An empty horizon
Where’s the economic blueprint?
This has been the question raised by many since the start of Noynoy’s administration and the cry is getting stronger since nothing is materializing in the policy horizon.
The National Economic Development Authority (Neda) recently came out with an abstract of Noynoy’s economic program called the Philippine Development Plan (PDP) 2011-2016 with the primary goals of a seven to eight percent growth rates per year and meeting the millennium development goals (MDGs). But what is being sought from Noynoy are cohesive and tangible initiatives that should have started now and to which the whole nation can latch on as proof that the current administration knows where it is taking the country. But there is none.
Noynoy started with the battlecry “Kung walang corrupt, walang mahirap” (No corruption, no poverty) along with the “Tuwid na landas” (straight path) concept but both remain mere soundbites as nothing concrete in terms of its application has been achieved.
Expectations on Noynoy started high mainly as a result of his lofty promises about eradicating corruption and his being the son of two democracy icons that is being drummed up no end as if this was part of the solution to the nation’s problems.
Noynoy has two programs that could pass up as tangible initiatives for development: the private-public partnership (PPP) scheme and the cash transfer program or the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program (4Ps).
Both are proving to have been haphazardly planned. Investors are not likely to subscribe to the program unless the government settles overhanging questions about the integrity of contracts with the government.
The dispute over the operation of the completed Terminal 3 of the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) in which Noynoy is holding his ground over the compensation being sought by the consortium that built it after a government expropriation, is a sticking issue among investors in considering the PPP.
Not paying the airport terminal owners the just compensation is certainly not a way to convince investors that this government can be trusted to honor contracts as well as a government that can’t be trusted to pay up, when it expropriates private property.
And Noynoy, for all his talk about investors now having confidence in him and his government, has also shown that he too, refuses to honor contracts, as he unilaterally canceled the Belgian dredging contract even when aready approved by Noynoy’s justice secretary.
None of the 25 or so of the initial projects under the PPP scheme, worth all of P127.8 billion, has started. Lately, the government has been selling the projects to the Chinese that took all of Noynoy’s economic managers to visit the mainland for the sales blitz.
Also faring miserably is the P21 billion worth conditional cash transfer program or the 4Ps that Dinky Soliman is supposedly implementing.
Noynoy appeared foolish when he wondered out loud why the self-rated poverty and hunger levels have gone up in a recent survey despite the costly program --- which only showed his disconnect with his own policy initiatives.
It also gave many a window into the decision-making process within the Aquino administration in which the focus is mainly on building up Noynoy’s image with low regard on how programs are efficiently implemented.
It is similar to the pantawid (stopgap) programs currently in place to address the problem on rising prices.
The Pantawid Pasada has been rated ineffective by its own beneficiaries, who are the drivers of public transportation, because it was introduced too late to have any impact amid the rising fuel prices and it was too little to give relief to those suffering from high prices.
There’s nothing concrete in terms of policies under Noynoy who instead uses band-aid solutions to problems that crop up under his watch.
That would be the case for the rest of the five years more under him.
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