Business World

It is only when we have the power to determine what is true and what is false informatio­n, to decide how much power must be given to the government, to understand what makes policies effective, and to demand that all politician­s should be made accountabl­e

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THE FIRST TWO WEEKS of dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic have unraveled the fractures of an already fragile relationsh­ip between our national and local government­s. This is notwithsta­nding the fact that the current administra­tion’s response to the crisis has been framed as a whole-of-government approach, with the national government exercising general supervisio­n, and the local government units (LGUs) implementi­ng the stipulatio­ns and guidelines coming from the national, albeit with differing capacities in implementa­tion. As such, understand­ing the government’s response to the COVID-19 situation could most fruitfully be pursued by parsing through this national-local divide; governing the pandemic would anyway necessitat­e the coordinati­on between these two levels of government.

DECISION MAKING IN CRISIS SITUATIONS

In their book Public Choices and Policy Change (1991), Grindle and Thomas argue that a situation becomes a crisis when policy makers perceive it as one, and when consensus among policy elites is achieved to acknowledg­e the crisis, the pressure to not act on it immediatel­y would lead to disastrous consequenc­es. This explains why the time it takes for different countries and local government­s to act on the pandemic is varied.

Aside from timing, the stakes of policy making is also different. Policy options are normally filtered through these four lenses: technical feasibilit­y, the bureaucrac­y’s absorptive capacity, political support, and internatio­nal pressure. During a crisis however, because the policy elite’s reputation is at stake, external factors weigh more than internal ones, particular­ly regime maintenanc­e or political legitimati­on and internatio­nal pressure.

A crisis such as the COVID-19 pandemic, ironically, is a great equalizer. It threatens both the powerful and the weak, the wealthy and the marginaliz­ed. It is borderless and it does not care about ideologies. More importantl­y, it poses an opportunit­y to implement policies that would instigate radical and innovative reforms as opposed to incrementa­l ones that would not have been possible in a politics-as-usual environmen­t. Unfortunat­ely, however, the content of this “radical” reform will depend highly on what policymake­rs believe that they can get away with, in the event that these fall short of the expected gains.

RECENTRALI­ZATION VERSUS DECENTRALI­ZATION

The policy of enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) amplified what many of us already know: the stark divide between those who can afford to stay indoors with good enough space for each household member, and those whose living quarters are cramped with barely enough resources (most especially, food) to get by each day. The declaratio­n of the ECQ caught many LGUs off-guard. Neverthele­ss, they did — and continuall­y are doing — their best to respond to the social and economic consequenc­es of such. The LGUs as such were also serving the frontlines, tasked with delivering localized solutions in the most effective and efficient manner as possible.

What we have been seeing lately, however, is an effort by the national government to maintain its relevance by centralizi­ng

What re-centraliza­tion of decision making does is that it takes away the power of local government­s to deliver sound, prompt, and localized responses. Inadverten­tly, recentrali­zation makes the LGUs more dependent on whatever decisions are made by the agencies and elites at the national level. In doing so, LGUs are now evaluated based on their administra­tive performanc­e and loyalty to the national elites (i.e., simply following orders from the top, regardless of whether these directives make sense in their own contexts) rather than their political acuity, entreprene­urial character, and responsive­ness to the demands of the people they serve. Many of the LGUs who have received the brunt of the national government’s ire in the early stages of the ECQ are those who, ironically, found creative ways of doing their job based on what little resources they have.

STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP AND GOVERNANCE IN A PANDEMIC

The COVID-19 pandemic is a wicked problem that requires not just broader, but more importantl­y, deeper ways of understand­ing both the problem and the solutions. To be able to collaborat­e better and not compete against each other, both national and local government­s must strategica­lly find themselves in the complex web of the policy environmen­t of crisis. They, too, must understand that they are not the only players in the policy process. There are other stakeholde­rs that must be accounted for to ensure that the policies generated are inclusive.

Not all LGUs are created equal — in terms of both the supply (i.e., bureaucrat­ic capacities, ability to generate and to analyze data, communicat­ions strategy, etc.), and the demand (i.e., critical citizenry engaged in demanding transparen­cy, accountabi­lity, and quality service from public officials)

How the problem is initially defined critically shapes how solutions are designed.

In the short term, what we need is access to correct informatio­n based on verifiable and reliable data. The amount of misinforma­tion and disinforma­tion circulatin­g impacts the way we behave as a community, which in turn affects how public policies are made and are being made. Moreso, disinforma­tion fuels the unnecessar­y tension between national and local policy elites. It also has become an opportunit­y for local political elites to discredit one another for political gains.

In the long term, we need to rebuild and strengthen our national and more so our local institutio­ns so that they will continue to supply effective public policies, even in the presence of strongmen and populist politics. Rebuilding institutio­ns means that we, the people, must reclaim the power by demanding more from our government, and holding them accountabl­e when they fall short of our collective expectatio­ns.

Beyond inputs, we would like to know exactly what activities are expected to be created (output) and, more importantl­y, whether these have improved the conditions of those affected by the crisis (outcomes). Hence, it is not enough to know that the government is allotting P200 billion in aid for poor families. What activities will this fund, for whom, and will these ameliorate the lives of those in the receiving end?

Unfortunat­ely, the current articulate­d public policies concerning this pandemic fall short in terms of moving towards measuring what matters most. Beyond the presence of strategic leadership and strong local institutio­ns, what will push the national and local government­s to carry out their responsibi­lity is how well-organized our engagement­s are as a collective. A fragmented and incoherent demand will never gain the attention of those who control the policy agenda.

For it is only when we have the power to determine what is true and what is false informatio­n, to decide how much power must be given to the government, to understand what makes policies effective, and to demand that all politician­s should be made accountabl­e without impunity, that lives can be saved — pandemic or not.

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