Philippine Daily Inquirer

Challenge for all

-

It is no exaggerati­on to say that a significan­t number of businessme­n were apprehensi­ve about the Philippine­s’ economic future in the weeks leading to and immediatel­y after President Duterte’s victory in last year’s national elections. Dire warnings were aired about how foreign investors were set to pull the rug out from under Filipinos’ feet by fleeing the country in droves. Doomsday scenarios were also painted about how a precipitou­s fall in the peso against the US dollar would lead to a 1997-style financial meltdown, all because of dim prospects under the firebrand mayor-turned-head-of-state who promised to fatten the fish in Manila Bay with the corpses of thousands of drug pushers and users.

Yet here we are, six months later, and the economic sky has not fallen on the Philippine­s.

Yes, the stock market has declined, but it has done so for the second year in a row, in part because investors viewed Philippine stocks as overvalued. Yes, the peso has weakened more than all the other regional currencies against the resurgent dollar, but not by an alarming margin over its peers. More importantl­y, the widespread joblessnes­s and broad economic meltdown predicted by Mr. Duterte’s socalled “haters” have failed to materializ­e.

In fact, all indication­s are pointing to another banner year for the Philippine­s.

According to an article published on Bloomberg last week, the Philippine­s “is anticipate­d to post the strongest growth of any major Asian economy in 2017, building up on a solid run in recent years.” It goes on to quote a study by Japan’s Nomura Holdings saying that the Philippine economy “starts 2017 from a position of strength and can better withstand the impact of rising external risks than most other countries in Asia.”

Nomura points out that the main driver for the local economy will continue to be domestic demand and investment spending, which will offset the expected weakness in the country’s export sector.

This doesn’t mean that risks are absent, or that the naysayers are wrong. Wemust be watchful. And more significan­tly, we must make the most of the environmen­t in which we collective­ly find ourselves today.

Recognizin­g that Mr. Duterte was brought to power by the grievances of millions of Filipinos who saw—over the past six years—a few of their countrymen accumulate astounding wealth and flaunt this on social media, while the masses suffered daily commuter train breakdowns and mindnumbin­g, four-hour commutes, we all have a responsibi­lity to ensure that the benefits of economic prosperity are spread out as equitably as possible.

Are you appalled by the spate of extrajudic­ial killings going on today? Then you should speak out against them. But you should also help lay the foundation­s for a future democratic­ally elected administra­tion that will not be voted into office by a populace frustrated by their leaders’ inaction.

The challenge for the Duterte administra­tion is to make everything that’s going well for the Philippine­s work for every Filipino. It can do that by channeling some of that political resolve it has demonstrat­ed in its war on drugs into getting the ball rolling on jobgenerat­ing (and badly needed) big-ticket infrastruc­ture projects. Mr. Duterte should resist the temptation to adopt his predecesso­r’s mindset that the economy will take care of itself without the Chief Executive providing the impetus for action.

Indeed, the challenge for all of us—as stakeholde­rs in this country’s present and future—is to make every chip on the table, every ace in our hand, count toward improving the economic lot of Filipinos.

It doesn’t matter who you voted for. All Filipinos of every creed or political stripe and color need three square meals a day, a roof over their head, quality education, a stable job, affordable healthcare and reliable public infrastruc­ture.

Let’s get to work.

THIS DOESN’T MEAN THAT RISKS ARE ABSENT, OR THAT THE NAYSAYERS ARE WRONG. WE MUST BE WATCHFUL; WE MUST MAKE THE MOST OF THE ENVIRONMEN­T IN WHICH WE COLLECTIVE­LY FIND OURSELVES TODAY

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines