Manila Bulletin

Promises, victory, and then the hard part

- DR. JAIME LAYA Comments are cordially invited, addressed to walangwala­888@gmail.com.

After all the promises, denunciati­ons, allegation­s, fake and genuine news, rumors, threats, protests, whoever is today’s victor will not have an easy six years ahead.

The Makati Business Club issued a statement last week on where we are and what lies ahead. So many companies closed shop. Workers lost their jobs. Business owners suffered losses, depleted their capital. Workers exhausted their savings, sank deeper into debt. Many have died.

Signs of recovery began to appear but Russia invaded Ukraine and another crisis began. Oil price jumped, causing a domino effect on freight and on the cost of transport, electricit­y, food, and so on. For related reasons and with similar effects, interest rates are up and the peso is depreciati­ng. All the sanctions imposed by the US and Europe and the reaction of Russia, as well as developmen­ts in China, India, and the Middle East have worsened matters. With the Philippine­s dependent on oil and food imports, a hot seat awaits Malacañang’s next occupant.

In the immediate term, the Makati Business Club has promised to protect or increase production and address supply bottleneck­s to cushion rising inĹation. For the longer run, its aim is to create a strong, skilled, upwardly mobile workforce. Through policy formulatio­n, it seeks to help in job creation, improve worker skills and productivi­ty, better working conditions, expanded health care and social security, and unemployme­nt insurance.

To cope with Covid-19 hardships, government has been distributi­ng cash—ayuda—to the poor and aged, health measures even as tax and customs revenues have fallen, and spending money on health care and pandemic control. The banking system has also been encouraged to ease lending and collection policies with the easing of normally tough regulation­s.

The new administra­tion is therefore inheriting a weak economy, high public debt, a depreciati­ng peso, and prospects for more of the same.

There won’t be any magic. Food prices won’t drop tomorrow. Not all the jobless will be employed next Monday. Not much can be done about the price of gasoline and transport and freight cost other than the tough decision to favor jeepney drivers as against private vehicle owners, and to raise minimum wage if things get worse.

The new President also needs to get his or her team together and get organized, learn the ropes, work out a strategy with Congress, formulate a plan of action with a timetable.

Like any leader, our new President needs to motivate, plan, organize, and control if his or her campaign promises are to be fulĸlled. The eliminatio­n of graft and corruption, reduction of prime commodity prices, jobs for all, help for the poor, attraction of foreign investment, improved education, etc. were promised by just about all of them.

Government really has two key tools, ĸscal and monetary policies. The former has to do with revenue, expenditur­e, and debt while the latter has to do with money supply and, under our system, foreign exchange. A socio-economic plan is supposed to guide the use of these tools, weapons if you prefer.

The only ways to reduce the price of rice and for that matter anything else is to increase production or reduce demand. The former is easier. We have no winters and can grow food year-round. Most Filipinos continue to depend on agricultur­e and production can be improved with better seed, scientiĸc cultivatio­n methods, relaxation of certain agrarian reform regulation­s, tariff review, and for the longer term, crop insurance and irrigation, land-use planning to slow if not prevent the conversion of fertile crop land to subdivisio­ns.

Reforestat­ion would provide employment, particular­ly to the really marginaliz­ed cultural communitie­s and in the medium term reduce landslides and Ĺooding and produce water for irrigation, power, and waterworks. Commercial forestry with native trees (not foreign mahogany) yield valuable wood like narra, molave, and tindalo or fruits and nuts like mangoes, cashew, and pili.

Mangrove reforestat­ion projects, like those in Samar and Davao, have not only provided employment but have also improved fishery and tourism and have protected

There won’t be any magic. Food prices won’t drop tomorrow. Not all the jobless will be employed next Monday. Not much can be done about the price of gasoline…

communitie­s from typhoons and wave erosion.

Every President, Quezon included, have been denouncing graft and corruption but it seems success has been limited. Example at the top would send a signal, as would locking up a couple of high-proĸle violators of any existing law on procuremen­t, sale of government property like public markets, graft, SALN, deadlines on decision making, and what have you.

The reduction of red tape (for which there is already a law) would not only reduce graft and corruption but also make life easier for everyone. Bureaucrat­ic bottleneck­s and delays are easily avoided with grease money. Reducing the number of documentar­y requiremen­ts, clearances, initials, and signatures will not only reduce opportunit­ies and need for payoffs, but also make life easier for business, importers, and the general public, including OFWs on whom the economy depends.

Metro Manila and Cebu City trafĸc cost billions not only in gasoline but even more in lost working hours, delays in production, unnecessar­y vehicle imports, pollution, public works—all those overpasses, underpasse­s, and skyways. Forget about the aggravatio­n and expense incurred by millions of commuters. Efficient public transporta­tion systems in our two largest cities and revival of the Luzon train system would be worthy and doable goals.

Friends who live in rough neighborho­ods tell me how peace and order has improved and how drug pushers and users have all but vanished in the past six years. They are not overly concerned over EJKs, saying that for the most part those K-ed had it coming. Not the EJKs of course, but the war against drugs is advisedly continued but with speedier crime-and punishment administra­tion.

Metro Manila is a giant assembly of informal settler communitie­s that lack proper sanitation, ĸre protection, water and electricit­y, access to transporta­tion and schools, and so on. We’ve had housing projects on and off since the 1930s, the most recent being those tenements along the railroad tracks in San Andres Bukid that are not only ugly and barely livable but also block railroad improvemen­t. How about following the example of Singapore that used the resources of their social security organizati­on to build high-rise housing? They were for rent, not for sale, and as funds became available, were demolished to build higher and better units.

With hope, our new leader will be unlike Mrs. Aquino who famously declared she disliked unsolicite­d advice. Anyway, hope springs eternal.

 ?? ?? RED CORNER, PINK CORNER From left: Presidenti­al aspirants Bongbong Marcos (BBM Media Bureau) and Leni Robredo (VPLR Media Bureau)
RED CORNER, PINK CORNER From left: Presidenti­al aspirants Bongbong Marcos (BBM Media Bureau) and Leni Robredo (VPLR Media Bureau)
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