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Sunday, March 3, 2013

Philippines’ elite swallow country’s new wealth

Optimism is soaring that the Philippines is finally becoming an Asian tiger economy, but critics caution a tiny elite that has long dominated is amassing most of the new wealth while the poor miss out.

President Benigno Aquino has overseen some of the highest growth rates in the region since he took office in 2010, while the stock market has hovered in record territory, credit ratings have improved and debt ratios have dropped.

"The Philippines is no longer the sick man of East Asia, but the rising tiger," World Bank country director Motoo Konishi told a forum attended by many of Aquino's economic planning chiefs recently.

However economists say that, despite genuine efforts from Aquino's team to create inclusive growth, little progress has been made in changing a structure that for decades has allowed one of Asia's worst rich-poor divides to develop.

"I think it's obvious to everyone that something is structurally wrong. The oligarchy has too much control of the country's resources," Cielito Habito, a respected former economic planning minister, told AFP.

He presented data to the same economic forum at which Konishi spoke, showing that in 2011 the 40 richest families on the Forbes wealth list accounted for 76 percent of the country's gross domestic product (GDP) growth.

This was the highest in Asia, compared with Thailand where the top 40 accounted for 33.7 percent of wealth growth, 5.6 percent for Malaysia and just 2.8 percent for Japan, according to Habito.

According to the Forbes 2012 annual rich list, the two wealthiest people in the Philippines, ethnic Chinese magnates Henry Sy and Lucio Tan, were worth a combined $13.6 billion.

This equated to six percent of the entire Philippine economy.

In contrast, about 25 million people, or one quarter of the population, lived on $1 a day or less in 2009, which was little changed from a decade earlier, according to the government's most recent data.

Some of the elite families have dominated since the Spanish colonial era that ended in the late 1800s.

Prominent Spanish names, such as Ayala and Aboitiz, continue to control large chunks of the economy and members of the families are consistent high placers on Forbes' annual top-40 wealth list.

Their business interests range from utilities to property development to banking, telecommunications and the booming business process outsourcing industry.

Many of the ethnic Chinese tycoons, such as Sy and Tan, got their start soon after the country gained post-World War II independence from the United States.

The tendency for the same names to dominate major industries can be partly attributed to government regulations that continue to allow near monopolies and protections for key players.

For decades after independence from the United States in 1946, important sectors such as air transport and telecommunications were under monopoly control, according to a Philippine Institute for Development Studies paper.

Despite wide-ranging reforms since 1981, big chunks of the market remain effective oligopolies or cartels, it said.

Habito said the path to riches for the few is also helped by a political culture that allows personal connections to easily open doors.

The Aquino government's mantra since succeeding graft-tainted Gloria Arroyo's administration has been good governance and inclusive growth, and their efforts have been applauded by the international community.

The government is spending more than $1 billion this year on one of its signature programmes to bridge the rich-poor divide.

The conditional cash transfers programme will see 15 million of the nation's poorest people receive money directly in exchange for going to school and getting proper health care.

However Louie Montemar, a political science professor at Manila's De La Salle University, said little had been done at the top end to impact on the dominance of the elite.

"There's some sense to the argument that we've never had a real democracy because only a few have controlled economic power," Montemar told AFP.

"The country dances to the tune of the tiny elite."

Nevertheless, the government and economists say there are many other reforms that can be taken to bring about inclusive growth.

Analysts said the most direct path out of poverty was improving worker skills, using higher tax revenues to boost spending on infrastructure, and rebuilding the country's manufacturing sector.

To this end, many economists endorse the Aquino government's cash transfer programme as well as reforms to the education system, which include extending the primary and high school system from 10 to 13 years.

But for people such as mother-of-five Remy del Rosario, who earns about 1,500 pesos ($36) a week selling cigarettes on a Manila roadside, talk of structural reform and inclusive growth mean little.

With her bus driver husband out of work, the family has no savings and her income is barely enough to cover food, bus fare, and prescription medicines.

"Other people may be better off now, but we see no improvement in our lives," she said. (http://bit.ly/Ximlsw)

AFP/ INQUIRER Business 

Saturday, March 2, 2013

SABAH DEATH toll reached up 22: recently 5 Malaysian policemen killed in ambush in Semporna, Sabah

Part of Kampung Sri Jaya Simunul in Semporna, a village on water where the gun fight between the Sulu militants and Malaysian police took place. -- NSTP/Datu Ruslan Sulai

  • March 1: 12 Sulu Royal Army killed, and 2 Malaysian Police
  • March 2: 2 Malaysian Police killed
  • March 3: 3 Malaysian Policed killed, 2 Sulu Royal Army supporters , 1 armed man killed by villager

3 more Malaysian policemen were killed in an ambush during a police raid on a village on water in Semporna, Sabah yesterday, bringing the total number of casualty to 5.

Inspector-General of  Police Tan Sri Ismail Omar said two Sulu armed men were killed in the incident.

The latest incident brings the death toll of Malaysian policemen to 7 with the two police commandos who were killed during Friday's attack by Sulu militants near their hideout in Kampung Tanduo in Lahad Datu, about 130km from Semporna yesterday.

The 5 personnel, he said were deployed to conduct a "ground assessment" when they were ambushed.

Security forces returned fire, killing 2 of the armed men.

Ismail named three areas where security forces were up against foreigners - Lahad Datu, Semporna and Kunak.

"Police received information of 2 armed men at two villages, Kampung Lormalong and Kg Dasar Lama.

"10 foreigners with three in camouflage uniforms and arms are currently hiding in a house," he told the media in Lahad Datu.

In Kampung Tanduo, he said 3 of the Sulu Royal Army who were attempting to leave the cordoned-off area, had been arrested.

No curfew or travel advisory to Sabah had been imposed, to date.  

Ismail advised everyone to stay calm and refrain from spreading rumors.

Only statements from him, Ismail said,  should be believed.

 

Meanwhile, in Semporna,a group of local villagers overpowered a gunman  before shooting him dead with his own M16, when the  man  took them hostage near Kampung Senallang Lama this morning.

About 10 of them fought back and attacked the would-be kidnapper as he forced them to walk towards the hills in the coastal village at about 10am.

Murba Mohammad Dahil from Kabogan who was one of the hostages, said they pounced on the man as he forced them to walk up a hill.

Meanwhile, Bernama reported that Ismail said police were investigating whether the armed men were linked to the more than 150 armed intruders in Kampung Tanduo, Lahad Datu, about 150 kilometres from Semporna.  

Last Friday, 2 VAT 69 commandos; ASP Zulkifli Mamat, 29, and Sergeant Sabarudin Daud, 46, were killed and 3 other policemen injured in a shootout with the armed intruders, claiming to be members of the Royal Army of the Sulu Sultanate in the Southern Philippines, in Kampung Tanduo, Sabah, North Borneo. 

12 of the Sulu Royal Army were also killed in the incident.

Ismail said he would name the 5 policemen later.  

In a separate development, he said, police detected another group of 10 men, 3 of them armed, in Kampung Lomalong and Kampung Dasar Lama, Kunak, at about 10 pm yesterday. 

We're tracking their movement," he said.

Ismail said the police also detained 3 of the more than 150 armed Sulu Royal Army who had entrenched themselves in Kampung Tanduo since Feb 9.

"The 3 men are believed to have attempted to leave the group," he said, declining to provide further details of the arrests. 

with report from NewStraitsTimes

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