11/12/2010
Much as I would like to take  even a day off from the endless electricity price gouging and swindles, I  am not able to.  The news every day brings up new cases of the blatant  defrauding of the Filipino power consumers by the Energy Regulatory  Commission (ERC), together with the big private power companies, as well  as the silence of the nation’s legislature.
A few days ago, this  headline came up: “Aboitiz Equity income jumps 128 percent to P5.6B in  Q3.”  Looking closely into the details, one reads: “The power group  continued to account for the biggest chunk of the income pie with an 83  percent share, followed by the banking and food groups…”
No doubt  that 83-percent increase attributed to the Aboitiz power group came from  the company’s deal with the Power Sector Assets and Liabilities  Management Corp. (Psalm), wherein it got to buy the state’s power barges  117 and 118 for a third of what was declared to the ERC when it  subsequently entered into a deal for those same barges to fill in for  the “energy crisis” in Mindanao.
That threefold increase in  valuation, which Therma Marine Inc. of the Aboitiz group submitted to  the ERC, was made the basis for setting the current power rates in  Mindanao, which, as we reported and powerfully expounded on the floor of  Congress by a Mindanao congressman, “have virtually doubled from March  to April and May this year.” It was stated further that “In 2009, we  paid P49.70 per kWh/month.  However, last April we paid P360 per  kWh/month and P606 per kWh/month in May 2010. This had caused untold  sufferings and hardships to our people in Mindanao, especially the  poor.”
Those hardships and sufferings now translate to the huge,  heartless, and indecent income jump of 128 percent of the Aboitiz Equity  group. And yet this dwarfs what the company got in 2001.
After  colluding with the Edsa II power grab of Gloria Arroyo, the Aboitiz  group got the newly-installed regime to transfer P20 billion in GSIS  (Government Service Insurance System) deposits in the Land Bank of the  Philippines — one of our largest and most stable government banks, with  over 500 ATMs to service GSIS members — to its own banking interest,  Unionbank, which had only less than 50 ATMs at that time.
It was  patently illegal since GSIS deposits should always be deposited in a  government bank.  But aside from being disadvantageous to government, it  was also a disservice to the million and a half GSIS members as  Unionbank was not in a position to service them efficiently — which  resulted in the many years of horrendous complaints about Unionbank and  its eCard system with the GSIS. Ten years have passed and despite the  continuing abuses, none of these  transgressions have been punished.
The  abuse by the oligarchs is part and parcel of the continuing policy of  liberalization and privatization of the Philippine economy. It has  destroyed the public sector and dismantled public, shared ownership of  the nation’s wealth and resources by transferring these only to a few —  just a dozen or so —  corporate oligarchs through which the Western  powers plunder the nation.
The mother of all this plunder, in  turn, has been the liberalization of our currency and capital regime,  which is now highlighted by the ongoing collapse of globalization in the  world economy via the currency war that is a-building. This, as  self-respecting and self-caring nations start escalating a series of  protectionist measures for their economies.
From Brazil (which has  raised its tax on foreign investments in its bonds from two to four,  and now six percent) to Japan (which has shocked everyone by intervening  last September to weaken its yen and announcing this month that it will  continue to maintain its weak yen policy), nations are opposing the US’  move to strengthen everyone else’s currency by weakening its own.
All,  it seems, except for the Philippines, which is under the IMF-WB  (International Monetary Fund-World Bank) stooge Cesar Purisima, who has  proudly declared the dollars invested in his $1-billion bonds as tax  exempt, thereby strengthening the peso and weakening the dollar, and  resulting in punishing losses for our OFWs, export industries, and call  centers.
The Aquino government tries to look for some silver  lining, such as looking to prepay foreign loans as it takes fewer pesos  to pay dollar debts; but the dark clouds are overwhelming.
As oil  is already projected to rise to $100/bbl soon, since oil producing  countries have set higher prices to compensate for the declining value  of the dollar in which the trade is denominated; rice producing  countries will certainly do the same. At the same time, without currency  and trade restriction, imports from the US will rise and domestic  agriculture and industries will suffer even more.
Even without the  dollar devaluation, our poultries and piggeries have already been under  a lot of pressure from US exports of chicken and pork parts, as our car  industry has suffered from American imports.  With the dollar  devaluation, coupled with the elite and Filipino consumers’ penchant for  imports, this will even worsen dramatically.
The only course, if  this country is to survive and grow again, is the sovereign and  nationalist economic direction.  And this is something we hope the  Aquino III regime can still learn. If not, then we can expect the  pressure for an unscheduled regime change to be in the cards within a  year’s time.
(Tune in to Sulo ng Pilipino, Monday, Wednesday and  Friday, 6 to 7 p.m. on 1098AM; watch Politics Today with HTL, Tuesday, 8  to 9 p.m., with replay at 11 p.m., on “Power Consumers’ Legislative  Champions: Reps. Bernadette Herrera and Toby Tiangco,” 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/20101112com5.html