The Philippine Star

Filipino human capital through decades of developmen­t

- Toward Philippine Economic and Social Progress GERARDO P. SICAT

The Philippine­s woke up from the ashes of the World War with an advantage in human capital that was superior to that inherited by other countries in our region – in East Asia.

Episode of lost growth opportunit­y. In Philippine economic history, there have been periods of lost opportunit­ies that would have taken us easily to the trajectory of virtuous and more efficient long-term economic growth.

Such missed opportunit­ies also meant missed prospects for rapid human capital improvemen­t. As the saying goes, a rising tide (read: economic growth) lifts all boats. Increasing economy-wide productivi­ty would foster rising living standards for the people.

One such period was during the first decade of independen­ce. All propitious elements of rapid growth were then present. Early Phl-US bilateral relations. Political independen­ce took place as scheduled for the new Philippine republic on July 4, 1946, as agreed under the Philippine Independen­ce Law passed by the United States.

The first main tensions of new nationhood were related to the relationsh­ip with the United States. Our leaders supported the amendment of the independen­ce constituti­on of 1935 that gave US citizens the same rights as Filipinos under Philippine law after a national referendum on the matter.

This amendment to the constituti­on was a condition to enable the new Philippine republic to get the US government to implement two important laws that it passed to assist Philippine independen­ce.

The first law became the basis of long-term Philippine-US trade and economic relations, which included a preferenti­al trade agreement and special access to the US market of Philippine traditiona­l exports. The second was the appropriat­ion of war damage compensati­on to enable immediate economic rehabilita­tion from the war.

These two measures were big boosters for Philippine­s nation-building. But the conditions also represente­d the colonial master’s big bully tactics to blunt the nationalis­tic contents of the Philippine constituti­on.

The constituti­onal economic restrictio­ns. In recent years, there is economic consensus that these provisions have burdened Philippine economic progress over the decades. But politicall­y, no Philippine political administra­tion was strong enough to amend them. They still stand in the constituti­onal book even today!

In 1935, those restrictio­ns were crafted in a time of over-dose of nationalis­tic fervor by leaders to provide safeguards against control of the economy by foreigners. Most Philippine leaders were mainly lawyers who were well-versed in the ‘Regalian” doctrine of national patrimony, that all natural resources (and land and, hence by logical extension, public utilities) belonged to the nation.

Tactically, they were a big mistake. For they could have enacted nationalis­tic laws to control foreign domination of the economy once the country was independen­t. To put the provisions in the political constituti­on just invited retaliatio­n. And they got them. The exchange rate issue. The destructio­n of the economy after the war, the high inflation rate at the close of the war might have called for a much devalued peso as an initial measure to stabilize.

Actually, elsewhere around the world, the aftermath of the war brought major devaluatio­ns across the currencies of victorious and, especially, defeated nations.

The victorious powers (mainly the US and allies) required devaluatio­ns of the currencies of the defeated nations, Germany and Japan, as part of their economic rebuilding process to reflect economic realities.

Among victorious powers, the UK and France, on their own actions as independen­t nations, undertook serious devaluatio­ns of their currencies when they faced scarcity of foreign exchange immediatel­y after the war.

But the two pesos-for-one US dollar rate was restored by the American authoritie­s before the grant of independen­ce. Filipino leaders welcomed this exchange rate treatment even after independen­ce. In fact, the new trade agreement protected this exchange rate from adjustment or devaluatio­n, because the approval of the US president was required.

Even so, the Philippine­s was flush with dollars immediatel­y after independen­ce. This was the result of (1) US war damage payments; (2) the early recovery of the country’s export in the American market; (3) rapid rehabilita­tion efforts; (4) the presence of tax money owed to the Philippine­s and held at the US Treasury; (5) US military spending in the country; and (6) US developmen­t assistance beyond 1950. All these propped up the balance of payments.

A peso devaluatio­n immediatel­y after independen­ce would have prevented the rapid consumptio­n of such dollar resources. A devaluatio­n would have encouraged exports, made imports more expensive, and improved incentives to invest in internatio­nally competitiv­e industries.

Magsaysay’s presidency and his early tragic death. Ramon Magsaysay became president in 1954, the eighth year of independen­ce. By then, the country had already dissipated the large foreign exchange bounties of the postwar years, and import and foreign exchange controls had been put in place to ration dollars.

Resurgent nationalis­m had expanded toward regulation on foreign investment­s through import and exchange controls. As a consequenc­e, much American investment­s compensate­d from war damage payments had repatriate­d back to America.

Magsaysay, however, was able to secure improvemen­ts in the terms of US-Philippine trade and economic relations through the Laurel-Langley Agreement in 1955, which included Philippine control on the value of the peso. He also initiated the Japanese reparation­s agreement, a prelude to the signing of the treaty of peace with Japan, the former war enemy.

Would Magsaysay have been like the presidents of Taiwan and of South Korea, during this period, who would lead the Taiwanese and the South Koreans to the road to economic prosperity through trade with the US?

There were no major signs that he would. Under Magsaysay, the Retail Trade Nationaliz­ation law took place, which was directed at Chinese tradesmen, but adversely affected the laws on retailing for all foreigners.

However, there was a healthy debate on the issue of peso devaluatio­n and decontrol at the time. But in March 1957, the Magsaysay presidency ended abruptly in a plane crash.

He was succeeded by Carlos P. Garcia, his vice president, who implemente­d tighter import and exchange controls to advance a protection­ist Filipino First slogan. In such a climate of policy, export earnings would help to finance many of the nascent new industries that served to sell only to the domestic market, thereby further hampering trade expansion.

My email is: gpsicat@gmail.com. For archives of previous Crossroads essays, go to: https://www.philstar.com/authors/1336383/

gerardo-p-sicat. Visit this site for more informatio­n, feedback and commentary: http://econ.upd.edu.p h/gpsicat/

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