BSP (Bunk-O Sentral ng Pilipinas)
| DIE HARD III | 
| Herman Tiu Laurel | 
Nowhere can a Filipino find more bunk in this bunk rich land than at the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), which again boasts of an expansion in the country’s gross international reserves when the value of the currency it keeps is in danger of imminent massive crash. That means Filipinos will be holding close to $50 billion of worthless bunk, or US T-bills, when the music stops. But do Tetangco, Guinigundo, Paderanga et al. give a hoot? Would they even bother with the thought of more Filipinos finding themselves in the poorhouse once the dollar crash descends upon the world, since they are paid tens of millions anyway to keep the farce alive? Quite simply, this kind of bunk, in tandem with the Department of Finance (DoF)’s peso bonds, will be our final ruin.
A whole spectrum of financial and currency analysts, as well as  scholars — from renowned economists such as New York University  Professor Noriel Roubini to similarly prestigious Mark Solomon — have  already projected the dollar crash between now and the middle of 2011.
According  to Roubini, “If markets were to believe, and I’m not saying it’s  likely, that inflation is going to be the route that the US is going to  take to resolve this problem, then you could have a crash of the value  of the dollar… The value of the dollar over time has to fall on a  trade-weighted basis, but not necessarily relative to euro and yen.”
Solomon adds, “…a 20-percent drop in the value of either a stock  or financial holding over a period of time is considered a crash. The  US dollar already crashed from 120 on the USDX down to its current level  of 75. This 45-point drop, or roughly 33-percent drop, over several  years, meets the definition of a crash.”
A growing  number of Filipinos who are becoming aware of this but still cannot do  anything, as the Aquino government is simply clueless as can be, must  therefore keep on educating fellow Filipinos on this.
Last week the Japanese Central Bank intervened by buying up dollars to support it. Take this news two days  ago: “Japan props up dollar for first time since 2004… for the first  time in six years, selling the yen to buy dollars. It follows a surge in  the value of the Japanese currency to a 15-year peak which was spooking  business leaders worried about its effects on exports…”
The  BSP, in turn, is building up precarious US dollars while the DoF issues  more debts in the $1-billion peso bonds, which are inevitably dollar  debts because all of its transactions will still be in dollars. Despite  the DoF’s Foolish-ima spin, the Philippine peso is not of reserve  quality anywhere.
At the same time, Malacañang’s  P15-billion public-private partnership (PPP) projects which are really  taxpayer-driven, will give sovereign guarantee funds again to the  plutocrats and US crony capitalists, who are now boosting the local  stock market.
Foreign portfolio investors always  smell easy, quick, and gargantuan profits whenever PPP-type projects in  power, water, infrastructure (such as tollways), etc. are given special  financial packages guaranteed with taxpayers’ and consumers’ money.
These  inelastic or unavoidably necessary public utilities, which used to be a  right of any citizen and provided free or for the most minimal of costs  since the public funded them, were, under the Yellows’  political-economic philosophy beginning with Cory Aquino, converted into  profiteering opportunities for private enterprises, with complete  disregard for public welfare and development. For this reason, state  revenues will continue to dwindle and public institutions will have to  rely more and more on other means to survive.
These  economic and financial policies are directly connected to such issues  as the current “Juetengate” bedeviling the new Aquino. Jueteng is now  the only source of funds for the Philippine National Police (PNP) top  brass to maintain a lifestyle befitting of members of the ruling class.  After all, what’s all the hardship for if not to give them the  wherewithal to put their children into exclusives schools, travel on  European junkets, and have the latest cars and the money to run for  elections? Aren’t most members of the ruling class living it up, say, on  the sinecure of a congressman’s “pork barrel,” which come from debts  such as the Foolish-ima peso bonds, which in turn increase the state’s  penury and inability to sustain itself?
PeNoy  Aquino knows the realities of life in government; he has seen it all  since childhood. Surely, he’s not about to start a rebellion in the  police brass by really cracking down on that illegal numbers game.
Archbishop  Oscar Cruz’s campaign against the “immoral” jueteng is also a bunk-load  in the contradiction that he personally faces for not condemning all  forms of gambling such as church bingos, raffles, sharing in horse  racing proceeds, and legalized gambling that impoverish and break up  families. And if he condemns jueteng because it is illegal, then it is  another contradiction for him not to endorse its legalization.
Contradictions make for a lot of bunk; so does hypocrisy; even fraud.  Although some priests can almost beat the Bunk-O Sentral ng Pilipinas  in its amount of bunk, in the end, the financial sector still beats ‘em  all. With the help of controlled mainstream media, many Filipinos still  unconsciously swallow them in leaps and bounds.  This space, however,  will continue to try its darn best to expose the bunk to save our fellow  citizens from it.
(Tune in to Sulo ng Pilipino,  Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. on 1098AM; watch  Politics Today, Tuesday, 8 p.m. to 9 p.m., with replay at 11 p.m. on  Global News Network, Destiny Cable Channel 21; visit our blogs,  http://newkatipunero.blogspot.com and  http://hermantiulaurel.blogspot.com)(Reprinted with permission from Mr. Herman Tiu-Laurel)
Source: The Daily Tribune
URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20100920com4.html

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

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