Why was Duterte was chosen as president”
>> Friday, May 20, 2016
EDITORIAL
It is a
foregone conclusion that Rodrigo "the Punisher" Duterte will be the
country's next president. Why have Filipinos chosen him and what does it mean
for the economy?
From an economic standpoint, it's hard to understand what Filipinos have
seen in Duterte's plans for the country.
For one thing, he doesn't appear to have any - and if he does, he certainly
didn't talk about them in his election rallies, according to analysts. But to
be fair to him, neither did any of the other candidates, or not very much at
least.
An article by BBC Asia business writer Karishmas Vaswani says the Philippines is one of the "rising
tigers" of South East Asia, clocking an average of 6% growth over the last
few years under President Aquino's administration.
Foreign direct investment has quadrupled, tax collection has improved
and at least 4 million new jobs have been created - admittedly far too few in a
country of 102 million people.
Vaswani says people she spoke to and on the markets told her they
weren't feeling the benefits of that growth, and that they were fed up with the
status quo.
“Just imagine for a moment if you can, what it must feel like to sit in
the back of a dilapidated and creaking train for two hours to get to your
office, and then to be paid just enough so your family doesn't go hungry, only
to fight your way back on to that train at the end of your day and sit for
another two hours to get home.
Imagine, if you can, what a life spent overseas saving up money for your
family back home must feel like when you return, only to find that your
marriage has broken down and your kids don't recognize you?
“Or to run into a cop at a street corner, and know that the only way out
of a lengthy ordeal at the police station is to pay a quick bribe so that you
won't be late for work? And then imagine the anger, the frustration and the
resentment you might feel if you looked at the sprawling malls and tinted
air-conditioned cars and saw that there was a very clear economic divide in
this democratic country - the haves, and the have-nots, the folks who can get
out of paying bribes because of their connections, and those who have no
choice. Imagine all of that, and then you'll understand why Mr
Duterte is the front-runner in this race.”
The statistics are stark, and bleak. Experts say anywhere between 40%
and 80% of Philippine legislators are connected to political dynasties with
vested interests. A handful of the families control almost all of the country's
wealth.
And perhaps the bleakest, starkest statistic of all: 25% of the
population lives under the poverty line - a figure that hasn't changed much in
two decades.
So it shouldn't come as a surprise then that Filipinos have chosen
Duterte's crime-busting, tough-talking, action-oriented ways over the current administration's candidate
Manuel Roxas.
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