Asia’s laggard
SINGAPORE — Back in the early 1960s, the World Bank came out with a study predicting that the Philippines, among all the countries in Asia, was in the best position to achieve economic prosperity. The study noted that the
What a difference half a century makes.
Today
Mahbubani is now dean of the Lee Kuan Yew (LKY)
Sadly for us, the World Bank’s prediction turned out to be widely off the mark, and we are not the leader of the Asian hemisphere.
Instead it was
What happened to the
“It’s puzzling,” Mahbubani told me last Monday in his office. This was shortly after I addressed international participants in LKY’s flagship senior management program on governance and leadership. On the school’s invitation, I discussed media and governance.
“You’ve tried dictatorship, you’ve tried democracy,” Mahbubani noted, yet nothing seems to work.
* * *
In his book, Mahbubani attributes the economic success of
If all the countries in
The
“… Political clans still reign in the
I told him Filipinos are in fact aware that the country lacks those seven pillars. The press writes about the need for those pillars; politicians talk about them endlessly.
So why has there been no change? Because many of those who are in a position to implement reforms are among the biggest beneficiaries of the feudal system, where family fortunes are built on political power and patronage. For such people, there is no incentive to change the status quo.
The rotten system taints even efforts to uphold the rule of law. In our country, only the poor are punished for crimes. From the Marcos regime to the present, the biggest crooks are getting away with everything.
“It is impossible to build a modern society and a modern economy without a modern rule of law,” Mahbubani declares. “This is the pill that all Asians will have to swallow, bitter though it may be in the early years of application.”
* * *
Like the best educators, Mahbubani has an abiding faith in the human capacity to change for the better, and he believes there is hope for the
“I don’t believe anybody is lazy,” he told me. Incentives can be created so people won’t be lazy, he said. “I believe that no culture is at a disadvantage.”
He also sees nothing wrong with being a copycat. As premised in his book,
Many Filipinos cannot wait for change to come and are simply leaving their country. The Filipino community in
Many of the Filipinos here are maids, entertainers and blue-collar workers. But there is an increasing number of Filipinos in IT enterprises and medical services. And of course the hotels are full of Filipino employees. One young woman in my hotel told me why she left: “Pahirap kasi nang pahirap ang buhay sa atin (Life keeps getting harder back home).”
At least I didn’t notice Filipinas among the many Chinese-looking women who loiter around
Mahbubani remembers that when the World Bank came out with its rosy prediction about our country, people from all over
Today Filipinos are the hospitality workers of
We look on the bright side and measure national progress by minute increments.
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