Philippine Daily Inquirer

EXEC SAYS INFRA DEV’T, DEMOCRACY CAN’T MIX

- —ROYSTEPHEN­C. CANIVEL

One of the country’s richest Filipinos said that infrastruc­ture developmen­t and democracy could not go hand in hand, hinting that there might be a benefit in being run by a dictator.

Internatio­nal Container Terminal Services Inc. (ICTSI) chair and president Enrique Razon Jr. said yesterday that some countries with the most advanced infrastruc­ture were not democratic, but quickly clarified that he was not “endorsing” one form of political system over another.

He said this during one of the sessions during the Asean Business and Investment Summit (Abis), wherein he was invited to discuss issues on infrastruc­ture developmen­t along with other officials in the private and public sectors.

“If you really look at it, those that have the most advanced infrastruc­ture are the ones that are not democratic. The countries with the best infrastruc­ture in the world are dictatorsh­ips,” he said.

Razon, who was named the country's seventh richest manby Forbes Magazine, said that the United States was the only country that advocated for democracy and achieved developmen­t, but noted that this was because the country was “so vast and has so much resources.”

“Europe is well-advanced but most of [its in-

frastructu­re] was built a hundred years ago and they weren’t a democracy then,” he said.

Following this comment, Ayala Corp. chair and chief executive Jaime Zobel de Ayala, who was also part of the session’s panelists, said that infrastruc­tures could still be developed with the right “ecosystem.”

“I’m not gonna go Ricky’s route but let’s just say I believe in private-public partnershi­ps,” he said.

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