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Lawmakers watching Marcos economic game plan

PHILIPPINE STAR/KRIZ JOHN ROSALES

By Alyssa Nicole O. Tan, Reporter

LAWMAKERS are watching how President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. plans to steer a virus-stricken economy amid prices that are spiraling out of control.

Mr. Marcos, who won the May 9 election by a landslide, will deliver his first address to Congress on July 25.

“How to improve government services when it comes to health and education, how to create jobs — those are what our countrymen want to hear in President Bongbong Marcos’ upcoming state of the nation address,” Senator Juan Edgardo “Sonny” M. Angara said in a statement on Thursday.

Industries that have been hit hard by a coronavirus pandemic in the past two years would need all the help that they could get from the government, he added.

Senator Mary Grace S. Poe-Llamanzares said she expects “concrete, comprehensive and impactful solutions” from the president.

“Providing economic opportunities should be at the core of our comprehensive infrastructure plan, marked by crucial, high-impact projects that are thoroughly planned and carried out without delays and wastage,” she said in a separate statement.

“Efficient implementation of projects will propel economic activities and allow our people to thrive in these hard times,” she added.

Ms. Poe said she is looking forward to improved digital connectivity and e-governance, better crop output and for major transportation projects to be completed.

Senator Loren B. Legarda said she wanted to hear Mr. Marcos speak about his priority programs and economic and fiscal reforms as he plans to deal with rising joblessness, food security, health and education.

“The state of the nation address has always been the preamble of every new administration,” she said in a statement. “I am looking forward to hearing President Marcos’ specific plans on the country’s pandemic recovery and transition to a better normal. I hope that it is ​​one that is aligned and attuned to the climate path.”

Ms. Legarda also said she wanted to hear him speak about how the government will tame inflation amid rising global fuel prices, and how he will handle the country’s sea dispute with China.

She likewise expects the president to talk about how to deal with the country’s record debt and how he plans to solve the learning crisis after schools were shut by lockdowns in the past two years.

Senator Emmanuel Joel J. Villanueva said he wants to hear about the president’s plans for the country’s workers and foreign policy

“Our relations with other countries are important, especially in terms of international trade and security,” he said in mixed English and Filipino. “It is also important for our overseas Filipino workers to hear about this, especially at the beginning of the operation of the Department of Migrant Workers.”

Senator Ana Theresia “Risa” N. Hontiveros-Baraquel said Mr. Marcos should say how he plans to solve the food crisis, rising oil prices, climate change and energy resources.

She is also waiting for the details of his economic transformation agenda, the safe return to schools and infrastructure development.

Albay Rep. Jose Maria Clemente S. Salceda expects the president to prioritize agricultural revolution, citing a goal to boost the export value of high-value agricultural products to $20 billion by the end of his term, achieving global competitiveness in corn and fulfilling his campaign promise of bringing down the price of rice to P20 a kilo.

He said Mr. Marcos would probably have a decisive response on inflation during his address. “We need a broad range of presidential powers to act in the areas where we have some control,” Mr. Salceda said, citing price gouging, logistics and middleman costs, second-round impacts and the effects of rising prices on the poor.

The congressman also expects to hear more about jobs, support to small businesses, commitment to technological resiliency, sustainability, the recovery of the education sector and fiscal prudence.

Party-list Rep. Bernadette Herrera-Dy, wanted to hear the president speak about rebuilding the economy, addressing inflation and improving internet connectivity.

“We expect the president to unveil a roadmap to help the country recover from the impacts of COVID-19 for the next six years or so,” she said in a statement.

Ms. Dy said the government should continue to help households and businesses, particularly micro, small and medium enterprises, until the coronavirus is contained.

“Although the economy has recovered somewhat in the first quarter of this year, millions of Filipinos who lost their jobs remain unemployed, the economy is operating far below its capacity and the recovery appears to be stalling,” she said.

House of Representatives Secretary-General Mark Llandro Mendoza on Wednesday said as much as 80% of 1,360 invitees have confirmed their attendance to Mr. Marcos’ first address.

Pampanga Rep. Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, former President Joseph E. Estrada and Vice President Sara Duterte-Carpio will attend the event at the House, while ex-President Rodrigo R. Duterte and former Vice President Maria Leonor “Leni” G. Robredo have yet to send their response.

Filipinos in New York warned of rising hate crimes

GUIDO COPPA-UNSPLASH

THE PHILIPPINE Consulate General in New York has told Filipinos to remain vigilant amid a citywide jump in major crimes, according to a post it made on Facebook.

The latest statistics released by the city’s police department showed a 37% increase in major crimes in New York.

“Kababayans are reminded to be situationally aware at all times when outside their residences and to take the necessary precautions to avoid becoming a victim of crime,” the consulate general said in the statement.

It also said grand theft cases had risen by 49% this year, car theft by 46%, robbery by 39% and burglary by 33%.

“Kababayans taking mass transport are also reminded to remain vigilant as transit crimes have also increased by 55.5% compared with last year,” the consulate general said.

Foreign Affairs Assistant Secretary for Migrant Workers’ Affairs Paul Raymund P. Cortes has said that in documented cases, victims who were in the subway did not even realize that they were being yelled at and told to “go back home to your own Asian country.”

Some, he added, have become traumatized. The consulate helps victims by providing them with “psychosocial help or therapy” after experiencing an attack.

In March, at least three Filipino seniors were beaten, with one to the point of unconsciousness, and the other hit more than a hundred times by the perpetrator. They also got robbed.

Hate crimes have also increased by 13% across New York.

At least 41 Filipinos in the city have been victimized since 2021. The latest was an assault against an 18-year-old Filipino tourist near the Philippine Center in Manhattan last week. — Alyssa Nicole O. Tan

DoJ, DILG partner in seeking to decongest jails

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MIGUEL DE GUZMAN

JUSTICE Secretary Jesus Crispin C. Remulla and Interior Secretary Benjamin C. Abalos, Jr. on Thursday said their agencies are working together to address congestion in the country’s jails.

At a joint press conference streamed live on Facebook, Mr. Remulla said he had asked President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. to appoint an assistant secretary for digital infrastructure to handle the digitalization of jail records.

“It is the only way to make things visible online to have more prisoners processed,” he said. “Decongestion is a matter of looking at each prisoner as a person, not a number.”

The agencies plan to coordinate with the Department of Information and Communications Technology to streamline the digitalization of jail records, Mr. Abalos told the briefing.

He added that he plans to ask heads of local governments to donate plots of land to the Bureau of Jail Management and Penology (BJMP) so it can build more jail facilities. Philippine jails are overcrowded by almost five times.

BJMP, under the Interior department’s supervision, detains inmates with jail sentences of up to three years. The  Bureau of Corrections under the Department of Justice (DoJ) handles inmates with sentences exceeding three years.

Mr. Remulla said there are 17,000 inmates in the national penitentiary in Muntinlupa City, which was designed to house 6,000 inmates.

BJMP Director Allan S. Iral told the same briefing court hearings of inmates should be fast-tracked to help decongest the country’s jails.

Meanwhile, Mr. Abalos said he plans to reassess the qualifications of police officers conducting anti-drug operations.

He added  that the Interior department would implement more training programs and seminars on criminal law to determine qualified law enforcement personnel.

Only 21% or 62,000 of 291,000 drug cases filed have led to convictions, he said, citing police data from 2016 to 2022. — John Victor D. Ordoñez

Former anti-drug official tapped as acting Customs chief 

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

PRESIDENT Ferdinand “Bongbong” R. Marcos Jr. has tapped Yogi Filemon Ruiz, a former anti-drug official, to temporarily head the Bureau of Customs (BoC), according to the Presidential Palace. 

Mr. Ruiz was sworn in as acting BoC commissioner by President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. on Wednesday, Malacañang said in a statement on Thursday. 

Before joining BoC in 2017, Mr. Ruiz headed a regional office of the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency.  

The Customs bureau is among the Philippine agencies considered among the most corrupt.   

Mr. Marcos, 64, said last month that he would only go after those people who will be involved in corrupt activities under his term. Let’s forget the past.”  

Meanwhile, Mr. Marcos re-appointed veteran diplomat Philippe J. Lhuillier as the Philippinesenvoy to Spain.  

In a tweet on Wednesday, the President said he administered the oath-taking of Mr. Lhuillier.  

From 1990 to 2010, Mr. Lhuillier served as the countrys ambassador to Italy. Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza 

Private sector presses gov’t for green light to use P1.3B worth of expiring vaccines  

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

PRIVATE companies are facing a wastage of P1.3 billion worth of vaccines against coronavirus that are expiring by the end of the month, according to a business leader.   

The private sector has appealed to the government to allow them to use the expiring vaccines as second COVID-19 booster shots for their workers.  

The possible losses worth more than P1.3 billion were only incurred by the private sector and do not yet reflect the vaccines donated to the government,said Jose Maria A. Concepcion III, a member of the President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. Private Sector Advisory Council.  

As of writing, there were 623,680 AstraZeneca vaccines and 864,700 Moderna vaccines in private sector warehouses, Mr. Concepcion said.  

Each AstraZeneca jab is estimated to cost at least US$5 each, while Moderna shots were bought for US$26.83 for each dose,he said.   

The vaccines were purchased by the private sector through a tripartite agreement with manufacturers and the government as the country struggled to procure vaccines amid the pandemic.    

Under the agreement, half of the vaccines acquired by businesses were shared with the government.   

We have to learn from this. I think what really contributed was the lack of clear rules on the vaccines: who is allowed to take the vaccines, and the ability of some bodies to move swiftly with science and the reality on the ground,said Mr. Concepcion, who advised the previous administration on entrepreneurial concerns.   

Mr. Concepcion is among those appealing to the government to allow workers as young as 50 years to receive a second booster shot.    

The lack of urgency with some bodies is still affecting the whole vaccine rollout. This shouldn’t be the case as we move forward,he said.   

The private sector has already proven that it is willing to get vaccinated. There is no need for mandates when it comes to the private sector.”  

Mr. Concepcion said the return of in-person classes and the vulnerability of the workforce should also be considered by the government in vaccine deployment. Pandemic response should not be business-as-usual.” 

The private sector has been asking the government to lower the minimum age requirement for a second booster shot to 50 years instead of 60. 

Currently, only seniors and health workers may get a second top-up shot. 

Mr. Concepcion has been lobbying for reforms in the Health departments Health Technology Assessment Council, which he said has failed to accelerate the governments booster program.  

He earlier cited a slight delay in the administration of the first booster shot, which was first rolled out in the country in November.  

More than 71.4 million people had been fully vaccinated against the coronavirus as of July 19. More than 1.1 million people have received their second booster shot 

Experts earlier warned that waning immunity against the coronavirus among Filipinos and increased movement could trigger small wavesof infections.  

BARMM 
Meanwhile, vaccination rate against coronavirus in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM) in southern Philippines remained the lowest in the country at 39.73%, according to data from the Ministry of Health as of July 16.  

Fully vaccinated individuals, or those who have received two doses or one of a single-dose brand, were more than 1.38 million out of the 3.48 million eligible population.   

Those with booster shots were only 138,832 individuals.  

The Philippine government has set a target nationwide coverage of at least 70%.     

Health Undersecretary Maria Rosario Vergeire, currently the departments officer-in-charge secretary, was in the region on Thursday to assure the BARMM government of continued support on health issues.   

Let me express my gratitude to the Department of Health delegation. We are quite aware that in BARMM, the challenge is still very much high as far as vaccination is concerned,Bangsamoro Chief Minister Ahod Ebrahim said in a statement. 

HIGHER TARGETS
Ms. Vergeire said the current administration is soon launching a campaign for higher coronavirus vaccination targets.   

She said under the Pinaslakasprogram, the national government aims to innoculate 90% of senior citizens nationwide with primary series and at least 50% of the eligible population.  

In May, the BARMM Ministry of Health set up 71 additional sites for a targeted vaccination campaign to ramp up coverage.   

Health Officer-in-Charge Minister Zulqarneyn M. Abas had said that the regions low coverage rate is mainly due to hesitancy.  Our top enemy in the low vaccination roll out in our region is the high vaccination hesitancy of the public,he said.     

Health ministry Director General Amirel S. Usman also said then that while the region had been recording low coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) cases and was at relatively low risk,a higher vaccination rate would help mitigate potential future outbreaks.    

Active COVID-19 cases in the BARMM as of July 20 remained low at 12 out of the 19,847 recorded since the start of the pandemic. Of the total, 19,142 recovered while 693 died.   

Basilan province had the highest number of active cases at 7, while Maguindanao province and Cotabato City had two each, and Lanao del Sur had one. Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza and Marifi S. Jara 

BCDA pitches New Clark City for ecotourism investments 

THE RIVER Park in New Clark City has a path for walking and cycling along the Cutcut River. — THE BCDA GROUP 

THE BASES Conversion and Development Authority (BCDA) is positioning New Clark City as an ecotourism destination, with 9,450 hectares open for development to investors, the government-owned corporation said.    

BCDA is always open to tourism investments in New Clark City. Given its strategic location, rich biodiversity and vast open spaces, it is the perfect place for eco-theme parks and ecotourism projects, BCDA Senior Vice President for Conversion and Development Joshua M. Bingcang said during a recent investment promotion event.  

The Central Luzon Tourism Investment Summit and Business Exchange was attended by 36 investors and agencies from the Philippines, Singapore, China, Japan and South Korea, BCDA said in a statement on Thursday.   

New Clark City, located in Tarlac which is about 110 kilometers north of the capital Manila, is masterplanned as a green and smart urban center with 40% of the area for buildings and 60% allocated to open spaces, forests, and parks.  

The complex already has its River Park, a 4.5-hectare area that features a 1.4-kilometer walkway along the Cutcut River. There are also plans to develop the 44.8-hectare Central Park at the heart of the city, which will be one of the largest public parks in the country once completed, BCDA said.   

It is also home to an athletics center first used during the 2019 Southeast Asian Games. 

Mr. Bingcang also said they are continuously pursuing locators for mixed-use projects, retail, and food and beverage establishments.  

The New Clark City is linked to the Clark International Airport at the Clark Freeport Zone via an access road that is expected to be completed before the end of the year.  

BCDA said New Clark City will also become more accessible upon the completion of the North-South Commuter Railway. There are also plans to develop a public transportation system within the complex as locators and residents increase, it said.  

We are already getting there. Weve accomplished much of the infrastructure development,Mr. Bingcang said. MSJ 

Japan turns over water system, tech-voc center in South Cotabato 

JAPANESE EMBASSY IN THE PHILIPPINES
JAPANESE EMBASSY IN THE PHILIPPINES

THE JAPANESE government has turned over water supply projects in a remote village in South Cotabato province in southern Philippines, the Japanese Embassy said on Thursday. 

The P4-million project set up three communal faucet systems in Barangay Kablon in the town of Tupi, which had one of the lowest rates of access to safe potable water in the province. 

Japanese Consul-General Ishikawa Yoshihisa said during the handover ceremony that with the new water sources, residents will now be free from worries of contracting water-borne diseases and the physical burden of fetching water from long distances. 

Mr. Ishikawa also led the formal opening of a Japan-funded P4.3-million technical-vocational training facility that will be run by the municipal government of Tampakan, another town in South Cotabato.    

The new building expands the local governments tech-voc training center that was built in 2011.      

Approved in 2018, both projects are part of Japans official development assistance programs to support peace and development in Mindanao under the Japan-Bangsamoro Initiatives for Reconstruction and Development. Alyssa Nicole O. Tan 

Senate bill on zero hunger refiled 

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

A SENATOR has refiled a bill that mandates the government to ensure zero hunger in the Philippines within 10 years after the effectivity of the law amid threats of a global food crisis. 

Under Senate Bill 30, otherwise known as the Right to Adequate Food Act, the incidence of hunger in the country should be a quarter less than the level recorded at the time of its passage within 2.5 years. It should be reduced by another 25% after five years; another 25% after 7.5 years; until it reaches 0% after 10 years.  

Under the bill, hunger refers to a condition in which people do not get enough to eat that provides the necessary nutrients for a fully productive, active and healthy living due to the unavailability and inaccessibility of food.  

The global food supply shortage that affects us today is beyond our control because it is dictated by global market forces,Senator Ramon B. Revilla, Jr. said in a statement on Thursday. “But if we increase the local production of agricultural goods, we will become more self-reliant and maintain affordable food prices.”  

In June, former Agriculture Secretary William D. Dar warned about the impending food crisis brought about by the global food supply shortage, which is expected to become more evident by end-2022.   

Should the bill pass into law, the state must ensure that land devoted to food production is increased to 50% of all prime agricultural land in every region within 10 years.   

The proposed measure also requires the government to create a framework that will eliminate hunger in an organized strategic manner. A Commission on the Right to Adequate Food will also be established.    

Violators of the law may be imprisoned for a maximum of six years and fined with up to P500,000.  

In the 2020 State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World Report, the Philippines had the highest number of food-insecure people in the Southeast Asian region from 2017 to 2019 with 59 million Filipinos suffering from moderate to severe lack of consistent access to food. Moreover, 15.4 million were considered to be undernourished. Alyssa Nicole O. Tan 

QC gov’t denies Bayan’s request to rally at Batasan Road during SONA 

BAYAN FACEBOOK PAGE
BAYAN FACEBOOK PAGE

THE QUEZON City local government denied on Thursday progressive group Bagong Alyansang Makabayan’s (Bayan) request to hold a protest along Batasan Road during President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr.’s first State of the Nation (SONA) Address on July 25. 

In a July 19 letter addressed to Bayan Secretary General Renato M. Reyes, the Quezon City Department of Public Order and Safety (DPOS) said Batasan Road, which is within the citys jurisdiction, is not a designated freedom park for rallies and mass gatherings.  

It added that a rally would cause traffic congestion for motorists in the area.  

“The denial by the Quezon City DPOS of our application for a rally permit violates the law and our constitutional rights,” Bayan said in a statement. “The denial is arbitrary and follows the fascist imposition of the police. It is patently wrong.”  

The House of Representatives complex where the SONA will be held is located along Batasan Road. 

The Philippine National Police (PNP) earlier said it would deploy over 21,000 police officers for the SONA.  

PNP Spokesperson Jean S. Fajardo told a press briefing on Wednesday that violent protesters will be temporarily detained in a bus from the Bureau of Jail Management and Penology.  

The PNP had listed the Quezon Memorial Circle, the Commission on Human Rights compound, and the University of the Philippines campus as designated areas for protest activities. The entire Commonwealth Avenue, which is linked to Batasan Road, was also declared a no-rally zone.  

In a separate statement, farmers group Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas (KMP) said the denial of a permit to rally violates the group’s right to peaceful assembly and freedom of expression. 

“Our lives and our future are at stake here,” said Rafael V. Mariano, chairperson emeritus of KMP and former Agriculture chief. 

“What right does the DPOS or the Philippine National Police have to prevent any peaceful assembly?” he added. John Victor D. Ordoñez 

Cayetano appeals to Marcos to veto vape bill 

PHILIPPINE STAR/EDD GUMBAN

A SENATOR has appealed to President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. to veto a bill regulating vaping, citing that its passage will overturn stricter regulations and pose harm to the young market.   

The Vape Bill does not regulate, but actually loosens crucial safeguards and makes these products more available to younger individuals,Senator Pia S. Cayetano said in a letter to the President dated July 20.  

Mr. President, I strongly urge you to veto the vape bill,she said. 

The reconciled version of the bill passed the 18th Congress in January and was transmitted to the office of the President on June 24, according to a June 27 statement of Ms. Cayetano.  

Proponents of the bill have argued that vapes and heated tobacco products (HTPs) are effective cessation tools from cigarette smoking and note the need to regulate the industry, the senator said.  

However, she called these arguments fatally flawed because rather than to regulate, the Vape bill actually removes the protective measures already found under Republic Act No. 11467 or the Sin Tax Reform Act of 2020.”  

She noted that under the proposed Vaporized Nicotine and Non-Nicotine Products Regulation Act, regulation of vapes and HTPs will be transferred to the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).   

It is incomprehensible how the DTI would perform the task of determining the safety of the products that will be on the market. By its very mandate, it is the FDA that has the power and the expertise to regulate this industry,she said.   

Ms. Cayetano also pointed out that the proposed measure will lower age limits to 18 from 21 years.  

She cited studies which show that the brain continues to mature until the age of 25, and early exposure to nicotine, through vapes and HTPs, could impair brain development.  

More flavors are also allowed by the bill, Ms. Cayetano said, and this will likely appeal to the youth.  

I thus reiterate my urgent call and echo the appeal of more than sixty medical associations and health advocates, former DoH (Department of Health) secretaries, and concerned government agenciesto veto the Vape Bill,she said.  

We need to listen to health experts,she said. Alyssa Nicole O. Tan 

The root of all evil

JCOMP-FREEPIK

Yes, money or the love of it is the root of all evil, but so is poverty in the Philippines. They may not be so conscious of it as to put it into words, but the results of a recent Pulse Asia survey suggest that the majority of Filipinos assume that poverty is their country’s number one problem — and the source of many others.

The survey found that what most Filipinos want the Marcos administration to immediately do are: 1.) control  inflation; 2.) raise workers’ wages; 3.) end poverty; 4.) make more jobs available; 5.) minimize government corruption; 6.) enforce the law equally, regardless of social, economic, or political status; 7.) reduce criminality; 8.) work for a peaceful society; 9.) extend financial aid to those who lost their jobs because of the pandemic; and, 10.) reduce if not eliminate the incidence of involuntary hunger.

Every one of those concerns is either directly or indirectly an economic issue. Number 3, poverty, is apparently the primary issue most citizens want addressed, of which all the others are manifestations or consequences. Inflation, inadequate wages, limited job opportunities, the loss of jobs, and hunger are either indicators or contributory factors to the descent into poverty in 2022 of some 46% of the population. (That number is expected to decline as the economy recovers, but poverty would still be the lot of millions of Filipinos unless long-term solutions to it are found.)

The criminality that worries most Filipinos and the armed conflicts that have persisted for decades are at least partly among the consequences of poverty and underdevelopment, while corruption and inequality before the law contribute to poverty as well as to the rebellions that have haunted this country for over a century. Poverty is both root and branch — the cause as well as effect — of the evils of Philippine society.

Controlling inflation, creating more jobs, and raising wages would enable more people to spend for their needs. They would end, or at least reduce involuntary hunger, and in the process also help revive the economy. But whether even these solutions can be realized in the shortest possible time is doubtful. The limited job opportunities in the Philippines, for example, are due to the equally limited capacity of the import-dependent economy to employ more people, while the inflation rate is subject to such vagaries as the price of petroleum products in the world market, the level of demand for them in other countries, the conflicting interests of rival nations, and the value of the peso vis-a-vis other currencies.

What are needed are long-term solutions. There is a National Anti-Poverty Commission (NAPC) which was created in 1998 by Republic Act 8425 in furtherance of the so-called Social Reform Agenda (SRA) of the government. Its mandate is to coordinate SRA efforts and to see to it that they are incorporated into national, regional, and local programs.

The law created a rather large and complex NAPC bureaucracy that is headed by the President of the Philippines. But despite the presumably best intentions of RA 8475, the persistence of poverty and the surge in the numbers of the poor suggest that it has not exactly been successful in putting a stop to, or mitigating, the poverty of millions of Filipinos.

In 2017, however, the NAPC Secretariat released its “Reforming Philippine Anti-Poverty Policy,” a paper that was the result of a year’s study by its staff and consultants which admits that what passes for the government’s anti-poverty policy has failed to achieve that end, and hence has to change.

It pointed out that despite economic growth, millions of Filipinos remain poor because the economy has not developed into an advanced industrial system. Some 21.9 million Filipinos, or 3.8 million families, are officially considered “income poor.” But as many as 50 to 60 million more Filipinos are potentially impoverished because of job insecurity and limited access to social services among other reasons. Illness in the family or the death of its breadwinner can also impoverish even middle-class families.

Instead of piecemeal, area-based, sectoral anti-poverty programs, the NAPC paper argues that poverty eradication must be the centerpiece of all social, economic and environmental government strategies.

Providing more jobs in the Philippines is imperative, both to enable families to keep body and soul together as well as to stop the exodus of Filipino workers to other countries that, by separating wives and husbands and children from parents has been devastating to the stability of many families. But it can happen only if structural reforms in agriculture and industry are implemented to so develop both as to make more jobs available, the NAPC paper continues. This would require the adoption of an authentic agrarian reform program that would encourage rural development, and of national industrialization as policy — the twin strategies that developed some of the Philippines’ closest neighbors, among them South Korea, Taiwan, Japan, and China. In addition, the adoption of a social policy that would ensure the delivery of such social services as education and medical care to all the citizenry is imperative, since eliminating, or at least alleviating poverty is not solely limited to providing jobs and a living wage.

The paper also points out that equally important in eradicating poverty is democratic governance, which can encourage the population to participate in the making of the decisions that are crucial to their lives.

The NAPC document was published five years ago, but few, if any, of its recommendations have been adopted. Economic growth per se, which presumes that its fruits will “trickle down” to the impoverished, is still the policy rather than making poverty eradication the central purpose of economic development and reform. Piecemeal and temporary poverty alleviation programs, which have been erratically and even whimsically implemented by the past regime, are continuing while more Filipinos are falling into deeper poverty and despair, as they and their children go hungry and are unable to afford adequate medical care when ill.

The consequences of the mass poverty that is among the inevitable product of underdevelopment are social instability, rebellions, and, perhaps worst of all, the hopelessness and despair that afflict untold millions in the slums of Philippine cities and the country’s impoverished rural areas. Implicit in the findings of the Pulse Asia survey is a sense among many that things have never been as bad nor as desperate — and together with it, the fear that they could be even worse.

There is no arguing against the fact that poverty alleviation has been the biggest challenge to every administration since 1946 when the country supposedly recovered its independence. But it is a challenge none of them ever met — or is perhaps a policy to which not one of them has really been committed despite their lip service to it. 

The Marcos administration could do worse than adopt the NAPC recommendations if it really intends to enable this country to recover from the past six years of bureaucratic bungling and corruption that have been so damaging to the lives of its people.

If it succeeds in at least reducing poverty, it could secure an honored and honorable place in Philippine history that no one would have any reason to question. Eradicating the curse of poverty would also be one way of transforming from rhetoric to reality its promise to “make this nation great again.” But does it have the capacity, the will, and — perhaps most important of all — the imagination to do so?

 

Luis V. Teodoro is on Facebook and Twitter (@luisteodoro).

www.luisteodoro.com

The long road to fiscal consolidation

VECTORJUICE-FREEPIK

If there’s a credit rating analysis that best sums up the fiscal challenge for the Marcos Jr. administration, it has to be the February 2022 Fitch Ratings’ explanation of the negative outlook it assigned to the Philippines while affirming its triple B investment grade.

“The negative outlook reflects uncertainty about medium-term growth prospects as well as possible challenges in unwinding policy response to the health crisis and bringing government debt on a firm downward path.”

The Philippine Government as represented by Department of Finance (DoF) Secretary Ben Diokno is quite bullish about the recovery of business activities with the lifting of pandemic restrictions and normalization of people’s mobility. During the BSP-UP School of Economics Distinguished Lectures Series on July 18, the chief economic manager expressed his confidence that the economy could weather the implications of current geopolitical events and post-pandemic changes in the international financial system.

Three days earlier, on July 15, he assured the Group of 20 countries plus the European Union Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors meeting that “we have a comprehensive set of interventions to effectively balance the need to sustain the growth momentum while containing inflationary pressures and their cascading effects on the economy.”

A day before that, on July 14, Secretary Diokno defended the aggressive monetary tightening by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) on the ground that the local economy remains robust enough “to absorb” it.

Trust for more traction was placed in the recent initiatives such as the Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprises Act, the Financial Institutions Strategic Transfer Act, Rice Tariffication Act and other initiatives.

RESILIENT GROWTH AND ECONOMIC SCARRING
The Philippine economy remains resilient due largely to more than 30 years of policy and structural reforms that have allowed the country to reap gains in both economic efficiency and total factor productivity. But it is hysteresis, or economic scarring of the pandemic, that could be the biggest hurdle to both economic growth and fiscal consolidation.

As AMRO’s (ASEAN + 3 Macroeconomic Research Office) Annual Consultation Report, released July 20, stressed, the prolonged closure of schools and the sub-par quality of online classes dependent on weak internet connection would have serious implications on the quality of the labor force in the years ahead. Upgrading and upskilling are imperative to attain an effective switch to digital, technology-driven economy. Labor market mismatches could be a costly drag to the new normal forced by the pandemic.

The closure of many micro, small and medium enterprises would also require substantial but focused support. It is the driving force behind the unprecedented rise in both unemployment and underemployment in the last two years. As a result, poverty has worsened.

This is the major reason why the new medium-term fiscal program 2022-2028 should be deliberate in calling for priority expenditure on health, disaster risk management, social security, digital economy, and growth-inducing shovel-ready infrastructure projects. Prioritization should thus be the buzzword particularly today because this government’s fiscal space might continue to shrink.

PUBLIC REVENUES
But we find the medium-term growth in revenues to be quite modest, unambitious in fact.

It is programmed to grow from an estimated 15.2% of GDP in 2022 to 17.6% of GDP in 2028. The programmed average ratio for 2022-2024 of 15.4% actually comes out even lower than the average ratio of 15.7% during the two-year pandemic when the economy severely contracted. In fact, the actual first quarter 2022 ratio had already reached nearly 16%.

This must be based on Secretary Diokno’s stand that tax administration, rather than new taxes, is the first priority to raise government revenue which would be reflected in the new fiscal consolidation plan.

Experience tells us that the path of tax administration, though paved with good intention, could lead to nowhere. Improving real property valuation and simplifying financial taxation will all depend on good implementation. It’s good the DoF has indicated its support for taxing digital services and transactions, but perhaps there should be more. As DoF chief economist Gil Beltran pointed out recently, there’s room for raising excise taxes on sin products like tobacco, vapes, and alcoholic drinks.

PUBLIC SPENDING
On the spending side, we find some disconnect with the medium-term growth targets. For 2022, the Development Budget Coordination Committee (DBCC) is envisioning a 6.5-7.5% and for next year through 2028, 6.5-8%. But ironically, public spending is programmed to decline from 22.9% in 2022 to only 20.6% by 2028.

Trimming the deficit from 7.6% in 2022 to only 3% by 2028 can only be done by increasing the revenues and real GDP. But the government, in adhering to an ambitious growth target, should also keep public spending very much engaged, rather than reduced as programmed, because private sector spending is yet to be self-sustaining. In short, as long as revenues are raised at a higher margin than the expansion of expenditure, we can have a situation of robust growth and sustainable public finance.

Otherwise, as AMRO warned, “it would take longer time to mitigate scarring effects” that have become more visible, and growth prospects might therefore be compromised.

FISCAL SPACE
Some fiscal space could be realized from a possible budget reassessment by individual agencies and realignment across departments and offices.

We find the Department of Budget and Management’s (DBM) previous issuance to revisit 2023 budget proposals relevant.

National Budget Memorandum No. 144 calls for both existing and new programs to be reassessed to ensure they are responsive to strategic direction for the year, implementation-ready, consistent with each agency’s absorptive capacity and aligned with the plans and priorities of the Marcos administration. These are a mouthful, and require serious thought and compliance.

DBM should truly commit to ensure the national budget allocation is prudent and judicial. The Commission on Audit (CoA) has time and again qualified its findings on many public agencies with respect to their use of public money. It’s not enough that the government takes pride in its ability to increase the release of notices of cash allocation (NCAs), the utilization of such funds should be intensified especially in the first half of the year when the weather is conducive to undertaking public works projects.

For instance, it was reported by CoA that because of implementation issues surrounding 14 foreign-assisted projects of the Department of Transportation worth P1.61 trillion in 2021, the government was forced to pay P128.42 million in additional fees.

CoA also found the Department of Social Welfare and Development failed to distribute P1.9 billion worth of Social Amelioration Program funds during the pandemic. In addition, it was only recently that the Department realized that some 1.3 families should have been dropped from the cash program because they have transitioned from extreme poverty. Some 600,000 more are expected to be delisted.

Some disbursements worth P33.446 million, CoA found, remains unliquidated by the Office of the President for the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict. Whether some cash distribution was done for each local government unit remains to be seen.

On a bigger scale, some infra experts are of the view that many big Build, Build, Build projects could hardly be justified in terms of their economic value. Interest rates charged by bilateral sources have been found to be above market. Giving these flagship projects a second look could save the Republic billions of pesos that would otherwise have to be raised from additional taxes or borrowings, something that could bloat the debt to GDP ratio again.

Therefore, DBM’s directive for government agencies to rationalize their individual budget proposal should result in lower overall amounts. If needed, some realignments between and among agencies should also be done. In the congressional hearings, we should see the CoA representatives do due diligence to each agency’s goals and spending capacity. Special sessions should also be conducted to ascertain big infra projects’ economic values against their total costs and source of funding. Media coverage should be encouraged.

STATE OF THE NATION ADDRESS
We expect to hear President Bongbong Marcos explain the details of his government’s fiscal program to achieve speedy economic recovery, mitigation of the pandemic, and a return to fiscal sustainability on Monday during the State of the Nation Address. If market confidence is boosted and investments start streaming in, growth is likely to be sustained.

Going back to Fitch’s assessment, one can see the weight it assigns to government effectiveness, one that is inclusive of good and smart governance, rule of law and control of corruption. If we fail to reduce government debt to GDP ratio, it could be rating-negative while broadening the revenue base is rating-positive. Putting public finance on an even keel ensures a good trajectory of economic growth and promotes poverty reduction.

While we are way above Sri Lanka’s woes, this is one strategy of avoiding a descent to its level.

 

Diwa C. Guinigundo is the former deputy governor for the Monetary and Economics Sector, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP). He served the BSP for 41 years. In 2001-2003, he was alternate executive director at the International Monetary Fund in Washington, DC. He is the senior pastor of the Fullness of Christ International Ministries in Mandaluyong.