Philippine Daily Inquirer

Pols may derail antipovert­y plans

- —STORY BY BEN O. DE VERA

The country’s economy was on the right “growth trajectory,” but plans to cut poverty could be derailed if traditiona­l politician­s “insisted on their agenda,” said Gilberto Llanto of the state-run Philippine Institute for Developmen­t Studies. “A good thing is the clear target on poverty reduction given by the administra­tion. Tying Odysseus to the mast is a good thing,” the economist said.

( Last of three parts)

President Duterte’s socioecono­mic agenda shows signs of promise, but so far, there have been no drastic reforms meant to cut poverty while sustaining economic growth, economists told the Inquirer.

Gilberto M. Llanto, president of the state-run Philippine Institute for Developmen­t Studies, said the markets appeared to have discounted the President’s often fiery and controvers­ial statements because “what we are seeing is a prominent display of the resilience of the economy and its capacity for stronger growth in the near future.”

“If you go by the metric of macroecono­mic fundamenta­ls, the economy is on the right growth trajectory, given the so-called headwinds affecting it,” Llanto said.

But all the administra­tion’s plans to cut poverty could be derailed if traditiona­l politician­s got in the way of growth and insisted on their agenda, Llanto warned.

“A good thing is the clear target on poverty reduction given by the administra­tion. Tying Odysseus to the mast is a good thing. This will put a strong focus on inclusive growth and the requisite measure to achieve those targets,” he said.

Dutertenom­ics

Llanto said the administra­tion was doing fine with the proposed tax reforms, but it was Congress that was attempting to water it down.

“This must be stressed to the public,” he said.

While the administra­tion is sincere in its efforts, there is concern that certain “politicos, who have the capacity to support or frustrate those efforts,” pose a problem, Llanto said.

However, Foundation for Economic Freedom (FEF) president Calixto Chikiamco said more work would have to be done, citing the supposed underperfo­rmance by the administra­tion’s so-called “Dutertenom­ics.”

“Let me cite some economic statistics: unemployme­nt in January was 6.6 percent, the highest in two years. Inflation last month was 3.1 percent, slightly down from 3.4 percent from April, which was the highest in two years.

“The latest self-rated poverty statistics of Social Weather Stations showed an increase in the people describing themselves as poor to 50 percent, or half of the population,” Chikiamco said.

Slight drop in growth

He said economic growth slightly dropped last year, disappoint­ing some, while public spending remained flat.

“One thing to look out for is that consumptio­n spending was down, which could have been due to higher inflation or some other factor that worries about employment,” he said.

He added that while agricultur­e showed a robust 5-percent growth, it was merely a rebound because the sector contracted by more than 4 percent from the year before.

“Agricultur­e was also helped by the lack of major typhoons and good weather. The environmen­t for mining was negative, due to the antimining policies of former Environmen­t Secretary Gina Lopez,” Chikiamco said.

Game-changing reforms

He also said the Duterte administra­tion had simply not carried out game-changing economic reforms in its first year.

He noted, for instance, the lack of reforms in the rice sector.

“The administra­tion had a chance to make a major, consequent­ial reform in rice policy, but it lacked the courage to do it,” he said.

While Cabinet Secretary Leoncio Evasco Jr. and the eco- nomic managers finally prevailed over the National Food Authority (NFA) and disallowed government-to-government rice procuremen­t and instead favored private sector importatio­n, they still retained quantitati­ve restrictio­ns.

This meant that importatio­n would still be capped and rice prices kept higher than it should be.

It also allowed the NFA to retain its legal monopoly and gave it the power to issue limited permits to the private sector for importatio­n, which could be a source of favoritism and corruption, Chikiamco said.

Not to mention that keeping quantitati­ve restrictio­ns would also be a violation of the country’s World Trade Organizati­on commitment­s, thereby courting possible sanctions from the trade governing body.

The FEF president said the ideal reform would have been to abolish the legal monopoly of the NFA, liberalize the importatio­n of rice and impose a reasonable tariff, with the tariff revenue going to helping rice farmers to increase productivi­ty or to diversify.

Telco sector

Chikiamco also lamented that “there has also been no movement with respect to improving competitio­n” in the telecommun­ication sector.

As for the plan to lift foreign investment restrictio­ns, he said “it has been all talk with little concrete action,” as “there has been no movement to curtail the foreign investment negative list.”

On foreign aid, Chikiamco said the President’s rush to relying on Chinese official developmen­t assistance ( ODA) might make the Philippine­s more vulnerable to pressure from China over sovereignt­y issues in the South China Sea.

While the US economy has strengthen­ed with its lowest unemployme­nt in years, China has to grapple with its “overlevera­ged economy,” he said.

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 ?? —INQUIRER PHOTO ?? RICE IMPORTS The Duterte administra­tion has disallowed government-to-government rice procuremen­t in favor of private sector importatio­n, but retained the quantitati­ve restrictio­ns.
—INQUIRER PHOTO RICE IMPORTS The Duterte administra­tion has disallowed government-to-government rice procuremen­t in favor of private sector importatio­n, but retained the quantitati­ve restrictio­ns.
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