This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 22, July 10-16, 2005
The
most recent calls by the country’s business elites for President Gloria
Macapagal-Arroyo to step down only underscore her far-reaching failures as an
economist. Coming on top of mounting popular unrest because of the people’s
worsening condition over the last 4½ years, they herald a looming financial
meltdown if Ms. Arroyo does not resign. BY
SANDRA NICOLAS President Gloria-Macapagal
Arroyo is clearly not only an illegitimate president but a failed economist.
More than ever, the Philippine economy isn’t producing the goods and services
needed by the people nor creating the productive livelihoods they need to afford
these. The people’s situation has
unambiguously worsened since Ms. Arroyo assumed the presidency in 2001.
Unemployment has risen to
unprecedented levels. The 11.4 percent average rate from 2001-2004 is the worst
sustained unemployment in the country’s history. Indeed, the annual 11.8 percent
unemployment rate last year is – apart from a brief spike to 12.8 percent in
1985 - the highest in the last half-century of official unemployment data. As it
is, in April 2005 there were 13.2 million Filipinos either out of work or
working but still looking for additional jobs because they still weren’t earning
enough. Inflation rates have been
rising since 2002 and, since late-2004, are already at the highest levels in the
last decade. The average monthly inflation rate in the first half of the year of
over 8 percent is already nearly three times the 3 percent rate in 2002.
Consumers feel this in rising transport fares and soaring prices of such basic
goods as rice, pork, chicken, galunggong (round scad), cooking oil and
instant noodles. Prices of oil products have increased 22 percent, of power by
up to 19 percent, and of water by up to 52 percent just since the start of the
year. And even for those lucky
enough to have jobs, incomes continue to fail to keep up with these rising
prices. The daily cost of living for a family of six in the National Capital
Region (NCR) is estimated at PhP620 in May 2005 yet the daily nominal minimum
wage in the NCR is only a little over half of this at just PhP325. The Arroyo administration
meanwhile has embarked on a fiscal austerity program that lays off government
workers and drastically cuts back on social services spending. In just the past
year, some 126,000 public sector jobs have been lost according to the latest
Labor Force Survey (LFS). The four years of Ms.
Arroyo’s watch has also seen the real value of education spending fall 3.2
percent, of health spending fall 24.5 percent and of housing spending fall 61.0
percent from the four years before her. These real budget cuts are even worse if
population growth is factored in. Eroding public support not only denies
people’s social services but also makes these more expensive. All these have shown up in
the economic indicators more usually reported by the government. Growth in gross
domestic product (GDP) slowed to 4.6 percent in the first quarter of 2005
compared to the 6.1 percent whole-year rate in 2004. Growth has been severely
depressed by dropping consumer demand (inevitable, given rising joblessness and
falling real incomes), government austerity and domestic productive sectors
hollowed out by two decades of increasing “globalization.” Ultimately it’s the
degradation of domestic agriculture and industry that is making the economy more
and more vulnerable. In the absence of a solid domestic economic base, the
economy is unduly reliant on external sources of growth and resources. It’s this
dependence that is bringing the country to the verge of a financial meltdown. A US$887 million balance of
payments (BoP) surplus was recorded in the first five months of the year.
Unfortunately this was a hollow surplus and due wholly to external sources:
overseas Filipino worker (OFW) remittances, increased “hot money” and greater
foreign borrowing. OFWs remitted US$2.3
billion in the first quarter of 2005 or 17 percent more than in the same period
last year. In terms of the BoP, OFW compensation inflows grew at a faster rate
of 4.1 percent compared to 2.4 percent last year. Yet notwithstanding that OFW
remittances are the most important economic lifeline for millions of Filipino
households, this is essentially a source of resources external to the economy
and beyond its control that, as a fundamental surrender of economic sovereignty,
should not be made a long-run pillar of the economy. There are moreover the very
serious social costs involved for OFW families. It’s the other two sources
that will be the source of problems for the Arroyo administration. Portfolio
inflows accumulated to US$1.913 billion as of the third week of June or some 14
times the amount posted in the corresponding period last year. The government
meanwhile has so far for the year been able to issue US$2.3 billion in sovereign
bonds. With foreign direct
investment (FDI) dropping steeply – Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP)-registered
FDI shrank by 73 percent in the first quarter compared to the same period last
year – “hot money” and public foreign borrowing have been crucial sources of
foreign exchange. Yet these two sources are also the most dependent on investor
and creditor perceptions and so most vulnerable to suddenly reversing depending
on how the overall political and economic situation plays out. Ms. Arroyo apparently is
opting to ride out the storm battering her administration. Unfortunately the
concrete economic and political conditions are working strongly against her. Although the government
plays up improving national government (NG) budget deficits, at the end of the
day the consolidated public sector deficit (CPSD) is still high and rising. In
the first quarter the CPSD was 10 percent higher than in the same period last
year. As long as there is a deficit, borrowing will continue and debt will
increase. By April, total NG debt was
still 11 percent higher than a year before. End-2004 outstanding public sector
debt was still at PhP5.3 trillion or 118 percent of GDP (although this figure is
questionable). Total NG debt payments in the first four months of the year were
20 percent higher than the year before and total 2005 debt payments are
projected to eat up 94 percent of total revenues. Compounding the
administration’s troubles is the expanded value-added tax law that basically
translates into a great additional burden on the already so overburdened
populace. Ms. Arroyo’s attempt at fiscal adjustment by placing the burden on the
people can only backfire against her and bring the economy into greater crisis. The Arroyo administration’s
grave crisis of legitimacy dovetails with all of these weaknesses – a backward
domestic economy, absence of any popular support, reliance on external sources
of finance and high levels of debt and debt payments – to lay the conditions for
a financial storm. As the political tumult
grows, opportunistic foreign investors and creditors will increasingly realize
that the “economic stability” they yearn for will not be possible under a
beleaguered Arroyo administration. Interruptions in foreign lending to the
government and in “hot money” inflows will precipitate a foreign exchange
crisis. An export-dependent and
import-oriented economy is deeply vulnerable to such an arbitrary external shock
and interruptions in foreign payments flows will cascade across the entire
domestic economy. Especially with a government unwilling to take the radical
economic reforms needed to get the support of the people and build a strong
domestic economic, the economy could be plunged into turmoil. Ms. Arroyo’s stubborn
attempts to cling to power and ride out the storm may, on the contrary, bring
about a much greater storm. Bulatlat © 2004 Bulatlat
■
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ANALYSIS
Financial Storm Brewing
BulatlatPeople’s plight
Business’ bane
Arroyo’s financial storm