Pity The Nation

“Hold me now, oh hold me now. Till this hour has come around. We fought for justice and not for gain but the magistrate sent me away.” --- The Edge singing for U2 in Van Diemen’s Land
WHEN TOMORROW COMES TO THIS NATION of our birth, what door should open to us and what road shall lead us unto what place?

To be certain, we take some little strides forward, and we have gained them, as our exports grow and the remittances of our overseas workers (our modern day heroes) redound into more and more families that are uplifted from the cruel stranglehold of poverty. Yet, as we examine our terrain, our society’s flawed pyramid of wealth, there are still much left to be desired. Like upon a battle, when the smoke clears after the last gunshot is heard and we see the dead and the maimed lying on the bloodied warpath, we know by heart that battles may be won now but the war ain’t over yet.

We must seek our future now for if tomorrow comes, we have no regrets to drink to and have no blame to impute upon ourselves.

Now we seek the key or keys to our forward march into the economic battles of this global economic world where competition is the harshest ever and those who flinch for even for just a second would surely lose any economic advantage where even the richest of nations now are more inclined to protect their markets with inequitable tariff adjustments that favors the few that caters to their own interests. The GATT is never fool-proof in fact, even as we speak, many have already seen blatant loopholes in the agreed rules and conduct of trade that markets like ours could not compete with subsidies other rich governments give their own farmers. There were times in the near past that it was much cheaper to import vegetables from South Korea than source them from local producers. And we are just talking about vegetables here. Fair play is an illusion and we only must realize this. We see even the European states gathering into a strong union in order to build and rebuild their markets and keep other competitions out of the way. To compete then is never to depend so much on equitable tariff adjustments from more advanced states but should be mainly on terms of quality and standard.

The great Lebanese poet Khalil Gibran once wrote: “Pity the nation that does not sew its own garments and pity the nation that does not make its own bread”.

The name of the game is self-sufficiency and resilience in trade. When we produce our own grains, then we do not have to bleed ever-scarce foreign currencies just to feed our people with bread. If we build our own cars, then we do not have to worry about being in the losing end of the economic game where we sell them commodities like rattan furniture and then on the other hand we buy from them high-end products like aircrafts. We gain a little and then lose heavily by gigantic profit margins. This is the apparent cause of the vicious cycle that we are in and that is why we continue to depend on foreign loans and aid to fulfill our budgetary requirements for the vicious cycle clearly indicates the symptoms of a bleeding nation and nobody seem to see the emergency situation.

There is no nation that rises without sewing its own garments. There are few exceptions primary of which are small countries like Singapore and Switzerland. Singapore rose steadily in the 1970’s by being the hub of British middlemen buying and selling anything from oil to silk and transporting them from one place to another—mainly to and from China mainland, which even in the past was already a very huge market. Of course, we know that Switzerland earns its wealth mainly by safekeeping other nation’s wealth and nothing much else. The Philippines could not become Singapore in a sense that the littlest of population of Singapore made it easier to distribute wealth into everyone’s pocket. We are a nation of tens of millions that we could not do business by simply becoming middlemen for other nation’s goods, to sell into somebody else’s market. In short, foreign investment may help small nations like Singapore but a huge nation like the Philippines, we need more effort than just taking in foreign investments. We need to look inward and see if we can create more wealth and become self-sufficient. When we sew our own garments, we can keep more hard currencies by not having to buy garments elsewhere.

When we can produce everything that we need then we will have lesser needs from outside entities and we do not need to bleed the nation for things we haven’t got. Productivity is the key to our nation’s success and self-sufficiency is our main objective.

Our engineers should have more buildings built. The lawyers more cases prosecuted and defended and judges should have more cases decided. Our farmers should reap more harvest and our fishermen should catch more fish from the seas. The writer should write more enchanting narrations and our poets should sing more wordy lullabies that endear the heart of readers. Our teachers should educate more children and our doctors cure more of those who are sick and pained. The carpenters must hammer more nails into more wood and cement while our taxi drivers should carry more passengers from one place to another. Our sellers then should sell more and our buyers would certainly buy more and more. And then when our laborers produces more sardines and electronic products, then they can have more in their pockets as the wages of their blood, sweat and tears rises also. And more money in the pocket of our laborers, the more they buy cigarettes and beer and milk and garments and the rich capitalists would surely have more business in mind. This is the cycle of our dreams, not a vicious one that holds us down like a leech, but one that will supplements us and complement every member of our society, and one day we could become a nation where no one is left behind, where everyone shall have a share in the pie and everyone moves ahead and not only the chosen and lucky few.

Many amongst us, the daily economists whispering into the ears of our leaders may at many times look outward towards the multinationals and the foreign investors with money to spare. But perhaps, we may miss the more important aspect of real economic progress where we only have to develop a self-generating system of economy by looking inward just one more time. We should give it one last try.

Post a Comment

18 Comments

  1. Anonymous4:45 PM GMT+8

    Self-sufficiency and resilience....That was a strong point and I definitely agree...The most effective way of gaining help is helping ourselves and as a result, others will give a hand ..... as well.

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  2. Anonymous4:47 PM GMT+8

    Nga pala link kita from my blog , if you don't mind.....

    --jun--

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  3. Anonymous2:20 PM GMT+8

    Hi Flex J, definitely we must rise thru generating mostly our own wealth, that is, sewing our own garments...heck,...we don't even manufacture our own scooters,...that's why we keep on bleeding dollars...

    The honor is mine, so pls. link on..

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  4. Anonymous3:55 PM GMT+8

    I think (and many think) that the root cause of our poverty is graft & corruption. A lot of things have been said on this already. A number of people have suggested action points. I don't have an easy solution myself. For me, gaining a good economic standing is a long complex process. There's an interplay of various factors like education, political will, etc. But first things first and if we are able to address graft & corruption properly as a nation, then all other good things will follow suit like the self-sufficiency and resilience in trade you mentioned. It's a classic application of the Pareto's Principle.

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  5. Anonymous4:18 PM GMT+8

    I haven't heard about the Pareto Principle yet Abaniko but I will surely research on it. Clearly, rampant graft and corruption is one major reason why our nation is so downtrodden, and it may be one of the reason why our productivity is so slow and anemic in the past years when our neighbor countries have speeded ahead. Money that should be used for more research and production just go down the drain thru corruption of our treasuries by unscrupulous politicians.

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  6. Anonymous4:20 PM GMT+8

    This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

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  7. The famous .COM millionaire and Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban discusses the same focus as your entry on his blog (blogmaverick.com). Cuban went to the Cayman Islands and was shocked to see its improvements after being ravaged by Hurricane Ivan last year. The people of Cayman Island recovered without the help of other countries. They did it on their own. In addition to Self-sufficiency and resilience, we should stop whining about foreign competition and instill in our minds that nobody in a better position to help the Philippines but us. We should take it as challenge to improve ourselves and put the Philippines once again in the arena of global competitiveness. We definitely have the talents and resources. It’s about time for every Filipino to look back and ask “what have we done wrong?”, correct those mistakes and stand up once more.

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  8. Anonymous1:56 AM GMT+8

    hello nong! perteng taasa man ani diay? unya basahon nako mubalik ko kay matulog sa ko gikan duty gikapoy ko..

    sige nong, ayoayo dina ha..

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  9. Major Tom – perhaps a new brand of government that decentralizes power to the provinces for a change would help. This would reduce the pillaging opportunities for the vultures in national government that cripples the country on a much larger scale. We will still have vultures in provincial governments no doubt but they would only hurt their own areas. In a way some form of damage control on corruption can be achieved.

    Pinoys do have a tremendous love of country and are proud and passionate about who they are but it just seem to lie in the hearts and not in the soul. We should create a country that best suits our needs. We should not create a country to be showcased – we need a country that serves us, a country that satisfies our requirements. With a big percentage of the population wallowing in poverty, who really needs gigantic malls, fancy restaurants, 30 storey hotels, high rise condos? Are we on the mission to create a country for tourists and vacationers? If foreign investments are great for the country does it mean that we redesign the Phils to be totally appealing to foreigners, at the expense of marginalizing our own culture? Don’t we exist first as Filipinos, for the Philippines before bending over for others? Wouldn’t we think of ourselves first, before others?

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  10. Anonymous4:37 PM GMT+8

    sorry ser kinda off-topic.

    i like your new layout. good job!

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  11. Anonymous3:57 PM GMT+8

    To John Clark: This should be a great challenge John, only if we could find the right leader that could instill in us the virtue of unity towards resiliency and self-suffuciency. Experts say that our natural resources is so abundant but we just do not know how to exploit it without the foreign capitalists that take two dollars for every dollar they spend here as investments.

    To nao: Taas man lagi.Sweet dreams lang diha sa imong beauty sleep.

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  12. Anonymous4:02 PM GMT+8

    To BW: That's so true BW, we should think Filipino first before we think of making our country like a commodity, selling it like a product to foreign interests. If only we could instill in ourselves how we can really be self-generating and independent.

    To Jeff: Thanks for the kind words Jeff. Actually I should be crediting Ms. Lilia Ahner, Michale Hanscom and Blogger-Template site for the new design. I made some customization of my own.

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  13. Anonymous3:30 PM GMT+8

    Maybe the leaders of our government are focusing too much on dirty politics, on nurturing grievances, and throwing stones at each other, forgetting the real reasons why the Filipino citizens voted for them during the elections.

    We need leaders who are proactive, strong, and who will really work on the betterment of our nation. Kailan kaya tayo magkakaroon ng set of officials na ganyan ang goals?

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