,” says Ben Simpfendorfer, an economist for Royal Bank of Scotland. “The Gulf might have looked more like Australia if it weren’t for the pegs.”

Absorbing the Pain

Central banks, especially the Fed, are hoping that slowing growth in the U.S. and Europe will ease inflationary pressures globally, especially when fast-growing emerging economies begin to feel the slowdown’s pain. Some economists argue that current commodity prices are higher than underlying demand can justify, and predict they could fall sharply if speculators retreat and global growth eases. And, at some point, the Fed will stop cutting U.S. rates, helping arrest the decline in the dollar and the inflationary side-effects.

“Inflation almost always falls during economic downturns. The Fed has history on its side,” says Julian Jessop, an economist with Capital Economics in London. He expects inflation to be much lower globally a year from now, and the new IMF forecast does, too. Nonetheless, he says, “The outlook for inflation is much more uncertain than it has been for a while.”

–Chip Cummins in Dubai, Kelly Evans in New York, Sue Feng in Beijing and Joellen Perry in Frankfurt contributed to this article.

 

Unbridled capitalism at its worst again

Weak dollar, hot money cause of high food prices: FAO

Reuters

 

Source: ABS-CBN News http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/storypage.aspx?StoryId=114715

 

BRASILIA – Global investment funds and the weak dollar are largely to blame for high world food prices, a senior official of the United Nation’s Food and Agriculture Organization said on Thursday.

 

“The crisis is a speculative attack and it will last,” said Jose Graziano, the UN food and farm organization’s regional representative for Latin America and the Caribbean.

 

“This is not a conspiracy theory,” he said.

 

Across the globe foods from bread to milk have become more expensive and in some countries helped fuel inflation. High prices for rice, beans and other food staples provoked food riots in Haiti this week.

 

“The lack of confidence in the (U.S.) dollar has led investment funds to look for higher returns in commodities … first metals and then foods,” Graziano told a news conference in the capital.

 

Investors have speculated in commodities including wheat, corn and rice because stocks in recent years have been drawn down by rising demand in emerging markets and supply shortages due to adverse climate in key producer nations, Graziano said.

 

“Speculative attacks become possible when you have low reserves,” Graziano said.

 

Stocks of some food crops have fallen to their lowest levels in three decades, according to Brazilian farm experts.

 

Brasilia will host an FAO conference next week, which will focus on food shortages in Haiti, biofuels and small farms.

 

The FAO will in next week’s meeting propose initiatives to help combat the current global food shortage, including incentives for small farmers.

 

Brazil is one of the world’s leading food exporters.

Manila rice, rice, baby

Nothing to sing about. The price of rice is expected to remain high for a while. Let’s hope farmers benefit.

 

IRRI: High rice prices to last for some time

Agence France-Presse
  

Rice prices are likely to keep rising for some time as production of the staple fails to keep up with soaring demand, the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) said Friday.

The Philippines-based institute earlier warned of potential civil unrest as governments struggle to provide cheap rice amid a sustained rise in prices over the past two years to near-record levels.

“Longer term demand-supply imbalance is clearly indicated by depletion of stock that has been going on for years, the latest edition of the IRRI publication Rice Today quoted IRRI economist Sushil Pandey as saying.

 

“We have been consuming more than what we have been producing and research to increase rice productivity is needed to address this imbalance,” Pandey added.
 
Just seven percent of the annual global production of the grain, a staple food of more than three billion people mostly living in the developing world, is traded in the international market.
This was because rice was seen as a political commodity and governments strive to maintain large stocks to guard against large price swings, IRRI said.The institute said it had convened a group of experts to draw up a list of what could be done to solve the crisis and they agreed that raising yields was the only long-term solution.

IRRI said the crisis was affecting both the urban poor as well as rice farmers who farm small plots that cannot produce enough even for their own family’s use.

“Although the current rising rice price was seen as beneficial for farmers who grow a reasonable surplus that they can sell on the market, poor farmers with small or no surplus and poor urban consumers will continue to lose out if the price continues to rise,” it said.

Philippine Rice Research Institute head Leo Sebastian urged governments to increase investment in agricultural research.

“(The) impact of technologies is a driver of increased rice production, whether a country exports or imports,” he said.

 ‘But everybody is saying that investment in agricultural research is small or limited — and something needs to be done about this.”

DZMM interview of Pacquiao and Marquez

Source: http://angsawariko.blogspot.com/2008/04/juan-manuel-marquez-challenges-manny.html

 

Juan Manuel Marquez challenges Manny Pacquiao

Last Sunday, April 6, 2008, the day of the much publicized “Invasion: Philippines vs The World” boxing tournament at the Araneta Coliseum, Philippines, Juan Manuel Marquez again challenged Manny Pacquiao for a rematch, claiming that he (Marquez) is the winner in their last two matches, including the one last March 16 in Las Vegas. But Manny Pacquiao was firm in his interview in DZMM Teleradyo by saying “Everybody agrees on my winning, I knocked him down in the 3rd round, people are satisfied in my winning.”

The world eagerly awaits the next chapter… 

Local view of emergent Filipino boxing heroes

To me what the string of victories mean is that Filipino boxing should recognize the role and pay its respects to Filipino martial arts so that all can honor the source… He refers below to a recent tournament pitting international boxing champions against Filipino boxers.

 

 

What the invasion meant

By BILL VELASCO

 

Source: ABS-CBN News http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/storypage.aspx?StoryId=114240

April 9, 2008

Invasion: Philippines vs the World set some new parameters for professional boxing, and sent a good signal to the international boxing community. Of course, the sweep of Filipino boxers (even the non-televised swing bouts against a Thai and Indonesian were won by Filipinos Michael Domingo and Bert Batawang by knockout), left a lasting impression of Filipino dominance.

There were many proud statements made of the Philippines by the event, staged by Golden Boy Promotions and ALA Promotions, and the excellent television coverage by ABS-CBN also cemented great impressions of the Philippines.

First of all, the card established the Philippines as a boxing destination. It had been a long time since world title fights had been a staple in the country, and Invasion made the trip here not only palatable, but attractive. For a while, the logistics and cost of staging a world title fight in the Philippines made little economic sense. But, with the rise in pay-per-view in the United States (the Oscar dela Hoya-Floyd Mayweather clash earned 2.5 million buys), the economies now are very enticing to promoters. Add to this the growing wealth of overseas Filipinos, and you have a ready market.

Secondly, there is an abundance of Filipino talent. Both the World Boxing Organization and Golden Boy acknowledge the tremendous talent of Filipino fighters. They are tough, exciting to watch, and extremely marketable, with no language barrier to the US. And the Philippines has never had five world champions at the same time. So there is more to the country now that Manny Pacquiao has become an ambassador of the sport.

Third, there are promoters and managers here who take care of their boxers. ALA Prmotions has to get a lot of credit for paving the way for great things to come for Philippine boxing. The Aldeguer family has brought up new boxers who are well-trained, well-managed and provide a lot of excitement to boxing fans. It’s about time Fiipinos are recognized as world-class businessmen outside the ring, as well.

Fourth, TV coverage can bring the excitement anywhere. With the reach of a broadcast giant like ABS-CBN, sporting events on a world stage can pull in a big market even when held in the Philippines. The sports entertainment market is growing, and ABS-CBN is at the forefront of it, if not outright pushing the envelope itself. Invasion was a calculated gamble that will pay off long-term, and ABS-CBN knows it. Cable and digital TV are growing, and still have an endless requirement for content. Imagine the possibilities.

Fifth, in Asia, the Philippines is key to success in the boxing market. Former WBC super featherweight champion Juan Manuel Marquez was treated like a rock star at the fight Sunday. The Mexican hero hardly got any rest, as fans applauded him loudly and continuously asked for autographs. It sent a signal: Filipinos know their boxing, and respect great boxers. Remember, this was not held at a casino arena, where ringside is occupied by high rollers screaming for blood because of large bets they made. It was held at the Araneta Coliseum where regular fans mingled with the mighty for a chance to see a countryman do them proud.

When the WBO went into Asia about a decade ago, they started with Thailand, then went to the Philippines. In a growing market like Asia, with large countries like China and India waiting to be tapped, having a global boxing icon in a neighboring market will expand interest in boxing in particular, and sports in general.

In sum, the invasion may have been repelled, but the invitation to bring more big boxing events to the country is open.

Check out videos of Filipino martial arts (FMA)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CXfZ9C9vJso

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YmJJLhy0o-M&search=

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YvrvoBIq__k

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mpddW9guzBg&search=lapunti

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=94iXkVUue8A&search=sayoc

 

Geothermal energy production in the Philippines

More positive news on energy production in the Philippines… Perhaps a First World status is not so far away after all.

 

 

Geothermal dev’t roadmap pushed

Source: Manila Bulletin Online http://www.mb.com.ph/BSNS20080410121494.html

 

April 10, 2008

 

A roadmap for the development of the country’s geothermal energy sector was one of the key proposals put forward by the National Geothermal Association of the Philippines (NGAP) in a recently-concluded general assembly of stakeholders.

 

They noted the geothermal industry roadmap must be aligned with the aspirations for wider utilization of renewable energy as a way to enhance the country’s energy independence and as part of the strategy for climate change risks mitigation.

 

The vision being advanced by NGAP would be to position the Philippines “to be the world leader in geothermal energy production and utilization,” to be complemented by initiatives such as the establishment of centers of excellence in geothermal technology and services.

 

After the development of the first geothermal energy facility in the country in 1971, development initiatives progressed significantly over the years that current generation from geothermal facilities now reach 1,978 megawatts.

 

The Philippines is currently the world’s second largest geothermal energy producer, next to the United States. But assessing its resource potential, experts noted that the country has a big chance to take the lead in geothermal energy development.

 

Yet for these goals to move forward, the government must first do its share in laying down the right policies to entice investments in the sector. The appropriate initial step seen would be the passage of the Renewable Energy Bill, which remains pending in Congress until now.

 

In a manifesto issued by NGAP during the general assembly which tackled “Emerging Challenges and Opportunities in Renewable Energy”, the organization stressed that it “stands resolutely behind current efforts among the key stakeholders in government, the power sector and civil society to promote the exploration and development of Renewable Energy.”

 

First Gen and Philippine National Oil Company-Energy Development Corporation director Peter D. Garrucho Jr, who was the keynote speaker at the event, cited as a significant development the fact that geothermal resources are now recognized as renewable energy by global energy organizations, such as the International Energy Agency, the World Energy Council and the United Nations Environment Program.

 

With First Gen’s current acquisition of the majority shareholdings of geothermal firm PNOC-EDC, Garrucho also outlined the major thrusts of the company in the renewable energy industry which include the development of new geothermal fields and possibility of overseas expansion, starting in Indonesia.

 

NGAP president Lauro F. Bayrante, on the other hand, pledged that the organization will “champion geothermal as a viable, clean and indigenous energy form.”

 

The group has formally handed over the manifesto to Renewable Energy Coalition Convenor Catherine Maceda, who reiterated call on policymakers to prioritize the passage of the Renewable Energy Bill.

 

The measure is expected to provide various incentives to prospective investments in renewable energy; which are seen to eventually translate into reduction in the delivered price of electricity generated, primarily those from geothermal resource.

Philippines now a source of energy for Japan firm

This just made my day… Check this out: the Philippines is now a supplier of fuel for a Japanese firm. Amazing, huh?!

 

 

 

Petron awards propylene supply contract to Japanese firm Mitsui

By MYRNA M. VELASCO
 
 
Source: Manila Bulletin Online http://www.mb.com.ph/BSNS20080410121492.html

April 10, 2008


LIMAY, Bataan — Petron Corporation’s first customer, Japanese firm Mitsui Co. Ltd., already lifted 1,500 metric tons of propylene from its newly-inaugurated Petro Fluidized Catalytic Cracking (PetroFCC) unit and Propylene Recovery Unit (PRU), expansion components of its Bataan refinery.

 

The company said Mitsui started sourcing its petrochemical feedstock from its refinery in April 1 this year after it won the tender for off-take of polymer-grade propylene covering six months.

 

The PetroFCC and propylene recovery units have been part of the oil firm’s $ 300-million refinery expansion plan, a venture that enabled it to diversify its business into petrochemicals.

 

These petrochemical feedstock units already form the second major investment undertaken by the company at its refinery after completing the initial $ 100-million investment for facilities that allowed it to produce fuels compliant to quality specified by the Clean Air Act.

 

“This is the first major step in our diversification into the petrochemicals business and signals a shift in our growth strategy,” Petron president Kamal M. Al-Yahya said.

 

For his part, Petron chairman Nicasio I. Alcantara noted that “these new refinery units will boost the local petrochemical industry and benefit other vital downstream manufacturing sectors.”

 

The investments poured into these projects, he added, manifest the company’s “belief in the country’s growth prospects and our commitment to contribute to the national economy.”

 

The PetroFCC converts black products (fuel oil) into higher value products, such as gasoline, diesel and liquefied petroleum gas.

 

The unit installed at the Bataan refinery, having been considered “firstofits-kind” reportedly yields a higher level of petrochemical feedstock propylene than typical FCC units.

 

The PRU, on the other hand, takes the function of purifying propylene so it can be used in making various petrochemical products, primarily those used in manufacturing basic items such as food packaging, appliances, car parts and furniture, among others.

 

“The PetroFCC has a conversion capacity of 19,000 barrels per day while the PRU will produce 140,000 metric tons of propylene annually,” Petron said.

 

The company noted its mixed xylene production has been contributing greatly to its bottom line, helping boost its net income by 6.3-percent to P6.4 billion last year from 2006 level.

 

The oil firm is also currently evaluating Phase 2 of its Refinery Master Plan, which targets to increase its conversion capacity and petrochemical feedstock production.

 

“We are currently studying other options to further enhance our Bataan refinery and consequently, unlock more value for our shareholders,” Alcantara said.