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[Music]
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good day and welcome to another session
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of the public intellectual lecture
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series
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i am leo for the department from the
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department of interdisciplinary studies
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and today's session involves economics
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and the philippines
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how far have we gone under the there the
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regime we have here for today's guest
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sunny africa the executive director of
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ebon foundation
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a non-profit research and advocacy group
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thank you very much
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uh sunny for accommodating us for
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today's session well thank you for the
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invitation leo
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something yes um of course this will be
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a very
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interesting discussion because
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apparently you know
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the claims from both the opposition and
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those who support the government
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differ but we're talking about the same
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reality
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so the topic for today is about
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economics now
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so perhaps you can provide us a brief
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overview
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of the economic condition of the
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philippines right the economic situation
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because on one hand you have the
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government or government data even
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saying that there's economic growth a
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6.6 increase
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or 6.6 economic growth sin for the past
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two years
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and then you have also the the
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supporters of the government claiming
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that the various tax reform packages
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have have actually been geared towards
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uplifting the lives of the poor
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and then on the other you have critics
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saying that it has not really
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impacted the lives of those who whose
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lives
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need to be uplifted perhaps you can talk
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or perhaps give us an overview regarding
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that discussion
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the thing about the economy of course
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there's so many figures you can throw
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around
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but for us what really matters is we
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have to look at the figures that matter
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to people's lives
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so i think the fact of economic growth
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it's true i mean
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it's a it's a statistical fact that the
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economy has been growing
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it's also a statistical fact the economy
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has been growing more rapidly
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in the last more or less the last five
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to ten years
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compared to previous decades but also
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it's a statistical fact
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the economy is not creating enough jobs
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and the number of poor people are
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increasing so for us
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it's not actually a question of um who's
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saying
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what's factual or not what's true or not
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it's actually choosing what fact matters
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for us when we assess the economy
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so for us we will grant that the economy
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has been growing
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we will grant that it has been growing
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most at the most rapid rate
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in maybe like three to four decades but
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i think
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people who hold on to facts have to
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accept the fact the economy is creating
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less jobs now than before
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the fact is also there are more poor
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people now than in the country's history
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so for us i think um
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let's not sort of let's not look for
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single figures about the economy
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to say that's the state of the economy
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so for the most important figures about
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the state of the people
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and that's what the economy is about
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because in the end growth does not mean
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anything if the people aren't feeling it
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and right now i think the sad reality is
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despite the growth
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the people are not feeling economic
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growth some people are getting very very
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wealthy
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they're probably the ones that are quite
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happy to talk about economic growth
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because it reflects increasing profits
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increasing wealth
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but that is not the state of the economy
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but
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that's the point now how do we reconcile
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that contradiction because
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on one hand you said it's an objective
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reality a statistical reality
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that there's an increase in the cos
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there's an increase in growth
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there's an increase in you mentioned
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something about i think um
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certain uh or growth being increased and
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then on the other what they're also
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saying it's also an objective reality
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that people do not have jobs or a lot
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there's an increasing rate in people not
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having jobs
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or not having an adequate quality of
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life now perhaps we can start this
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discussion
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because that's a very loaded question i
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think now but let's start with that
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with the with an explanation of why for
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example the economy is
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booming or the economy is or this wealth
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is being
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generated no a lot of health is being
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generated
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actually um there is no contradiction
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um there's only a contradiction if we
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hold on to the assumption that an
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economy
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automatically reflects the conditions of
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the people
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i'm saying this whole contradiction
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because the economy is doing what it's
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doing by design
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and that's actually where the problem
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lies
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in principle an economy should serve the
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needs of the greatest number
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that's what we all believe that's what
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people who talk about economic
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development like to believe
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but if um if it seems like it's a
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contradiction between growth and under
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development
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that contradiction disappears once you
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accept the hard the brutal fact
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the economy is not designed for the
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people the way the economy is structured
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right now it's a very elite driven elite
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dominated economy
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we have a political system making
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economic policy decisions
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for the interests of a few for the
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interest of the wealthy
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versus the interest of the many so the
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reason i'm saying that's not a
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contradiction because by design
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when you're talking about a free market
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economy that's unregulated
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we're talking about economic policies
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that prioritize profits
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and the market over the needs of the
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many what we will have is what is
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happening right now but it's not which
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is not contradictory it's a natural
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result
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of an economy that's um relies on an
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undergrated free market
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and i think that's such an important
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point to grasp because it's not just a
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matter of
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let's have faster growth and then we
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will have more development
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if the economy is designed that that
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growth is not going to go to the many
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no matter how fast your growth is it is
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by design going to
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concentrate wealth and profits in a few
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while not creating enough jobs and
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relieving poverty because that is not
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the objective of
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current economic policy right now so
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it's a long-winded way of saying
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there's so contradiction because the
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economy is unfortunately designed for a
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few
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not designed for them any so for us it's
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a political question
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i don't think we're living in much of a
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democracy right now we can't have a
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political democracy
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if there's lack of democracy in the
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economy and if there's no democracy in
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the economy
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we will have political decision making
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for the interest of a few
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leading to the seeming contradiction but
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actually
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intrinsic outcome of an undemocratic
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economy
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but again because you're mentioning the
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free market now you're mentioning this
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ladies fair point of view that everyone
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should be able to have
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the opportunity to compete and it should
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be sort of like a
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functional meritocracy you know where
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the fit test can actually survive or the
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most competent can actually survive
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but the point there is shouldn't the
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government
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be regulating these things because as as
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the duterte government has proclaimed
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that the trained law the tax reform law
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should actually
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impact the poor rather than the rich and
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that's what the government is also
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saying
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the train law is actually impacting
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positively growth
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and also um inclu inclusivity because
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now most of the government should now be
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able to accumulate funds
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to impact the lives of the poor now so
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why is that
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because what if that's the problem with
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the system what is the government doing
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to regulate the system or at least
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to fix that system that's a good
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specific example the terrain law
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first it's not true that the train law
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is helping economic growth help in
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development
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if anything the train law is designed to
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transfer wealth from the poorest
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to the richest and that is by design
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what does a trained law do train package
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one
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reduced personal income taxes on the
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richest families
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by our estimation the top 20 percent of
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wealthiest families in the philippines
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will be paying less personal income tax
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because a government needs revenue the
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reduction in revenues from
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lowering personal income tax on the
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richest is made up for
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by increasing consumption taxes on
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everyone including the poorest 80
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percent
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so the net effect is they reached 20
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they are paying higher consumption taxes
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but they get more in their pocket from
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lower personal income taxes that in the
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end they have more money in their pocket
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the problem is with the poor is 80 they
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are paying higher consumption taxes
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but with no offsetting gains in personal
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income tax
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so the net effect for the poor is 80
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percent they have less money in their
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pocket
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so overall what is happening is you're
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transferring wealth from the poorest 80
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percent
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to the richest 20 and that is by design
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so for us
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again we were talking earlier about what
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facts are in place unfortunately the
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train was a good example
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of government economic managers not
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actually being very truthful
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they keep saying that 99 of filipino
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households will benefit from the terrain
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law that actually isn't
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a brazen untruth because we have
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their own data which they presented in
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senate committee hearings which they
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gave to us
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as part of our formal data requests they
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knew
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that the burden of the train law would
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fall on the poorest
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they knew that reindeer would liberate
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the richest families
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but they said something contrary to that
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so first it's an untruth and again
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it cuts the heart of the matter the
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training is a very specific
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data point about economic policy making
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this an economic policy
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designed for the wealthy at the expense
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of the buddhists and that cuts across
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wage policy land reform policy trading
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investment policy
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unfortunately the underlying spirit of
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our economic policy is
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to make things better for the richest
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even if it
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tramples on the interest of the many so
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given that obviously by design the train
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law is actually
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taxing the poor more rather than the
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rich but
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wouldn't the logic also there or within
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the government logic also there apply
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that they're trying to fall
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or follow like a kinesian model where
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the government accumulates
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funds so it can stimul or they can
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actually create more jobs so for example
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i think part of the funding that's
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coming from or part of the funds that
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come from the train law will actually be
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utilized for the build build build
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program
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so if you follow if you're following
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that train of logic now
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so even if the poor is actually paying
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more
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aren't they getting more from that
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particular um from that particular law
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because
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the government will now move towards
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providing more jobs for them again
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unfortunately that is not what's going
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to happen
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um if the training is meant to be
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funding infrastructure
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let's focus on the flagship
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infrastructure projects there are 75
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flagship infrastructure projects right
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now um by the government
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about 90 of those are transport projects
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about two-thirds of those are in the
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country's richest regions
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um national capital region centre luzon
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and southern tagalog
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so at a stroke that belies the argument
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that the train loss revenues
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which go to infrastructure will go to
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the poor
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because train law will be funded
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infrastructure projects concentrated in
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the three wealthiest regions of the
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country
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not trickling down to the remaining um
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13 12 13 regions of the country so it
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can't be called
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a prop or infrastructure spending if
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it's being spent mainly
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in the country's religious regions
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secondly
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in all honesty the poor
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don't need more roads who needs more
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roads
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the companies based in ncr cl and
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st who need
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more mobility for their goods and
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services to go to the port area to send
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their goods abroad
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or to bring goods into their export
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zones they're
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going to be the main benefits of the
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train law so i know
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it's always nice to have infrastructure
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it's always nice to feel that you know
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you have a
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quicker commute but our problem there is
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that infrastructure spending
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is not commensurate to the benefits and
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infrastructure spending will be financed
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by the aggressive
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tax reform package which is the train
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law so it's not
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it's a complete untruth the government
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says that um
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the revenues will be spent on proper
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infrastructure that is not happening
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but you mentioned that specifically
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because farm to market roads are
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sort of like part of this package of
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part of the infrastructure package
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offered by the duterte government you
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also mentioned central the zone in
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southern tagalog
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because i was thinking about the recent
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events regarding farmers
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um apparently there's a contradiction
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between what the government wants for
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food supply and the condition of farmers
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wouldn't infrastructure or farm to
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market roads from central luzon
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to ncr in southern tagalog to ncr
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and even from other regions in mindanao
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to davao and as the ports support areas
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now
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wouldn't these actually contribute to
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alleviating or actually improving the
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lives of farmers no
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isn't that part of the government
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framework again another good example
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that is liberalization law well
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sometimes called the right
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stratification law
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the rice liberalization law it took away
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protections for
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rice for domestic domestic rice industry
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um so it took away
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import cotas it took away the regulatory
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authority of the national food authority
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and it opened up the country to
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basically unlimited rice imports as long
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as certain tariffs are paid
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it's basically open up the country to
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cheap rice imports
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again it's by design the way the free
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market operates is
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it kills the poor uh so it kills the
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uncompetitive who tend to be
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the poorest and that's exactly what's
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happening right now um
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because of the rice liberalization law
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in center luzon
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even if you have more farm-to-market
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roads farmers will still not be able to
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compete because
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they have not felt the subsidies to
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become more efficient to become more
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competitive
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yet right now because of the rice
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liberalization law they're having to
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compete with cheap
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imported rice from thailand from vietnam
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in india which are heavily subsidized in
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their
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home countries and what is happening is
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exactly what's happening now
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the way the market operates is you have
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cheap
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ballet from cheap rice from abroad it
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drives local
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ballet prices down rice traders will not
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get any more from the local
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rice farmers they will buy from abroad
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driving
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ballet prices down driving farmers
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incomes down
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forcing rice farmers to go bankrupt
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forcing rice farmers to find other means
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of livelihood because it's no longer
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profitable or conventional to their
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effort to produce rice hence
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they will produce less rice or they will
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stop
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farming rice they might go to
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construction for short-term jobs
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you have two major long-term effects
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rice domestic rice production will
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collapse
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rice farmers will be displaced and
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they're earning like maybe six thousand
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seven thousand pesos a month right now
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that's nothing
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and third the country's food security
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over the long term will be compromised
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and we're forced to rely on imported
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rice so on so many levels
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the free market operating in the rice
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industry again it's emblematic
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it hits the poor the worst it makes the
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right status very wealthy because they
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can now
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have markups on their larger markups on
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the
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rice they sell but long-term development
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and short-term
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welfare farmers is completely
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compromised because
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the free market is operating so against
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that any claim that yeah but they have
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three more they have
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farm to market roads it's not enough
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what they need is what
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thai rice farmers vietnamese rice
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farmers indian rice farmers and actually
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japanese rice farmers are getting um
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there's a lot of talk about the rice
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competitors enhancement fund
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it's supposed to be 10 billion pesos a
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year that is nothing compared to what
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vietnamese farmers are earning
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vietnamese farmers are getting over one
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billion dollars in subsidies every year
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thai farmers are getting over four
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billion dollars in their subsidies every
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year
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japanese rice farmers are getting over
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16 billion dollars in rice subsidies
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every year
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and that's the kind of support rice
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farmers need
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infrastructure won't help them right
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civilization will devastate them
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that's a good point but from i know this
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is a very harsh point of view
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but doesn't that or isn't that proof
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that the free that the lazy sphere
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concept works because
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you're now driving or you're now
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producing or
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you have now access to cheaper rice
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which benefits consumers
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and now on the other now if you if
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farming or agriculture is no longer
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viable for farmers
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they now can move on because that's the
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promise you can now move on
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you can now migrate to the city and
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acquire higher paying jobs now
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i know there's an issue on the long term
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with when it comes to food security
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but again from the point of view of the
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individual consumer and you know they
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meet the maybe the government can argue
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the the past and they cannot move on to
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more um
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economically rewarding activities
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i think it's nice to unpack some some
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seemingly intuitive notions
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there um i'll i'll work backwards first
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intuitive notion okay
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it's not profitable to farm i'll move to
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the cities for a higher paying job
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because that's how lazy sphere works
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that is not happening
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why the highest unemployment rates in
00:17:16
the country are in the cities
00:17:18
um the worst urban living condition
00:17:21
living conditions are in our
00:17:22
city urban centers they're congested
00:17:25
they're polluted
00:17:26
they're the social problems of crime and
00:17:28
everything so
00:17:31
we have to disabuse ourselves with an
00:17:33
ocean a farmer who loses work
00:17:35
will have options in the city because
00:17:38
they won't have options in the city we
00:17:39
have a bloated informal sector
00:17:41
with very low paying insecure informal
00:17:44
work
00:17:45
they will not earn more in the cities
00:17:47
they will just bloat the informal sector
00:17:49
they will blow
00:17:50
urban urban unemployment so that's i
00:17:52
think a completely
00:17:54
dodgy thing to claim that the space
00:17:57
farmer has options in the city because
00:17:59
they're not enough options in the city
00:18:01
um second point
00:18:02
um is it okay for inefficient farming to
00:18:06
just let it die
00:18:07
and then let the economy because it's
00:18:09
moving allegedly the capitalist
00:18:11
system is a self-correcting
00:18:13
self-regulating system
00:18:15
again we have to unpack that because
00:18:17
there is a prime of place that should be
00:18:19
given to
00:18:20
food self-sufficiency and it's an
00:18:22
insight that our neighbors
00:18:24
ironically were getting rice from they
00:18:26
realized they realized
00:18:28
if they let the free market operate in
00:18:30
the thigh
00:18:31
vietnamese india and japanese right
00:18:33
industry then if the free market
00:18:35
operates
00:18:36
those industries those sectors will
00:18:38
collapse
00:18:39
so they made a political choice to
00:18:41
subvert the market
00:18:42
for a development end of rice
00:18:44
self-sufficiency
00:18:46
they're subsidizing their rice farmers
00:18:49
because if they were not subsidized the
00:18:50
market would kill them
00:18:52
but there's a political decision we want
00:18:54
a rice industry
00:18:56
even if the market is inefficient and on
00:18:59
balance what's more important
00:19:00
what the market says or what economic
00:19:03
development demands
00:19:04
the political choice should be what
00:19:07
economic development demands people need
00:19:09
it's a wrong political choice
00:19:11
to they fight the market and say
00:19:12
whatever the market says
00:19:14
that's the that's the way to go the
00:19:17
market in the rice industry will say
00:19:20
let it die import the cheap from abroad
00:19:22
at the expense of
00:19:24
short-term transition costs for farmers
00:19:26
at the expense of long-term food
00:19:29
self-insufficiency and food insecurity
00:19:31
that's a political decision it goes
00:19:34
along it cuts across all runs of
00:19:37
economic activity
00:19:39
if for instance again our neighboring
00:19:41
countries
00:19:42
japan china if they chose to
00:19:46
let the market operate in terms of
00:19:48
industrial development
00:19:49
they would not have indices to begin
00:19:51
with they remain backward agricultural
00:19:52
countries
00:19:53
but at their periods of development
00:19:56
their governments intervened in
00:19:57
industrial development
00:19:59
to subsidize their industries to protect
00:20:01
their industries not following what the
00:20:03
market says
00:20:04
hence their industrial powerhouses now
00:20:06
so for us that's such a key concept to
00:20:09
to grasp we've gotten so used to
00:20:11
thinking that what the market says
00:20:14
is going to be correct it's
00:20:15
self-regulating we've gotten so used to
00:20:17
thinking
00:20:18
the only activity worth entering into is
00:20:20
profitable
00:20:21
but that is at the point of the economy
00:20:23
if the point of an economy is to create
00:20:25
enough jobs
00:20:26
enough incomes for the population if the
00:20:28
point for an economy
00:20:30
especially agricultural agriculture
00:20:31
country is to have food security for the
00:20:34
population
00:20:35
the market will not give that on its own
00:20:37
account the market actually
00:20:38
will go in contrary directions hence the
00:20:41
government should step in to regulate it
00:20:43
in a certain way to bring the economy to
00:20:46
development and that's what i think
00:20:47
where the
00:20:48
the third administration and even past
00:20:50
philippine governments have failed
00:20:52
um in the last four decades we've bought
00:20:55
into
00:20:56
the deification of the market what into
00:20:58
this celebration of global
00:21:00
competitiveness and market efficiency
00:21:02
worst of all we've bought into the idea
00:21:04
that the government should not intervene
00:21:06
in national economic development which
00:21:08
should lead to the market
00:21:09
and we are where we are right now with
00:21:11
growth
00:21:13
being very high but not enough jobs with
00:21:16
good with a lot of profits for a few
00:21:19
wealthy families and big corporations
00:21:21
but with the majority
00:21:23
actually still in poverty that is what
00:21:25
the market is delivered and by any
00:21:27
standard
00:21:28
i don't think that's a good development
00:21:29
outcome what the free market has given
00:21:31
us over the last four years four decades
00:21:33
that's actually a very good point thank
00:21:35
you because you were also mentioning
00:21:37
about the role of government
00:21:38
in ensuring i guess competitiveness in a
00:21:41
very lazy
00:21:42
in a very free market economy driven
00:21:44
system
00:21:45
but isn't the government also
00:21:46
intervening in terms of
00:21:48
of government services social services
00:21:50
because that's also part of the promise
00:21:52
promise of the trained law now that it's
00:21:54
not just about infrastructure but also
00:21:56
providing more for education
00:21:58
health services and in a way aren't we
00:22:01
seeing it in terms of the free tuition
00:22:03
policy for state universities and
00:22:05
colleges isn't that a byproduct
00:22:08
as well of a free market economy where
00:22:10
the government
00:22:11
actually just taxes people and then
00:22:15
regurgitates or you know returns no
00:22:17
these
00:22:18
uh it's uh it's funding into the forms
00:22:20
of social service
00:22:22
again let's unpack that a bit first
00:22:25
social services
00:22:26
should never be provided in market terms
00:22:29
so for us
00:22:30
that's a key key notion that we have to
00:22:31
grasp
00:22:33
health and education to some degree even
00:22:35
housing
00:22:37
if the if that's left to the market they
00:22:39
will be too
00:22:40
expensive and inaccessible for too many
00:22:42
people because
00:22:44
they will become more expensive because
00:22:45
there's always going to be a profit
00:22:47
premium put on that
00:22:49
so i think a core notion about social
00:22:51
services the people need it
00:22:53
we cannot leave it to the market and
00:22:54
privatize it because if we commodify
00:22:56
health and education
00:22:58
only those who can afford it will have
00:23:00
it so that's an important point because
00:23:02
that
00:23:02
points to how the government has to over
00:23:06
the long term
00:23:06
be the ones providing in a publicly
00:23:10
funded subsidized manner health
00:23:12
education
00:23:13
housing and all of that so those can't
00:23:16
be left to the market so
00:23:17
point number one point number two where
00:23:20
would the government get the resources
00:23:21
to provide the health education whether
00:23:23
it's universal health care or free
00:23:25
tuition
00:23:25
all of that they should get exactly from
00:23:28
taxation
00:23:29
but should you get it by taxing the poor
00:23:32
or taxing the rich
00:23:33
and that's where the prob our problem is
00:23:35
with a train law it's blackmailing the
00:23:37
poor
00:23:37
to say that you have to pay higher taxes
00:23:39
because they're giving it back to you
00:23:41
that's blackmail because behind that
00:23:43
statement that
00:23:44
if you don't if we don't charge you
00:23:47
higher taxes you won't get your services
00:23:49
then the statement is you're telling the
00:23:51
rich
00:23:52
don't worry you'll be paying less taxes
00:23:55
that's where the problem lies
00:23:56
the government has to generate revenues
00:23:59
for the social services
00:24:01
but it should be the revenue should be
00:24:03
earned
00:24:04
from those have the most ability to pay
00:24:05
that which is the rich
00:24:07
and that is a very problematic notion
00:24:09
for us under terrain law
00:24:11
they are making the rich pay less and
00:24:13
making the poor pay more
00:24:15
on the argument that it gives social
00:24:17
services that's wrong
00:24:19
the rich should pay more so the poor can
00:24:21
have social services
00:24:22
and again that's a political choice
00:24:24
redistribution of wealth
00:24:26
public responsibility for the buddhists
00:24:28
so it doesn't make sense for us
00:24:30
for the richest families and with a
00:24:32
trained package too right now
00:24:33
for the biggest corporations it doesn't
00:24:35
make sense for us that those with the
00:24:37
most ability to pay
00:24:38
will actually end up paying less and
00:24:40
those with the least ability to pay who
00:24:42
will feel every peso they lose
00:24:44
will end up paying more so again that's
00:24:46
i think a key notion
00:24:48
the train law should not be used to
00:24:50
blackmail the poor if anything
00:24:52
the government should make a political
00:24:54
choice those who have the most should
00:24:56
pay the most
00:24:56
those have the least should pay the
00:24:58
least or not paid they can't afford it
00:25:01
so because now we're we're talking about
00:25:04
data now because we're mentioning
00:25:05
the train law and its impact on the
00:25:07
economy while the
00:25:08
well economic data actually shows wealth
00:25:10
is being generated it's not being
00:25:12
equitably distributed
00:25:14
so it means those who actually have more
00:25:16
are getting more
00:25:18
while those who have less pay more for
00:25:20
the services that are that
00:25:22
for that do not necessarily um
00:25:25
meet the requirements now but if that's
00:25:27
the case now if we're not looking at
00:25:29
statistics like gdp gnp
00:25:32
and if that's the case how are we
00:25:34
supposed to a
00:25:36
define what is a humane existence
00:25:38
because
00:25:39
obviously that is now being under no no
00:25:41
under interrogation
00:25:42
because what does it really mean to have
00:25:44
a livable
00:25:45
humane life and next if that is the
00:25:48
perspective what should we really be
00:25:50
measuring what are what should
00:25:52
what data what information should we be
00:25:55
really looking into
00:25:56
and evaluate when determining the if
00:25:58
there is economic growth
00:26:00
if there is upliftment in the lives of
00:26:01
people
00:26:03
i think um human well-being there's so
00:26:05
many dimensions but you know to be a bit
00:26:07
crude about it so can sort of be more
00:26:09
manageable we can talk about the
00:26:10
material aspects of
00:26:12
human welfare it's so basic
00:26:15
for human welfare for a family
00:26:18
to have any minimum standard of welfare
00:26:20
their breadwinners have to have jobs
00:26:23
and those jobs have to be secure and
00:26:24
giving them enough incomes
00:26:26
to provide for the basic needs of daily
00:26:28
life that's one aspect jobs and incomes
00:26:31
second aspect they should have access to
00:26:33
decent social services
00:26:34
education health and housing so i think
00:26:37
in terms of material needs
00:26:38
jobs with enough incomes and social
00:26:42
services
00:26:43
i think that's where the current
00:26:45
administration is
00:26:46
is actually falling far short first we
00:26:49
always stress all the time there's
00:26:51
something wrong with the job data being
00:26:53
presented right now
00:26:55
first it's a fact that we're not
00:26:57
generating enough jobs
00:26:58
um the on average 81 000 annual job
00:27:02
generation the first two years
00:27:04
of the administration that's the worst
00:27:06
job generation in the post-marcos era
00:27:09
unemployment is actually much higher
00:27:10
than officially reported
00:27:12
the official unemployment rate is about
00:27:14
five and a half percent
00:27:16
the official number of unemployed is
00:27:17
only about 2.3 million
00:27:19
but that's because the government has
00:27:21
stopped counting unemployed
00:27:22
filipinos um they made this
00:27:26
sticker definition you had to have been
00:27:28
looking for work in the last six months
00:27:30
and able to do to um
00:27:34
start working at the drop of a pin to
00:27:36
the counter i think you need to be
00:27:38
looking for work
00:27:39
for work and immediately available for
00:27:41
work that's so tricky because by putting
00:27:43
those two new conditions
00:27:45
in the current unemployment statistics
00:27:47
2.3 million filipinos
00:27:49
are jobless but not counted as
00:27:52
unemployed
00:27:52
so that's a problem for us because um
00:27:56
when that definition was was changed in
00:27:58
2005
00:27:59
the government has been using it it
00:28:01
falsely reduces the number of unemployed
00:28:04
falsely reduced the unemployment rate
00:28:06
and gave me the impression that growth
00:28:08
is benefiting the people but i think
00:28:09
that's
00:28:10
so important because you know it's so
00:28:13
normal in a especially market economy
00:28:15
you have to have a job in the earning
00:28:17
to actually be buying your basic
00:28:20
necessities
00:28:21
so on the jobs front there's a big
00:28:23
problem um we're a service economy more
00:28:26
than a producing economy
00:28:27
we're de-industrializing we're not
00:28:29
creating enough jobs
00:28:31
because of the free market framework
00:28:32
we're doing there in terms of wages
00:28:36
productivity is actually increasing
00:28:37
labor productivity has been increasing
00:28:39
for the last two decades
00:28:40
but wages have not been increasing why
00:28:43
are we just not
00:28:44
increasing because they're being taken
00:28:46
as profits
00:28:47
by the owners of capital so the economy
00:28:50
is growing
00:28:51
because productivity is increasing but
00:28:53
the benefits from growth and
00:28:54
productivity
00:28:56
they're not going to the workers higher
00:28:57
wages because the real wages have been
00:28:59
flat for the last
00:29:00
18 years they're going to profits so
00:29:03
that's a problem there
00:29:04
again inequality and also concentrating
00:29:06
wealth on the very
00:29:08
already the very very richest so that's
00:29:11
where the problem is right now
00:29:13
we have an economy by design not
00:29:15
creating enough jobs
00:29:16
an economy by design concentrating
00:29:19
income on the very richest
00:29:21
in an economy even worse now by design
00:29:24
lowering the tax burden on the richest
00:29:26
and extremely taxable and the poor so
00:29:28
even
00:29:29
the social services we're supposed to be
00:29:31
getting
00:29:32
at best we can call them crumbs because
00:29:36
um talking about the free tuition only
00:29:39
half of the population
00:29:40
of the student population at the
00:29:42
tertiary level is actually going to be
00:29:44
benefiting from that
00:29:46
the other half of the tertiary level
00:29:48
population will still be
00:29:49
in private colleges with very very high
00:29:52
tuition
00:29:53
so it's a good step forward the free
00:29:56
tuition and sucs
00:29:58
but still a partial measure to universal
00:30:00
education at a tertiary level
00:30:02
same goes for universal healthcare it
00:30:05
might seem like a good idea to put money
00:30:06
in people's pockets through field health
00:30:08
so they can pay for hospital services
00:30:11
but
00:30:12
if those are privately provided hospital
00:30:14
services with a profit premium
00:30:16
actually you're paying more for
00:30:20
hospital care when you should be because
00:30:24
you've added a profit premium because a
00:30:26
hospital care is provided by a
00:30:28
by a private firm which is
00:30:30
profit-seeking
00:30:31
so but the social level that's a problem
00:30:34
because
00:30:35
health has become a commodity
00:30:36
unnecessarily expensive
00:30:38
instead of being a public publicly
00:30:42
provided social service provided at cost
00:30:44
or better yet subsidized so for us i
00:30:47
think you know we have to unpack some
00:30:49
some deeply held things that have been
00:30:51
that have been told to us about
00:30:53
economic growth jobs incomes and even
00:30:55
social services
00:31:06
[Music]
00:31:18
you