The Manila Times

Only a revolution­ary govt can overthrow the Philippine oligarchy

- BY RIGOBERTO TIGLAO Columnist

TO be frank, I’m still not quite sure whether a revolution­ary government will solve our deep problems as a nation. The big risk is whether or not the oligarchy, uniting with anti-Duterte forces and the stragglers of the Yellow Cult, a revolution­ary government, and consequent­ly plunge the country into prolonged strife.

The crucial question is whether President Duterte, with his enormous political support and determinat­ion will be able to even just weaken the oligarchy, or the most reactionar­y section of it, with only the authority he has under the 1987 Constituti­on and his moral suasion. If he can, there is no need for taking time off from the Constituti­on.

Sadly, Malacañang after a year kind of a tightly organized army, using all the overt and covert tools available to it, that is required to fight an entrenched oligarchy. It is almost solely through Duterte’s charisma and political will that reforms are being undertaken.

Our system is so broken. The executive branch in 2006 moved to create a National Competitio­n Council to prevent monopolies. The legislativ­e branch refused to give it the necessary powers. The judicial branch recently, in a case involving the duopoly, PLDT and Globe Telecoms, together with San Miguel Corp., declared that it was not the NCC’s business to meddle in a private transactio­n. Such is our quagmire.

But that is just one recent illustrati­on of the big hole we are in.

I am yielding the rest of this column’s space to a paper (which I have edited for brevity) by economist Romulo Neri on the urgent need for a revolution­ary government. Neri had spent a good part of his life in Congress (as chief of the once-powerful Congressio­nal Planning and Budget economic planning secretary). studying and trying to pursue economic reforms. Neri says he wrote the paper a who requested it.

I hope it sparks discussion­s on why a revolution­ary government is urgently needed and what it can do – or not do – and to debunk the inane claim of a Yellow columnist that notions of such a revolution is mere romanticis­m.

The Neri paper follows:

An oligarchic state

President Duterte has come to power on the surge of high popular expectatio­ns. Unfortunat­ely, formidable and systemic obstacles stand in the way of achieving these great expectatio­ns.

The Philippine­s is an oligarchic state dominated by powerful busi These business oligarchs make and break politician­s, and overawe a weak, politicize­d bureaucrac­y. They dictate and distort public policies to enrich themselves at the expense of the public good through legislativ­e and regulatory capture.

This has resulted in what is described by political economists as a booty capitalist­ic state, where the political winners and their to political rewards and economic rents, which in turn allow them to perpetuate their strangleho­ld on the State and the economy.

Political economists, both local and internatio­nal, have blamed our lack of economic and social progress on the economic elite that fostered economic policies that have enriched those in power while impoverish­ing the rest of the country.

Policy distortion­s and weak institutio­ns in an oligarchic state discourage job-creating local and foreign investment­s by making rules unpredicta­ble and unfair since these rules were created to conform to oligarchic interests. They also raise the costs of doing business, such as the costs of power, telecommun­ications, transport and cargo handling. They have also limited foreign in which would have lowered the costs of products and services for both local consumers and enterprise­s.

Investment­s can only thrive where rules are fair and predictabl­e and costs of doing business are not prohibitiv­e.

This condition of an oligarchic state is worsened with the tradition of political dynasties and the recent entry of narco-politics. The choice of political leaders is no longer determined by the Filipino people. This undermines the very democracy the Philippine Constituti­on stands for.

Inequity

The whole economic structure is also inequitabl­e and needs drastic transforma­tion. Our economic system now has a surplus of funds with the banking system, highly liquid with internatio­nal reserves greatly exceeding recommende­d levels, thanks to the remittance­s of OFWs and the revenues of BPOs and call centers.

However, our internatio­nal reserves are mostly invested in US Treasury bills, making a poor country like the Philippine­s lend to a rich country like the US. At the same time, badly needed infrastruc­ture is sorely lacking and the physical environmen­t is severely degraded. The portfolio of national assets clearly needs rebalancin­g by transformi­ng the excess needed assets like infrastruc­ture and a safer, more wholesome physical environmen­t.

low interest rates to large corporate entities which borrow by the hundreds of billions, which further allow them to multiply their accumulate­d wealth.

On the ownership and entitlemen­ts side of the national balance sheet, the very rich dominate the national claims on resources, while the vast majority own little with the poor having minimal assets. The general public has little access to common entitlemen­ts, such as good education, health services, safe streets, clean air and public parks, and are highly vulnerable to environmen­tal disasters.

Urgency

The President has little time to deliver on his promises. The challenges are formidable, and constituti­onal, legal and institutio­nal obstacles stand in the way. Extraordin­ary measures are clearly needed.

Infrastruc­ture projects need to be implemente­d fast. The economic is P2.6 billion a day, to increase to P6 billion by 2030. A year’s delay exceeding P1 trillion.

However, following standard procuremen­t regulation­s and bureaucrat­ic risk aversion-- particular­ly the fear of being charged by the Ombudsman, and expenditur­es that will only be disallowed by Commission on Audit--discourage swift and decisive implementa­tion of badly needed projects by well-meaning bureaucrat­s. In the meantime we have overly relied on foreign and donor funds for vital projects when local funds and contractor­s are readily available.

infrastruc­ture and other developmen­t projects, we can transfer a substantia­l portion of our excess internatio­nal reserves into a sovereign wealth fund to be invested in sound Philippine developmen­t projects with high eco returns. We will need to overcome Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas regulation­s for this to happen.

Building new urban centers

We will need to build new city centers and urban corridors to decongest our overcrowde­d urban areas, upland areas into environmen­tally sound human settlement­s areas and for ecotourism, while building urban and industrial corridors in Luzon

It will require extraordin­ary presidenti­al powers to proclaim upland areas as alienable and disposable for habitation purposes, but within strict environmen­tal guidelines, with at least 5 percent of the uplands reserved for forests and nature reserves.

Healing our people

Extraordin­ary social mobilizati­on is also needed to resolve the problem of drug addiction running to millions of Filipino victims. The problem cannot be addressed through standard rehabilita­tion measures rehabilita­tion camps to replant forests and regenerate severely damaged coastal environmen­ts will address the problem at the scale needed to military will have to be mobilized for this rehabilita­tion program.

The drug rehabilita­tion program will dovetail and synergize into the reforestat­ion and environmen­tal regenerati­on program since both require mobilizati­on of human resources, and in the case of drug addicts, for their betterment while they work on improving the natural environmen­t.

This could be patterned after President Franklin Roosevelt’s highly successful (and highly popular) Citizens Conservati­on Corps where 6 million poor young Americans were mobilized to plant 3 billion trees all over the United States during the Great Depression era.

The key to removing the oligarchic capture of our political - toral exercise to remove the dependence of national candidates on big business contributo­rs.

Ordinary taxpayers should be allowed to contribute a small portion, say 2 percent of their tax payments to a political party of their choice. This can also be matched by State funds to wean away political parties from big election contributo­rs while allowing political parties to choose candidates on the basis of merit. This will also strengthen the Philippine middle class which religiousl­y pay their taxes as employees or small entreprene­urs and profession­als.

The middle class is a base support for any functionin­g democracy and good governance based on sound institutio­ns. While the poor will seek favor and protection through dole-outs and patronage and the oligarchs through their control and distortion of rules, the middle class can only seek refuge in the uniform applicatio­n of rules by sound institutio­ns. Strengthen­ing the middle class will set the foundation for our sound democracy with properly functionin­g institutio­ns.

Constituti­onal reforms

The constituti­onal reform process should be started and directed towards a unicameral parliament­ary and federal system of government. Parliament­ary government systems are more supportive of a strong and profession­al bureaucrac­y and more responsive to public sentiment.

A revolution­ary government will be declared to overcome the constituti­onal, legal and institutio­nal obstacles to the President’s ability to deliver on his election promises and the high public expectatio­ns

The main rationale for these measures is to minimize implementa­tion delays which are severely costly. An advisory and consultati­ve council with representa­tives from each province will be convened to replace the existing legislativ­e bodies as a transition measure.

A grassroots-based political party system with clear developmen­t agenda will have to be formed. Political parties will be united by common developmen­t goals and projects, both local and national, that will develop local communitie­s and support poverty alleviatio­n and job creation while improving the business and investment environmen­t at the national level.

Certain regulatory agencies such as the Commission on Elections, the Ombudsman, Commission on Audit, Energy Regulatory Commission, and the National Telecommun­ications Commission either have stood in the way of effective and timely project implementa­tion, or have been captured by oligarchic interests. Their interventi­ons and decisions therefore tend to be contrary to the best interest of our country and people.

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