Insidious illogic in Pagcor  privatization
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 Mainstream media have followed up PeNoy Aquino’s announce-ment of his Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp. (Pagcor) privatization plan with massive propaganda. Their argument is that since any game of chance is immoral and unproductive, and since Pagcor, the largest gambling operation run by government, is riddled with corruption, that state-owned enterprise needs to be privatized. However, if they truly believe gambling to be immoral and unproductive, shouldn’t they call for its abolition — whether it be in the form of lotteries such as the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office (PCSO) sweepstakes or the Malaysian-led lotto draws — then later Pagcor’s own dissolution? To only call  for privatization contradicts their sworn moral scruples and belies  their position as hypocritical, if not insidious. For them to say  “Pagcor is corrupt; therefore it must be privatized” is to admit that  Aquino and his Pagcor Chairman Bong Naguiat are incapable of instituting  any anti-corruption reform as far as gambling is concerned. As the privatization of Pagcor means its gambling  operations will continue, the only change will be to where the revenues  will go. For sure, it will no longer benefit government and, in  principle, the state’s charities and the President’s Social Fund. It  will merely go to private corporate coffers and from thence may likely  not be shared with government for its social spending programs at all. From initial information disclosed to media, the  privatized Pagcor being envisioned by PeNoy will be tax-exempt. We can  only roll our eyes in amazement at the unbelievable stroke of luck that  the favored private party or parties will enjoy. Pagcor’s income amounts  to an average of P30 billion or over $600 million every year; and  that’s supposed to be a much-needed resource for government to help the  poor with. But the other so-called “logic” for  Pagcor’s privatization that trumps the previous one is the massive  corruption pervading Pagcor. A top corruption charge that Naguiat has  made concerns the 300 Pagcor consultants appointed by his predecessor  Efraim Genuino to the tune of P5 million a month or P60 million a year.  If such were indeed the case at Pagcor under Arroyo and Genuino (as it  most likely was), the direct solution is to file corruption charges  against those responsible; prosecute them to the hilt; and make an  example of them in the long promised anti-corruption drive of the Aquino  government. Refusing to clean up Pagcor, in terms of weeding out those  in the career service who collaborate in various corrupt activities and  then, cutting out resources that are being frittered away, is akin to  throwing the precious baby with the bathwater. Even  doing so at any price is simply not acceptable. If the Aquino  government tries to argue that it needs to let go of Pagcor because it  is corrupt, then it has no right at all to sit a single minute more! This illogic of privatization has ruled the country  since the time of PeNoy’s mother 25 years ago. Look at what has happened  today: All the government assets chosen to be privatized were those  that proved productive and earned billions for the nation. Thus, only  huge revenue losses for the government and the public (and obscene  profits for the corporate oligarchs) ensued. Whether it’s power, oil,  water or toll ways, just name it and its profits are now for the  oligarchs’ satisfaction. The Department of  Finance’s Cesar Purisima is expectedly supporting Pagcor’s  privatization. His finance and Big Business bosses will be getting their  hands on the company’s revenues once it is privatized, with the foreign  gambling and financial mafia getting their share of the pie. If anyone  doesn’t know it yet, the global finance industry has always been tied to  gambling — from Monte Carlo to Las Vegas to Macao. The privatization of Pagcor will lead to an even greater  control of the Philippines by gambling and finance syndicates, with  narco-politics close behind, as exemplified by NYSE’s Richard Grasso  embracing Colombian FARC narco-rebel Raul Reyes in 1999, as well as his  part in the compensation controversies that foreshadowed the 2008 Wall  Street financial crash. Truth to tell, the past 25  years of liberalization has seen the country progressively sink into  the gambling and narcotic quagmire never seen before. The privatization of Pagcor is one of the last frontiers  in the battle for complete control of RP’s resources which the global  and local oligarchs are waging against the people. As each privatization  proceeds, the nation only sinks deeper into poverty. Our hope is that  the increasing impoverishment imposed through the oligarchy’s newest  puppet government may finally rouse the middle class and the masa to  awaken and fight back. All oppressed sectors — professionals,  small-and-medium scale entrepreneurs, labor, soldiers, plus the  ideologically-inspired opposition — must heed this call. Those who  continue to turn a blind eye — including those who pose as opposition  but kowtow to the Yellow movement — are collaborators to the ongoing  plunder and oppression. This is the message the truly concerned,  nationalistic forces must continually raise so the people may know. (Tune in to 1098AM, Sulo ng Pilipino, Monday, Wednesday  and Friday, 6 to 7 p.m.; Destiny Cable Channel 21, Politics Today,  Tuesday, 8 to 9 p.m., with replay at 11 p.m.; also visit our new blog,  http://newkatipunero.blogspot.com) | 
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(Reprinted with permission from Mr. Herman Tiu-Laurel)
Source: The Daily Tribune
URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20100719com5.html

 
 
 
 

 
 
 

 


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