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7th May 08 - Walden Bello, Inquirer (Philippines)
Summary: The stagnation of the Philippine economy has now lasted
over 25 years. Between 1990 and 2005, the Philippines’ average annual
per-capita gross domestic product (GDP) growth rate was the lowest in
Southeast Asia, lower than even those of Laos, Cambodia, and Myanmar.
Explanations rooting the country’s failure to launch in overpopulation,
corruption, protectionism, and noncompetitive wages are examined in
this article and found grossly inadequate. The central bottleneck is
the gutting of the government’s capacity to invest owing to the policy
of prioritizing debt repayments and the severe loss of government’s
revenues due to trade liberalization. In contrast to the Philippines,
our neighbors promoted policies that saw state investment synergize
private investment. This accounted for their superior economic
performance, especially before the Asian financial crisis. Until the
reigning policy framework is overturned the country will not be able to
emerge out of stagnation.
* * *
Assaulted on all sides owing to its entanglement in the ZTE national
broadband network (NBN) corruption scandal, the administration has
confronted its critics with the image of an economy that is purring
along, that is doing just fine except for the rise in the price of
rice, for which it says it is blameless.
Deconstructing ‘growth’ in 2007
But the state of the economy, even some of the administration’s
friends have pointed out, is a thin reed on which to rest. In a recent
article, Peter Wallace, an influential consultant, deconstructed the
7.3 percent growth rate recorded for the Philippines in 2007, showing
that the figure is actually a statistical fluke that stems from the way
the measure the GDP is computed. The figure actually masks something
negative: the fall of imports by 5.4 percent.
“So, because we had less imports, GDP looked good,” Wallace says.
“From where I sit, that does not indicate a strong, growing economy,
the best in 31 years.”
With no less irony, the World Bank agrees: “Remarkably, weaker
import growth made the largest arithmetical contribution to the growth
acceleration in 2000-07 compared to 1990-99.” It added that this was
not “consistent with sustained fast growth in the longer term.”
The reality, Wallace points out, is indicated by the same brutal
numbers: more poor people in 2007 than in 2000, more people without
jobs, a real decline in average family income, the shrinking of the
middle class as more people jump ship and swim to other shores.
“Notwithstanding higher growth,” the World Bank chimes in, “the
latest official poverty estimates show that between 2003 and 2006, when
GDP growth averaged 5.4 percent, poverty incidence increased from 30.0
to 32.9 percent. This level of poverty incidence is almost as high as
it was in 2000 (33 percent). Indeed the magnitude of poor Filipinos
rose to its highest level in 2006: of a population of 84 million in
2006, 27.6 million Filipinos fell below the national poverty threshold
of P15, 057.”
If you pop the famous “Ronald Reagan” question
to most Filipinos—“Do you feel better off now than four years
ago”—there is no doubt about how they would answer.
For many people, the main problem confronting the economy is spelled
G-M-A. But for those who have spent time studying the Philippine
economy, Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo is not the problem, but part
of a bigger problem that extends far into the recent past. The
collective responsibility of the last five administrations for our
economic malfunctioning becomes stark when viewed in a comparative
context.
According to the latest Human Development Report of the United
Nations Development Program (UNDP), with the growth in GDP per capita
averaging 1.6 percent a year in the period 1990-2005, the Philippines’
economic growth record was the worst in Southeast Asia, with even all
the so-called lower-tier ASEAN countries significantly outstripping it.
Say that again? OK. Now, Vietnam (with GDP growth of 5.9 percent) is
not a surprise. But, for Christ’s sake, Laos (3.8 percent), Cambodia
(5.5 percent), and Myanmar (6.6 percent)?
So what are the real causes of this state of stagnation that has now lasted for over 25 years?
There is, of course, the old overpopulation-causes-poverty school.
The weight of decades of research, however, is that it is economic
growth that causes a significant decline in population growth—the
so-called “demographic transition—instead of reduced population serving
as the trigger for economic dynamism.
This is not to say that a slowing of the population growth rate does
not make the burden of development lighter. It does, and fertility
control also contributes positively to women’s empowerment, which is
why contraceptive programs continue to be critical.
It is, however, the other, seemingly more solid explanations for the
Philippines’ failure to launch that interest us here. There are three
that are particularly popular with the establishment: corruption,
protectionism, and high wages. Let’s look at these closely.
Is it corruption?
Undoubtedly, the most popular is Peter Wallace and the World Bank’s
favored answer—that is, that cronyism and corruption are holding the
Philippines back. This view is reinforced by the news that, for two
years in a row, the Philippines has been designated the “most corrupt
economy” in Asia by the influential Political and Economic Risk
Consultancy (PERC).
Now, there is no doubt that corruption erodes governance, subverts
democracy, and is morally corrosive. And there is no doubt in this
writer’s mind that the illegitimate occupant of Malacañang deserves to
be hung, drawn, and quartered—legally, that is, not physically—for
presiding over one of the most corrupt regimes in the history of the
republic.
However, it is another thing to say that corruption and cronyism are
mainly responsible for the Philippines’ failure to get out of the
stagnation in which it is mired. The reason one must be skeptical of
this explanation is that in many other societies, periods of rapid
growth have also been periods of endemic corruption in politics, and
this observation includes England in the 18th century, the US in the
nineteenth and early 20th centuries, and Korea in the late 1960s to the
‘80s.
Closer to home, corruption pervaded the politics of our Southeast
Asian neighbors, such as Thailand, Malaysia, and Indonesia during their
period of rapid industrialization from the mid-1980s to the mid-1990s,
when they experienced six to 10 percent growth rates.
Indonesia under Suharto, for instance, occupied the position the
Philippines is now in, being regularly rated as the most corrupt
government in Asia. Double-entry bookkeeping, tax evasion, bribing of
politicians and bureaucrats, and massive fraud were legendary in
Thailand in its boom decade.
Observations casting doubt on the correlation between stagnation and
corruption have received confirmation from more systematic studies.
Focusing on Southeast Asia, Mustaq Khan and Jomo K.S. found no simple
correlation between the extent of rent-seeking and long-run economic
performance and found the thesis that crony capitalism caused the Asian
financial crisis of 1997 a rather dubious one.
Working with a bigger global sample, I.A. Brunetti, G. Kisunku, and
B.Weder’s research found that, if at all, the impact of corruption on
GDP growth was not significant. Other studies have found that, as in
the case with population growth and poverty, the direction of causation
is more likely to be from poverty to corruption rather than the other
way around.
Summing up the conclusion of a slew of studies on growth and
corruption, Herbert Docena says, “Too many empirical anomalies
undermine the conclusion” that corruption is a significant explanation
for economic backwardness.
What research has done is simply to confirm the intuitive sense that
the customs agent that builds a house with ill-gotten wealth stimulates
the economy as much as the middle manager who builds one with her
legitimate savings. The difference between them lies not in their
economic effects but in what their ethical and legal destinies should
be: The former deserves to go to jail while the other deserves to enjoy
the fruits of her labor.
There is an added problem with the corruption explanation for
stagnation, Docena argues. The popular discourse that attributes
economic backwardness to corruption and cronyism plays into the
dynamics of elite politics and that of multilateral institutions like
the World Bank.
“Corruption discourse” is the preferred weapon in the political
competition among the different factions of the elite. It is discourse
that performs the function of allowing elites to compete and succeed
one another in office without fatally destabilizing a social structure
that is shot through with inequity.
The neoliberal explanation
Another favorite explanation is that stagnation stems from the
“strong” protection offered to domestic industry. The Philippines, it
is said, has not been exposed enough to market forces that would have
shaken it out of its “inefficiency.”
The problem with this analysis is that, in fact, the Philippines was
subjected to radical tariff liberalization in the 1980’s and 1990’s.
Under programs imposed by the World Bank and International Monetary
Fund (IMF) in the 1980s, the average tariff rate was brought down from
43 percent in 1980 to 28 percent in 1985 and quantitative restrictions
were removed on more 900 items between 1981 and 1985.
This process of liberalization was accelerated in the mid-1990s
under the Fidel Ramos administration’s Executive Order 264, which
sought to drive down tariffs on all but a few sensitive products to
between one and five percent in 2004.
Moreover, the liberalization program in the Philippines was often
more profound than those of our neighbors, which were growing by leaps
and bounds while we stagnated. For instance, by the end of the 1980s,
the average tariff rates in Indonesia and the Philippines were just
about equal while Indonesia had a greater proportion of goods subjected
to non-tariff barriers than the Philippines.
Compared with Thailand, which was, in many ways, the best performer
among the Southeast Asian “newly industrializing countries” (NICs) in
the 1985-1995 period, the Philippines was much farther along the
liberalization road: By the end of the eighties, the effective rate of
protection for manufacturing in Thailand was 52 percent, compared to 23
percent for the Philippines.
In fact, in the 1980s and 1990s, the strategy of our neighbors was
not one of indiscriminate liberalization such as that pursued by
Philippine technocrats but one of strategic protectionism cum selective
liberalization that was designed to deepen their industrial structures.
As one wag who was trying to drive home the contrasting outcomes in
the Philippines and our neighbors put it, the crucial difference was
that our technocrats preached free trade and practiced it, while our
neighbors boasted of their free trade credentials while practicing
protectionism. In other words, in world ruled by economic realpolitik,
it is often not a virtue to practice what you preach.
Management’s story
A third explanation favored by the establishment is that too much
legal protection of labor has made wages rigid and noncompetitive with
other Asian countries, thus making the Philippines an unattractive
investment site.
Though it has been successfully used by management to dampen wage
demands, this argument has been seriously undermined by the facts. The
real wage in 2003 was only 80 percent of what it was in 1980 and
labor’s share in GDP has dropped from 75 percent to 65 percent. In
contrast, capital’s share of GDP has increased by 10 percent and the
profit rate has shown an upward trend, from 8 percent in 1985 to nearly
13 percent in 2002.
The Spanish economist Jesus Felipe and his Filipino colleague
Leonardo Lanzona, Jr., argue in a study for the Asian Development Bank
that except in some areas, Philippine labor market policies cannot be
seen as the main culprit for the economy’s failure to lift off.
Indeed, they do not see an increase in current wages as a problem
since, seen from a neo-Keynesian perspective, the Philippines falls
into the category of being a “wage-led economic regime,” where, owing
to persistently low levels of investment by capital, an increase in
wages will lead to a higher level of aggregate demand that will result
in a utilization of current excess capacity in industry, leading to
faster growth and more employment.
So why is the Philippines stuck in what is effectively a low-growth
path, where unemployment and underemployment continue to rise even when
the economy is growing by five to six percent? The culprit, Felipe and
Lanzona strongly suggest, is low capital accumulation or investment:
“In the Philippines … the lack of investment is a well known
problem…. It is possible that the Philippines’ low capital stock per
worker, due to lack of investment, has led to higher markups and
unemployment. Thus, the policy prescriptions to reduce unemployment
would be investment and not labor market reforms.”
The investment conundrum
One cannot then understand Philippine underdevelopment without
reference to the crisis of investment. From nearly 30 percent in the
early 1980s, the ratio of investment to GDP plunged to 17 percent in
the mid-1980s and never really recovered, staying at 20-22 percent in
the early part of this decade. The same pattern of collapse and very
weak recovery is also seen in the growth of capital stock, which fell
from an index of nearly 0.07 in 1983 to nearly zero in 1985 and leveled
off at below 0.03 in the early part of this decade.
To understand the dismal performance of investment over the last two
decades, one must situate these figures in their historical
politico-economic context.
While the Ferdinand Marcos regime is often pinpointed as the culprit
behind Philippine underdevelopment, an equally decisive part has been
played by the post-Marcos administrations. The private sector unraveled
in the early 1980s owing to the effects of a structural adjustment
program—trade liberalization cum monetary and fiscal tightening—imposed
by the World Bank and IMF at a time of international recession.
Describing the fatal conjunction of local adjustment and
international downturn, the late economist Charles Lindsay said,
“Whatever the merits of the SAL [structural adjustment loan], its
timing was deplorable.”
The collapse of industry, it must also be noted, took place amidst a
political crisis that marked the transition from the dictatorship to
the presidency of Corazon Aquino.
Why government spending was gutted
The downward spiral of private investment was not met by a
countercyclical effort of government to shore up the economy, as would
be expected under orthodox macroeconomic management. This was a
catastrophic failure, and the cause of it was external.
Owing to pressure from international creditors, the fledgling
democratic government of President Corazon Aquino adopted the so-called
“model debtor strategy” in the hope of continuing to have access to
international capital markets. This approach was cast in iron by
Executive Order 292, which affirmed the “automatic appropriation” from
the annual government budget of the full amount needed to service the
foreign debt.
What this meant is that instead of picking up the investment slack,
government resources flowed out in debt service payments. In the
critical period 1986-1993, an amount coming to some eight to 10 percent
of GDP left the Philippines yearly in debt service payments, with the
total amount coming to nearly $30 billion.
This figure was nearly $8.5 billion more than the $21.5 billion
Philippines total external debt in 1986. What is even more appalling is
that owing to the onerous terms of repaying debts that were subject to
variable interest rates and the practice of incurring new debt to pay
off the old, instead of showing a reduction, the foreign debt in 1993
had gone up to $29 billion!
What this translated into was that interest payments as a percentage
of total government expenditure went from seven percent in 1980 to 28
percent in 1994. Capital expenditures, on the other hand, plunged from
26 percent to 16 percent. Debt servicing, in short, became, alongside
wages and salaries, the No. 1 priority of the national budget, with
capital expenditures being starved of outlays.
Since government is the biggest investor in the country—indeed, in
any country—the radical stripping away of capital expenditures
represented by these figures goes a long way towards explaining the
stagnant 1.0 percent average yearly GDP growth rate in the 1980s and
the 2.3 percent rate in the first half of the 1990s.
The anti-growth implications of the state’s being deprived of
resources for investment were very clear to Filipino economists during
the mid-eighties. As the University of the Philippines professors who
authored the famous 1985 “White Paper” warned: “The search for a
recovery program that is consistent with a debt repayment schedule
determined by our creditors is a futile one and should therefore be
abandoned.”
Government and investment: contrasts with out neighbors
Why do we focus on key policy decisions made in the period 1985 to
1995? The reason is that these decisions—in particular the fateful
decision to channel government financial resources to debt repayment
instead of capital expenditures—go a long way towards explaining why
our neighbors leaped forward as we stagnated.
Contrary to doctrinaire free-market economics, institutional
economists argue that government financial resources devoted to
building physical or social infrastructure or shoring up domestic
demand “crowd in” rather than “crowd out” private investment, including
foreign investment. For instance, one key study of a panel of
developing economies from1980 to 1997 found that public investment
complemented private investment, and that, on average, a 10-percent
increase in public investment was associated with a two-percent
increase in private investment.
Now the key explanation for why our neighbors flourished in the
period 1985-95 is that they were deluged with Japanese investment that
was relocating from Japan to make up for the loss of competitiveness of
Japan-based production owing to the drastic revaluation of the Japanese
yen relative to the dollar under the famous Plaza Accord in 1985. This
flow of Japanese investment to our neighbors was not accidental.
Nor was it accidental that the Japanese bypassed the Philippines. For
while our external creditors were busy stripping our government of
resources for investment in infrastructure, our neighbors were
frantically devoting resources to financing infrastructure to attract
or crowd in Japanese direct investment.
Indonesia, for instance, attracted $3.7 billion worth of Japanese
direct investment between 1985 and 1990. A key reason was the high
level of government capital expenditures, which came to 47 percent of
total expenditures in 1980, 43 percent in 1990 and 47 percent in 1994.
Or take Thailand. It pushed down interest payments from eight percent
of government expenditure in 1980 to two percent in 1995 and raised
capital expenditures from 23 percent to 33 percent.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Thailand received $24 billion in
foreign direct investment from Japan, Korea and Taiwan—15 times the
amount invested by the three countries in the Philippines, which came
to a paltry $1.6 billion.
There is no doubt that government capital spending crowded in
foreign investment in Thailand and the lack out it crowded out foreign
investment in the Philippines. And there is no doubt that, as
KunioYoshihara asserted, “This difference in the flow of foreign
investment from [Japan, Korea, and Taiwan] produced a significant
disparity in growth performance of the two countries during this
period.”
Like all clear-thinking investors, the Japanese were
not going en masse to a place where infrastructure was decaying and
where the market was depressed and poverty was increasing owing to a
political economy shackled by structural adjustment and battered by the
priority given to repaying the foreign debt. They were, in short, not
stupid.
This trend of continuing outflow of government resources in the form
of payments to creditors and the shrinking of capital expenditures
continued into the first years of this decade. In 2005, according to
World Bank data, 29 percent of the government expenditure was devoted
to interest payments to both foreign and domestic creditors and 12
percent to capital expenditures.
Calculations by James Miraflor of the Freedom from Debt Coalition
put servicing of the foreign and domestic debt (most of which is said
to be owed to locally based foreign entities) at 51 percent in 2005, 54
percent in 2006, and 41 percent in 2007.
This configuration of government spending prompted the faculty of
the University of the Philippines School of Economics to complain once
again that the budget left “little room for infrastructure spending and
other development needs,” though they did not follow through on the
policy consequences of their analysis.
They were joined, in an extraordinary example of hypocrisy, given
its historical role in foisting the debt service at the head of the
trough of government spending, by the World Bank, which complained in a
2007 policy brief:
“The Global Competitiveness Index ranks the Philippines at only 71
out of 131 countries, rating the country particularly poorly on a
majority of the infrastructure indicators. The quality of transport
infrastructure (which includes roads, railways, ports, airports, and
logistics) is a particularly serious concern, with consequences for
trade-related transaction costs and overall competitiveness. Recent
assessments indicate that transport infrastructure is poorly maintained
and badly managed, with years of underinvestment, especially in
maintenance.”
Not surprisingly, with government capital expenditures remaining
low, total fixed investment has remained anemic, indeed running at only
14 percent of GDP, which the World Bank notes is “substantially lower
even than during the deep recession in the first half of the 1980s and
substantially lower than in most other larger East Asian economies.”
Durable equipment investment, it added, reached a historic low in
2007. The problem, as usual, is not the World Bank’s description of
developments but its refusal to see their origins in policies in the
formulation of which the Bank was deeply implicated.
The other shoe drops: trade liberalization and the fiscal crisis
The explanation for our national stagnation is not exhausted by the
priority our leaders accorded to repaying the foreign debt. Activist
governments, we have seen, have been key players in development in
Southeast Asia.
But the Philippine government was incapacitated from playing this
activist role by a one-two punch delivered by external forces. If the
hemorrhage of payments on the debt hit it on the expenditure side,
trade liberalization, by drastically reducing a very critical source of
government revenues, clobbered it on the revenue side.
But before we detail this second blow, the fiscal impact of trade
liberalization, it is important to place the latter in the context of
the comprehensive structural adjustment cum trade liberalization
program that choked the country in the 1980s and 1990s.
It is fashionable these days to decry the weakness of the Philippine
manufacturing sector, which was supposed to play the role of absorbing
a greater and greater part of the labor force into high-value-added
jobs.
Trade liberalization was, in theory, supposed to reinvigorate
Philippine industry by, among other things, ending monopolization.
Instead, what happened was monopolization increased as trade
liberalization intensified. Why? It is very likely that monopolization
rose because weaker firms were driven out of business by trade
liberalization—an understandable outcome but one that did not fit the
neoliberal paradigm.
As noted earlier when we discussed and dismissed protectionism as a
possible explanation for the Philippines’ economic stagnation, trade
liberalization in this country was no joke. The effective rate of
protection for manufacturing was pushed down from 44 percent to 20
percent. That was achieved at the cost of multiple bankruptcies and
massive job losses—in short, de-industrialization.
The list of industrial casualties included paper products, textiles,
ceramics, rubber products, furniture and fixtures, petrochemicals,
beverage, wood, shoes, petroleum oils, clothing accessories, and
leather goods. The textile industry was practically rendered extinct by
the combination of tariff cuts and the abuse of duty-free privileges,
with the number of forms shrinking from 200 firms in 1970 to less than
10 by the end of the century.
As former secretary of finance Isidro Camacho Jr. admitted, “There’s
an uneven implementation of trade liberalization, which was to our
disadvantage.” While consumers may have benefited from tariff cuts, he
said, liberalization “has killed so many local industries.”
Yet, the negative effects of trade liberalization were not limited
to the erosion of the country’s industrial base. Trade liberalization
had fiscal effects. If the hemorrhage of payments on the foreign debt
blew a hole on the expenditure side, trade liberalization, by reducing
a very critical source of government revenues blew a hole on the
revenue side.
The trade liberalization that started with Executive Order 264—which
phased in, beginning 1994, a radical program to unilaterally reduce all
tariffs to zero to five percent by 2004—resulted in radically decreased
customs collections in a very short period of time.
In the period 1995-2003, while the value of imports grew by 40
percent, customs collections of import duties declined by 35 percent;
imports rose from $25.5 billion in 1995 to $37.4 billion in 2003, but
import duties fell from P64.4 billion to P41.4 billion.
As a percentage of GDP, total customs collections fell from 5.6
percent of GDP in 1993 to 2.8 percent in 2002. As a percentage of
government revenues, customs duties and taxes from international trade
fell from 29 percent in 1995 to 19 percent in 2000 at a time that
hardly any new revenue sources had come on stream.
Combined with the outflow of debt service payments, the collapse in
customs revenues precipitated the fiscal implosion, which made it even
more difficult for government to finance the capital expenditures that
were necessary to crowd in both domestic and foreign investment in
order to decisively lift the country from the stagnation of the
eighties and nineties.
Former Finance Secretary Camacho could not but admit the
obvious—that it was not so much failure to increase taxation but the
drive to decrease import taxation that mainly accounted for the crisis
in government revenue: “The severe deterioration of fiscal performance
from the mid-1990s could be attributed to aggressive tariff reduction.”
To say this is not to excuse the current administration and its
predecessors from not making a greater effort at tax collection,
especially from their private sector cronies, just as our earlier
remarks were not meant to excuse corruption. It is mainly to achieve a
clearer understanding of the key structural factors and dynamics that
have condemned the Philippines to almost permanent stagnation.
One can agree with Peter Wallace that the Philippines needs a much
bigger effort to enforce taxation and punish tax evaders without having
to say that this failure is what precipitated the crisis on the revenue
side. Trade liberalization precipitated that crisis, which resulted in,
among other things, a further crippling of the capacity of the
Philippine state to play a positive role in development.
When paradigms blind
In conclusion, the dominant explanations for the continuing
stagnation that has caused so many Filipinos to abandon ship are deeply
flawed. The reason they continue to be popular is that they are easy to
grasp (corruption) or ideologically correct (lack of market freedom).
Alternative explanations are screened out because they are not
ideologically correct or because they are, like the burden of debt
thesis, simply unacceptable as explanations and options for action to
the establishment. Yet it requires no special intelligence to
realize that the massive amounts of money that have gone to paying our
creditors to service our constantly mounting external debt was money
that could not go to development. It cannot be otherwise given that
resources are finite.
Sometimes such truths can only be grudgingly accepted when events
occur that force their acceptance. For instance, it can no longer be
denied that Argentina’s five-year string of 10 percent annual GDP
growth is due principally to President Nestor Kirchner’s courageous act
of unilaterally writing down—that is, paying about 25 cents of every
dollar owed to bondholders—on most of that country’s foreign debt and
channeling the money saved to domestic investment.
With the failure of doctrinaire neoliberalism to both explain and
move countries out of underdevelopment, we are beginning once more to
appreciate the positive role of the state in development, in its triple
role of assisting the market, disciplining the market, and leading the
market. What we have tried to do here is to position the incapacitation
of the Philippine state as the central factor in explaining the
stagnation of the Philippine economy.
The priority accorded to repaying the foreign debt in the context of
an economy in crisis deprived the state of financial resources to play
its role as the economy’s biggest investor, thus crowding out private
investment. This emasculation on the expenditure side was paralleled by
a crippling on the revenue side by the collapse of customs revenues
owing to aggressive trade liberalization.
This double-punch amplified the depressive effects of the policy
framework of structural adjustment cum trade liberalization that was
imposed on the country in the eighties and nineties with the
acquiescence of our leaders. This suffocating policy framework
unfortunately lives on, with minor adjustments, and as long as it
remains this country’s basic paradigm, it is difficult to see the
Philippines emerging from its long night of stagnation.
Walden Bello is president of Freedom from Debt
Coalition, senior analyst at Focus on the Global South, and professor
of sociology at the University of the Philippines. He would like to
thank James Matthew Miraflor and Bobby Diciembre of the Freedom from
Debt Coalition for their assistance. He can be reached at
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