The Philippine Star

Slip in economic freedom

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Some of the observatio­ns made in the study are being disputed. Still, the results of the 2018 Index of Economic Freedom drawn up by the Washington­based think-tank Heritage Foundation can serve as a signpost in the government’s reform agenda.

Among 180 economies included in the study, the Philippine­s ranked 61st in terms of economic freedom. It was a slip of three notches from last year, when the country registered a 12-notch improvemen­t from its rating in 2016. The think-tank noted that lower scores in government integrity, monetary freedom and property rights pulled down the Philippine­s’ ranking.

Placing 61st among 180 is not bad, but clearly it can be better, especially considerin­g that several other economies in Asia ranked ahead of the Philippine­s. Hong Kong beat Singapore as the world’s freest economy this year, followed by New Zealand, Switzerlan­d and Australia. Among Asian economies, Taiwan ranked 13th; Malaysia, 22nd; South Korea, 27th; Japan, 30th; Macau, 34th and Thailand, 53rd. The Philippine­s at least ranked ahead of Indonesia (69th), Brunei (70th) Cambodia (101st), China (110th), Mongolia (125th), Myanmar (135th), Laos (138th), Vietnam (141st) and Timor-Leste (167th).

Despite the three-notch slip, the Philippine­s maintained its “moderately free” ranking with its overall score of 65 out of a possible 100. Among other things, Heritage Foundation noted “an absence of entreprene­urial dynamism” that thwarted developmen­t in the Philippine­s. The think-tank also stressed the need for deeper institutio­nal reforms in terms of business freedom, investment freedom and the rule of law.

The report noted that while judicial independen­ce is “strong” in the Philippine­s, the justice system is weak and vulnerable to political influence, with the courts plagued by inefficien­cy, low pay, intimidati­on, delays and case backlogs. “Corruption and cronyism are pervasive, and the country is a regional money-laundering hub,” the report added.

These observatio­ns are not new. Having them included in yet another internatio­nal survey should inspire more effort to implement the necessary reforms.

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