December 4, 2022 |
4:11 pm
Introspective By Romeo L. Bernardo
I am pleased to share with readers
the political section of our latest quarterly outlook report for Globalsource
Partners (globalsourcepartners.com), a
subscriber-based network of independent analysts in emerging market countries,
with headquarters in New York. Christine Tang and I are their Philippine
Advisers.
President Ferdinand Marcos, Jr. gave
himself a pat in the back for picking the “best and the brightest,” when asked
about accomplishments in his first 100 days. Those in business circles
would readily agree that he made inspired choices, not only in the core
economic departments but also in key line agencies critical to unlocking the
economy’s post-pandemic growth potential. Nevertheless, the general sentiment
is that his cabinet is a mixed bag and many would be quick to add the hope that
he will be able to find a suitable health secretary soon and a replacement
for himself in the Agriculture department.
By now, political observers have come
to the realization that the President is contented to give free rein to his
cabinet in overseeing their respective portfolios. For departments led by any
one of the “best and brightest,” this may well be something welcomed. Indeed,
one could see the positive outcomes in, for example, financial markets’ buy-in
of the fiscal consolidation program, the private sector’s backing of the
revised PPP rules, the re-centering of foreign policy after the past two
administration’s excessive pro-US then pro-China stances, and the swift actions
on the energy front to encourage investments in oil exploration and power
generation for energy security.
But while good results go with good
leadership, the reverse appears true as well. Regrettably, soaring food prices
has put the limelight on the President’s turf, the Agriculture department.
Early hopes that he would use his abundant political capital to hold sway over
competing entrenched interests in the sector and exert a positive influence on
bureaucratic inertia have faded away. Food prices have gone up by nearly 1% per
month between the time he took office in July and October, and the price of
sugar, the subject of an importation order he called illegal, increased 44%
during the four-month period. Even now, we are told that decision makers in the
agriculture sector are bickering unendingly over the size of import volumes for
specific crops that are in short supply.
In the meantime, over at the Health
department where the President has bafflingly said he would appoint a secretary
after the health crisis is over, the vaccination drive appears to have lost
momentum and it is unclear what the roadmap is for the highly under resourced
sector. Currently, both the Health department and PhilHealth, government’s
struggling health insurance corporate vehicle, are headed by caretakers who are
not empowered to take strategic policy reform decisions.
Given the mixed performance of the
administration, dependent as it is on the leadership of individual cabinet
members, the question of how President Marcos’ cabinet will evolve in six to 12
months’ time arises. The question has come up not only because the agriculture
and health sectors feel rudderless at the moment but also because of two
forthcoming developments. One, by mid-year, those who ran and lost in the May
elections, who are not allowed by the Constitution to be appointed to
government positions within a 12-month period, will become eligible. This will
give the President an expanded pool of, possibly, electoral teammates to choose
from, and, obversely, open the floodgates to hard lobbying by more political,
less qualified office seekers. Two, crucial in a time of financial turbulence,
BSP (Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas) Governor Felipe Medalla, who has won the
acclaim of the financial and broad business sector, is merely serving out the
remaining term of his predecessor which expires end of June next year. Hopes
have been pinned on his appointment to a full term to continue the excellent
navigation during this time of global financial turbulence.
Adding to the uncertainty in the
business environment is a widely publicized rumor suggesting that the economic
team, especially the finance secretary, has lost the confidence of the
President. The rumor, possibly orchestrated, followed the sudden appointment of
a new chief in the powerful internal revenue bureau, Romeo Lumagui, Jr., a
close family associate of the President. Mr. Lumagui replaced Secretary
Diokno’s choice, Lilia Guillermo, after less than five months on the job. Ms.
Guillermo is a 30-year veteran of the tax bureau, whose last post was as
assistant governor in the BSP after serving as undersecretary in the Budget
department, both under Secretary Diokno.
The rumor was put to rest after the
heads of the leading business organizations, the Makati Business Club, the
Management Association of the Philippines, and the Philippine Chamber of
Commerce and Industry, expressed full confidence in Secretary Diokno and the
entire economic team, and the President subsequently dismissed it as fake news.
Nonetheless, speculations about
changes in the composition of the economic team continue. It has not been lost
on financial market players that the most prominently mentioned rumored
replacement for Secretary Diokno is a close associate of former president, now
congresswoman, Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and the vice-president and daughter of
the former president, Sara Duterte.
*****
And we also made a cautionary
observation on a bill being rushed now in Congress.
The hotly debated congressional bill
to create a sovereign wealth fund through the pooling of resources of
government financial institutions will add to Philippine financial and fiscal
risks. The proposal is poorly timed, with external balances under stress and
government debt and borrowings elevated, and it raises the specter of
Malaysia’s 1MDB scandal, traced ultimately to poor governance.
Romeo L. Bernardo was finance
undersecretary from 1990-1996. He is a trustee/director of the Foundation for
Economic Freedom, the Management Association of the Philippines, and the FINEX
Foundation. He also serves as a board director in leading companies in banking
and financial services, telecommunication, energy, food and beverage,
education, real estate, and others.
romeo.lopez.bernardo@gmail.com
No comments:
Post a Comment