Alas, it isnt just me who worries that we may fail what could be our final test at democracy. The Export Finance and Insurance Corp. (EFIC), an Australian government agency that finances exports (such as the "export" of Australian construction services for the North Luzon Tollways) has said as much in a fairly recent assessment of our country risk.
EFIC has observed in an economic paper prepared by its chief economist (and available in their website), that our two leading presidential candidates in May "seems to present a choice between continuing policy drift at best and a much faster erosion of creditworthiness at worst."
My sentiments exactly! I have said that we should ignore the top two leading candidates in favor of choosing one from among the next three. The world out there is no longer buying Romulo Neris loud protestations of how great our economic fundamentals are. As the EFIC paper puts it, there is a long string of developments unsettling investors and sending interest rates up and the peso down.
Worse, EFIC does not see relief in the results of the May election if one of the two frontrunners emerges the winner. EFICs prognosis is pretty bleak. Financial default may not be imminent, it says, but it cannot be ruled out. "It is difficult to see a decisive stabilization and adjustment scenario that puts the default worries to rest."
Steadily deteriorating economic and financial fundamentals, policy inertia, unsettling political developments in the lead-up to the May presidential poll and recently deteriorating market sentiment are developments all making the economy increasingly vulnerable, EFIC observes.
Add to that are worries arising from Moodys downgrade of our long term foreign currency debt rating to Ba2, two levels below investment grade, the warning made by Standard Chartered Bank about the Argentina-like danger we face and Loren Legardas promise to repeal the law providing for the automatic appropriation for debt service if FPJ wins.
It is no wonder we have vanished from the radar screen of the world financial market. Philippine asset-holders, according to EFIC, are awakening to the risks they face in our country, and they have been trimming asset allocations and demanding higher risk premiums accordingly. Sounds to me like we are headed for the kangkungan!
EFIC observed that the peso has been one of the worst performing Asian currencies for some time, weakening against even the falling US$. Earlier this month it hit an all-time low of 56.35 to the US$. Investors, EFIC notes, are concerned at a yawning fiscal deficit and associated rising public and foreign debt. And to think Ate Glo claims she managed the economy well!
Investors, according to EFIC, are worried. "They see a Congress in deadlock, incapable of passing the 2004 budget or tax reform laws to broaden and deepen the tax base. They worry that under an FPJ administration this inertia would continue. The resultant higher interest rates and lower peso are feeding into higher public debt service payments, which is adding to investor anxiety in a vicious circle."
EFIC confirmed our worst fears that those deficits have caused public external and domestic borrowing "to outstrip underlying growth of government revenues, exports and GDP. Rising debt and debt service relative to underlying revenue and income means, of course, eroding fiscal and external solvency."
And when Neri starts talking about our great fundamentals, you can ask him about EFICs observation that "export growth has been volatile, and last year came in at only 1 1/2 percent when many neighboring countries were registering double-digit increases. Meanwhile, FDI, a key driver of Philippine exports, has been on a relentless downtrend from a low base reaching 0.2 percent of GDP in 2003 from 0.8 percent in 1997 and slumping 45 percent year-on-year in the first three quarters of 2003."
EFIC also cited another worrisome aspect of our economic governance: our off budget debts like those incurred by Napocor. "A final concern is the large off-budget debt, equivalent to 39 percent of the consolidated public debt. (Consolidated public debt is 120 percent of GDP, on-budget debt 73 percent.) Off-budget debt is less transparent than on-budget debt, and has recently been accumulating rapidly. The National Power Corp. (Napocor) is the single biggest contributor to the public debt."
EFIC pointed out that our "fiscal and debt indicators are bad breaching, for instance, the World Banks 20-percent danger limit for the external debt service ratio and the IMFs 60-percent limit for prudent external debt they wouldnt be so bad as to trigger immediate concern, if the government had set upon a course of policy adjustment to stabilize the numbers and bring them down. But that is the rub it hasnt. Inertia is the hallmark of the executive government and gridlock of the Congress. So as the IMF puts it, the debt dynamics are unstable."
My conclusions are clear: the last three years have been terrible and it would be extremely stupid to want six more years of that. On the other hand, the other one who calls himself a king, has spooked the investors and the creditors even before he assumes office. As I said, pick from among the next three. They may not be able to quickly lead us to nirvana but at least, they could give us a fighting chance.
Man and woman naked in bed together. Man reading newspaper with headline: "Court rules same-sex couples can marry."
Man: "It will make an absolute mockery of traditional marriage!"
Woman: "Thats just what my husband says."
Boo Chancos e-mail address is bchanco@bayantel.com.ph