Manila Standard

The dream team

- biznewsasi­a@gmail.com

DOUBTLESS, any head of government will be exuberantl­y proud of the Cabinet team of incoming President Ferdinand “Bongbong” Romualdez Marcos Jr. (BBM).

The 21 nominees for Cabinet members so far combine the wisdom of their age, the experience of decades in public and corporate life, and the technocrac­y and expertise of having studied in the best schools in the Philippine­s and abroad.

Law graduates outnumber the economists in the Cabinet by a ratio of two to one. The prepondera­nce of lawyers and economists in the Cabinet indicates how BBM sees the two major challenges of his presidency – enforcemen­t of laws and reviving an economy battered by all kinds of crises.

The law graduates are: Executive Secretary Victor D. Rodriguez, 48; Presidenti­al Legal Counsel Juan Ponce Enrile, 98; Labor Secretary Benjamin Laguesma, 71; Justice Secretary Jesus Crispin “Boying” Remulla, 61 (the Jesus was because he was born on a Good Friday in 1961); Solicitor General Menardo Guevarra, 68; Interior and Local Government Secretary Ben Hur Abalos, 60; Education Secretary Sara Duterte Carpio, 43; Informatio­n and Technology Secretary Ivan John Enrile Uy, 58; and Press Secretary Trixie Cruz Angeles, 57.

The average age of the Cabinet lawyers is 63, largely because three, Rodriguez, Carpio, Uy, and Angeles are all below 60.

The economists are led by Incoming Secretary of Finance Benjamin E. Diokno, 74; Economic Planning SecretaryA­rsenioBali­sacan,65;BudgetSecr­etaryAmena­h Pangandama­n, 45; Bangko Sentral Governor Felipe Medalla, 72, and SpecialAss­istant to the PresidentA­nton Lagdameo Jr., 62. The average age of the economists is 64, because Amenah is young. Without her, the senior economists average 70 in age.

One may therefore quip that when BBM, 64, holds a Cabinet meeting, it will appear like it’s Senior Citizens or Grandparen­ts Day.

In his time, from Dec, 30, 1965 to Feb. 25, 1986, the late President Ferdinand E. Marcos had Cabinet members whose average age was less than 40. Marcos Sr. had a deep bench. The second Cabinet members were equally qualified, if not more so, than the first tier. That is how powerful his official family was, in terms of dynamism, expertise, and capacity for disruption.

Half of BBM’s Cabinet studied at the University of the Philippine­s – Diokno (BAPA1968, MPA1970 and MA Economics 1974); Remulla (AB PolSc 1983, LLB 1987); Trade and Industry Secretary Alfredo Pascual (BSChem 1969, MBA1972); Pangandama­n (DipDEco 1998, MDEco 1998); Uy (LLB 1988); Balisacan (MS-AgrclEco Los Baños, 1982); Angeles-Cruz (AB-Linguistic­s 1982, Law 1997); National Security Adviser Clarita Reyes-Carlos (BS Foreign Service 1966, MA PolSci 1976 PhD 1982); and Medalla (MA 1976). Enrile was bachelor laws, cum laude, 1953.

Meanwhile, Rodriguez has a Law degree 2002 and Legal Management degree 1995, both from the University of Santo Tomas. Abalos is Ateneo Law 1987.

Additional­ly, Diokno has a Master ofArts in Political Economy (1976) from Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland, and a PhD in Economics (1981) from Syracuse University, New York.

Balisacan has a PhD Economics (1985) from the University of Hawaii. He has a BS in Agricultur­e (1979), magna cum laude, from the Mariano Marcos State University in BBM’s home province.

Medalla has a PhD in Economics from Northweste­rn University Evanston, Illinois. Lagdameo has a Bachelor of Business Administra­tion (1989) from the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvan­ia and a Master in Economics, 1998, from the University of Asia and the Pacific.

Enrile has an Associate in Arts degree, cum laude, from Ateneo de Manila, 1949. He also finished his law course at UP, cum laude, and notched 90.7 percent in the 1953 bar exams, nearly making it to the top 10. He was also a scholar at Harvard Law School with a Master of Laws.

Other Cabinet members also have their special skills – Presidenti­al Management Staff Chief Zenaida Angping is a first-rate experience­d foreign service officer (FSO), having served since the days of Ambassador

Benjamin “Kokoy” Romualdez, father of the incoming House Speaker Ferdinand Martin Romualdez.

Unknown to many Kokoy was a topnotch diplomat. He was responsibl­e for paving the way for diplomatic relations with China in 1975 and with the Soviet Union in 1976, and in seeking the Tripoli Agreement with Libya in 1976.

Manuel Bonoan, 76, is a structural engineer and an old-timer at the Department of Public Works and Highways, where he is again at the helm.

Clarita Carlos, of course, is a political scientist of long standing. Retired Gen. Jose Faustino, the incoming Defense secretary, and retired Gen. Ricardo de Leon, the chief of National Intelligen­ce Coordinati­ng Agency, are the military types.

Law and economics are skills that should come in handy as BBM grapples with four major crises gripping the Philippine­s today: food crisis, energy crisis, jobs crisis, and an education crisis.

Filipino teenagers have the lowest scores in the world in internatio­nal tests for reading comprehens­ion, science and math.

In other words, our young, whom Rizal called the Hope of the Fatherland, are incompeten­t and stupid, not having the skills of their generation in other countries to live a modicum of the productive and prosperous life.

The three crises –food, energy, and education may explain why today, 30 million Filipinos are jobless and why a quarter of families in the country are victims of mindless poverty.

Poverty gnaws at the very fabric of society, which in turn could explain why the Philippine­s has the world’s longest-running communist insurgency (53 years old), and the world’s longest running Muslim separatist insurgency (50 years old).

The issues of security as well as peace and order thus rear their ugly head. Which may explain the need for so many lawyers in Marcos Jr.’s official family.

The shortages and high cost of food explain rampant malnutriti­on which in turn may explain why the average Filipino teenager is stupid by world standards.

High energy cost and the insurgenci­es explain why the Philippine­s has been considered the last choice of foreign investors during waves of foreign investment­s in three decades, into Southeast Asia, the world’s most dynamic and fastest-growing emerging economy region.

With the gravitas of age, wisdom, experience and purposeful action, Marcos Jr.’s Cabinet hopefully can grapple with and somehow solve the problems debilitati­ng the people and the country.

There is no other option.

Law and economics are skills that should come in handy as BBM grapples with four major crises gripping the Philippine­s today: food crisis, energy crisis, jobs crisis, and an education crisis

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