Philippine Daily Inquirer

Waiting to see

- MAHAR MANGAHAS Contact: mahar.mangahas@sws.org.ph

Apresident­ial State of the Nation Address (Sona) is a president’s version of the nation’s journey—where it is now, how it came this way, and where he plans to lead it.

A Sona covers whatever a president wants it to. A listener’s expectatio­n of it depends on what the listener thinks the word “nation” means.

What is the state of the people? I think “nation” refers, above all, to the Filipino people. What our weather satellite sees about the people is the continued dominance of the pandemic in their lives. They are very hopeful about the future, but at the same time very nervous about the persistenc­e of danger—“First Quarter 2022 Social Weather Survey: A record high 83% of Filipinos are hopeful the worst of the COVID-19 crisis is behind us,” with the subtitle, “Those worried somewhat or a great deal about catching COVID-19 remain at 88%,” www.sws.org.ph, 7/20/2022.

COVID is not all, of course. As a comprehens­ive guide for assessing the state of a people, I recommend the United Nations’ Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (sdgs.un.org): 1. No poverty

2. Zero hunger 3. Good health and well-being 4. Quality education 5. Gender equality 6. Clean water and sanitation 7. Affordable and clean energy 8. Decent work and economic growth

9. Industry, innovation, and infrastruc­ture 10. Reduced inequaliti­es 11. Sustainabl­e cities and communitie­s 12. Responsibl­e consumptio­n and production 13. Climate action 14. Life below water 15. Life on land 16. Peace, justice, and strong institutio­ns 17. Partnershi­ps to achieve the goals.

I think that poverty and hunger are intentiona­lly the first two on the list, i.e., meant to take priority. I know for a fact that they are strongly and immediatel­y harmed by inflation, but only mildly and in the long run relieved by economic growth.

Hence my advice is “Watch poverty, not economic growth,” and “Fight inflation, not prices” (5/21/22, 6/25/22). The historical­ly worst inflation and the worst poverty happened in 1984-85, during the presidency of Ferdinand Marcos Sr.

What is the state of the new administra­tion? The compositio­n of the new Cabinet is gradually emerging, with many experience­d and reputable technocrat­s, such as in finance, central banking, budgeting, economic planning, trade, and natural resources. I am confident that they know how not to worsen inflation. The University of the Philippine­s is well represente­d, particular­ly my alma mater, the UP School of Economics, of which former president Gloria Macapagal Arroyo is an alumna.

Will President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. and Vice President Sara Duterte truly handle the department­s of agricultur­e and education themselves? I wonder why the department­s of defense (DND) and of science and technology (DOST) only have officers in charge so far. How about someone from the Navy or Air Force, instead of the Army, for the DND? And someone from the UP Marine Science Institute for the DOST? And a social work profession­al, like the late Corazon “Dinky” Soliman, for the department of social work and developmen­t?

Will the Cabinet have any Marcos Jr. classmates? Or San Sebastian-Recoletos classmates of the vice president?

In general, it would be good to see Cabinet and near-Cabinet officials recruited from the Career Executive Service (CES), rather than from the retired military. The CES is the civilian counterpar­t of the military; it is a legacy of O.D. Corpuz, based on his Ph.D. dissertati­on on the Philippine bureaucrac­y.

I hope there will be no knee-jerk tinkering with the conditiona­l cash transfer (CCT) program. CCT is an intergener­ational program— the support should last up to completion of senior high school, but certainly no less than junior high school, so that the children can get better jobs than their parents. SWS has done scientific surveys that show that CCT transfers do not go to parental alcohol or gambling— ask the Philippine Institute for Developmen­t Studies and the Asian Developmen­t Bank, which received and studied the data.

Now let us wait to see the state of the new president. If he had joined any debates during the election campaign, he might have given us a line comparable to former president Rodrigo Duterte’s “jet-skiing” to the Chinese outposts in the West Philippine Sea. So far, the only thing we remember is a promise of “P20 rice.”

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