ON Oct. 23, my three co-authors and I launched our book titled Momentum: Economic Reforms for Sustained Growth.
Our book editor, noted veteran journalist Roel Landingin, explains 
what it’s all about: “In this collection of newspaper columns published 
from 2008 to 2019, five of the country’s leading economic commentators —
 Romeo Bernardo, Calixto Chikiamco, Emmanuel de Dios, Raul Fabella and 
the late Cayetano Paderanga — put forward observations and 
recommendations on some of the most intractable problems facing economic
 progress in the Philippines. But the essays do not always dwell on 
economic analysis and prescription: they also delve into broader themes 
ranging from motorcycle riding, US China rivalry; Mark Twain, basketball
 and working in government among others.“
Why the title Momentum?
In the welcome remarks of the evening, Foundation for Economic Freedom President Toti Chikiamco explained on our behalf:
“Truth to tell, we kicked around a few ideas. Prof. De Dios suggested
 ‘Wokenomics,’ derived from the current urban slang, ‘Woke,’ which means
 to be awake and always conscious of perceived injustices. However, 
after a few discussions and several late night dinners, we settled on 
the more prosaic but more apropos ‘Momentum,’ with the subtitle 
‘Economic Reforms for Sustaining Growth.’”
“The word is appropriately ‘Momentum’ because the Philippines has 
broken from its boom and bust cycle in the past. It’s cruising along at 
5-7% GDP growth, which is among the fastest in the region, and no doubt 
due to reforms in the past. The big question now is: how to sustain and 
even accelerate economic growth?
“We hope this book supplies the answer. It’s a curated collection of the author’s articles in BusinessWorld,
 which they wrote as members of the board of IDEA, or the Institute of 
Development and Econometric Analysis, the economic research organization
 that the late Dondon Paderanga founded and where he invited us to be 
board members. This book is also a loving tribute to our late friend 
Dondon.
“This book was made possible by friends and supporters. I don’t have 
to cite them, but they know who they are. They may not exactly espouse 
the same ideas as the authors, but they share with us a love of country 
and desire to keep the momentum of economic growth. Thank you again. We 
promise to distribute the book as widely as possible, perhaps enter it 
into the public domain after a certain period, to enrich the discourse 
on the economic direction of the country.”
At the launch at the Fairmont Hotel in Makati, we were most honored 
by the attendance of such public sector luminaries as former President 
Fidel Ramos, former Prime Minister Cesar Virata, Central Bank Governor 
Ben Diokno, Chief Justice Artemio Panganiban, Monetary Board Member 
Philip Medalla, Representative and Professor Stella Quimbo, Competition 
Commission Chair Arsenio Balisacan, Senator Serge OsmeƱa, former 
Secretaries Gerry Sicat, Roberto de a Ocampo, Gary Teves, Romulo Neri, 
Popo Lotilla and General Joe Almonte; and business leaders and 
executives such as Endika and Montxu Aboitiz of AEV, Oscar Reyes of the 
MVP group, MAP President Riza Mantaring, ECOP President Serge Ortiz 
Luis, SHEDA Chair Jeff Ng, Bulletin Chair Basilio Yap, BusinessWorld
 Editor-in-Chief Roby Alampay, Harvard Alumni Association President 
Anthony Abad ( who kindly and superbly emceed) and others too many to 
mention.
The book enjoyed generous advanced praise — well deserved for 80% of 
the book — thanks to my four co-authors, in whose brilliance I happily 
bask.
Here are excerpts from some of our “reviewers”:
From Chief Justice Panganiban: “If ever there would be a Supreme 
Court for economic matters, I think the authors of this book easily 
constitute its members (or at least, some of the more sagacious) and the
 book would contain their landmark ponentias to be read, re-read and 
obeyed not only by lawyers and economists but more importantly by the 
policy makers of our country and the general public as well.”
From Cesar Virata: “Can we present the writings of these ‘raging 
incrementalists’ before the Executive and Legislative Branches as their 
certified agenda in July 2019? I encourage readers to adopt advocacies 
prescribed in this compendium of ideas.”
From Stella Quimbo: “Dear policy maker, do the country a favor. Read this book. It contains the roadmap to economic Shangri-la.”
From former President Ramos’ National Security Adviser, Jose Almonte:
 “The nation is grateful to the talented economists who are the authors 
of this book. Their thoughts and writings in the last decade have helped
 form an intellectual consensus that paved the way for reforms to 
address the root cause why this country is among the least developed in 
this part of the world.”
From House Ways and Means Committee Chair Joey Salceda: “A choice selection of illuminating columns from BusinessWorld
 written in the last decade by five of our country’s most distinguished 
economists whose counsel I seek before providing advice to Presidents or
 House Speakers, or more so when I push legislation in Congress.”
From Johanna Chua, Citibank Head of Economics for Asia: “What I find 
refreshing in these essays is that ardent partisan politics has not 
obfuscated the clarity of economic arguments. The most seasoned 
intellects of this country can look through the longer historical lens 
of experience to form a pragmatic assessment of policy trade offs, 
regardless of who is running the country.”
From Arsenio Balisacan: “Founded on decades of experience in policy 
advocacy and rigorous economic thinking, the ideas contained in this 
book show the way forward for the country to realize its development 
ambitions. Policy makers, program managers, reform advocate, 
practitioners, and teacher and students of development and the 
Philippine economy would do well to pay attention — and act.”
And from Ben Diokno, himself an economics professor and opinion writer-leader, who spoke during the book launch: “The book Momentum,
 authored by some of our brilliant economists, will surely provide us 
with insights on the significance of economic reforms for sustaining 
growth… As I’ve always considered myself a reformist, I laud all the 
people involved in this book. May we keep the momentum going to achieve 
sustained, strong, balanced, and inclusive growth.”
Our comrade-in-arms in the Foundation for Economic Freedom, former 
Finance Secretaries Bobby de Ocampo and Gary Teves, and former National 
Economic and Development Authority Secretary now Monetary Board Member 
Philip Medalla, wrote similarly glowing endorsements way of an 
insightful extended Foreword.
The closing remarks of National Scientist Raul summed the evening and the book: “On behalf of the authors of Momentum,
 Romy, Toti, Noel, Dondon, and myself, let me express our deepest thanks
 to all our donors and patrons; to our families; and to the dear friends
 who took the time to read and comment on the volume… Our thanks go as 
well to BusinessWorld, the op-ed home of our revolving column, 
‘Introspective’; to Roel and Neil who shepherded the publication of the 
book; to the collective Fellowship of FEF who by joining the often 
strident policy debates forced us to clarify our own policy stances; and
 to Dondon’s baby, IDEA, of whose Board we remain members.
“This has been quite a journey, and I am extremely lucky to have had 
the company of Romy, Toti, Noel, and Dondon while undertaking it: Romy 
of the boundless curiosity; Toti of the principled pugnacity; Noel of 
the serene profundity; and Dondon the visionary who roped us more or 
less willingly into the ‘Introspective’ family.
“Contrary to impression, however, we are not woven of the same 
ideological fabric: Noel is the committed liberal democrat; I am more of
 the Deng Xiaoping pragmatist; Toti and Romy are raging incrementalists.
 Noel’s baccalaureate is Atenista, Toti’s and Dondon’s are La Sallista, 
Romy’s is Maroonista and mine is Seminarista. Dondon, Romy, Noel, and I 
but not Toti are bound in the UP School of Economics. Still, the 
collective light of reason that we seek and that shines on us together 
is stronger by far.
“A few principles make up the collective light that guides us: that 
the market and the rule-of-law together can work miracles; that 
government is best that enables the market; that it is silly to trifle 
with [it].
“Once more, therefore, our profound thanks to all of you, friends and
 fellow travelers, who joined us in this milestone moment. With you, the
 journey, if still littered with more failures than triumphs, is itself 
already a reward. Together, we will continue — to quote Dylan Thomas — 
to ‘Rage rage against the dying of the light.’”
P.S. The Foundation for Economic Freedom, a co-publisher of Momentum,
 won the 2019 prestigious Templeton Prize from the Atlas Network — a 
competition involving think tanks and public advocacy organizations 
worldwide — on Nov. 7 in New York City, for its work on the removal of 
restrictions on agricultural patents. The removal of restrictions on 
about 2.5 million agricultural patents is the subject in one of Calixto 
Chikiamco’s articles in Momentum.
To order Momentum, call 3453-2375 or send an e-mail at fef@fef.org.ph.
Romeo L. Bernardo is Vice-Chairman of the Foundation for Economic 
Freedom. He was Finance Undersecretary during the Corazon Aquino and 
Fidel Ramos administrations.

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