Reviving Cha-cha
>> Monday, July 15, 2013
EDITORIAL
While the clamor from business groups and several international
financial institutions to amend the economic provisions of the 1987
Constitution intensify,Malacanang spokespersons are saying this won’t happen
under the Aquino administration.
As the first regular session of the 16th Congress started,
several powerful lobbying groups – mostly influential business groups and
international institutions urged both chambers of Congress to immediately
resume cha-cha deliberations.
Now, with House Speaker Jose Belmonte espousing cha-cha
to amend economic provisions, this may still be possible through
legislation.
This, as anti-Cha-cha groups like the Kabataan Partylist said
they will oppose cha-cha, saying it would worsen plight of the poor and widen
the economic divide.
They said lifting economic restrictions would only worsen
poverty and inequality in the country.
Ahead of President Benigno Aquino III’s State of the
Nation Address in July 22, at least 13 major business groups including the
Makati Business Club, Employers Confederation of the Philippines, and the
Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry called on the president to pressure
Congress to pass amendments to the Constitution.
“We strongly urge your administration to consider
amending the economic provisions in the 1987 Constitution, which restrict
greater private sector participation,” the groups said in a letter to the
president dated June 19.
The 1987 Constitution sets a 40 percent limit on foreign
ownership of public utilities, land and several key industries.
The main argument of those advocating for the lifting of
constitutional limits to foreign ownership is that it would generate more
foreign direct investments and would stimulate economic growth. However, this
could be the farthest thing from the truth,” according to Rep. Terry Ridon of
Kabataan Partylist.“If we lift the current restrictions, local enterprises and
businesses would suffer due to the unrestrained dominance of foreign investors.
Lifting the economic limits would also open the floodgates for further exploitation
of our country’s scarce natural resources, including forests and mineral
reserves.”
“Generating more foreign direct investments is also not
tantamount to achieving inclusive growth. The country’s experience with foreign
investments in the past decades have shown how it only benefited large
businesses and corporations, but in exchange stunted job generation and the
growth of local industries. This scenario has largely widened the economic
divide between the rich and the poor.”
“If the last remaining legal barriers to foreign
exploitation will be lifted, a great number of Filipinos will become literal
strangers to our own country – penniless mendicants in a nation whose lands and
resources are mostly owned by foreign companies.”
According to anti-cha-cha groups people should not be
fooled by the rosy picture of growth and development painted by businessmen and
tycoons as behind their statements lie more
intensified poverty and exploitation.
It is still three years more of this administration and cha-cha
could still happen – depending on the political mood.
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