Showing posts with label disaster. Show all posts
Showing posts with label disaster. Show all posts

Losing a World Heritage Site

Filipinos refer to the rice terraces in Banaue as the eighth wonder of the world. The site – the most extensive network of terraced rice paddies in Asia – failed to make it to the new Seven Wonders of the World, officially proclaimed recently. But the rice terraces are in the list of World Heritage Sites drawn up by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization.

Now even that classification may be withdrawn. A recent report said Unesco may take the Banaue rice terraces out of its list of World Heritage Sites if the rice paddies continue to deteriorate. Unesco also noted the presence of structures that are not supposed to be within the heritage site and the apparent lack of a sustainable tourism program.

Local officials in Ifugao province have downplayed the possible loss of its Unesco classification. But the possible withdrawal of the classification cannot be taken lightly. In recent years other groups have expressed concern over the deterioration of the Banaue rice terraces. Though the site remains one of the country’s top tourist destinations, there has been little improvement in the tourism infrastructure in the area, from the two roads leading to the site to the accommodations and telecommunications facilities.

This could be the terraces caretakers’ idea of preserving the natural state of the site. But the terraces themselves are the ones that should be preserved; the surrounding areas can use some upgrading. The terraces themselves, however, are deteriorating. An infestation of giant worms eroded the terraces. Because of the low yield of the paddies and the lack of support to market the fragrant mountain rice, young Ifugaos were reported to be abandoning their farms to seek livelihood opportunities elsewhere.

In other countries, the rice harvested from a World Heritage Site would have been marketed worldwide as a gourmet variety at premium prices. The profits from tilling the terraced fields plus the tourism revenue would have guaranteed that the next generations of Ifugaos would have a stake in preserving their precious environment. It is not yet too late to do this in a site that is a source of national pride.

All fall down: 10 years after the Asian financial crisis

Ten years after the Asian financial cataclysm of 1997, the economies of the Western Pacific Rim are growing, though not at the rates they enjoyed before the crisis. There is no doubt that the region has been indelibly scarred by the crisis, the key indices being greater poverty, inequality, and social destabilization than existed before the crisis. South Korea’s painful labor market reforms, for instance, have produced the quiet desperation that is resulting in one of the highest suicide rates among developed countries.

What global financial architecture?

Meantime, despite all the talk about a “new global financial architecture,” there is little in place to regulate the massive movements of capital shooting through global financial networks at cyberspeed.

Leave-it-to-the-market enthusiasts tell us not to worry and confidently point out that there’s been no major crisis since the Argentine bankruptcy in 2002, but people who know better, like Wall Street insider Robert Rubin, who served as Bill Clinton’s Secretary of the Treasury, are very worried even as they resist regulation:

“Future financial crises are almost surely inevitable and could be even more severe. The markets are getting bigger, information is moving faster, flows are larger, and trade and capital markets have continued to integrate… It’s also important to point out that no one can predict in what area -- real estate, emerging markets, or whatever else -- the next crisis will occur.” A recent study by the Brookings Institution confirms Rubin’s fears: There have been over a hundred financial crises over the last thirty years.

The reign of finance capital

The amounts of speculative capital sloshing around in global financial circuits are truly mind-boggling. According to McKinsey Global Institute, the global stock of “core financial assets” stood at $140 trillion in 2005. Traditional commercial banks held a significant amount of global financial assets, but non-bank financial operators, which have become important intermediaries between savers and investors, accounted for $46 trillion in 2005, hedge funds for $1.6 trillion, and private equity investors about $600 billion.

These figures and other data on the stupefying rise and scale of global finance capital were presented by economist C.P. Chandrasekhar at the conference “A Decade After: Recovery and Adjustment since the East Asian Crisis” held in Bangkok, the epicenter of the 1997 financial earthquake, on July 12-14.

The explosive growth of finance capital is seen by some analysts as stemming from the overcapacity that is plaguing the global economy. This has resulted in a marked slowdown in investment in major parts of the global economy, with notable exceptions like China and the US.

With stagnation, capitalists are less motivated to invest in more productive capacity and have more incentive to move their money to speculative activity, that is, to try to squeeze more value out of already created value.

This is indicated by the fact that the ratio of global financial assets has risen from 109 percent in 1980 to 316 percent in 2005, according figures from the McKinsey Instituted cited by Financial Times columnist Martin Wolf.

Speculative activity as a mode of profit-making has also outran trade, with the daily volume of foreign exchange transactions in international markets standing at $1.9 trillion daily, compared with $9.1 trillion of trade in goods and services a year -- that is, speculative activity in a single day amounted to 20 percent of the annual value of global trade!

Martin Wolf, one of the cheerleaders of globalization, captures today’s power relations among the fractions of global capital when he writes: “The new financial capitalism represents the triumph of the trader in assets over the long-term producer.”

Ten years after the IMF and the US put the blame for the crisis on the alleged non-transparency of financial transactions in Asian countries, opaqueness is the order of the day when it comes to global finance, as the movements and mutations of speculative capital have outrun the capacity of national and multilateral regulatory authorities.

In addition to traditional credit, stocks, and bonds, new, esoteric financial instruments such as derivatives have exploded on the financial scene. Derivatives represent the financialization or the buying or selling of risk of an underlying asset without trading the asset itself. Today risk on everything can be financialized and traded, from the pace of carbon trading to the rate of internet broadband connections to weather predictions.

Paralleling the emergence of more complex instruments has been the rise of hedge funds and private equity funds as the most dynamic players in the global casino. Hedge funds, said to be key villains in the Asian financial crisis, are even more freewheeling now.

Now numbering over 9,500, hedge funds take short and long positions on a variety of investments, with a view to minimizing overall risk and maximizing profits. Private equity funds target firms with the end in view of controlling them, restructuring them, then selling them for a profit.

Accumulating reserves as a defensive strategy

With the absence of global financial regulation to tame the whirlwind of global finance, the Asian countries have taken measures to defend themselves from the volatile global speculators that brought down their economies by pulling $100 billion in panic from their economies in a few fateful weeks during the summer of 1997.

The ASEAN countries have banded with China, South Korea, and Japan to form the “ASEAN+3” financial grouping that will enable member countries to swap reserves in the event their currencies are targeted by speculators, as they were in 1997.

Even more important, they have built up massive financial reserves by running massive trade surpluses, an objective they have achieved by keeping their currencies undervalued.

Between 2001 and 2005, said the Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz, eight East Asian countries -- Japan, China, South Korea, Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, and the Philippines -- more than doubled their total reserves, from roughly $1 trillion to $2.3 trillion. China, the leader of the pack, is estimated to now have over $900 billion in reserves, followed by Japan.

This has resulted in a highly paradoxical situation. In a global economy marked by strong tendencies toward stagnation, China as producer and the US as consumer are the twin engines that keep the world economy afloat.

Yet, keeping US economy going necessitates a constant flow of credit from China and the other East Asian countries to the US to finance the middle classes’ consumption of goods from China and Asia. In the meantime, countries that really need the capital from East Asia, such as countries in Africa, get very little of these reserves since they are not considered creditworthy.

The demise of the IMF

The building up of massive reserves on the part of the Asian countries is directly related to their bitter experience with the International Monetary Fund. Governments recall the crisis as the result of a one-two-three punch delivered by the IMF.

First, the Fund, along with the US Treasury Department, pushed them to liberalize their capital accounts, which resulted in the easy exit of foreign capital that brought down their currencies. Then, the IMF provided them with multibillion dollar loans, not to rescue their economies but to rescue foreign creditors. Then, as their economies wobbled, the Fund told them to adopt pro-cyclical expenditure-cutting policies that accelerated their plunge into deep recession.

“Never again” became the slogan of a number of the affected governments. The Thaksin government in Thailand declared its “financial independence” from the IMF after paying off its debts in 2003, vowing never to return to the Fund. Indonesia has said it will pay off all its debts to the IMF by 2008.

The Philippines has refrained from contracting new loans from the Fund, while Malaysia defied it by imposing capital controls at the height of the crisis.

Ironically, then, the IMF has become one of the key victims of the 1997 debacle. This arrogant institution of some 1000 elite economists never recovered from the severe crisis of legitimacy and credibility that overtook it -- a crisis that was deepened by the bankruptcy of its star pupil Argentina in 2002.

In 2006, Brazil and Argentina, following Thailand’s example, paid off all their debts to the Fund in order to achieve financial independence. Then Hugo Chavez let the other shoe drop by announcing that Venezuela would leave the IMF and the World Bank.

What is, in effect, a boycott by its biggest borrowers is translating into a budget crisis for the IMF. Over the past two decades, the IMF's operations have been largely funded from the loan repayments of its developing country clients rather than from the contributions of wealthy Northern governments. But with the biggest borrowers refusing to borrow, debt repayments are being to be reduced to a trickle.

The upshot of these developments is that payments of charges and interests, according to Fund projections, will be cut by more than half, from $3.19 billion in 2005 to $1.39 billion in 2006 and again by half, to $635 million in 2009. These reductions have created what Ngaire Woods, an Oxford University specialist on the Fund, describes as “a huge squeeze on the budget of the organization.”

This succession of events has left the IMF with scarcely any influence among the big developing countries and groping for a new role. But the unraveling of the authority and power of the IMF is due not only to the resistance to further Fund intervention by developing countries.

The Bush administration itself contributed to eroding the Fund’s search for a meaningful role in global finance when it vetoed a move by the conservative American deputy director of the Fund, Ann Krueger, to create an IMF-supervised “Sovereign Debt Restructuring Mechanism” (SDRM), which would have allowed developing countries a standstill in their debt repayments while negotiating new terms with their creditors.

Many developing countries regarded the proposed SDRM weak, and what Washington’s veto showed was that the Bush people were not going to tolerate even the slightest controls on the international operations of US finance institutions.

Neoliberalism rejected: Thailand

It was not only the IMF but also neoliberalism, the dominant ideology of the 1990s, that came crashing down in the aftermath of the crisis. Malaysia imposed capital controls and stabilized the economy, allowing it to weather the recession in 1998-2000 better than other afflicted countries.

It was, however, Thailand that most dramatically broke with neoliberalism. After three stagnant years under governments faithfully complying with the IMF’s neoliberal prescriptions, the newly elected government of Thaksin Shinawatra propelled countercyclical, demand-stimulating neo-Keynesian policies to get the economy back on track.

Rural debt was frozen, government-financed universal health care was instituted, and each village was given one million baht to spend on a special project. Despite dire predictions from neoliberal economists, these measures contributed to propelling the economy into a moderate growth path, one that has since been sustained by demand emanating from China’s red-hot economy.

The 1997 financial crisis, which saw one million Thais drop below the poverty line in a few short weeks, turned Thais against neoliberal globalization. Even as the government refocused on stimulating domestic demand through income-support for the lower classes in the countryside and the city, popular sentiment went against free trade.

On Jan 8, 2006, several thousand Thais tried to storm the building in Chiang Mai, Thailand, where negotiations for an FTA (free trade agreement) were taking place between the US and Thailand. The negotiations were frozen; indeed, Prime Minister Thaksin’s advocacy of the FTA became one of the factors that contributed to his loss of legitimacy and eventually his ouster from power in September 2006.

The souring on globalization has been paralleled by the rise in popularity of an economic perspective promoted by the country’s popular monarch, King Bhumibol. Dubbed “sufficiency economics,” it is an inward-looking strategy that stresses self-reliance at the grassroots and the creation of stronger ties among domestic economic networks. Taking advantage of the King’s popularity, critics claim that the military-supported government that overthrew Thaksin is cleverly using the sufficiency economy to legitimize its rule.

Whatever the case, globalization is an unpopular word in Thailand today.

Neoliberalism triumphant: Korea

While Thailand broke with neoliberalism and the IMF, Korea followed almost to a “t” the neoliberal reforms forced on the government by the Fund: undertaking radical labor market restructuring, trade liberalization, and investment liberalization.

According to sociologist Chang Kyung Sup, “labor shedding was the most crucial measure for rescuing South Korean firms. Even after the breathtaking moments were over, most of the major firms continued to undertake organizational and technological restructuring in an employment minimizing manner, and thereby got reborn as globally competitive exporters.”

Once the classic activist developmental state that a report of the US Trade Representative characterized as the “most difficult place in the world” for US enterprises to do business in, Korea under IMF management has become a much more liberal economy than Japan.

Denationalization of Korea’s financial and industrial firms has taken place with “appalling speed,” says Chang, with foreign ownership now accounting for over 40 percent of the shares of Korea’s top financial and industrial conglomerates, or “chaebol.”

Samsung now has 47 percent foreign ownership, Posco, the steel company, over 50 percent, Hyundai Motors 42 percent, and LG Electronics 35 percent.

The IMF has touted Korea as a “success story.” However, Koreans hate the Fund and point to the high social costs of the so-called success. Poverty has increased sharply, from 3.0 percent of the population in 1996 to 11.6 percent in 2006, and the Gini coefficient that measures inequality jumped from 0.27 to 0.34.

Social solidarity is unraveling, with emigration, family desertion, and divorce rising alarmingly, along with the skyrocketing suicide rate. “We have one big unhappy society that looks back to the pre-crisis period as the golden age,” says Chang.

All fall down

In retrospect, the Asian financial crisis of 1997 may have brought about the downfall of the IMF, but, as economist Jayati Ghosh points out, it also marked the demise of the East Asian developmental state that had aggressively managed the integration of the Asian economy into the world economy so that this would be strengthened, not marginalized by global economic forces.

Despite their different pathways from the crisis, the economies of East Asia have been irrevocably scarred and weakened. The crisis marked the end of their being at the forefront of development, as models to be emulated. The 21st century that was supposed to be their century slipped away.

The cataclysm marked the passing of the torch to China, and indeed, in their weakened state, the smaller East and Southeast Asian economies have now become increasingly dependent on the dynamism imparted by their giant neighbor.

Spend and shuffle

The irrepressible Miriam Defensor-Santiago wants the Ombudsman unleashed on Metro Manila mayors who prove incapable or unwilling to properly clean their municipal drains. Pagasa said that garbage clogging drainage facilities has been the main culprit in the flooding that’s afflicted the metropolis. By all means, any means to exact accountability from mayors should be welcomed, but we suspect—based on past administration behavior—that city mayors only get taken to task, when it’s politically expedient to do so.

The President embarked on measures that, on the whole, seem sensible and timely. First, she transferred responsibility for Metro Manila’s flood control projects from the Department of Public Works and Highways to the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority. She then instructed the budget secretary to raise MMDA’s flood control budget from its present P101 million to P251 million (for 2008). And she went on to remind barangay officials that they are the front line, so to speak, in flood control efforts—which is very true.

We are, of course, aware of the President’s penchant for trying to solve problems by reshuffling the same tired, old deck of officials, while simultaneously throwing money at the problem. For example, while it does make sense to have the MMDA focus on the National Capital Region’s flood control efforts, we recall MMDA Chair Bayani Fernando crowing to media he had accomplished great things in terms of flood control. The drains, he said, last summer, were in tip-top shape. Now either they were, or weren’t.

If they were, it says a lot of the executive mismanagement of the metropolis that the drains got all fouled up in a matter of months. If they weren’t, then either Fernando was lying or wasn’t on top of the situation: either way, this begs the question of why he deserves to have flood control responsibilities handed back to him. It also needs to be asked—if Fernando had indeed achieved great things with the drains—why flood control had been transferred by the President from the MMDA to the DPWH, only to hand it back to the MMDA again (the mischievous answer is, of course, the magic words, “elections” and “patronage spending”).

Increasing the budget also begs another question: Was the flood control budget being allocated in too niggardly a manner? Could that be the reason why the President has decreed a P100-million increase? But then what does that over-parsimonious initial allocation suggest? Or, could something have been discovered over the past few weeks, which suddenly justifies the increase? We’d certainly like to know what our officials learned over the past few weeks that practical experience didn’t teach them over the past few decades.

Either the government has a plan, or it’s simply allocating money first, and then determining how to really spend it, later. Unfortunately neither prospect is comforting: if it had a plan, but wasn’t adequately funding it, then it can’t dodge the blame Santiago’s trying to pass on to the mayors; if it didn’t have a plan, then how on earth can it make sense to allocate money first, and do the planning later? The whole thing would smack too much of a public works scam in the making.

Still: the President was on to something when she ordered responsibility for flood control handed back to the MMDA. She was correct in urging barangay officials to be more active in declogging the drains. Where she can be even instrumental—that is, truly presidential—is by outlining how national and local governments can come together, integrate their efforts in a combined flood control plan, rationalize the creation and maintenance of the drainage infrastructure, wielding over everyone the tremendous persuasive and coercive powers of her office.

As it is, the long-standing problem of the NCR is that it is a collection of extremely jealous barons, the mayors, who are so insistent on their prerogatives, that a population (for whom the political boundaries the mayors so energetically guard, are essentially fictitious) bears the brunt of their collective arrogance. Legislation may be required, to propose a more unified form of government for the sprawling NCR.

Champions

We congratulate our group of six boxers for demonstrating once again that our country is a force to be reckoned with in the lower weight classes of international boxing by winning the Boxing World Cup.

Together with the string of victories that Manny Pacquiao has been enjoying, the triumph of the Filipino boxers can be expected to trigger greater interest in boxing both as a professional and an amateur sport. Many impoverished youths will see boxing as a ticket out of the mire of poverty.

But the development of boxing should not be made at the expense of other sports in which Filipinos could excel. Baseball was one sport in which Filipinos excelled before World War II. But after Liberation, because of the heavy American influence, basketball became the most popular sport among the masses. Filipinos seem to forget that because they are a race of short people, they cannot excel at basketball, in which Caucasian giants enjoy a natural advantage. In the recent Fiba Asia Championships, for instance, not even the addition of tall Filipino-Americans to the Philippine team could win it a slot in the finals.

Soccer, the truly international sport, is another game at which Filipinos, with their speed, natural agility and balletic grace, can excel. But it is played mostly only in the provinces and as a spectator sport it draws big crowds to movie houses and sports restaurants only during the biennial World Cup. Perhaps big corporations can help popularize soccer, and revive interest in baseball by sponsoring teams.

Boxing, often called “the manly art of self-defense,” will always be seen as the poor man’s ticket to riches. Because of its violent nature (many boxers have died as a result of ring injuries) and its identification with gambling, boxing has had a controversial history. There have been periodic calls for outlawing the sport, but especially in a poor country like the Philippines, such calls cannot succeed. Meanwhile, the best that can be done would be to ensure that boxers are given enough protection in the ring and that those who are retired are assured of some means of livelihood. Many boxers have been a source of national pride but some of them have been reduced to pathetic figures by penury. They should be accorded recognition not only when they bring honor to the country, but also given support in their twilight years.

Extreme weather

The world appears to be in for a long period of extreme weather, if recent reports are to be our gauge. More than 25 million people have been affected across South Asia by massive flooding. Since the start of the monsoon in June, at least 1,120 people have been killed and 18 million affected in India. In Bangladesh, abut 250 have been killed and around 8 million stranded or displaced.

Heavy rains have doused southern China, and landslides have killed 120 people and floods have displaced 14 million people. England and Wales had their wettest May and June since 1776 and suffered $6 billion in damage from extensive flooding. Germany suffered its driest April and its wettest May since 1901. All over the world—Mozambique, Uruguay, the reports are the same: extreme weather events have been taking place.

In the Philippines we are witness to the same phenomenon of weather being turned upside down, of having a wet dry season and a dry rainy season. At one point, the situation became so alarming that the Catholic Church called for what could be the modern-day equivalent of the tribal “rain dance”: the Oratio Imperata ad Petendam Pluvium (an obligatory prayer pleading for rain). And then a storm or two brushed the northern tip of the country, bringing much needed rains that raised the water levels in dams that supply much of the water for Luzon.

While most scientists believe extreme weather events will be more frequent as heat-trapping carbon dioxide emissions cause world temperatures to rise, the World Meteorological Organization says it is impossible to say with certainty what the second half of 2007 will bring. But it is best to be prepared for extreme weather occurrences. We cannot let our guard down; for instance, we still have to conserve water and prepare for the possibility that the rivers and lakes will dry up. And as a long-term measure, carry out in earnest, among other things, a project to plant 20 million trees that will help retain water and at the same time produce more life-giving oxygen.

Disaster Preparedness Month

DISASTERS can strike quickly and without warning. They can force communities to evacuate their neighborhoods or confine them in their homes. Disasters can happen anytime and anywhere that one may not have enough time to respond. Families have to be prepared to cope with the emergency until help arrives.

In the last decade, almost two billion people around the world have been affected by disasters. The effect on lives and livelihoods is immense and the economic effect on a country’s development is considerable. According to a World Hazards Report, losses attributed to natural disasters have risen to hundreds of billions of dollars a year in the past few years, from 40 to 50 billion dollars as the start of the 1990’s, and only a billion a year in the 1960’s. Nearly three quarters of the losses result from storms, floods, and drought. While there is evidence that disaster losses can be attributed to climactic and environmental changes due to human actions, rising population numbers and migration to areas at greater risk is contributing to the ever increasing loss of lives, properties, and livelihoods.

The Philippines is exposed to a wide variety of hazards, both natural and man-made. Earthquakes, severe storms, floods, landslides, power outages, volcanic eruptions are some of the potential emergencies we may encounter. The frequency of disasters, particularly in the last decade has increased at an alarming rate that vulnerable populations do not always have the opportunity to recover from one disaster before the next one strikes.

To highlight the importance of disaster preparedness, Disaster Preparedness Month is observed in July of each year. With the rainy and stormy months expected until November, families and communities need to prepare themselves for any emergencies. Staying one step ahead of the next disaster is increasingly important.

Slow probe

Philippine Star

A week after the ferry Blue Water Princess sank off the coast of Quezon, maritime authorities will finally start their investigation of the accident, which left at least 11 people dead. Authorities said they preferred to focus on rescue operations first before starting the investigation. The other day, as President Arroyo reprimanded the Maritime Industry Authority for the slow probe, authorities announced that the investigation would finally start this week. As of yesterday there were several statements to the press from maritime authorities but still no probe.

The investigation could end up as a mere formality since Philippine Coast Guard authorities had earlier said the ferry, owned by AC-Joy Express Liner and operated by Blue Magic Ferries, was not overloaded and appeared to have complied with maritime safety standards. The Board of Marine Inquiry has been ordered to submit a report within five weeks.

Even slower than the investigation of maritime disasters are the reforms needed to make maritime transportation safe. In an archipelago of over 7,100 islands, where many areas are accessible to ordinary folk only through ferries and outriggers, the safety of maritime transportation should be high on the list of government priorities. But despite numerous accidents in the past decades, one of which is considered the worst peacetime maritime disaster in the world, reforms in the maritime industry have been slow.

One of the reasons has to be the failure of successive administrations to make people account for negligence. Despite numerous accidents wherein the identities of victims could not be determined because passengers were not listed in manifests, basic regulations on keeping accurate ship manifests continue to be ignored. Cargo is improperly stowed, crewmembers lack requisite qualifications, and ships ignore warnings against sailing during foul weather. Even when ships sink, sending scores of people to their deaths, negligence — on the part of both ship owners and maritime authorities — is rarely penalized. People know they can get away with violating maritime safety rules. The reluctance to enforce those rules is evident even in the investigation of fatal maritime accidents.