11/19/2010
\"Diven the many issues that  are basic to the well-being of the Filipino people such as electricity,  water, public transport and toll ways that are not being dealt with by  most columnists of mainstream media, I have made it a point to focus on  them through this space.  But whenever I see issues covered extensively  by media being obfuscated by writers who rear their discriminatory  heads, then I have to step into the fray.
The Philippine Airlines  (PAL) vs PAL Employees Association (Palea) strike threat is a case in  point.  One the chief proponents of the privatization of state assets,  economic liberalization advocate Solita Monsod, takes what I see as a  double standard stand on the PAL vs Palea impasse, as she uses it as  another opportunity for lambasting a favorite whipping boy of the Makati  Business Club, a noisy group that shares her economic views.
That  the global and local airline industry is going through precarious times  is not in doubt. Monsod concedes that “the global economic crisis was  in full flow in 2008 and 2009, and travel was a natural victim (with)… a  7 percent decrease in worldwide demand.”  She also admits the adverse  impact of new restrictions on the Philippine aviation industry by the US  Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and the International Civil  Aviation Organization (ICAO) after our country was downgraded due to  deficiencies in our Air Transportation Office (ATO) and the Civil  Aviation Authority of the Philippines (CAAP).
What is not  included, though, in that litany of problems besetting PAL is the flag  carrier’s history of overstaffing before privatization, which previous  management reorganizations constricted by government-led compromises  could not optimally resolve. What PAL wouldn’t give to get the chance  that other airlines such as Cebu Pacific had, which is to start from  scratch — to start on the right foot.
One setback of PAL in the  past three years came from losses on its hedge against aviation fuel  price spikes in 2008. PAL reportedly incurred $150 to $300 million in  losses when oil prices reversed and dove instead, as the global economic  downturn took its toll.
Monsod and Palea keep attributing this  loss only to management and says labor shouldn’t be punished for it. I  don’t think PAL ever intended to take out that loss on anyone, but that  hedge was a judgment call intended for the good of the company as a  whole.
Fuel is obviously a fundamental cost in any airline  operation. Securing oneself against fuel price spikes, which many  expected at that time, was to PAL’s interest. A case can be made that  fuel prices really could have gone right through the roof. If it had  gone that way, all stakeholders in PAL — management, labor, and even  government — would have reaped the benefit from the hedge.
Privatization  was intended to pass management of the flag carrier from cumbersome  state managers to private, professional managers. I have never been for  privatization of state and public utility assets. I have fought it all  the past decades; but the advocates of privatization should be  consistent and leave private management’s prerogative alone so long as  laws are strictly followed.
PAL’s spinoff of various non-core  operations comes from a tenet of good business — focus.  There is  clearly nothing illegal in that spinoff, and the company is complying  with its obligation to provide severance pay (increased to 1.25 month  for every year of service), and offers new opportunities in the new  spun-off companies to retrenched employees which would most likely lead  to better future compensation as the companies grow with the synergy.
Those  who expect the privatized company to perform like a social welfare  enterprise could propose to start getting the state and government  involved again. Do what the Japanese did to save their Japan Airlines  (JAL). Their government pumped in 50 billion yen to turn it around,  which was justified in JAL’s case as it is a government airline.
Detractors  claim that the new spinoff companies are also invariably led by one  relation or another of the PAL owners, but who best to invite new  capital into this unattractive industry today than those who can assure  new investors the good will with the core client?
PAL’s owners  have actually unburdened government of a huge weight around its neck,  and PAL’s privatization is the only privatization project where the  public is ahead; unlike the privatization in power, water, toll ways,  mass transit system and port handling. It’s a wonder why Monsod  practically never critiques these other privatizations.
The recent  bus transport strike in Metro Manila highlights another double  standard: The Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA) and the  Department of Transportation and Communications’ view of buses as  traffic jam generators, while being blind to the over a hundred thousand  private cars exclusively chauffeuring students to and from school,  clogging up Edsa and its tributaries.
Buses serve five times more  passengers per square meter than private vehicles, having much greater  positive economic and social value. Private vehicles are inefficient  commuter movers; only more “sosyal.” School buses should be mandatory in  Metro Manila, where a special school bus network with communication  radios and trained conductors that would unclog Metro roads by over a  hundred thousand cars should be established. When I proposed this to  Cory Aquino’s MMDA chief Elfren Cruz in 1991, he said: “Magagalit ang  mayayaman.” (The rich will get angry.)
Frankly, this crackdown on  buses may have a hidden agenda — make the MRT’s new coaches (and  resulting higher rates) under the multi-million public-private  partnership or PPP projects more lucrative for PeNoy’s invited  “investors.”
(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 Global News Network, Destiny  Cable, now Channel 8; visit our blogs, http://newkatipunero.blogspot.com  and http://hermantiulaurel.blogspot.com)
(Reposted with permission from Mr. Herman Tiu-Laurel)
Source:  The Daily Tribune
URL: 
http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20101119com4.html