ECONOMICS DEBT AND DEMOCRACY IN THE PHILIPPINES By Jennifer
L. Smith Jennifer L. Smith is a political economist who spent nine months
in the Philippines in 1987 working with the Philippine Rural Reconstruction
Movement and the Freedom from Debt Coalition. Philippine President Corazon
Aquino wants the Philippine people to believe that the foreign debt crisis
is a complicated financial problem that only her Finance Secretary, Vincente
Jayme, and the Central Bank Governor, Jose Fernandez, can understand and
resolve. A growing number of people in the Philippines understand, however,
that the situation is really quite simple: the country will never be able
to repay all of the $30.2 billion owed to foreign creditors, and, therefore,
government and creditor policies must change. The government's debt policies
are impinging upon democratic institutions in the Philippines and reveal
President Aquino's willingness to sacrifice economic and political sovereignty
to placate foreign creditors. The government's debt policies The Aquino
government's program to address the debt crisis has four main components.
The first has been to honor all debts of the previous government, despite
the extensive graft and fraud by former Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos
and his wife Imelda. Estimates of the Marcoses' personal graft, not including
that of their cronies, run from $5 billion to $20 billion. Their deposits
in Swiss bank accounts are said to be worth $3.5 billion and their illegal
investments in New York City properties, which were disclosed in U.S. congressional
hearings, are conservatively valued at $9 million. According to James Boyce,
a professor of economics at the University of Massachusetts, who is currently
writing a book on the Philippines, total capital flight from the country
since 1962 is worth about $22 billion in 1986 dollars. Walden Bello, economist
and author of Development Debacle: the World Bank in the Philippines, is
one of many who assert that when President Aquino first came to power and
her international legitimacy was at its height, she could have at least
declared a moratorium on debt payments until the legitimacy of the loans
was investigated. To this date, the government has not investigated the
use of foreign loans with the exception of the Bataan Nuclear Power Plant.
This plant is a Third World white elephant; its cost has reached $2.67
billion; Westinghouse, the builder, paid Marcos approximately $80 million
in commission; and it has never been and will never be put into operation
since it was built within 25 miles of three active volcanos and an earthquake
fault line. The government's policy also involves rescheduling debt payments
owed to foreign governments and private banks. (The multilateral banks
such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank do not
reschedule their loans.) The Philippine government reached two rescheduling
agreements in 1987 with the Paris Club of western governments, the seven
leading industrial nations, and with their commercial bank creditors, extending
loan payments over 10 to 17 years and providing a grace period of 5 and
7 years, respectively, on payments of principal. Consequently, service
of the foreign debt was thus reduced to $2.9 from $4 billion annually from
1987 to 1992. Debt payments in 1988 came to $3.1 billion of which $2 billion
was for interest and $1.1 billion was for principal. The rescheduling of
commercial and private debt certainly mitigated the immediate debt burden.
There are problems, however, with rescheduling debt payments. Jose Ledesma,
a member of the Philippine Freedom From Debt Coalition's Board of Directors,
notes that "The country is still required to pay all of the debt and the
crisis is simply postponed until 1992 when the principal is due." (page
missing here; unscannable) Professor Boyce argues that continued growth
is unlikely. Boyce says, "The current growth is consumer-led (rather than
investment-led) and is largely due to greater utilization of existing capital.
It will not continue because little of the current investment is going
into plants and equipment," and therefore, productive capacity is not expanding.
Cavanagh and Broad have written that the World Bank model of export-oriented
growth which worked for the Newly Industrialized Countries (NICs) is bound
for failure in the long run for LDCs. The competition is much greater now
because the NlCs did not move out of production of light manufactured goods,
as the World Bank predicted, and too many LDCs are pursuing the same path
at the World Bank's encouragement. Furthermore, protectionism is blocking
markets and substitution of synthetics for primary commodities is diminishing
demand in industrial nations. The impact on democracy These policies defy
the spirit and intention of the country's new constitution. First, the
constitution states that the largest budget priority should be education,
but currently debt service makes up the largest portion of the budget.
Second, the constitution gives the Congress power to authorize and appropriate
the national budget, yet 40 percent of the national budget is automatically
appropriated to debt service without any deliberation by Congress. President
Aquino's recent attempts to limit the ability of the Congress to act on
debt-related policies also lead critics to question her commitment to genuine
democracy. Aquino asked the House of Representatives to place a six month
moratorium on all bills that dealt with the foreign debt. This was after
the Senate passed a bill that would limit debt service to 20 percent of
export earnings. She then vetoed a bill that would have created a Debt
Commission composed of representatives from the executive and legislative
branches of government, business and private sectors. The Commission would
have served solely an advisory function. Aquino charged that it would infringe
upon her powers to negotiate and contract for loans. The Senate, with a
great uproar, subsequently voted for the first time to override the presidential
veto. The bill was subsequently modified and signed by President Aquino.
President Aquino has also maintained secrecy around negotiations with the
IMF and the World Bank, preventing any knowledge or discussion of their
proposals outside of the negotiating panel. Economic Planning Secretary
Solita Monsod was recently dropped from the IMF negotiating panel after
opposing the growth rate target set by the IMF. Members of Congress have
lamented the fact that they requested information on the discussions with
the IMF and did not receive any until they were given the final "Letter
of Intent." Members of both the House and the Senate were furious when
told that they could not amend the Letter of Intent and had no choice but
to approve it in a matter of days. If they did not, the Philippines would
have lost IMF standby credits, and thus the PAP, a $500 million soft loan
from Japan, any further loans from commercial banks and the rescheduling
of $1.2 billion of Paris Club loans which are all conditioned upon a standby
agreement with the IMF. Members of Congress, led by Speaker Pro Tempore
Antonio Cuenco, then demanded the removal of the leaders of the negotiating
panel - Central Bank Governor Jose Fernandez and Finance Secretary Vincente
Jayme - whose "continuous bungling has worked against the best interests
of the people." Debt and sovereignty President Aquino's debt strategy sacrifices
economic and political sovereignty because of its extreme dependence on
inflows of foreign capital. The greatest issue of political sovereignty
confronting the Philippines today is the renewal of the U.S. Military Bases
Agreement (MBA). Although there is growing opposition to having foreign
bases with nuclear weapons on Philippine soil, the MBA would have to be
renewed in order to receive current levels of U.S. foreign aid and perhaps
also the $10 billion PAP. Cavanagh and Broad write that "Despite all of
President Aquino's assurances that the PAP will not be linked to retention
of the bases, the quiet signal from the United States is unmistakable.
As U.S. spokespersons diplomatically put it, the climate for approving
new assistance to the Philippines would be damaged considerably by any
decision to remove the bases." Philippine dependence on foreign aid and
loans also allows the IMF and western donors to dictate the development
strategies and specific economic policies that the country must follow.
The outlines of the most recent IMF accord include budget cuts, import
liberalization, the devaluation of the peso, the elimination of the cereal
subsidy and increases in fuel, power and water rates. IMF austerity programs
are notorious for resulting in fewer social services for the poor, increased
prices of basic private services and goods, including transportation and
rice (the main staple) and more expensive imports. These policies hurt
poor people the most. Secretary Monsod warned in a memo to President Aquino
that the IMF program would set back economic growth and spark political
unrest. The Congress realized how little power it has when it tried to
amend, and considered rejecting altogether, the IMF Letter of Intent. The
U.S. bases agreement, the IMF austerity program and increased reliance
on foreign aid and investment all promote economic dependence and undermine
political and economic sovereignty. The first step out of this trap is
for President Aquino to adopt debt policies based on the people's needs
and on building national self-reliance. Alternative policies The Manila-based
Freedom From Debt Coalition (FDC) is a private coalition working with members
of Congress to change the way the Philippines is handling the debt crisis.
The FDC program calls for a new rescheduling agreement with the nation's
creditors based on the nation's ability to pay and a moratorium on all
debt payments until such an agreement is reached. The capacity to pay would
be defined as limiting payments to no more than 10 percent of actual merchandise
export earnings. At current levels of exports, annual debt service would
amount to $600 million compared to the anticipated level of $3.4 billion.
The FDC also calls for the government to legally disengage from loans proven
to have been illegally appropriated by Marcos and to refuse to accept responsibility
for loans originally contracted by private borrowers. The Aquino government
asserts that the Philippine economy would not be able to withstand the
retaliation from private banks that such a program would provoke, including
the cut off of new lending and the elimination of trade credits. But it
ignores the fact that even with new lending, the country could experience
a $16. 3 billion net outflow from 1987 to 1992. Thus, paying the debt would
hemorrhage the economy more than the cut off of new credits. Moreover,
the elimination of trade credits would be counterproductive if the level
of debt payments were tied to export earnings. Conclusion The Philippines
may soon be one of the first countries to undergo an IMF-coordinated debt
reduction program. It would be part of the new U.S. Brady proposal which
calls for commercial banks to voluntarily reduce outstanding debt by 20
percent in exchange for IMF and World Bank guarantees on the remaining
debt. But the Brady proposal will do little to alleviate the Philippines
current debt burden and nothing to promote debt- free, self-reliant development.
Secretary James Brady's plan assumes that developing nations such as the
Philippines can grow out of debt while implementing IMF austerity programs
and World Bank export-oriented development strategies. Both institutions
have had just the opposite impact on the Philippines and other developing
nations in which they have operated. For any debt reduction program to
be successful, it must be based upon the needs of developing countries
as defined by them not by the U.S. Treasury Department, private banks or
the IMF. President Aquino has not asserted an appropriate, distinctly Philippine,
proposal. Her handling of the debt crisis thus far indicates a greater
commitment to the interests of the IMF, World Bank, private banks and foreign
governments, especially the United States, than to the Filipinos' desire
for genuine democracy and political and economic sovereignty. It may be
too late for her to regain the full support of the "people power" coalition
that brought her to power, but it is not too late to listen to the Filipino
people and adopt debt policies based on their needs.