The Aquino administration was beating its chest with the year on year 6.4% GDP growth – amidst the hubris of the Corona impeachment and the chainsaw chopping of a key witness in the Ampatuan Massacre. Never mind that when the figures are seasonally adjusted – the GDP growth is actually only 2.5%. Whenever I read economic pronouncements by Aquino’s economic managers and how “hopeful” they are about the economy and how it is “poised for take off” – I am reminded of a DVD entitled “Planes that Never Flew”.
Obviously, the Reuters story will not be carried locally – why rain on Aquino’s parade – or why bother to tell the accurate truth even. It doesn’t take much to see that truth will always be the primary casualty in the oligarch-backed Aquino administration.
That’s on top of a decline in Philippine competititiveness from 41 to 43 in the 2012 World Competitiveness Index- as if the Philippines was competitive ever.
Even the Aquino relative-owned SWS reported an expansion in joblessness, poverty, and hunger.
It doesn’t take much to beffudle the Pinoy masses with numbers like higher sovereign credit ratings or higher year on year GDP growth. But, one cannot mask the hunger pangs of grumbling stomachs, or the feet lining up to get a job overseas – or the lack of good paying jobs in the domestic front
The usual culprit cited by Philippine economic managers was “due to the under spending by the Aquino administration last year”. The statement is misleading because government spending is not the only component of GDP.
To claim that the Philippine economy did not grow as well due to lack of government spending is quite disingenuous. After all, an increase in consumer spending, investments, and trade also lead to economic growth.
What the numbers also mean is that the economy did not grow because there is also a lack in consumer spending, investments, and trade. The lackluster growth in these factors have led to outcomes where people don’t have jobs, are poorer, and are hungrier.
But how does that account for the growing number of Filipino businessman winding up in the Forbes Fortune 500 while there is an increase in poverty ? That my friends is what you call – income inequality. It is formally measured by the Gini coefficient. In the case of the Philippines, data from the National Statistical Coordination Board (NSCB) showed that income inequality had declined, but remained relatively high, even exceeding those of many Asian countries.
And that’s just after the ADB Summit where the Philippines was exhorted to do more in addressing income inequality because the Philippines had the highest Gini coefficient in South East Asia.
So how did the income inequality widen?
The structural defects of a protectionist economic policy that restricts foreign investments to only 40% equity is glaring as Filipino businesses gain monopoly status in energy, telecommunication, water, transportation, health, and retail among others. Instead of liberalizing the economy as a way of bringing in much needed capital – the Aquino government has opted to pursue foreign capital by increasing public debt. The dogged pursuit of public indebtedness can be seen from the frantic desire to get higher sovereign credit ratings.
What’s the big deal about sovereign credit ratings? First off – sovereign credit ratings reflect a national government’s willingness and ability to repay its debts. Here’s the interesting part – the outcome of a recent study on sovereign credit ratings and economic freedom showed a strong correlation.
So yes, there is a benefit to good sovereign credit ratings. The question however is – which economic policies lead to better sovereign credit ratings?
The other part of the study showed that
The Philippines sovereign credit ratings can only go so far before it hits the ceiling called “Friendliness to Foreign Investments” aka Protectionism aka the 60/40 economic restrictions in the 1987 Constitution hastily crafted by hand-selected advisers of oligarch Manchurian president Cory Aquino.
It gets worse because the only companies who can avail of the improved sovereign credit ratings – are the same oligarch owned Filipino companies. And just when you think you hit the bottom barrel – the bottom is blown off by the public private partnerships where public monopoly is replaced by private monopoly.
Take for example, the health industry. The good news is public hospitals are being privatized. The bad news is only Filipino companies are allowed to participate in the privatization. Foreign companies which have better capitalization and expertise are restricted from participating. Thus public hospitals are now offering “private wards”.
When Manny Pangilinan completes the Public-Private-Partnership deal with the DOH – the small private hospital owners who are being taxed to subsidize Manny Pangilinan’s hospital buyout, will face competition from Manny Pangilinan and the DOH hospitals. Is that fair?
A consumer issue is whether these MVP hospitals will lower the cost of health care to Filipinos or not. It seems that MVP bought the DOH hospitals to snag the medical tourism business – Filipino health consumers be damned. Of course, the Philippine left will be in its usual hizzy fit to nationalize health care – a cure worse than the disease.
Instead of opening up the health market to both local and foreign capital in order to increase investments in health – the Philippine government opts otherwise. Aquino instead continues to restrict foreign investments in hospitals, the entry of foreign medical professionals, gets more loans to fund health care, and sells government assets to oligarch owned corporations at a loss when there are foreign companies who are willing to buy the government assets at a better price than Manny Pangilinan. Aquino, Abad, Drilon – then taxes us some more – even incurring more public debt so that Aquino and can disburse CCT subsidy for health care. That’s a solution???
It’s the same modus operandi that started with the privatization of NAPOCOR (energy). Then expanded to water (MAYNILAD), tollways (SLEX/NLEX), transportation (PAL), telecom (PLDT), and now – health. Privatization without the benefit of liberalization simply replaces an inefficient public monopoly with another inefficient private monopoly – consumers and businesses still lose.
I recall a friend of mine who was so gungho about businessplans to set up an optic fiber manufacturing facility in Cebu this year (2012). He was asking me about shipping costs and total landed costs from Cebu to markets in North America, China, and India. Without having to run the numbers – I told him flat out that his shipping costs will be competitive but his production costs will be uncompetitive because of the high cost of MERALCO’s electricity. Anyway, when the numbers were in and his customer saw the total landed cost (production cost + shipping cost) – he was given the order to hold off on plans to set up shop in the Philippines – because the costs were uncompetitive.
So yes, Aquino might not have increased taxes last year – but he certainly increased the public debt which taxpayers have to pay in the future. Holy madre de cacao.
And while CJ Corona was impeached – the public debt will be channeled to politicians who will splurge in projects and subsidies to nowhere, finding its way into undeclared dollar accounts of Congressmen, Senators, and even the President. Holy siniguelas.
But to keep appearances some of the funds will be disbursed in “poverty alleviation” programs like CCT subsidy. So after increasing Dinky Solimans CCT kitty – what do we get? More poverty, more hunger, more unemployment. Clearly something’s not right.
Thus going back to the question of economic growth – will more government spending increase growth or actually dampen it?
Let me ask a basic question – does government have money or not? NO it does not have money. The only way for government to have money is to take it away from people’s incomes, from business incomes, from tariffs on trade.
When government says it will increase spending – it means it will take more money away from consumers and business. When consumers and businesses have less money – they spend less. Thus – higher government spending comes at the cost of lower consumer and business spending. How will the overall economy grow then?
The better way for the economy to grow is to restrict government spending and allow the other drivers of the economy to grow – consumer spending, investments, and trade.
For the meantime the Philippines remains a bridesmaid, never a bride. Always “poised for take off” – but never taking off. Always “Open for business” – but no one’s buying. CJ Corona got impeached with impunity – no different from the Ampatuan state witness who got chopped up by a chainsaw while in the custody of the Aquino and De Lima’s witless .. este witness protection program.
Geez with a Philippine government run by Aquino worse than hell – who needs an enemy of the state?
BongV has written 379 stories on this site.
BongV is the webmaster of Antipinoy.com.
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