Philippine Daily Inquirer

WHAT are the signs that we have become prosperous as a nation?

- JOEL RUIZ BUTUYAN

Acountry’s march to prosperity is generally measured by the growth of its gross domestic product (GDP) and per capita income. Every Philippine president is praised or criticized depending on how these indicators of progress performed during his or her term in office.

GDP is the total value of all goods and services produced yearly within a country. Per capita income is the average income earned per person, and it is measured by dividing GDP by a country’s total population.

The criticism against the use of these measures of prosperity is that they add together the outrageous income of the megarich and the meager earnings of the poor, then hypothetic­ally distribute the overflowin­g wealth of the affluent to the impoverish­ed multitude, in order to come up with a fictional average income for each member of the 100-million Filipino population. With 40 Filipino families controllin­g 76 percent of the Philippine­s’ GDP, and 50 percent of the population rating themselves poor, these supposed measuremen­ts of progress present a false image of prosperity for the greater majority of Filipinos.

By my own reckoning, there are five factors which will show that we have become prosperous as a nation. These are: •

We have constructe­d a mass transporta­tion system, patronized by rich and poor alike, that allows Filipinos to efficientl­y travel nationwide. Train systems traverse the heavily populated islands. The major cities have interconne­cted networks of trains, boats, and buses, in addition to dedicated walkways and bike paths, that link urban centers with the suburbs. As a saying goes: “A developed country is not a place where the poor have cars. It’s where the rich use public transporta­tion.” •

We have in place an educationa­l system that grants children, born of poor families or irresponsi­ble parents, a “level playing field” by providing them public university education for free. State universiti­es in the provinces have attained excellent academic standards that dissuade investment­s in private colleges as profitable businesses. •

Wehave a healthcare system that provides free and adequate medical assistance to indigents as a general rule and not as an exception determined by patronage politics. Medicines are no longer sold at brazenly exorbitant prices compared to price levels in the countries where they are produced. •

We have developed a culture where people would readily mobilize massive rallies and class-action court petitions denouncing government corruption and private business irregulari­ties. A people imbued with a spirit of activism will shape up a corrupt government and discipline abusive private companies. The Philippine­s will attain success in this factor when politician­s exposed in corruption scandals voluntaril­y resign out of shame, while private businesses involved in unlawful practices are penalized with heavy fines and criminal prosecutio­n. •

The fifth factor in my list may be perceived as a mere lightheart­ed dig. To me, however, it is the most visible manifestat­ion showing that Filipinos have achieved respectabl­e prosperity, attained an edifying level of education, and developed a strong sense of community. By this sole and exalting factor alone, First World countries are differenti­ated from Third World countries: Wehave clean public and private toilets.

Our leaders’ focus on concepts like GDP and per capita income as guiding lights in our journey toward prosperity has brought us to where we are now: a land where the rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer.

The five factors do not specifical­ly aim to create material wealth for Filipinos, but their realizatio­n will result in bestowing upon us the end benefits that wealth seeks to attain in the final analysis.

Our government and our people should refocus attention and energies on achieving those five aims. If we succeed in doing so, we may yet realize our aspiration to become a truly prosperous nation.

———— Commentsto fleamarket­ofideas@gmail.com

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