This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 26, August 7-13, 2005
Believe It or Not!
Government’s constant
tampering with economic indicators serves to conceal its failed policies that
have worsened the country’s economic situation.
By
IBON Media and Publications
Posted by
Bulatlat
Government recently revealed once again how its
economic data cannot be trusted to provide a true picture of the country’s
economy. Last week, the country’s trade deficit figures for the past three years
were reported to be significantly under-declared after government admitted it
made major revisions to imports and exports data.
For 2004, the trade deficit was revised to $4.3
billion from the $713 million figure earlier reported by the National Statistics
Office (NSO). The 2003 and 2002 trade deficit figures were likewise revised to
more than $4 billion. For these three years, the cumulative trade deficit was
understated by over $10 billion.
According to independent think-tank IBON
Foundation, this only spells more bad news for the country’s balance of payments
(BOP) position. For a dollar-dependent economy, a bigger trade deficit means
fewer dollars to pay for the country’s imports and debt payment.
Economists said the revisions raised further
doubts about the reliability of Philippine economic data after previous major
revisions. Trade deficit data for 2000-2001 had earlier been revised.
That Philippine economic data is not reliable
should not be surprising given how the Arroyo administration is using revised
methodologies to conceal harsh realities about the economy. For example, the
National Statistical Coordination Board (NSCB) has reduced the poverty threshold
several times to decrease the number of poor Filipinos and obscure the true
extent of poverty in the country. The NSO has also redefined unemployment to
reduce the count of unemployed workers.
Further, the Department of Finance has removed
intra-government borrowings as a part of the outstanding public sector deficit (OPSD)
to reduce public debt figures, while the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) has
added a 20 percent “raising factor” to hike overseas Filipinos’ remittance
estimates and improve balance of payments accounts.
These changes not only make the identification
of trends difficult by making current data incompatible with previous years’
estimates. More significantly, they serve to conceal government’s failed
policies that have worsened the country’s economic situation. Posted by
Bulatlat © 2004 Bulatlat
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Flawed statistics show unreliability of
government data