Petropolitik, Sapian and China 6
Table of contents for Petropolitik, Sapian And China
- Petropolitik, Sapian And China 1
- Petropolitik, Sapian and China 2
- Petropolitik, Sapian and China 3
- Petropolitik, Sapian and China 4
- Petropolitik, Sapian and China 5
- Petropolitik, Sapian and China 6
- Petropolitik, Sapian and China 7
- Petropolitik, Sapian and China 8
- Petropolitik, Sapian and China 9
- Petropolitik, Sapian and China 10
- Petropolitik, Sapian and China 11
- Petropolitik, Sapian and China 12
- Petropolitik, Sapian and China 13th and Final Part
Petropolitik, Sapian and China - Sixth in a Continuing Series
Another way to revisit the saga of Sapian, China and oil crisis is tracing the thread of Philippine petroleum deregulation. Fidel V. Ramos (FVR) pushed for the enactment of Republic Act 8180, the Downstream Oil Industry Deregulation Act of 1996, to promote a more competitive market and prices by allowing the entry of “small” oil players to the market monopolized by the so-called Big Three, namely, Pilipinas Shell Petroleum, Caltex Philippines Inc. and Petron Inc. This involves the removal of the government subsidy to oil prices, called the Oil Price Stabilization Fund, which provided a cushion to oil price increases. In 1999, a new oil deregulation law (RA 8479) was enacted to pave the way for the full deregulation of the oil industry.
During World War II, many countries heavily regulated industries and nationalized critical industries (e.g., petroleum, coal mines, steel mills etc.) to provide maximum support and efficient use of resources for war efforts. After the war, many countries continued or expanded controls on industries to rebuild their war-ravaged economies, and well into the 70s. By the 80s, U.K. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher - plagued by paralyzing strikes, mismanagement, and bankruptcy - started to privatize government companies. In economic circles, it was called Thatcherism. In the U.S., President Ronald Reagan tried to relax government control on businesses, called Reaganomics. Both trends lean toward Keynesian economics. A very influential 20th Century economist, John Maynard Keynes theorized that government should use its power sparingly at the macro-economic level to regulate (e.g., interest rates, use of reserves etc.) but let the private sector and market forces try to equalize itself. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keynesian_economics
Along these lines U.S. President Bill Clinton, FVR and other leaders promoted a book by David Osborne and Ted Gaebler, entitled, Reinventing Government: How the Entrepreneurial Spirit is Transforming the Public Sector. The authors looked into model governments efficiently run like corporations, with performance-based budget, partnership with the private sector, and people empowerment themes. It called for leveling of the playing field, deregulation, decentralization, devolution, and liberalization, in all aspects of government, politics and the economy. From Washington, to Europe, to Tokyo, a chorus of international organizations told Cory and FVR to pursue these goals. Hence, it was institutionalized in FVR’s Philippines 2000. http://govinfo.library.unt.edu/npr/index.htm
Under this philosophy, started by Cory but staunchly implemented by FVR, the bureaucracy worked double time to deregulate, decentralize, and devolve powers of governance. Among the first tangible result of these is the Local Government Code
- to the perpetual chagrin of my mother and Nono Varon’s parents (it’s a relief they are all in the United States now!) - that included the devolution of the Department of Health’s Rural Health Units (RHUs) to local government units. There were persistent rumors that RHUs will be renationalized, but early on I asked former Health Secretary Juan Flavier (now, Senator) and he told me to tell my mother to change career because it’s not going to happen. In theory, local governments should have more control over their local affairs and would be able to prioritize their policies and fine-tune their programs according to local needs.
Another example is today’s proliferation of cell phones. PLDT monopoly was broken by giving away franchises to any company able to install 5,000 lines, can apply for telephone franchise anywhere in the Philippines. Many leapfrogged with infinite cell lines, so you now have a galaxy of cell service providers. This also was true with Cable TV providers and a host of other telecommunications sub-sectors. Philippine Airlines franchise monopoly was also broken. Now, passengers are no longer at the mercy of PAL. Anyone who has a plane, compliant with all BOT regulations, could apply for an air franchise anywhere in the Philippines. Then you have BOT (Build-Operate-Transfer, Build-Transfer-Operate, Build-Own-Operate etc.) alphabet schemes, which allowed building of dozens of giga-wattage power plants by Hopewell Holdings, Enron, etc. worth billions of dollars. The caveat, contracts for 50 years for guaranteed power purchase by the National Power Corporation. This wiped out the brown outs overnight, particularly when power grids throughout the country have been interconnected. Then, you have your Skyway, North Luzon Expressway, MRT and many others. Under the general theme, base lands, like the Fort Bonifacio area, have been opened to joint ventures with the private sector.
For a moment, the Philippines was referred to as one of the Tiger Cubs of Asia.
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- Petropolitik, Sapian and China 6. (2008, June 20). In Sapian Online. Retrieved 05:45, July 30, 2010, from http://www.sapianonline.com/20060521/articles/sixth-in-a-continuing-series
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