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The Philippine Economy: Policies for the 21st Century, Recent Performances and Prospects

It is my pleasure to be invited to speak before the distinguished teachers and students of the Ateneo de Davao University on its first Economic Forum sponsored by the Economics Society.

Today, I will discuss the economic policy choices of the Macapagal-Arroyo administration, what these policies have yielded in terms of the recent performance of the economy, and prospects for this year and next.

When the Administration took over in January 2001, it inherited several fundamental weaknesses.

Following the political shocks brought about by the involvement of former President Estrada in the illegal numbers game jueteng, business and consumer confidence deteriorated, resulting in high interest and inflation rates, and severe weakening of the peso against the US dollar. The immediate challenge was to restore macroeconomic stability and convince investors that the government was committed to long-term policies for growth with equity.

The Policies of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo

Under the leadership of President Macapagal-Arroyo, a deficit-reduction program was put in place aimed at reducing interest and inflation rates, and stabilizing the peso-dollar exchange rate.

In addition, long delayed structural reforms were pursued. This resulted in the enactment of the Electric Power Industry Reform Act and the Anti-Money Laundering Law.

In her first State of the Nation Address, the President laid down her vision: eliminate poverty within the decade.

This calls for a comprehensive set of economic and social policies that are now spelled out in the Medium-Term Philippine Development Plan for 2001-2004.

The Plan has four key elements:
1. Macroeconomic stability with equitable growth based on free enterprise;
2. Agriculture and fisheries modernization with social equity;
3. Comprehensive human development and protecting the vulnerable; and
4. Good governance and the rule of law.

In only 19 months in office, the administration has laid down the foundation for creating prosperity within reach of every Filipino. Our countrymen, imbued with hard work and ingenuity, are responding positively to the policies of the Administration.

Recent Economic Performance

I will now present a report on the performance of the economy in 2001 until the first quarter of 2002. I will also describe the prospects for the rest of 2002 until next year. An update on the on-going projects here in Region XI will cap my presentation.

The year 2001 is one that many countries all over the world would want to forget. Far too many shocks with unwanted consequences occurred: (1) the retrenchment of the high-technology sector; and (2) the terrorist attacks in the US on 11 September 2001.

Fortuitously, the Philippine economy managed to overcome these shocks. Overall, the Philippine economy is healthy and strong Last year, it posted one of the highest output growth rates in the region.

Aggregate Performance 2001-2002

After a mild slowdown in 2001 following the severe slump in the technology sector and the delayed recovery of the US economy due to the September 11 attack, the economy strengthened in the first quarter of 2002, with gross domestic product (GDP) adjusted for inflation expanding by 3.8 percent from last year’s 2.9 percent.

Gross national product (GNP), which takes into account net factor incomes from abroad like the overseas workers’ income remittance, rose 4.9 percent as the country paid less in property expense due to lower interest on foreign debt (see fig. 1).

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Sectoral Performance 2001-Q12002

The recovery was broad-based, with growth accelerating across all sectors. Services led all sectors from a year ago, on account of the robust performance of telecommunications, trade, and private services. Agriculture expanded by 4.4 percent as favorable weather and the government support for Agriculture and Fisheries Modernization Act boosted production in crops, fishery, livestock, and poultry. Industry also recovered, led by rising production in consumer-durable sectors and the rebound in exports (see fig. 2).

Domestic and Foreign Demand

Growth was domestically driven, as personal consumption spending remained healthy while private construction accelerated. Strong domestic demand offset the decline in net exports arising from the lingering impact of the slump in the technology sector. In the second quarter, however, the indicators so far show a rebound in net exports (see fig 3).

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Gross Domestic Product: Annual Percent Change

Growth so far compares well with our neighbor in the region. As of the first quarter of 2002, the Philippine economic performance was ahead of Malaysia and Indonesia but slightly lower than Thailand (see Table 1).

Employment

About 1.3 million jobs were created as of April 2002. The bulk of the new jobs generated were in services and agriculture as shown in fig 4.

GDP-Region XI. 2001-2002

The healthy pace of economic expansion in the country a year ago is also seen in the modest improvement of Region XI’s economy. In 2001, the Davao region (Region XI) grew 2.1 percent. Davao Region is one of the country’s most progressive regions. It ranks 1st among Mindanao regions, accounting for 34.2 percent of Mindanao output, and 6th nationwide, accounting for a 5.6 percent share in the Gross Domestic Product (see fig. 5).

Gross Value Added by Sector

The services sector accounts for the largest share of the region’s GRDP (44%), with its trading activities contributing about nearly one-half of the sector’s output (44.1%).

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Thirty percent (30°,1)) of the region’s output comes from agriculture. It is the second largest contributor to agricultural production in the country, next to Region IV. It also has the 6th largest output in both services and industry sectors among all regions in the country (see fig. 6).

The Region’s Major Exports

Davao Region is noted for its high quality agricultural products which are among the region’s major exports. Banana is the top export of the region followed by pineapple, oil cake and other residue, yellow fin tuna, mixture of fruit preserves and natural rubber.

Among the region’s top 10 exports are non-agricultural products such as activated carbon and Portland cement.

Japan, China and the USA are the region’s major export markets. New and promising markets include Palau for Portland cement and New Zealand for its fruit preserves (see table 2).

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Leading Indicators for Second Quarter Growth

The momentum of growth of the country in the first quarter appears to have firmed up in the second quarter, based on the latest indicators. We are expecting the release of official data on national income accounts this last week of August.

The economy has been off to a good start in 2002. Favorable macroeconomic conditions augur well for a stronger recovery in consumer and investment demand. Inflation has been on the downtrend since January 2001 on account of the adequate supply of agricultural commodities, generally stable world oil prices, and recent change on electricity pricing. The falling inflation rate and the prudent borrowing strategy of the administration has also led to 91-day T-bill rates that are lower than a year-ago levels. Monetary policy, meanwhile, has made price stability its main goal. At the same time, the exchange rate system in place is flexible, allowing the peso to stabilize given the anti-inflationary stance of monetary policy and the fiscal discipline of the Administration.

The low interest rate environment has perked up the housing sector. The number of building permits granted in the first quarter of 2002 rose 16.3 percent, while value increased 56.3 percent. About 70 percent of the building permits issued are for residential purposes.

Our trade sector has also rebounded strongly. Exports remain dominated by electronic equipment and parts. The pick-up in both exports and domestic production has led to rising imports.

With the favorable domestic and external environment, the manufacturing sector has become more upbeat. Based on the results of the Monthly Integrated Survey of Selected Industries (MISSI) in May 2002, volume of production rose by 10.6 percent.

Notwithstanding the dry weather which precedes the onset of an El Niño, the agriculture sector expanded 2.5 percent in the second quarter leading to a first semester growth of 3.2 percent. The delayed rainfall affected palay production in the second quarter (-4.9%) and corn (-6.1%). However, there was an expansion in high value crops such as onion and cassava, as farmers shifted production to these crops. Livestock (3.1%), poultry (2.0°/o) and fishery (5.5%) posted strong growths (see table 3).

Other indicators such as Meralco sales and appliance sales also indicate that the economic recovery firmed up in the second quarter.

Business confidence has also improved in Region XI.

From January to July 2002, the total value of projects registered with BOI-Region XI reached P135 million from zero in the same period last year.

The projects registered in this period include the export of banana chips by: (a) Tropical Synergy in Davao City (P45 million); (b) GSL Enterprises in Davao del Sur (P45 million); and (c) Lucas International in Davao City (P45 million).

Moreover, BOI XI has received initial applications in the following investment areas: Landline expansion by Davao Telephone Company (DATELCO) in Tagum City (P200 million) and; Vapor Heat Treatment (VHT) expansion by DOLE-Tropi -Fresh Co, in Panabo City (P267 million). These represent the potential BOI registrants in the region for the second half of the year.

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Let me now discuss the prospects for 2002-2003.

Barring a renewed recession or a severe slowdown in the US economy, growth forecast for the rest of the year and 2003 remain cautiously optimistic. GDP growth, adjusted for inflation, is expected to grow 4.0-4.5 percent in 2002 and GNP by 4.5-5.0 percent. Growth is expected to accelerate to 5.0-5.5 percent in 2003 (see table 4).

Agriculture will post a slightly lower growth with El Niño, affecting the sector in the last quarter of 2002 to mid 2003. Services will continue to lead growth, as domestic demand continue to favor telecommunication, trade, and private services. Industry will grow at a faster pace, lifted by the continuing recovery in manufacturing and private construction, assuming that external demand conditions remain favorable to exports.

Prospects for 2002-2003: Domestic demand

Private consumer demand is expected to remain firm in 2002 as inflation remains modest. The continued remittance of overseas foreign workers (OFWs) and better labor market conditions will also continue to prop up domestic consumption.

Private construction demand is expected to pick up in 2002, given the low interest rate environment. Private construction is seen expanding robustly in 2003 pulled up by higher demand for housing. Housing is seen to pick up with the implementation of measures in housing finance such as that of the Home Guaranty corporation for low-cost housing The passage of the Special Purpose Asset Vehicle Act (SPAV) will also increase the resources available for the investment spending (see table 5).

Prospects for 2002-2003: Global Environment

A major risk to growth is the threat of a possible double-dip recession in the US in 2002-2003. However, the diversification of Philippine exports to the fast-growing Asian market, including China, increases the resiliency of the Philippine economy against a slowdown in the US economy.

China offers opportunities, evident from the fact that it is now in the top ten destination list of Philippine exports (see table 6).

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Prospects for 2002-2003: Domestic Environment

Macroeconomic stability remains crucial in ensuring strong domestic demand. Keeping a modest deficit relative to GDP is important in moderating domestic interest rates and in tempering inflationary expectations.

Barring extreme shocks to the economy and in line with the shift to inflation targeting, inflation is expected to remain tame in 2003 at 4.5 percent. The forecast is also conditioned on a moderate increase in the peso-dollar exchange rate (from P50-51 in 2002 and P51-52 in 2003); modest increases in global oil prices; and on measures to mitigate the impact of a mild El Niño on food supply (see table 7).

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Sustained growth and stability will also depend on structural reforms that will firm up business confidence and further improve the efficiency of the production sectors.

The cost of doing business is expected to decline with the rationalization of Independent Power Producers (IPP) contracts and with the implementation of the Electricity Power Industry Reform Act (EPIRA) and passage of the Transco bill. The Special Purpose Asset Vehicle (SPAN) bill will pave the way for greater lending to the corporate sector while strengthening the banking sector’s balance sheets. Finally, tax reforms that aim to improve the buoyancy of the tax system will enable the government to increase its investments in education, health, housing, agriculture, basic infrastructure, and peace and order. Recent moves such as the filing of charges against 300 VAT tax evaders and the Administration’s priority to reduce criminality are seen to boost investor morale.

The government remains committed to the development of Region XI. Thus, the following strategies shall be pursued for the next two and half years:

1. hasten agriculture and fisheries modernization
2. enhance the environment for further access in the global market
3. construct major roads, bridges and farm to market roads, and
4. set up mechanisms to improve, as well as expand the delivery of basic services and upgrade educational and health facilities.

Major Public Investment Programs and Projects

In support of the region’s development objectives, the government is currently implementing official development assistance (ODA) and locally funded programs and projects in the region to address its requirement in terms of infrastructure, human development services, agricultural development and agrarian reform, among others. There are two ongoing ODA projects in the region, namely: Davao International Airport Development Project and Construction and Equipping of the Davao Medical Center.

The Davao International Airport Development Project involves the upgrading of the Davao International Airport to International Civil Aviation Organization Standards at the existing site. This includes the upgrading and extension of existing runway; widening and grading of the landing strip; construction of dual access taxiway; the construction of new passenger terminal, cargo terminal and other airport operations, maintenance and air traffic control facilities. The project costs P4.2 billion and is being implemented by the Department of Trade and Commerce (DOTC), with support from the Asian Development Bank (ADB). The airport project supports the vision to further deepen the participation of Region XI in the national and international markets.

The Construction and Equipping of the Davao Medical Center aims to provide products and services necessary for the construction of the outpatient building; equipment necessary for the execution of the project and services thereof; and other services necessary for the transportation of these products. The project costs P860 million and is being implemented by the Davao City Government, with support from the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA).

In addition, there are also on-going ODA infrastructure projects in support of the region’s development. These are the following:

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Continuing Challenges

At this point, let me acknowledge that the Philippines still faces several challenges, including reducing poverty incidence and unemployment rate.

However, a commitment to policies known to be working will be of great help.

These policies enhance the long-run prospects of the economy. Macroeconomic policies to ensure stability. Structural reforms aimed at raising the economy’s competitiveness. Good governance and rule of law to improve quality of life and investors’ confidence.

I am confident that the economy’s performance under the administration of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo brings greater hope for the future of the Philippine economy and that of Region XI than two years ago.

The support of all Filipinos, particularly the people of Mindanao and Region XI are key in transforming these policies into actual improvements in the people’s lives, especially those of the poor.

Thank you and good day.

Prospects for strategic economic alliance between the U.S and the Philippines

The purpose of these remarks is to review some of the more important economic issues faced by the Philippines since independence. In undertaking this review I consider it desirable to highlight differences between American and Filipino perceptions of the issues or the policies required to deal with them. Second, it will be helpful to suggest some promising areas of bilateral strategic alliances where these two countries can cooperate on new policy areas for mutual economic benefit.

Foreign Trade and GDP Growth

In the early years of independence the Philippines chose an import substitution growth strategy which both focused on the development of indigenous industry and was highly interventionist in implementation. This was a widely accepted strategy among economists of that era, and did in fact provide the country with very satisfactory GDP growth rates for a little over a decade, i.e. until the early 1960s. But it had to be abandoned-albeit gradually, and some would say, grudgingly. A major problem with import substitution was that it tended to stultify growth in foreign trade. But as Philippine economic history makes abundantly clear, periods of rapid export growth (e.g. the second half of the nineteenth century and the first quarter of the twentieth)- are also the periods of most rapid GDP growth. Controversely, the periods of sluggish export growth – e.g. the 1930, and the 1980s – usually represent periods of stagnation in GDP growth.

Given these facts, there is nevertheless a difference in perceptions of trade and as an overall growth strategy. Americans have generally favored free trade along with an open economy. Filipinos on the other hand have been concerned with the aspect of “foreign domination” attendant with an open economy posture, along with the vulnerability that goes along with dependence on one or a few foreign (country) markets.

These approaches to trade and growth are not mutually exclusive provided each party observes certain critical guideposts in policy design. On the American side the requirement is that the U.S. will continue to support Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) and the smooth inauguration of World Trade Organization (WTO) rules. Thus will be phased out some of the trade barriers most opposed by countries like the Philippines (e.g. textiles under the multi-fibre agreement). Above all, if America decides that the pace of trade liberalization or the resolution of trade conflicts through organizations like WTO and APEC are not satisfactory, she shouted not proceed to adopt retaliatory policies such as those outlined under Super 301 or unilateral action by the United States Trade Representative (USTR).

On the Philippines’ side, the country will have to remain open to foreign investment. In addition, it should look forward to the development of a growing domestic market as an additional source of demand growth – as Japan and Korea have demonstrated. To accomplish this, more attention must be given to improved income distribution. In the Philippines, the income gains from trade have not been distributed widely, and domestic markets remain very narrow. I estimate that the real wage rate of unskilled workers was constant from 1848 to 1941, and fell by about 30 percent between 1941 and 1980. (MacMicking. 1848; Joint Philippine-American Finance Committee, 1946; Central Bank of the Philippines, 1980). In other words, all the increased per capita purchasing power for the past 130 years has gone to the a wealthy elite and to a fairly narrow middle class located in the major. cities. Obviously, production for the local domestic market has very limited real growth potential in these circumstances. A shift in income distribution is essential. One way to achieve this is to focus on raising agricultural exports and productivity which will stimulate real income growth in the rural areas (Derosa and Bautista, 1996). Another would be to monitor wage bargaining practices more closely in an effort to improve competition in the labor market.

Infrastructure for Development

It is widely agreed that development requires the creation of an infrastructure – both physical and human capital – for successful development. The size and quality of this infrastructure go a long way toward determining the rate of output growth. In the Philippines, the Commonwealth government laid down the basis for an expanded infrastructure. During the first four decades of this century government services increased by about twelve times. Much of this increase was in the areas of education and public health. By 1950 the Philippines was far out in front of other Southeast Asian nations in terms of educational levels and declining mortality rates. During independence, expansion of this human services thrust has continued, although at a somewhat reduced rate because of the country’s fiscal policy logjam.

In the area of physical infrastructure, the record is mixed. Expansion of irrigation – on which agricultural productivity so heavily depends – has seen essentially two periods of rapid expansion during the past century. The first was undertaken by the American government in response to a major rice crisis in 1910. Rice imports, which had been growing steadily during the 1890s and early 1900s, reached a level of nearly 25 percent of total imports between 1910 and 1912. The American administration, eager to balance the Philippine external accounts and to insure its own fiscal solvency and to head off popular unrest, embarked on an extensive irrigation program. This program, which started with construction of the San Miguel works on the Pampanga River and culminated with the Angat project in Cagayan, raised the productivity of agriculture and reduced rice imports to a trickle by 1920. However, little additional work was done on the further expansion of irrigation under the American regime, and indeed during the first two decades of Philippine independence. Then in the early 1970s the threat of a rice crisis once again loomed on the economic horizon. And, just as had occured 50 years before, it prompted political leaders to take action – this time with World Bank Whelp. The result was similar: rice imports not only declined but the country actually became a rice exporter by the next decade.

These two episodes show what can be done when politics experiences the firm pressure of economic reality and when the political leaders clearly understand the connection between the two. In the immediate future, the Philippines will continue to benefit from continued attention to water control. However. there are limits to the effectiveness of this strategy. The country will eventually find it necessary to look to more inventive strategies to raise agricultural productivity. In this effort cooperation with U.S. and ASEAN in the development of regional research centers will probably turn out to be an important component of the solution.

The Financial System

The major function of any financial system is to generate savings. Saving is performed by households, businesses and by the government. The volume of savings determines the volume of investment or capital formation. A rapid rate of capital formation increases worker productivity, which in turn makes a country’s products more competitive worldwide, and at the same time providing the basis for an increase in real wages. At the present time, the financial sector in the Philippines is extremely weak. The nation’s saving rate of around 16 percent is the lowest in Southeast Asia (where the average is above 30 percent), and one of the lowest among developing countries in Asia. The weakness is particularly evident in the extremely low rate of household savings and the low level of government fiscal revenues and savings.

A major reason for the low national saving rate is the weakness of the banking system. Mismanagement and pirating of the banking system during 1970s and 1980s led to insolvency of a number of domestic institutions and growing mistrust of banks by depositors. The result was that Filipino households either invested their savings in tangibles like construction and real estate or moved money to foreign institutions. This situation can only be corrected by opening up the financial sector to foreign investment – a move that has already been taken. Foreign investors applaud this policy. Many Filipinos, on the other hand, worry about the influence of a few foreign countries on a vital sector of the national economy. But the reality is that Filipino banks were so badly undercapitalized that no feasible alternative was really available.

A second reason for the low rate of Philippine savings is the weakness of fiscal policy. Fiscal policy involves the structure of taxes, the level of government revenues, government expenditures and the size of the government surplus or deficit. In most rapidly growing Southeast Asian nations, the government runs a surplus, at least in some years. This contributes to the national saving rate: For example, if the private sector saves 20 percent of national income and the government runs a surplus equal to 4 percent of national income, the national saving rate is 24 percent. But if the government runs a deficit of 4 percent, the national saving rate drops from 24 to 16 percent. The expansion of fiscal revenues and improvement in the allocation of government expenditures is absolutely essential to raising the growth rate of saving and ultimately income, in the Philippines. The weakness of the domestic financial system is one of the main reasons for the failure of Philippine growth to ‘catch up” with other SEA nations. What is happening now is that households prefer to invest in construction and real estate speculation, leading eventually to an oversupply structures. Meanwhile, capital investment in machinery and other non-construction items is sorely neglected, keeping works productivity low. The base for exports continues to be cheap labor, as opposed to efficient labor.

Fiscal reform is the gordian knot of Philippine development. It has a long history. When the American Insular government took charge in the early 1900s, it was faced with a fiscal system inherited from Spain which generated not more than 4-5 percent of GDP in government revenues. Originally. the Taft administration planned on a program of American private investment and increased foreign trades which would be taxed to augment the Insular government finances. When Taft’s program became stalled in the U.S. Congress, Taft turned to a “free trade” program in which Philippine exports would enter the U.S. duty-free and American products coming to the Philippines would also be free of duty. But pursuit of this policy created a fiscal dilemma because the existing system depended heavily on taxation of imports and exports, as well as on the cedula or head-tax. With a deficit facing the American Insular government, a new tax system was hastily dawn up (Hord, 1907). In its essentials, the new system put much greater reliance on internal taxes, particularly excise taxes on the production and trade in specific commodities, like alcohol and tobacco. However, it did not produce any change with regard to income taxes. Nor did it deal effectively with real estate taxes. This latter was an egregious omission in view of the fact that sugar production and exports were now heavily subsidized by the American consumer. The net upshot was that although the American revision of the Philippine fiscal system raised government revenue to about 7 percent, the system had little of what economists call elasticity. That is, government revenues as a percent of GDP grew only slowly.

The newly independent Philippines inherited this fiscal system, and although some changes were made, fiscal revenues have continued to exhibit a low growth elasticity. Philippine government revenues as a percent of GDP continue to be among the lowest in Southeast Asia, and only half that of rapidly growing countries like Malaysia (not to mention high-performers like Singapore). The solution to this century-old fiscal logjam is not only a radical revision of the tax system, but also a streamlining of the government expenditure structure – both parts absolutely essential for significant acceleration in GDP growth. Some headway has been made by privatization which has the effect of paring down the government expenditure side. Still, there remain areas of activity in the production of public goods where the participation of government is essential. A fundamental revision of the fiscal system will require a massive domestic political effort. But it is not impossible. Political action on rice production took place when the country’s leaders looked down the barrel of an economic crisis. Today, the crisis is equally pressing. The task is to make clear the relationship between growth, real wages and financial sector reform. In this effort multilateral institutions such as the IMF or the ADB may be helpful in the planning stage. But ultimately design and implementation rest squarely with Filipino leaders.

Foreign Exchange Rates

The Philippine economy is.highly sensitive to the foreign exchange rate. The country’s economic history is replete with examples of GDP growth effects resulting from changes in the value of the peso. When, in the last decades of the nineteenth century, the peso declined in value from $1 to approximately $0.45 by 100, Philippine exports expanded rapidly. Again, when the U.S. dollar was devalued in 1934 (and along with it the peso which was fixed to the dollar), an export boom of historic proportions in the mining industry was ushered in which lasted until World War II (Hooley, 1996). Other examples in more recent years could be added: But the point is that the foreign exchange rate is and always has been a major determinant of GDP growth in this country.

In the past, the peso has been anchored to the dollar. In the future, the exchange rate of the peso vis-a vis other currencies is now becoming increasingly important. The reason is the growth in Asia Pacific Trade. Some countries in the region (e.g. Indonesia) follow a policy of a crawling peg which slowly but steadily depreciates the rupiah. When the peso does not depreciate, or if it appreciates, as it has done recently, this confers a competitive advantage to Indonesian exports. It also provides Indonesia with a larger share of other economic benefits, such as increased employment for example. As Asia Pacific trade expands, increased attention will have to be given to the creation of some kind of band of exchange rates, although possibly a rather flexible band. This is a task the Philippines and the U.S. can cooperate on, and indeed will require close cooperation if trade in the region is going to continue its rapid expansion. The dollar may still remain the anchor currency for Pacific Rim countries, but the relationship of other countries’ currencies to the dollar and to each other will become the focus of more sophisticated multilateral arrangements. In the task to sort out a new exchange rate system, the possibilities for mutual cooperation and benefits -is great for both America and the Philippines.

Defense

This last area is one of the most promising for Filipino-American cooperation. We all know that the old system of insuring international security in the Philippines (and Southeast _Asia) which was organized around the U.S. bases at Clark Field and Subic has ended. What we do not yet know is the kind of system that will take its place.

First, let the obvious be said. Continued growth in Asia Pacific trade can only take place within the context of a stable insecurity system embracing all nations in the region. It was the absence of such a system that thwarted the resuscitation of trade growth in the late 1930s and led eventually to the outbreak of World War II. In those years, there were a series of meetings in London and Geneva among the great powers which-tried to establish a workable security agreement. These efforts ended in failure. Nowhere was the failure more evident than in the Western Pacific which, in effect, invited adoption of aggressive naval and military postures by ambitious leaders.

The situation today is different, but also dangerous. On the one hand, the danger of nuclear war has declined. Confrontation between Russia and the U.S. in Asia has actually shifted toward cooperation – as evident by the growth of trade and investment between Eastern Siberia and Alaska. On the other hand, the “great powers” have much less control over developments in this area than they once did. And while many countries in the world have substantially reduced military spending as a percent of GDP, the reduction in -Asia is only minimal, and some countries in the Asia Pacific region have actually increased the share of GDP going to the military. In dollar terms, Asian countries’ military spending between 1990 and 1995 increased by $15 billion, with $9 billion of the total accounted for by the newly industrializing countries. This military build-up, along with the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, creates new potential for the flare-up of conflicts’ along the east coast of the Asia mainland – from the Kurile Islands to the Spratleys to the Archipelago region of Southeast Asia.

The serious threat here is the loss of control by the larger nations. A promising way to deal with the situation is to shift to a multilateral security strategy. It should be the goal to include in a new organization all the important powers in the region and especially those states on whose territories conflicts have or are likely to break out. There is tremendous potential for cooperation between the Philippines and America in the creation and functioning of such a multilateral security strategy. Both would benefit handsomely from increased security in the region. Both have potentially unique contributions to make toward success of such a strategy. Both have a comparative advantage in the pursuit of such a course of action by virtue of their present international positions.