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Impact on the Philippines

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Cheap labor ex. OFWs, export-oriented manufacturing, call centers... Cheap natural resources ex. coconut products, fruits & vegetables, minerals... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Impact on the Philippines


1
Impact on the Philippines Alternatives
COMBATING THE DESCENT INTO DEEPER CRISIS
IBON Foundation10 February 2009
2
Main points
  • Philippines is entering a long period of
    stagnation severe crisis
  • Government is dishonest about the state of the
    economy
  • and deceitful about supposed efforts to cope
    with the crisis
  • The people need relief real development
  • Immediate relief
  • Discarding failed policies
  • Strategic aspirations

3
Global crisis the Philippines
4
Imperialist crisis recession
5
Global economic crisis the Philippines
  • Impact on a semifeudal semicolonial economy?
  • Note experience in 2000-2001
  • US bubble burst in 2000, growth fell from 3.7
    (2000) to 0.8 (2001) global slowdown
  • In Philippines
  • Exports growth collapsed 19 (1999), 9 (2000),
    negative 16 (2001) Foreign investment fell 84
    to US355 M (2001)
  • Unemployment soared from 9.8 (1999) to 11.1
    (2001)
  • Remittances declined slightly by 0.3 to US6,031
    M (2001)
  • Remittances from US fell in absolute terms

6
Deepening Philippine crisis
7
Deepening Philippine crisis
  • Drastically slowing economic growth
  • 2008 growth slowed in 60 of economy
  • 2009 Will fall to less than 3 which is less
    than half growth in 2007
  • Worst joblessness in countrys history is rising
    even further
  • 2008 10.7 million unemployed underemployed
  • 2009 Could rise to some 12-13 million
  • Of which at least 5 million outright jobless
    (increase of 900,000)
  • Retrenchments, less job creation, deteriorating
    quality of jobs

8
Deepening Philippine crisis
  • Falling real incomes worsening poverty
  • 2006, at approx P110 or less per person per day
  • Poor families 13.9 million (official 4.7 M)
  • Poor Filipinos 70 million (official 27.6 M)
  • 2008 Incomes lost almost 10 of value due to
    inflation
  • 2009 Worsening poverty due to joblessness and
    falling incomes more driven to poverty
    deepening poverty for poorest

9
Globalization has made economy weaker more
vulnerable
  • Imperialist globalization was all about
    monopoly capital profiting from the Third World
  • Plundering the Philippines
  • Cheap labor ex. OFWs, export-oriented
    manufacturing, call centers
  • Cheap natural resources ex. coconut products,
    fruits vegetables, minerals
  • Monopolized markets ex. power, oil, water
  • Debt speculation ex. foreign debt, aid,
    portfolio investments

10
Globalization has made economy weaker more
vulnerable
  • Internal vulnerability Shrinking shares of
    manufacturing agriculture in the economy
  • Manufacturing smallest since 1950s
  • Agriculture smallest in countrys history
  • Domestic economy poorly equipped to deal with
    crisis
  • Shrunken productive base for generating jobs
    incomes
  • Weakened domestic ability to consume invest

11
Globalization has made economy weaker more
vulnerable
  • External vulnerability Unprecedented dependence
    on low value-added exports, one-sided foreign
    investment overseas remittances
  • 84 of exports to just 10 countries
  • 77 of FDI from just US, EU Japan
  • 88 of remittances from only 10 countries
  • Source countries are all seeing drastically
    slowing or even negative growth
  • ? Externally-triggered downturn since 2008
    beginning of another long period of stagnation
    severe crisis

12
Gross government neglect
13
Chronic worsening crisis
  • Globalization policies have worsened economic
    backwardness resulted in false development
  • Yet govt is maintaining these policies which will
    keep the Philippines as merely
  • Provider of cheap labor
  • Source of cheap raw materials
  • A market to dominate monopolize
  • Chronically dependent on foreign debt capital

14
Sham resiliency plan or sustainability plan
  • Reported plan/package P330 billion
  • P160 B increase in 2009 natl govt (NG) budget
  • Including dole-out PPPP cash transfer program
  • P40 B corporate/individual tax breaks
  • P100 B off-budget infrastructure fund (GOCCs,
    GFI, private sector)
  • P30 B additional benefits to GSIS/SSS/PhilHealth
    members
  • Alternative livelihood programs, jobs
    placement services loans

15
There is no pump-priming
  • The P1.4 trillion national government (NG) budget
    for 2009 is not a pump-priming budget
  • Second smallest share of NG spending to GDP in at
    least two-and-a-half decades (approx 16.1)
  • Unexceptional increases in
  • Total NG expenditure (9 real growth)
  • Larger growth in 2007, 2000, 1997, 1995, 1994,
    1990, 1989
  • Total non-debt expenditure (8 real growth)
  • Larger growth in 2000, 1997, 1990, 1987

16
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17
The plan is mere spin, pretense propaganda
  • Recycling repackaging what was already there
  • i.e., 2009 NG budget, corporate tax breaks,
    off-budget infrastructure fund
  • Meaningless ineffectual measures amidst general
    economic crisis
  • i.e., False job placement, livelihood programs,
    loans
  • And even narrowly targeted only at newly
    displaced what about millions of jobless and
    tens of millions of poor even before worsening
    of situation?

18
The people must guard against being made to bear
burden of adjustment
  • Business groups government pushing for lower
    pay, reduced benefits, more uncertain work and
    outright layoffs
  • Imperialist powers will push to further open up
    Third World countries through more
    globalization policies
  • Ever a vent for their crisis
  • Administrations cha-cha offensive
  • A maneuver to remain in power longer
  • surrendering last remaining legal barriers to
    foreign exploitation of the countrys human and
    natural resources

19
Genuine relief development
20
Real stimulus needed
  • Premises are situation of deep/widespread
    poverty vast inequalities in wealth, income
    assets failure of free market policies of
    globalization
  • Main objective stimulate failing consumption and
    production
  • Through
  • Immediate relief not just for recently displaced
    but for as much of long-suffering as possible
  • Preserve current jobs
  • Public sector (e.g., no rationalization)
  • Private sector (e.g., no retrenchments, no
    wage/benefit cuts)
  • Quickest job creation
  • Immediate wide-ranging agrarian reform
  • Public works for productive rural infrastructure
  • Sustainable job creation and development
  • Real agricultural development
  • Building national industry

21
Immediate relief The people must get far more of
the social services and economic share long
denied them
  • Restore real per capita social services spending
    to at least 1997 levels
  • Additional P205 billion (education), P36 billion
    (health) and P5 billion (housing)
  • Support consumption
  • P125 across the board nationwide wage hike
    P3,000 increase in government salaries
  • Protection against formal/concealed cuts in
    wages, salaries benefits
  • Remove VAT on food oil products
  • while increasing taxation of wealth, luxury
    goods services, unproductive assets
    transactions

22
Immediate relief The people must get far more of
the social services and economic share long
denied them
  • Shift public spending to labor-intensive and
    basic rural infrastructure projects that directly
    improve peoples livelihoods
  • Ex. P100 billion not for a few big projects but
    small irrigation systems, farm-to-market roads
    and post-harvest facilities
  • Free public resources
  • Stop debt payments and cancel odious and
    illegitimate debt
  • Cracking down on corruption
  • Reducing spending on military and war which just
    feeds human rights violations

23
Radical economic reforms back to basics
  • Agrarian reform agricultural development (ex.
    GARB)
  • Land to the tillers, extension support services
  • Cooperativization modernization
  • National industrialization (ex. National
    Industrial Plan?)
  • Filipino industry is possible
  • .. and essential for jobs, incomes, capital
    accumulation, technology sustainable growth

24
Radical economic reforms back to basics
  • Ensure gains from foreign trade and investment
  • Protect the Philippine economy
  • Reverse trade investment liberalization
  • Control repatriation of FDI profits, dividends,
    royalties
  • Support Filipino agricultural industrial
    producers
  • Real technology transfer
  • Filipinization eventual nationalization of
    vital and strategic industries and utilities
  • Banking, finance and fiscal policy
  • Mobilize and allocate resources towards national
    agricultural, industrial social development
  • Crackdown on pervasive wasteful spending and
    bureaucrat corruption
  • Oppose financial services liberalization that
    imports of toxic fund management and speculative
    models

25
Strategic aspirations
  • We are in a period of historical significance
    amidst crisis, building a more just, equitable,
    humane peaceful world
  • Lessons about the limits/nature of monopoly
    capitalism
  • Intrinsic crisis of overproduction
  • Inbuilt poverty, inequality, exploitation
    oppression
  • Imperialist wars of aggression conquest
  • Build on the experience with progressive
    economics such as in socialist countries
  • Broad-based sustainable growth
  • Societys resources used for the peoples welfare
  • Combating joblessness, hunger, disease lack of
    knowledge

26
Salamat po Please sign on Peoples Statement
on the Global Crisiswww.politicaleconomy.info
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