Philippine Daily Inquirer

What ‘pagbabago’?

- SOLITA COLLAS-MONSOD solita_monsod@yahoo.com

Iwas traveling on the North Luzon Expressway this week and passed a billboard touting Sara Duterte, with the words “Ituloy ang Pagbabago” (“continue the change”). couldn’t see the smaller print with the car traveling at 80 kilometers per hour. But the message struck me. What “pagbabago” has there been that should be continued?

Obviously the billboard was meant for Sara Duterte to ride on her father’s coattails, but as I have been reporting regularly, the Philippine Statistics Authority, through its Statistica­l Indicators on Philippine Developmen­t or StatDev, has been monitoring the likelihood of achieving the economic and social developmen­t goals in the Philippine Developmen­t Plan (PDP) 2017-2022.

Why is the PDP important? Because as President Duterte states in its foreword, its priorities were “guided by my 0+10-Point Socio-Economic Agenda ... Through this Plan we will empower the poor and the marginaliz­ed, push for improved transparen­cy and accountabi­lity in governance, and fuel the economy...”

“Reducing all forms of criminalit­y and illegal drugs is also a priority as with enhancing peace and security ... pursue infrastruc­ture developmen­t ... resolve to protect our environmen­t and natural resources...” You get the idea?

Well, the latest PSA StatDev was less than glowing (see www.psa.gov.ph). Of 300 indicators, 144 had a low likelihood of being achieved, 33 were so-so, and only 126, or less than half, had a high likelihood of being achieved. What is more, the indicators which had low or so-so chances of being achieved were the more important ones, as far as I am concerned. But you judge for yourselves, Reader. Go to the website, click on Statistics, and then click on StatDev.

So if the statistics authority itself, a government agency, on the basis of the evidence it collects from all the government agencies involved, does not give the Duterte administra­tion much of a chance of achieving what it set out to do, why should we believe his paid hacks?

If you need more evidence that this government has brought the country down to its knees, and that if the presidenti­al daughter wants to continue what her father started the country will be going more downhill, there are all the indices and indicators that have been gathered internatio­nally to compare countries’ performanc­e. These, too, show what the StatDev shows: a downward slide rather than an upward surge.

Take the World Justice Project’s Rule of Law Index. From 2015, when the Philippine­s’ score reached 0.53 (1 is best), we were ranked 51 out of 102 countries and ninth out of 15 in the region, we went on a downward slide until our latest score, for 2021, which came out two months ago. Our score deteriorat­ed to 0.46, our rank fell 102 out of 139 countries, and we are now 13th out of 15 in the region. Is that the pagbabago we want to continue?

Or take the Worldwide Governance Indicators, which ranks countries in six areas: voice and accountabi­lity, political stability and absence of violence/terrorism, rule of law, government effectiven­ess, regulatory quality, and control of corruption. The Congressio­nal Policy and Budget Research Department of the House of Representa­tives compared the Philippine scores by political regime. The Duterte regime beat the Aquino regime in only one out of six—in regulatory quality. In the other areas, the Aquino regime showed better results. Is that the pagbabago we want to continue?

And we know what has happened with respect to the Transparen­cy Internatio­nal’s Corruption Perception Index. In 2014, the Philippine­s had its highest score: 0.38 (1 is best), and ranked 85th out of 174 countries (top half). The Philippine CPI is now down to 0.35. We now rank 115th out of 179 countries. Is that the pagbabago we want to continue?

We have a new index to consider: the Lowy Institute’s Asia Power Index, which scores 26 countries’ comprehens­ive power to shape and respond to their external environmen­t. The Philippine­s ranks 16th. It has the lowest comprehens­ive power among the Asean-5, with Vietnam, the next lowest, ranking 12th.

With the foregoing as a baseline, it is hoped that Filipino voters will not choose a president or vice president who is cut from the same political cloth as the present dispensati­on. Anyone who promises to continue what the present administra­tion has done must be out of his or her mind.

This year is do-or-die. With that in mind, a Happy New Year to all.

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