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Regulator approves toll adjustments for SCTEx, MCX

THE TOLL Regulatory Board (TRB) said it approved toll adjustments for Subic-Clark-Tarlac Expressway (SCTEx) and Muntinlupa-Cavite Expressway (MCX) this week.
TRB Executive Director Abraham P. Sales told reporters on Thursday the agency is issuing resolutions to SCTEx operator NLEX Corp. and MCX operator Ayala Corp. approving their pending rate adjustments as provided for by their respective concession agreements with the government.
“They’re entitled [to] yearly adjustments actually. The 2011 [adjustment] has been pending for some time]. It’s the first of the petitions to be resolved for SCTEx,” Mr. Sales said.
For MCX, the adjustment covers 2016, which he described as small.
Mr. Sales said after the approval, the toll operators must follow publication requirements before they are allowed to start collection. He did not provide the approved toll increases, but said the operators are expected to publish the adjusted matrix by next week.
In 2011, the operator of SCTEx at the time, the Bases Conversion and Development Authority (BCDA), filed an application with the TRB to raise tolls for the 93.77-kilometer expressway. The application was not resolved at the time NLEX Corp. took over SCTEx management in October 2015.
“SCTEx is entitled to apply yearly. For NLEx (North Luzon Expressway), every two years… South Luzon Expressway (is also about) every two years. STAR (Southern Tagalog Arterial Road) and CAVITEx (Manila-Cavite Expressway) are about every three years,” Mr. Sales said.
He noted the remaining petitions in SCTEx for the rest of the years from 2011, and all the other petitions for other toll roads, are still being taken up by the TRB Board.
Earlier this month, the TRB also allowed NLEX Corp. to start collecting higher tolls in NLEx for petitions made in 2013 and 2015.
NLEX Corp. is part of Metro Pacific Tollways Corp., the tollways unit of Metro Pacific Investments Corp. (MPIC).
MPIC is one of three key Philippine units of Hong Kong-based First Pacific Co. Ltd., the others being Philex Mining Corp. and PLDT, Inc. Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has a majority stake in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls. — Denise A. Valdez

Agriculture trade deficit widens in 4th quarter

A DEFICIT in the trade of agricultural products widened in the fourth quarter of 2018, with import growth outstripping exports, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) said Thursday.
Total trade amounted to $5.23 billion during the period, up 15.9% from a year earlier, with exports at P1.66 billion, up 8.8% from a year earlier, and imports valued at $3.57 billion, up 19.6%.
PSA said exports were dominated by the top 10 commodity groups, which accounted for $1.58 billion, up 11.7% from a year earlier.
The top 10 consists of edible fruits and nuts, citrus fruit peels, and melons ($645.14 million); animal or vegetable fats, oils and their cleavage products, and prepared edible fats ($303.19 million); tobacco and manufactured tobacco substitutes ($128.06 million); preparations of meats, of fish, or of crustaceans, molluscs and other aquatic invertebrates ($122.30 million); preparations of vegetables, fruits, nuts, or other parts of plants ($94.81 million); fish and crustaceans, molluscs and other aquatic invertebrates ($91.72 million); preparations of cereals, flour, starch or milk, and pastry cooks’ products ($82.20 million); miscellaneous edible preparations ($44.56 million); lac, gums, resins and other vegetable saps and extracts ($42.67 million); residues and waste from the food industries, and prepared animal fodder ($28.77 million).
The top 10 import products, meanwhile, accounted for $743.55 million of the total, up 103.4% from a year earlier.
These are: cereals ($743.55 million); residues and waste from the food industries, prepared animal fodder ($438.63 million); sugar and sugar confectionery products ($190.64 million); animal or vegetable fats and oils, cleavage products, prepared edible fats ($269.57 million); meat and edible meat offal ($345.86 million); beverages, spirits and vinegar ($167.74 million); products of the milling industry: malt, starches, inulin, wheat gluten ($79.96 million); edible fruit and nuts, peel of citrus and melons ($158.35 million); dairy produce, birds’ eggs, natural honey, edible products of animal origin ($236.43 million); and miscellaneous edible preparations ($368.55 million).
Philippine exports to the European Union (EU) amounted to $269.09 million, with the Netherlands the top buyer at $120.62 million.
Imports from the EU amounted to $365.29 million, with the Netherlands also the top export source with $72.33 million.
Japan posted an agriculture trade surplus of $224.10 million, while Australia posted a deficit of $84.81 million. — Reicelene Joy N. Ignacio

Makabayan to ask Supreme Court to order withdrawal from Chico River China loan deal

THE MAKABAYAN BLOC of legislators said it will file on April 3 a petition before the Supreme Court to order the government to withdraw from the Chico River Pump Irrigation Project loan agreement, over questions about its constitutionality.
“On April 3, we will be filing a declaratory relief petition to the Supreme Court, forcing the GRP (Government of the Republic of the Philippines) to rescind (the loan agreement)… (because of a) dangerous provision that will… sell out our national sovereignty,” Anakpawis Rep. Ariel B. Casilao said in a briefing on Thursday.
The petitioners cited Article 8.1 of the Chico River Pump Irrigation Project loan agreement, signed on April 10, 2018, in which the Philippines “irrevocably waives any immunity on the grounds of sovereign or otherwise for itself or its property in connection with any arbitration proceeding.”
Supreme Court Associate Justice Antonio T. Carpio earlier flagged the same provision which he said allows China to seize the country’s “patrimonial assets and assets dedicated to commercial use.”
The 1987 Constitution requires the President to inform Congress of every contract the government enters into relating to foreign-funded exploration, development and utilization of minerals and petroleum, among others, within 30 days from execution.
Mr. Casilao asked the government to publicize all 19 loan agreements signed with China, of which the Makabayan bloc was able to obtain only three. “We call out to the government to disclose publicly all contracts engaged, loans, grants, ODAs (Official Development Assistance).”
“Out of the 19 agreements entered upon by the GRP and private entities of China, hindi lang po limited ‘yan sa Chinese Government, kundi may mga malalaking investors po, tatlo pa lang ang nakuha nating kontrata (not limited to the Chinese government, but even large private investors, we have been able to obtain only three),“ he said.
Mr. Casilao did not disclose details of the two other agreements the bloc was able to obtain.
ACT-Teachers Rep. Antonio L. Tinio said the Chico River Pump Irrigation Project loan agreement follows the template of loan deals China entered into with other nations.
“Basically, (our loan agreement) with China follows the same template of Chinese loans in other countries (that are victims of the) debt trap, including Sri Lanka and Ecuador,” he said in the same briefing. — Charmaine A. Tadalan

SC dismisses challenge to bundling process for auctioning airport projects

THE Supreme Court (SC) dismissed a petition questioning the constitutionality of “bundling” of airport development projects in five provinces, ruling that the matter must first be tested in a lower court.
In a 42-page decision written by Associate Justice Francis H. Jardeleza, the SC said the arguments of the Gios-Samar, Inc., a nongovernmental organization composed of farmers and fisherfolk from Samar who were among the victims of Typhoon Yolanda, “are inextricably intertwined with underlying questions of fact.”
“This Court, however, is not a trier of fact. We cannot resolve these factual issues at the first instance. For this reason, we dismiss the petition,” the SC said.
The court said that it is not mandated by “structure or rule” to receive or evaluate evidence “in the first instance” as those are the primary functions of lower courts such as regional trial courts or the Court of Appeals.
“The doctrine of hierarchy of courts dictates that, direct recourse to this Court is allowed only to resolve questions of law, notwithstanding the invocation of paramount or transcendental importance of the action,” the high court ruled.
“This doctrine is not mere policy, rather, it is a constitutional filtering mechanism designed to enable the Court to focus on the more fundamental and essential tasks assigned to it by the highest law of the land,” it added.
The case stemmed from the March 2015 decision of the Department of Transportation and Communication and the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines to bundle into two groups the airport development projects to offer to bidders.
The combined Bacolod-Silay and Iloilo projects represented Bundle 1, valued at P50.66 billion, while Davao, Laguindingan, and New Bohol (Panglao) made up Bundle 2 worth P59.66 billion.
In the petition, Gios-Samar said the bundling of projects will allow companies with “questionable or shaky financial background” to have access to the projects by joining consortia. It also claimed the process violates the constitutional prohibition on monopolies and that bundling will “surely perpetrate the undue restraint of trade.”
The SC ruled that the petitioner failed to show how the process violates the Anti-Dummy Law and did not identify which corporation made false claims about its capital structure.
The high court also rejected the claim that the process allows companies of questionable background to access projects, noting that these matters were questions of fact.
“Even assuming that petitioner is referring to any or all of the five companies who have been pre-qualified to bid in the projects, its assertion that these companies are not financially able to undertake the project raises a question of fact, financial ability being a pre-qualification requirement,” the SC ruled.
The high court also added that the bundling of projects does not violate the constitutional prohibition on monopolies and restraint of trade.
“(W)e find that the grant of a concession agreement to an entity, as a winning bidder, for the exclusive development, operation, and maintenance of any or all of the Projects, does not by itself create a monopoly violative of the provisions of the Constitution,” the SC said, citing precedent which allows certain public utilities to be given exclusive franchises. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas

C5 South Link phase 1 to open in 2nd quarter

METRO Pacific Tollways Corp. (MPTC) said a portion of the C5 South Link Expressway is scheduled to open by the second quarter, which will connect C5 road to Merville in Parañaque City.
MPTC President Rodrigo E. Franco said on Wednesday that the 2-kilometer Segment 3A-1 of the 7.7-kilometer expressway is now nearing completion.
“Here in South Luzon, we have the C5 South Link project, of which the first section we expect to open in two months’ time,” he announced during the groundbreaking program for the Cavite-Laguna Expressway.
The P10-billion C5 South Link project was awarded by the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) to Cavitex Infrastructure Corp. (CIC), the operator of the Manila-Cavite Expressway (CAVITEx). The C5 South Link aims to connect Taguig to Parañaque, Las Piñas and Cavite through CAVITEx, with a driving time of about 30 minutes from the former duration of one hour.
The complete length of the toll road is scheduled for completion by 2020. This covers the segment from C5 to Merville, then Merville to Sucat, then Sucat to the R1 Expressway.
Meanwhile, Toll Regulatory Board (TRB) Executive Director Abraham P. Sales also announced on Thursday that the Metro Manila Skyway Stage 3 (Skyway 3) of San Miguel Corp. is expected to be completed by end-2019.
“They committed to complete the Buendia to NLEx (North Luzon Expressway) segment by end of this year. That means that by first quarter of next year, it will be opened,” he said at an event in Pasay City.
The 18.38-kilometer Skyway 3 is an elevated expressway that will start in Buendia, Makati, traversing Sta. Mesa, Manila and running to the Balintawak exit of NLEx. This is expected to reduce travel time end-to-end to 20 minutes from the former two hours.
MPTC is the tollways unit of Metro Pacific Investments Corp. (MPIC). MPIC is one of three Philippine units of Hong Kong-based First Pacific Co. Ltd., others being PLDT, Inc. and Philex Mining Corp. Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has an interest in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls. — Denise A. Valdez

Foreign Investments Act amendments being rushed

SENATOR Sherwin T. Gatchalian said Thursday that he intends to present to the plenary a bill amending the Foreign Investments Act (FIA) of 1991 to improve the country’s standing as a foreign investment destination in Southeast Asia.
“With only nine session days remaining, we hope to sponsor a measure amending the Foreign Investments Act (FIA) of 1991, which is essential to put the country in a competitive position over other ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) countries in terms of attracting businesses and investments by providing clarity to foreigners who are interested in investing in small and medium enterprises or practicing their profession in the Philippines,” Mr. Gatchalian said in a statement.
Asked on the chances of the proposed measure to achieve third-reading approval in the Senate before the 17th Congress ends, Senate President Vicente C. Sotto III said in a text message to BusinessWorld, “It depends on whether it’s controversial or not.”
The chair of the Senate committee on economic affairs said the “poor standing” of the country’s Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) inflows among ASEAN member states signals the need for “immediate implementation of economic reforms that will foster a more competitive business environment.”
“Based on our own analysis, macroeconomic risks such as higher than expected inflation in 2018, the country’s restrictive investment environment, and poor infrastructure quality — particularly on transportation and logistical infrastructure — remain the key stumbling blocks,” he said.
Senate Bill No. 2102, filed by Mr. Gatchalian, reduces to 15 from the present 50 direct local hires the minimum employment requirement for small- and medium-sized domestic enterprises with 40% equity with minimum paid-in capital of $100,000 that will be allowed to set up shop in the country.
It also excludes the practice of professions from the coverage of the Foreign Investment Act (FIA) to allow other laws to govern the rules regarding foreign nationals practicing their profession in the Philippines.
Mr. Gatchalian has said the bill would be among the priority measures of the Senate committee on economic affairs for the remainder of the 17th Congress. Its counterpart measure in the House of Representatives obtained third-reading approval on Jan. 14.
The Joint Foreign Chambers (JFC) of the Philippines has expressed support for such amendments. In a statement on Jan. 24, the JFC said that the minimal restrictions for foreign investors will enable the development of small foreign-owned enterprises in the design and information technology sectors as well as other similar businesses started with a few employees.
According to the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), foreign direct investment net inflows fell 4.4% to $9.802 billion in 2018.
Aside from the proposed amendments to the FIA, Mr. Gatchalian called for the passage of the bills amending the Public Services Act and the Retail Trade Liberalization Act to “foster an inclusive, efficient, and competitive business environment in the Philippines.” — Camille A. Aguinaldo

National government debt declines month-on-month in February

THE government’s total outstanding debt declined slightly from a month earlier in February due to redemptions of domestic bonds, the repayment of foreign loans, and a stronger peso, the Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) said.
The February total was P7.45 trillion, down 0.6% from January.
Debt rose 9.2% from a year earlier.
Some 65.7% of the total represented domestic borrowing.
Local debt was P4.89 trillion, down 0.2% from January, and up 10.6% from a year earlier.
The BTr attributed the month-on-month decline in domestic debt to the redemption of government securities amounting to P11.46 billion in February, as well as the downward valuation of onshore dollar bonds amounting to P190 million due to the appreciation of the peso.
The BTr quoted the peso at P51.769 per dollar at the end of February, against P52.161 in the previous month as well P52.07 a year earlier.
External debt amounted to P2.55 trillion in February, down 1.2% from a month earlier and up 6.8% year-on-year. “The reduction in the level of external debt was due to the net repayment of foreign loans amounting to P3.15 billion,” the BTr explained.
The Treasury also attributed the decline in foreign obligations to the impact of currency fluctuations by both the dollar and third-currency denominated debt totaling P19.42 billion and P8.38 billion, respectively.
Meanwhile, guaranteed obligations stood at P473.37 billion in February, down 2.9% from a month earlier.
The Treasury said this was due to net repayments on both domestic and external guarantees worth P8.51 billion and P0.11 billion, respectively.
“Local and third-currency appreciation, which lowered the peso value of external guarantees, reduced the value further by P3.11 billion and P2.18 billion, respectively,” the BTr added.
The government plans to borrow up to P1.189 trillion in 2019 to help finance its spending, up 33.85% from the P888.23 billion initially programmed for this year.
Of this year’s total, P891.7 billion will be sourced domestically and P297.2 billion from overseas. The Development Budget Coordination Committee adjusted the borrowing ratio in favor of domestic sources to 75-25 for 2019, from the previous year’s 65-35 ratio.
The government borrows from local and foreign sources to fund its budget deficit, which for this year is projected to stand at 3.2% of the country’s gross domestic product. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal

MORE debt reduction please

How dangerous or non-dangerous are China loans to the Philippine economy?
This is a valid concern but another bigger concern is the endless and irresponsible borrow-borrow-borrow policy of various administrations even without economic turmoil or crisis. This is the subject of the Market-Oriented Reforms for Efficiency (MORE) series of this column today.
The good news in the Philippines’ public debt is that the debt/GDP ratio has been declining since the last decade from 74% in 2004, 55% in 2009, to only 42% in 2016. The bad news is that the decline has been halted under the Duterte administration (see Figure 1)
Debt/GDP ration, in percent
The decline in trend was due to high borrowings by the current administration, even if they have big new tax revenues under the TRAIN law on top of natural increase in taxes. And high public debt means high interest payment.
Philippine government’s outstanding debt stock (actual + guaranteed) and interest payment, P billion
Now the China loans. One example often cited is Sri Lanka, with unpaid debt of $1.1 billion it was forced to lease out to China its strategic Hambantota Port for 99 years.
Some 21 projects worth P753.4 billion have been proposed for China funding by the administration, many of which can be done by big local firms at no cost to taxpayers. The Kaliwa Dam Project should be zero loan if the Duterte administration allowed the original Japanese proponent GUDC, or two local firms pre-qualified by the PPP Center, San Miguel and Datem, to build it under integrated PPP financing. But Duterte awarded the contract to China and we have a new loan of P18.7 billion.
We need less borrowings. We need to retire more old loans and we should pay low interest payment. There should be more fiscal responsibility in government.
 
Bienvenido S. Oplas, Jr. is the president of Minimal Government Thinkers
minimalgovernment@gmail.com

What’s the DFA good for?

The Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) is expected to promote international understanding and defend Philippine sovereignty. It is also tasked with protecting Filipinos abroad. In its dealings with other countries, it is of course assumed that the DFA will enhance and defend Philippine interests through diplomatic means. But equally important is its affirmation in word and deed of the value and need for the country to honor its international commitments to human, civil and political rights.
None of those imperatives were served by the recent statement of the current DFA Secretary, Teodoro Locsin, Jr., that the Philippine Senate ratified the treaty making the Philippines a signatory to the Rome Statute that created the International Criminal Court (ICC) only to “accommodate” the late Senator Miriam Defensor-Santiago so she could be an ICC judge.
In justifying the Philippine withdrawal from the ICC, Locsin also said that the ICC has “weaponized” human rights to defend the drug trade. It was in obvious reference to the prosecutor of that body’s decision to look into the possible accountability of President Rodrigo Duterte and other Philippine officials for crimes against humanity in connection with the killings in the regime’s “war” on illegal drugs.
If the rest of the world is listening, it shall have learned from no less than the country’s link to the international community that Philippine officialdom, particularly the Senate, makes decisions on whimsical bases rather than for the sake of national interest. That much is implicit in Locsin’s claim that the Senate ratified the treaty making the Philippines a signatory to the Rome Statute only to indulge one of its own members.
Locsin’s second statement not only accuses the ICC, which was created precisely to hold to account the worst violators of human rights on earth, of being an accomplice of drug traders. Echoing President Rodrigo Duterte’s statements alleging that human rights is being used as a shield for criminality, and that its defenders are criminals themselves, the DFA secretary was also reinforcing Mr. Duterte’s criminalization of human rights advocacy.
While one can understand Locsin’s continuing efforts at currying favor with his superior, his statements are completely at odds with what happened in 2000, in 2009 and 2011, as well as with the DFA’s traditions.
As media reports have pointed out, the Philippines was already a signatory to the Rome Statute in 2000. President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo signed in 2009 the International Humanitarian Law bill mandating the Philippines’ implementation of the Statute. The Senate ratified the treaty in 2011.
Human rights advocacy is part of the traditions of what is now the DFA, which was founded in 1899 by the Emilio Aguinaldo revolutionary government. With Apolinario Mabini as Secretary of Foreign Affairs, its primary mandate was to gain international recognition of the First Philippine Republic. Mabini, one of the greatest minds produced by the reform and revolutionary movements, was charged with getting the rest of the world to acknowledge the Filipino right to independence and self-determination. The defeat of the Republic in the Philippine-American War put an end to that aspiration, with Mabini exiled in Guam.
The restoration of Philippine independence in 1946 led to the Philippines’ being one of the first signatories to the United Nations’ Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) in 1948. Through the DFA, which has been headed by, among others, such stalwarts of democracy as Salvador P. Lopez, the Philippines had since signed other international covenants protective of human, civil and political rights.
But while the UDHR and other protocols to which the Philippines is a signatory commit the country and its government to the observance of such fundamentals as the right to life, liberty and personal security; the right to free expression; freedom of opinion and information; the right to education; freedom of assembly; the right to equality before the law; freedom from arbitrary arrest and exile; the right to be considered innocent until proven guilty; the right to due process; and freedom from torture and degrading treatment, human rights have nevertheless been under siege in the Philippines.
DFA logo seal
Peasants were massacred by State forces from the late 1940s to the 1950s as part of the government’s war against the Hukbong Mapagpalaya ng Bayan (HMB). A “crime” called “rebellion complex,” which added to the penalty for rebellion the penalties for the crimes of arson, rape, illegal possession of firearms and kidnapping, was fabricated by the government to prolong the imprisonment of, and to sentence to death, those accused of taking up arms against it.
Picket lines by workers on strike for better pay and working conditions were frequently attacked, the picketers dispersed, the workers fired, and their leaders accused of various crimes.
The torture of suspected criminals by security forces as a means of extracting information and confessions was, and still is, a common practice.
Free expression, the right to information, and the freedom to hold opinions were constantly under threat, in one instance leading to the persecution of University of the Philippines professors for expressing opinions on public issues, and for publishing in a learned journal a document on the peasant struggle for land.
Also in the 1970s, several student and political activists were abducted and forcibly disappeared. From the late 1960s until the declaration of martial law which banned free assembly, rallies, labor strikes and demonstrations were also frequently dispersed, often violently, resulting in injuries and a number of deaths.
When in 1972 Ferdinand Marcos issued Presidential Proclamation 1081 placing the entire country under martial law, the number of human rights violations — arbitrary arrests and detention without charges, extrajudicial killings, enforced disappearances, torture, the denial of due process, among others — escalated.
The Marcos dictatorship was overthrown in 1986 at EDSA. But its end did not put a stop to human rights violations. In the administrations that succeeded it — the Corazon Aquino, Fidel Ramos, Joseph Estrada, Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, and Benigno Aquino III regimes — extrajudicial killings, enforced disappearances, torture continued. The Macapagal-Arroyo record was the worst since the Marcos dictatorship with the murder of over 2,000 political and social activists and of 32 journalists and media workers in one incident.
But the regime of President Rodrigo Duterte has outdone that sorry record, with 4,540 killings admitted by the police in the course of its selective, anti-poor “war” on drugs, petty crimes and even “tambay” (loiterers), with over 25,000 deaths still “under investigation.” The DFA has justified the killings before the international community, and has also condoned China’s occupation and militarization of the West Philippine Sea, which has denied Filipino fisher folk access to the fishing grounds that are theirs by right.
The whole of Mindanao is under martial law, and the scene of such egregious human rights violations as massacres, the extrajudicial killing of Lumad and Moro leaders, and the military occupation of schools and entire communities that denies children and young people their right to education.
These are occurring because Mr. Duterte has openly expressed his contempt for human rights, while his keyboard army of trolls cranks out a tsunami of false information and incites violence against journalists and regime critics.
Under these circumstances human rights defenders need all the support and encouragement available to stop not only the violation of such rights as those to life and due process, but also the demonization, harassment and criminalization of human rights activists themselves. Obviously, however, the possibility that even some agencies of government, such as the Department of Foreign Affairs, would at the very least affirm the value and necessity of upholding the country’s many international commitments to human rights compliance has very demonstrably become a forlorn hope since July, 2016. What then is the DFA good for if the most we can expect of it is to defend the regime that’s in power and excuse Chinese aggression?
 
Luis V. Teodoro is on Facebook and Twitter (@luisteodoro).
www.luisteodoro.com

‘Fixation’

There are various types of obsessions and fixations. They apply to objects, people and situations. When one is focused on and fascinated with a beautiful subject, this could lead to a desire to possess it at all costs. When it is unattainable, it becomes an obsession.
In the 19th century, there was an unhealthy fixation on one’s position or status that was diagnosed by French writer Alexis de Tocqueville as “a strange melancholy haunting inhabitants of democracies in the midst of abundance.”
Being on the top tier has become a social affliction in the 21st century. This is the intense concern with social position. It is a soul-crushing disorder — the obsession of rank in the Western civilization.
It is prevalent in the lives of some people for extended seasons or years.
This affliction can be treated with great effort and over a period of time.
Acceptance is the first step.
The individual should accept and “forgive himself” for having certain perks — the elite club membership, the fancy weekend house in the country and frequent pleasure trips.
In the local scene, being in the elite circle is achieved through pedigree, inherited wealth, business savvy, good fortune and political success.
Being in the top tier (on any list) has its own unwritten code of behavior. It is a no-no to act like an overeager ostentatious parvenu. Conspicuous consumption and excessive social exposure are considered poor taste — especially when the country is in a recession or undergoing political turmoil.
People get stuck in “congenital uncertainty” with regard to their self-worth.
The display of unrefined behavior — overweening ambition, shallow snobbery, name dropping, calculating the net worth of others — based on appearance — is the result of insecurity. The underlying factor is the desperate bid for attention, recognition and esteem.
The perks and comforts of rank are quite enjoyable and addictive. However, there is a false notion about position in terms of actual value. Having an enviable social rung on the ladder of success is not an accurate measure of real value.
A social scientist once wrote that the poor enjoyed a moral status as elevated by their low social rank. This statement was based on a particular survey.
It reflected the pervasive influence of Christianity and Marxism. The affluent, in contrast, pursued pleasure — under the stigma of corruption and sin.
In the 20th century, the rise of capitalist meritocracy changed the delicate arrangement. Money became the primary social signifier. Being rich was better, they said. It created the strong impression that rich people are more highly regarded. (This us true is some societies)
Being poor was unfortunate. It was considered regrettable.
The material world soon overtook and overwhelmed the spiritual world. The result was rampant anxiety among the people who felt disoriented, disconnected. Among a certain niche, the current social obsession is status. One upmanship and keeping up with the richer neighbors are symptoms of the malaise.
According to social scientists, there are certain cerebral, esoteric remedies.
Read perceptive, enlightening books.
Study paintings and the history of art. It would expand one’s mind and broaden one’s perspective. Then it would challenge society’s understanding of what matters.
Laugh at the witty, satirical cartoons in magazines such as the New Yorker. The humor pokes fun at the foibles of people who have high status.
History and Anthropology are insightful. The ancient ruins provide the key to how people lived in the old civilizations. Gazing at old rocks is meditative and curative.
Here are some positive role models:
The ancient Greek cynics who did not give a damn about other people’s opinions.
The 19th Century Bohemians who realized that money was not everything. They enjoyed life and living despite the tight budgets and occasional harsh conditions.
Jesus Christ who taught people the fundamental value that we are all created equal.
According to a recent study, religion is supposed to be the effective antidote for anxiety. One needs a proper sense of humility to heal the affliction of vanity and superficiality. Unfortunately, being religious does not guarantee an instant cure for the corrosive effects of narcissism, being spoiled and egotistical. The Pharisee-like behavior of self-righteous hypocrites is incurable.
In the local setting, some people are beyond comprehension. People tolerate them because of their exalted status — wealth, power. Both are fleeting and temporal. Minor vices such as compulsive climbing and flashy behavior can be tempered with a dose if quiet, self-imposed hibernation, introspection and self-discipline.
The Christian concept of mortality is an equalizer. No matter how powerful or important some people may think they are, one thing is certain. The fixation on immortality and invulnerability is vacuous and useless.
Thus, we are given a timely reminder on Ash Wednesday. The cross on the forehead signifies that we will all end up as the most democratic of substances: dust.
 
Maria Victoria Rufino is an artist, writer and businesswoman. She is president and executive producer of Maverick Productions.
mavrufino@gmail.com

Time to end disrespectful student activism

There’s this interesting scene in the movie Too Big To Fail, which is about the 2008 financial crisis that almost brought down the entire global economy. The setting was after US Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson (played by William Hurt) asked the CEOs of the world’s biggest financial institutions to work through the weekend and try coming up with solutions to avert the crisis.
After hours of non-stop numbers crunching, a group of Goldman Sachs executives took a limousine to continue working at the New York Federal Reserve offices. Stepping down from the car, an executive whined he couldn’t handle the stress. Lloyd Blankfein, head of Goldman’s, turned to the young man and said: “You’re getting out of a Mercedes to go to the Federal Reserve. You’re not getting out of a Higgins Boat on Omaha Beach.”
Was reminded of that scene after reading about this survey on millennials. As Ben Renner reports, “stressors are causing young adults to have struggles falling asleep 138 nights each year”.
Apparently, “one-third of millennials believe their lives are more stressful than the average person’s life. The survey also pointed to the numerous causes of frustration for this particular youth segment. Many feel their overall stress level is caused by the accumulation of daily micro-stressors — seemingly trivial experiences — such as being stuck in traffic, waiting for appointments, or various smartphone issues.”
So, what are these stressors? Stressors causing millennials to lose sleep and believe their lives are worse than others? Brace yourselves, they are:

1. Losing wallet/credit card

2. Arguing with partner

3. Commute/traffic delays

4. Losing phone

5. Arriving late to work

6. Slow WiFi

7. Phone battery dying

8. Forgetting passwords

9. Credit card fraud

10. Forgetting phone charger

11. Losing/misplacing keys

12. Paying bills

13. Job interviews

14. Phone screen breaking

15. Credit card bills

16. Check engine light coming on

17. School loan payments

18. Job security

19. Choosing what to wear

20. Washing dishes

You got that right.
Feel free to take a moment to bang your head.
This takes me to a video that fairly spread around social media last week, where a senatorial candidate got into a rude back and forth with a student during a forum. The student apparently called the candidate a liar and the latter responded by calling the student “bobo.”
Now, the portion of the video that viraled unfairly starts when the candidate already lost his temper. Most netizens called out the candidate, rightly so, reprimanding him for apparent boorish behavior.
Nevertheless, the student himself should be called out for his disrespect: just because you disagree with someone or that person believes something differently does not entitle you to insult anyone publicly.
The video’s audio also happened to capture the offended muttering of the other students, which was annoying as they were completely oblivious to the fact that the initial insults came from one of their own. The students themselves should know about appropriate behavior towards others.
Furthermore, the reason why election fora are held is so that the students can hear what the candidates have to say. Not shut them up by heckling or insults. If one disagrees with what is being said, the mature thing to do is simply not vote for that candidate.
No need for the boorish theatrics.
Anyway, the point is that adults in government, academia, and in families must stop this ridiculous self-entitlement of students that just because they’re “feeling activist” they can do or say anything they want.
Respect begets respect.
Also, because they’re younger, is precisely why they should learn deference rather than arrogance towards their elders.
The problem is that life is too easy right now for the young. Everything available. Whenever desired. Convenient.
But Tim Wu points out, “we err in presuming convenience is always good, for it has a complex relationship with other ideals that we hold dear. Though understood and promoted as an instrument of liberation, convenience has a dark side. With its promise of smooth, effortless efficiency, it threatens to erase the sort of struggles and challenges that help give meaning to life. Created to free us, it can become a constraint on what we are willing to do, and thus in a subtle way it can enslave us.”
Thus, as Wu insightfully states and what we must make the present youth understand, is that “difficulty is a constitutive feature of human experience (The Tyranny of Convenience, February 2018).
There is something wrong in the way we are forming our youth. Rather than teach and train our youths to have the capability to deal with reality, we bend or twist reality for their convenience and feelings.
This is something this column is interested in exploring further. But for now, instilling rigorous discipline back in the schools would be a good start. Students need to learn that if they want to play an adult’s game, they should pay an adult’s price.
 
Jemy Gatdula is a Senior Fellow of the Philippine Council for Foreign Relations and a Philippine Judicial Academy law lecturer for constitutional philosophy and jurisprudence.
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Why the 1987 Constitution has endured for 32 years without amendment

By Michael Henry Ll. Yusingco and Sophiya M. Navarro
Last of two parts
And yet another plausible, even fundamental, reason why the Philippine charter has remained unamended for 32 years lies in the nation’s tradition of judicial review, specifically the power of the judiciary, i.e. the Supreme Court, to interpret the Constitution.
This power is articulated in the very old case of Angara vs. Electoral Commission:
…when the judiciary mediates to allocate constitutional boundaries, it does not assert any superiority over the other departments; it does not in reality nullify or invalidate an act of the legislature, but only asserts the solemn and sacred obligation assigned to it by the Constitution to determine conflicting claims of authority under the Constitution and to establish for the parties in an actual controversy the rights which that instrument secures and guarantees to them. This is in truth all that is involved in what is termed “judicial supremacy” which properly is the power of judicial review under the Constitution.
The power of judicial review is an important feature of the Philippines’ constitutional order, being an integral component of the institution of separation of powers. But the convention of judicial supremacy has effectively narrowed constitutionalism in the country. The gist of this doctrine is this, “the Constitution means what the Supreme Court says it means.” And this has been the constitutional mindset in the Philippines ever since this Supreme Court decision.
Notably, in a recent parliamentary exchange between two senators, this question was raised, “Can the Senate interpret the Constitution?” The answer of one senator, which today remains uncontested, was that it cannot because there is no specific provision authorizing the Senate to interpret the Constitution.
However, the Preamble clearly states that it is the “sovereign Filipino people” who “ordain and promulgate” the 1987 Constitution and therefore as authors of the Constitution, Filipinos, including legislators, do have the inherent authority, indeed the responsibility, to interpret their constitution.
The abdication of this power and duty is also reflected in how the 1987 Constitution is taught to the citizenry. Based on anecdotal research, high schools and universities teach the charter the same way law schools teach it, using jurisprudence as the primary and only resource material. So essentially young Filipinos learn only the Supreme Court’s perspective of the 1987 Constitution.
The bad consequence of this tradition is Filipinos are not encouraged to look at the 1987 Constitution through their own lens, using their own thinking. And worse, critical examination of the charter itself is stifled by this longstanding policy of judicial supremacy.
Accordingly, an impetus from the community to change the charter, or some parts of it, has never been formed. All past attempts at changing the 1987 Constitution, including the current one, have been initiated by politicians.
The reality is Filipinos have never habitually analyzed and debated the 1987 Constitution properly and thoroughly. Hence, the desire to amend or revise it was never organically fostered. The plain fact is Filipinos have never been in the position to intelligently decide whether or not charter change is needed. Instead, the polity has always banked on the Supreme Court to make the “correct” interpretation to resolve any gaps in the constitution.
PROFOUND DISCONNECT
Accordingly, the ultimate reason why the 1987 Constitution has not been amended is found in the very same Pulse Asia survey cited earlier. One key result reveals that 75% of respondents said they had little or “almost none or no knowledge at all” of the 1987 Constitution.
In the context of constitutional reform, this finding poses a huge problem. How can any reform process ever be truly robust and inclusive when there is a glaring disconnect between majority of Filipinos and the national charter?
How can a full and thoughtful community participation in public debates be guaranteed, for instance on the matter of what mode of amendment to adopt or on how should Congress vote acting as a constituent assembly, when 3 out of 4 Filipinos have little or “almost none or no knowledge at all” of the 1987 Constitution?
Meanwhile, promoters of charter change have argued that the 16 million votes garnered by President Duterte are enough proof that Filipinos want charter change because they approve of his federalism agenda. This is utterly unconvincing. For sure, not all of those who voted for him are federalism fans. And not all of those who did not vote for him, and they number about 44 million, are against federalization.
What the Pulse Asia survey results cited here really show is the unreadiness of Filipinos to take such a profound political exercise. Indeed, only by undergoing a genuine and participatory national dialogue will Filipinos attain a level of consciousness where they can properly decide whether to change the charter or not. And anything short of this will only reinforce the anxiety and mistrust fueling their resistance to constitutional reform.
ENDURING CONSTITUTION
To summarize, the 1987 Constitution has remained intact for 31 years for several reasons. First, the way the amendment process is articulated in the text has given rise to contesting views, making the launching of a strong and united initiative to amend or revise the charter very difficult.
Second, the political context surrounding all the moves to amend or revise the 1987 Constitution has always been dominated by a lack of trust, specifically directed at those pushing for it. Indeed, a trust deficit so severe, proponents have always failed to garner national support for their cause.
Third, there is a subtext in the evolution of the country’s constitutional order that underpins the endurance of the 1987 Constitution and that is the supremacy of its Supreme Court in determining what it means. Because Filipinos have surrendered this power to the Supreme Court, a culture of critical analysis in the community has never been cultivated. Consequently, a consensus of amending or revising the charter has never naturally evolved.
Fourth, there is a profound disconnect between citizens and the charter which has made it impossible to launch a credible charter change initiative. Simply put, Filipinos have never been in the position to intelligently decide whether constitutional reform is needed or not.
For good or bad, all of these reasons have allowed the 1987 Constitution to exist for 32 years without amendment. But the moment calls for Filipinos to deeply reflect on their national charter and how this has impacted the political economy of the country for the past three decades. Therefore, understanding these reasons is imperative for the nation’s constitutional maturity and must be studied further through President Duterte’s constitutional reform project.
This piece is a condensed version of an Ateneo Policy Center working paper. The full version is available at the Ateneo School of Government website and on the link in the online version of this article.