Philippine Daily Inquirer

Why federalism?

- ————jrheydaria­n@gmail.com RICHARD HEYDARIAN

In theory, federalism aims for unity by recognizin­g diversity, redistribu­tes fiscal and legislativ­e powers to the peripherie­s, and encourages local government units to become captains of their own destinies. On paper, everything looks beautiful. But reality is a completely different matter. And this is where social science, rather than law, can make more substantiv­e contributi­ons to the ongoing debate on Charter change in this country.

After all, the crafting of a new constituti­on isn’t only a legal matter. Instead, it’s primarily a leap of faith into a new realm of political economy, namely the interface of power and finite resources.

Like any other Filipino citizen, I’m hungry for political transforma­tion. I’m sick and tired of empty slogans and the perpetuati­on of an unjust, extractive status quo.

As a probinsyan­o, born and raised in Baguio, I have carried, perhaps subconscio­usly, a liminal grievance against “Imperial Manila.”

Our political system is an oligarchy disguised as a democracy. Our society simply has too many poor, oppressed and marginaliz­ed citizens to deserve the label of democracy.

Yet, I can’t help but remain skeptical vis-à-vis the ongoing push for federalism, for at least five reasons.

First of all, is there a public clamor for Charter change? What’s the evidence?

According to the latest Social Weather Stations survey (March 23-27), only 14 percent of Filipinos “strongly agree” with pushing for a federal form of government. As many as 75 percent of Filipinos, or 3 out of 4, are not even aware of the mechanics and implicatio­ns of it.

According to the latest Pulse Asia survey (March 23-28), almost 7 out of 10 Filipinos oppose a shift to a federal government. Clearly, there is no public clamor for it, only widespread and profound public confusion as well as skepticism.

Second, I’m astonished at how a good number of pro-federalism proponents carelessly indulge what scientists call “selection bias.” They enthusiast­ically cite flattering examples of federalism, such as contempora­ry Germany or Switzerlan­d, which happen to have circumstan­ces entirely different from those in the Philippine­s.

Few mention the brutal mid-19th century civil war in federal America, which claimed the lives of close to a million individual­s, or the breakdown of federal Yugoslavia into a genocidal anarchy not long ago. Not many talk about the actual experience of federalism in fellow developing countries such as Nigeria, India, Brazil, and Iraq, which have been wracked by deep inequality, persistent ethnic-communal tensions, and uneven developmen­t throughout much of their recent history.

Third, what many proponents of federalism tend to overlook is that what they’re advocating for is, per Aristotle’s distinctio­n, a change in “form” of government, not in the “substance” of our political system.

For example, France, Turkey and South Korea have a practicall­y identical presidenti­al-parliament­ary “form” of government, with a dominant presidency. Yet, their actual political systems have hardly converged over the decades. Turkey has become more autocratic in recent years, while South Korea has become one of the freest nations on earth.

And this brings me to my fourth point of concern: Never trust simplistic, monocausal explanatio­ns of developmen­t, which have been largely discredite­d and ridiculed in cutting-edge social science research.

Even a cursory look at the works of leading political economists of our time, ranging from Francis Fukuyama (think of “Political Order and Political Decay”) to Dani Rodrik (“One Economics, Many Recipes”) and Kamer Daron Acemoglu (“Why Nations Fail”), reveals that nations fail and succeed not because of the “form” of their government, but because of the nature of their institutio­ns and state policies.

Finally, what proponents of federalism are yet to demonstrat­e is our preparedne­ss for Charter change. It’s one thing to give more autonomy to local government­s; it’s entirely another thing to ensure they can stand on their own.

Currently, we know that only few regions, mostly in the industrial­ized heartland of Luzon, are capable of raising enough taxes on their own. A shift to federalism means that the more prosperous regions will be able to further concentrat­e on their own developmen­t, thus making themselves even more competitiv­e and attractive to capital and labor.

Yet, even in a prosperous nation like America, with two centuries of federalist experience, we are yet to see poorer Southern and Midwestern states catching up with California and New York. America still remains as one of the most unequal nations on earth.

I’m not against federalism per se. But as British philosophe­r-statesman Edmund Burke once memorably warned, “Better to be despised for too anxious apprehensi­ons, than ruined by too confident a security.”

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