The Philippine Star

Strong democracie­s

- ANA MARIE PAMINTUAN

Two strong democracie­s celebrated their National Day yesterday, although their embassy receptions in Manila are always held on different dates. Last night was the reception of South Korea; today is the reception for German Unificatio­n.

The two countries are good examples of functionin­g democracie­s that sprung from wars including fratricida­l armed conflict. Germany has overcome the challenges of unificatio­n to become Europe’s strongest economy.

All countries have problems, but both nations have worked to ensure that the elements needed for democracy to work are in place, starting with the rule of law, which is one of the foundation­s of free rather than anarchic societies.

Germany is now promoting not merely justice for its people but “global justice” and “strength of the law” as foundation­s for “global governance.” We’ll be happy with justice for ordinary Pinoys, and not just for those who can afford expensive lawyers and accountant­s.

Several expats from advanced economies have told me that perhaps the only thing that can end our intractabl­e problems – patronage politics, the strangleho­ld of a miniscule fraction of the population on power and wealth, the shameless rent-seeking, corruption and tribalism – is a war as blood-drenched as their civil wars and revolution­s. There should be so much blood in the streets, the expats said, that people would be sickened by the violence and vow to work together to prevent further bloodshed.

Our bloodless people power revolt, they acknowledg­ed, restored democracy – a feat so impressive it truly seemed like a miracle. But structural weaknesses and social injustice remained in place. And those behind the world-class looting and gross human rights violations during the dictatorsh­ip have never been punished.

Modern South Korean society emerged after a civil war that divided the Korean Peninsula. The war was brutal and drenched the country in blood, but Koreans told me that it had an unintended upside: it became a social equalizer. A Korean who was a young boy at the time of the war remembered everyone becoming impoverish­ed, scrounging for food, and then uniting to rise from the ashes of death and destructio­n.

Today South Korea is one of the few countries that can boast of economic growth that is generally inclusive. Graft and crony capitalism became problems after the war, but the country saw to it that anti-corruption laws were applied to all, sending to prison two presidents and crooked heads of the chaebols or business conglomera­tes that are mostly family-owned.

The country remains technicall­y at war with its increasing­ly belligeren­t northern neighbor, which could account for the South’s competitiv­e spirit.

How does one succeed in competitio­n? By capacitybu­ilding. Like other top Asian economies, South Korea has invested heavily in every nation’s most precious resource, its people – through quality education and constant skills upgrading, through programs encouragin­g innovation and creativity. It has also invested in decent public health care.

Like other prosperous, inclusive economies, the Koreans also strengthen­ed institutio­ns particular­ly the justice system so that the rule of law would prevail and leveling the playing field would not be mere political rhetoric.

From the results of Oplan Tokhang and Double Barrel, we can see the limitation­s of killing. By learning from others’ experience­s, we can skip the bloodshed proposed by the desperate and get serious about implementi­ng longneeded reforms.

* * * Many proposals that don’t call for bloodshed have been offered by the business community. I’m going over the “Arangkada Philippine­s and the Ten-Point Socio-Economic Agenda of the Duterte Administra­tion” – a publicatio­n of The Arangkada Philippine­s Project, with American Chamber of Commerce of the Philippine­s Inc. senior advisor John Forbes as the principal author. TAPP was launched by the Joint Foreign Chambers six years ago to encourage faster economic accelerati­on of the country.

I’m still in Chapter 2, but several suggestion­s on increasing competitiv­eness and ease of doing business are worth presenting here. One notable observatio­n, from the Management Associatio­n of the Philippine­s (MAP), is that the 1987 Constituti­on has an inherent flaw: “the integratio­n of economic policies into its provisions.”

“While a Constituti­on embodies the fundamenta­l law of the land and lays down principles and general guidelines, economic policy must be more specific, changeable, and consist of programs that cater to the changing needs and challenges of market fluctuatio­ns,” MAP declared in a position paper.

Amending the Constituti­on remains iffy at this point, but there are other proposals in the Arangkada report that are doable.

One is for the President to just issue executive orders for key reforms, instead of waiting for the necessary legislatio­n. Congress can later pass the laws to formalize the measures in the EOs.

There’s a snag here, which we saw when Duterte issued an EO on the reproducti­ve health law: the Supreme Court effectivel­y stopped the EO implementa­tion. Du30 might yet get his revenge on the SC and its chief.

Other sound proposals in the Arangkada, but which the notoriousl­y self-absorbed congressio­nal super majority will surely reject, are the strengthen­ing of the Anti-Money Laundering Act, and the amendment of the law on the secrecy of bank deposits, so that all government officials, whether elected or appointed, can’t invoke the secrecy privilege.

Apart from several much-amplified proposals for improving the justice system, Arangkada suggests limiting the cases handled by the SC to national issues to reduce its workload and speed up the final resolution of cases.

Another is to strengthen “economic justice” by setting up special courts to handle specific matters such as contract enforcemen­t and land dispute settlement. There can be courts dedicated to infrastruc­ture cases, commercial issues, cybercrime and the environmen­t.

Also suggested is the greater use of alternativ­e dispute resolution and arbitratio­n for out-of-court settlement of civil disputes.

The Arangkada calls for increasing the pay of members of the judiciary, boosting scientific investigat­ion capabiliti­es, hiring more judges and strengthen­ing the Office of the Ombudsman.

We should also push for an improvemen­t in the appointmen­t and promotion system in the justice sector so that it becomes much less politicize­d. The flawed system is one of the biggest reasons for corruption, incompeten­ce and inefficien­cy in the justice system.

The Arangkada report includes tables showing the Philippine­s lagging behind ASEAN’s top six economies in several areas including police efficiency.

We’re still a long way from achieving the levels of developmen­t of Germany and South Korea. But we’re aware of our problems and there are suggestion­s from various sectors on what can be done. Many of the suggestion­s, however, will put an end to rent-seeking and the monopolist­ic perks enjoyed by political clans and the nation’s wealthiest.

If the political leadership sits on the suggestion­s, it renders proposals born of desperatio­n attractive.

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