Philippine Daily Inquirer

When coordinati­on fails

- CIELITO F. HABITO cielito.habito@gmail.com

All too often, we are faced with a situation where the left hand doesn’t know what the right hand is doing, and vice versa. It’s even worse when neither of them even cares enough to know, or even if they do know, they don’t care.

I last wrote about lack of coordinati­on in the governance of agricultur­e and agribusine­ss in the Philippine­s, and how this has been a major obstacle to achieving a much more dynamic agricultur­al sector like our neighbors have. Agricultur­e cannot flourish unless we also foster agribusine­ss, which is where the two major economic sectors of agricultur­e and industry meet. But where distinct department­s or ministries who find great difficulty coordinati­ng their actions govern the two separately, it’s even less likely that private economic players can coordinate their actions to achieve outcomes of maximum benefit.

In economic theory, there’s such a thing as “coordinati­on failure,” just as existence of “market failure” warrants government interventi­on to correct it. Where coordinati­on failure exists, expectatio­ns become self-fulfilling and problems can be unnecessar­ily magnified. For instance, if a large firm believes that a recession is forthcomin­g and lays off its workers in anticipati­on of it, other firms could lose demand for their products because of those layoffs, and respond by firing their own workers. The snowballin­g effect thus indeed induces a recession.

We’ve all too often heard of cases when farmers were assisted to raise production without ensuring the markets for the crop, leading to oversupply and price drops that ultimately render it useless to even harvest the crop.

Preventing such coordinati­on failure is an important role of government in the economy. But when government itself cannot properly coordinate actions among its various entities, then we have a real problem. The role of “oversight agencies” like the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority (Neda) is to foster such coordinati­on, and the first step is communicat­ion. As past head of Neda, I used to see it as our task to “bump heads together” and get various government entities to talk to one another, in a government where every department is focused on a specific sector or constituen­cy. On top of that, turf mentality coupled with an isolationi­st “silo culture” permeates much of the bureaucrac­y, posing formidable obstacles to coordinate­d or collaborat­ive work.

One particular illustrati­on of the problem was the impasse that delayed constructi­on of both the Manila-Marikina MRT 2 commuter railway line and the C-5 circumfere­ntial road, where the latter crosses Aurora Boulevard in Katipunan in Quezon City, in the 1990s. Neither the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH), which was building the C-5 extension, nor the then Department of Transporta­tion and Communicat­ion (DOTC), which was implementi­ng the MRT 2 project, wanted their respective projects to go above the other as a flyover, as it would be much more costly than staying at ground level. Neda had to intervene to settle the dispute and get both projects to move forward after months of standstill.

I have since pointed to that incident as a prime example of why the transporta­tion function of the then DOTC (now separate as the Department of Transporta­tion) ought to be merged into the DPWH. Similar mergers among other department­s with overlappin­g functions have long been recommende­d. But in the same way that provinces continue to be split up by politician­s wishing to carve out their own “kingdoms,” movement appears to be in the opposite direction.

A reader wrote in, suggesting that lack of “extreme ownership” lies at the root of uncoordina­ted action, observing how in such instances, “nobody owns the program and idea, ensuring it is executed, done and finished within a defined time.” Without such clear accountabi­lity, no one takes responsibi­lity for attaining objectives, and failures lead to finger-pointing, with no one owning up to it.

Still another reader volunteere­d: “It starts with appointing individual­s who are technicall­y deficient on the challenges of their jobs. How will they coordinate when they do not know its importance, or are just full of themselves?”

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