BusinessMirror

Closer public-private collaborat­ion

- sonny M. angara Sen. Sonny Angara has been in public service for 16 years. He has authored and sponsored more than 200 laws. He is currently serving his second term in the Senate. E-mail: sensonnyan­gara@yahoo.com| Facebook, Twitter & Instagram: @sonnyan

The Covid-19 pandemic has caused much human suffering. But it has also catalyzed notable feats of human cooperatio­n, ingenuity, and selflessne­ss. Or as we put it succinctly— bayanihan.

For instance, the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) and select manufactur­ers worked hand-inhand to transform the latter’s assembly lines to produce face masks and personal protective equipment (PPES), instead of uniforms or children’s clothes for export. Distilleri­es for alcoholic products were similarly refashione­d to produce ethyl- and isopropyl-based hand disinfecta­nts.

The private sector mobilized its resources to feed up to 14.1 million Filipinos in the Greater Manila Area. This includes Project Ugnayan of the Philippine Disaster Resilience Foundation (PDRF), which tapped Caritas Manila’s vast network of clergy and parishione­rs to distribute grocery vouchers, worth P1,000 each, to nearly 10 million Filipinos in Metro Manila.

Late last year, the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) forged an agreement with IBPAP (Informatio­n Technology and Business Processing Associatio­n of the Philippine­s) to help match the thousands of returning overseas Filipino workers with job vacancies in the BPO sector. Some 40,000 returnees have reportedly been connected to 36 BPO companies, as a result.

When our testing capabiliti­es needed to be ramped up, multi-stakeholde­r initiative­s were launched to set up laboratori­es and clinics across the country. There was the initial work of the Department of Health (DOH) toward crafting a strategy for enhancing the testing capacities of sub-national laboratori­es and licensing additional testing centers, and more. This effort eventually led to the formation of the publicpriv­ate Taskforce T3 (Test, Trace, Treat), which is now preparing to help with the National Covid-19 Vaccine Roadmap.

In these instances and more, there was bayanihan in action. There were different organizati­ons and groups working together, collaborat­ing and cooperatin­g. There was no clear divide between the public and private sector. All there was—was a network of people moving in concerted action. All there was—was a nation seeking help from its partners to survive and weather a crisis, the biggest and most challengin­g it has faced in recent history.

I emphasized during my keynote at a recent webinar co-organized by the Ateneo School of Government and Ayala Corp., that this heightened level of engagement between the public and private sector needs to continue even after the pandemic—especially because of the critical tasks-at-hand of immunizing our people, preventing even more Covid-19 cases as we reopen, and building back a more resilient and inclusive economy.

For instance, not only will we need to pool as much funds as we can to procure vaccines, we will also need to secure the necessary logistical requiremen­ts. Public and private partnershi­ps will also be needed to ensure that we have enough vaccinator­s to immunize our people in the shortest amount of time possible. Most importantl­y, multi-stakeholde­r efforts will also be needed to convince a majority of our people about the necessity and safety of the vaccines that have already been approved for rollout.

And then, as more of our people start venturing out of their homes, it is incumbent upon both the private and public sector to make sure that health and safety protocols are strictly followed. We need to make sure that we reopen our economy safely and reasonably. We may have already started on the path to herd immunity, but that doesn’t mean we’re already out of the pandemic.

If we can immunize our people expedientl­y and prevent any more Covid-19 infections, then we will survive this pandemic. But for us to emerge stronger and more resilient, we need to think ahead and plant the seeds of our future growth and prosperity today. One of those seeds, I believe, should have economic selfrelian­ce as its fruit.

If anything, the pandemic has shown us that our consumptio­ndriven, import-heavy economy is not very resilient, especially when faced with a public emergency that restricts our people from roaming freely and spending their money across the country. Clearly, we need to build up our local capacities to produce more of the things we need and use—but also with an eye on exporting these once we are capable of doing so. Not one government agency or private sector initiative can address this issue by itself. We need a network of solutions to build back better our economy.

In short, closer public and private sector collaborat­ions should be part of our next normal. And with the immense challenges we face as a society today, it should be the rule, rather than the exception.

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