The Unstable Economic Structure of the Philippines
Posted on Thursday, 11 December 2014
The Unstable Economic
Structure
Of the Philippines
By Apolinario Villalobos
An ideal economic structure is one that assumes the shape of
a pyramid, with the broad base stabilized by the productive majority of the population,
the midsection consisting of enterprising middle class, and the topmost by the
least chunk composed of the rich. The current reality, however, has a different
picture. The middle class is slowly diminishing, with significant constituents
either joining the majority consisting of the poor or the minority rich. This
resulted to the structure’s instability. The whole edifice is dangerously
polarized and as the midsection loses its strength, it will not be for long
that the topmost chunk will topple. If that happens, the structure is left only
with the broad base consisting of the poor. That will what become of our
country…a country of poor Filipinos!...thanks to corruption!
The economy of the Philippines is in disarray. One need not
be a statistician to perceive this veracity. Prices of commodities that
skyrocketed did not go back to their respective former level, but instead continue their ascent; unemployment
is on the rise compounded by the number of fresh college and university
graduates that steadily balloons every year; and, medium-scale entrepreneurship
has waned due to globalization of trade.
One manifestation of the aforementioned phenomena is the
exodus of middle-class students from private educational institutions to public
schools that have reached their bursting limit. Also, the spending of both the
lower and the middle class has greatly lessened due to unemployment. Add to these
the dollar remittance of the modern heroes, the overseas Filipino workers, that
have likewise diminished as their big bulk of source, the Middle East has long
been suffering from internal political unrest.
Overall, the stability of the National Treasury has been
affected, leaving the government with no other choice but regularly renew its
loans that, as of latest count, already amounted to trillions of pesos. On the
other hand, world banks encourage the government to renew loans, by praising
the country’s improved credit reliability standing.
While the ordinary Filipinos suffer from the heavy yoke of
debt, ever-rising of prices, swelling of poverty, and political instability,
the corrupt government officials whose pockets are bulging with ill-gotten
wealth and the exploitive rich minority, look on. For how long the ordinary
Filipinos can endure the suffering before they finally lose their control, only
time can tell.
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