Wednesday, 22 August 2012 21:09
John Mangun / Outside the Box
Here is an article from one of my favorite authors- John Mangun, the original article can be found in this link. One of the reasons we are not a rich nation is because of the way the majority of us think. This article in this blog covers the mindset needed to raise our country to other possibilities and realities. In developing the Entrepreneurial Spirit, we push the country to new heights. Pinoy Business Coach believes we can do better.
Here is an article from one of my favorite authors- John Mangun, the original article can be found in this link. One of the reasons we are not a rich nation is because of the way the majority of us think. This article in this blog covers the mindset needed to raise our country to other possibilities and realities. In developing the Entrepreneurial Spirit, we push the country to new heights. Pinoy Business Coach believes we can do better.
THE title of the editorial in yesterday’s issue of
the Business-Mirror sums it all up: “PPP Inches Forward.” While the
editorial was speaking to the dismally slow progress of the
Public-Private Partnership Program, PPP could mean “Philippines Pathetic
Progress.”
It is absolutely
ridiculous to read a headline “PHL Makes Top 10 List of Fastest Growing
Economies” when the article talks about the year 2050. Further, our 2050
neighbors will include Mongolia, Nigeria and Egypt.
The
“experts” at Knight Frank and Citi Private Wealth feel they can make
accurate predictions 38 years down the road, but I want to see their
predictions for next year on Nigeria’s ongoing civil war and Egypt’s
move backward into the 8th century. It is all nonsense.
In
2005 I wrote an article, “The ‘Good Old Days:’ Philippine Economic
Progress Since 1988” that analyzed the Philippine economy’s progress
from 1988.
Between
1989 and 2005, the gross domestic product (GDP) of the Philippines
increased by 700 percent. Another interesting fact that I discovered was
that the Philippines was at times better at turning its growing
national wealth into human development regardless of the fact that
poverty had grown and that the experts even now complain about growth
not reaching all of the population. But in fact, for example from 1990
to 2001 the GDP growth averaged a meager 1-percent growth, while PHL’s
Human Development Index (HDI) score went up 2.74 percent. By comparison,
Thailand averaged 3-percent growth but their HDI score only increased
by 3.9 percent. The Philippines actually got more economic bang for its
buck of wealth growth.
United
Nations Development Program statistics showed that PHL rated a score of
16 on “Converting Wealth to Human Development” while our neighbors
lagged behind. Their scores were China: 9, South Korea: 3, India: 2,
Indonesia: -1, and Malaysia and Thailand both -7.
The
one factor that became evident in my research was that the government
was the single most important factor that was keeping the Philippines
down. During the period from 1988 to 2004, the GDP was increasing at a
rate of 4.5 percent on average, but government borrowing was rising at
the phenomenal rate of 17 percent per year. Furthermore, all that
government borrowing through four administrations did not translate into
propelling the PHL economy forward.
Thanks
to the efforts of the last administration finally getting a handle on
the government debt problem and those polices carrying forward now, PHL
government debt is not an anchor around the neck of the economy.
However,
the same inefficient and ineffective national government of the 1980s,
1990s, and beyond is still running (or maybe ruining) the show.
On
Monday one article in this paper was titled “BSP Gold Purchases Drop By
95%.” The report says that gold purchases by the Bangko Sentral ng
Pilipinas (BSP) dropped by 95 percent in the first half of 2012.
The
reason for this is not a lack of production but that the gold is being
smuggled out of the Philippines. Since the Bureau of Internal Revenue
(BIR) started cracking down on alleged tax evaders who might also be
those who transact gold selling to the BSP, the sellers have found
“alternative” sources to buy their gold.
I
am not defending those who would cheat on their taxes. But you might
think that the government could figure out how to do their jobs well.
The BSP, the BIR, and Bureau of Customs cannot seem to figure out how
some P10 billion or P20 billion worth of gold suddenly disappeared out
of the country. Perhaps they could start by asking a local cigarette
vendor in any provincial area outside of Davao. Or a fisherman along
some deserted Davao del Norte coastline. While corruption in government
may be a significant problem, perhaps a greater problem is competency.
If the private sector was managed and operated the way the government
seems to be, Filipinos would all be living in nipa huts and riding
carabaos for transportation.
Something must quickly change for the better in the government or nothing is going to change for the better for the nation.
*Dark and controlling powerful personalities are still controlling the destiny of this nation.
0 comments :
Post a Comment
Please post responsibly. any back links are welcome as long as they are related to the Blog Title. Thanks and happy posting.