| DIE HARD III | 
| Herman Tiu Laurel | 
As always, great horn-blowing accompanies the latest multi-billion peso borrowing announced by PeNoy Aquino’s Finance chief. Cesar Purisima clearly hopes this will drown out objective and critical analysis of the P44.1 billion in new loans added to the already enormous P4.6-trillion national government debt stock and our total debt of about P7 trillion. One headline even quotes the Hyatt 10 balik-secretary describing the oversubscribed issue as a “landslide vote of confidence,” the “first peso-denominated bond outside the country,” a “milestone,” and “the first time an Asian country conducted a float using its own currency.”
By  real honest standards, however, forensic financial analyst Hero Vaswani  of the Kilusang Makabansang Ekonomiya explains that there is nothing  really great about it. If anything, that huge borrowing is merely  evidence that the Philippine economy is unable to generate revenues, and  that the government still has to borrow to finance its operations,  despite claims of a 7.9-percent GDP growth.
A debt  is a debt is a debt. Yet Purisima says the peso bond issuance “is the  latest development in the (country’s) financing program in support of  the government’s proactive management of external liabilities,  particularly with respect to reducing its vulnerability to foreign  currency risks.”
But isn’t it really just the  foreign financial syndicates’ way of avoiding the volatility of the US  dollar by tying up a debtor country to an exchange rate for the bond? So  far, only the weak and unstable countries, such as Colombia in South  America, have become suckers to this scheme of issuing local currency  bonds.
National Treasurer Roberto Tan even  supported the new peso bond debt, saying it would “enhance the  government’s debt investor profile,” despite past examples of investor  profiles given to countries such as Greece that have shown the scoring  by the financial ratings agencies to be really meaningless.
Even  as Purisima boasts that the peso bond issuance was oversubscribed 13  times, we ask: Isn’t this oversubscription just a symptom of the hard  times in the western economies? The US is facing an on-going “low  intensity depression” and its policymakers have already pumped trillions  of dollars into the system, leading to desperation on where to park the  overflowing financial assets.
Further, Vaswani  explains that the US is lending at practically zero interest; which is  why so-called “investors” have started to use this to buy Third World  debt earning upwards of 5 percent. This reminds me of the “petrodollars”  40 years ago when US dollars overflowed after the Organization of  Petroleum Exporting Countries required oil to be traded only in that  currency, as the Middle East crises (of created wars and oil embargoes)  exploded oil prices from $15/bbl to almost $90/bbl (adjusted to 2008  dollar values. Trillions of US dollars then had to be recycled by  finagling or forcing Third World countries to swallow a lot of  un-payable loans.
Purisima is simply doing what  all his predecessors have done: Increasing our debt; failing to raise  revenues for government; and relying on new debts to finance the growing  national budget with its increasing annual deficit-spending. The two  months under the PeNoy administration has not brought about new ideas  for generating greater revenues without imposing new taxes and other  pains onto the public. Hence, the imbroglio over the value-added tax  (VAT) on tollways, the raising of MRT fares, and now, the removal of the  senior citizens’ VAT exemptions, which came out in the news just last  Sept. 9.
Where then is the much-vaunted  “anti-corruption dividend,” where savings from cleaning up waste from  graft and corruption are supposed to make up for the deficits and  fulfill the “no new taxes” pledge from PeNoy’s election campaign?
The  plain truth is, the Philippines will never be able to break loose from  the tightening strangle of the “debt trap” because every administration  since the February 1986 elite counter-revolution (with the sole  exception of Erap Estrada) had all been against the national economic  development paradigm of Ferdinand Marcos.
After  Cory Aquino took over, state revenues and the people’s wealth — as  directed by the US State Department and Makati Business Club — were  aggressively transferred to the oligarchy through trade liberalization  (jumpstarted by Cory and Bobby Tañada’s removal of 3,000 items from  tariff protection); privatization and deregulation of strategic  industries and public utilities (Meralco, Petron, Napocor, etc.); and  reversal of progressive income taxation through the institution of the  regressive VAT system.
It went on through Fidel  Ramos and peaked under Gloria Arroyo, where Big Business raked in P3  trillion in profits in just nine years!
To stop  this bloodletting, the people must wrest power away from the oligarchy  and put a genuinely democratic leadership in place. Unless PeNoy  undergoes a miraculous transformation and becomes truly Pinoy — no  longer for and of the US and the Makati Business Club — Filipinos will  have to continue their search for genuine nationalist and patriotic  leadership.  It could be still by elections, if we can stop the future  use of those Hocus-PCOS machines, or it can well be by other means,  which may prove feasible when the time comes.
In  the meantime, let’s continue to expose what the current Finance  secretary is really doing in contracting all these new debts — whether  in peso, dollar, euro, or yen. Debts in any currency are just the same  old financial foolishness. Right, Mr.  Foolish-ima?
(Reprinted with permission from Mr. Herman Tiu-Laurel)
Source: The Daily Tribune
URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20100913com4.html

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

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