Schooled
Karen Davila is earning a lot of flak over
her interview with Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Benjamin Diokno,
which she anchored on the faulty assumption that President Rodrigo Duterte
would be handing to President-elect Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. a bankrupt
government.
Her tone was that of astonishment why
Diokno has agreed to join the Marcos administration as Finance secretary when
he, at least the way Davila saw it, would be presiding over a ship that’s
already sinking before it could sail away from its dock.
(Daily Tribune) |
Typical Davila, she asked whether there’s a
Amiable as always, Diokno pointed out
that Medalla also has a year left in his tenured term in the BSP as its
Monetary Board Representative, and that Marcos did well in choosing him as his
BSP governor on account of his track record and credentials.
There’s no blaming Davila for asking
what to her were hard questions — something that earned her a “thank you” tweet
from defeated senatorial bet Chel Diokno. Except that those were only hard
questions because she did not do her homework as a journalist.
Diokno did not appear at all like a
deer stopped dead on its track from crossing the street under the glare of the
headlights that the broadcaster thought she shone on him. He just proceeded to
destroy the very foundation of her line of questioning.
Even if left unsaid, there seemed to be
an attempt by Davila to liken the Philippines to bankrupt Sri Lanka by blaming
the Duterte administration and the over 31 million Filipinos who voted to make
Marcos the first majority elected president in decades.
To Davila’s,
“I will make it simple, walang pera ang gobyerno (government
has no money),” Diokno said that having served for 30 years under four
presidents, starting with the late Cory Aquino, he has seen all kinds of
crises. “I’ve seen the worst of our economy, but we are in a better position
now,” he said.
“Prior to the Duterte administration,
we were heavily indebted and had a hard time arguing with the IMF
(International Monetary Fund). Before, our foreign reserves will only last for
two months at most, but with the Duterte administration, we have at least nine
months’ worth of import reserves,” Diokno pointed out.
“Currently, we do not have a problem
with paying our debts, which are mostly domestic than foreign, and we are a net
contributor to the IMF,” he added. “The Duterte administration has the best tax
structure than the previous admins that can help the Marcos leadership.”
By pointing out that the Philippines is
a net contributor to the IMF, Diokno shot down the favorite line of government
critics that he had buried the country in debt. As a net contributor, it meant
that the Philippines has never had a problem under Duterte in meeting its
obligations, thus the country’s good credit rating and readily available credit
line for such life-saving expenditures like vaccines against Covid-19.
That’s not the case in past
administrations, said Diokno, when the country had to “beg” lenders like the
IMF. The Duterte government has been paying its debts with money that the IMF,
in turn, is using to provide loans to other countries.
The country’s debt payments, it should
be pointed out based on Diokno’s explanation, are not at the expense of the
Duterte administration’s provision of services, and its infrastructure projects
under “Build, Build, Build” have created jobs and propped the purchasing power
of Filipinos despite the pandemic.
Diokno said that while the Noynoy
Aquino government left infrastructure projects hanging by using only two
percent of the country’s gross domestic products (GDP), the Duterte
administration spent five to six percent of GDP on infrastructure undertakings.
He said the outgoing administration has
given Filipinos roads, bridges and better airports and seaports “that boost our
international trading.” He said, “Build, Build, Build” “created jobs” and
expanded the country’s “capacity to gain economic growth.”
Why would Diokno not join the Marcos
government? As he pointed out, the country’s economic growth hit 8.3 percent in
the first quarter despite a “surge” in Covid cases in January. For him, there
are challenges like propping laggards like agriculture, but the future looks
good overall with the spadework done by the Duterte government. Those who want
the next government to fail may be in for another big disappointment.
The Daily Tribune
May 31, 2022
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