Showing posts with label John Nye. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Nye. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

One kaklase P-Noy should listen to


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DEMAND AND SUPPLY By Boo Chanco (The Philippine Star) Updated August 08, 2011 12:00AM 
What is worrisome about the Philippines, Dr. John Nye told an audience of businessmen last Thursday, is how we are falling behind our Asean neighbors in terms of economic growth. We grew five percent in the last decade but our neighbors grew seven to eight percent. This is unnatural, the Filipino-Americaneconomics professor observed.


Dr. Nye is no ordinary economist. He was valedictorian of P-Noy’s Ateneo High School class. He has a bachelor’s degree in physics from CalTech and a masters and doctorate degree in economics from Northwestern University.


A professor of Political Economy at George Mason University and a national fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University, he is a specialist in European economic history and institutional economics.


His lecture last week under the sponsorship of Asia United Bank was on “Speeding up Philippine Economic Growth: a Historical and Institutional Perspective.” His lecture was well received and the question on everyone’s mind was, “has he talked to P-Noy?” He wouldn’t say anything about it, neither confirming nor denying any contact. But I understand he did meet the President and the next question is, did P-Noy get anything out of the meeting?


I want to believe P-Noy did imbibe some good ideas. For one thing, Dr. Nye isn’t like most economists we have met… he takes a stand and ordinary mortals can actually understand him. That’s because he doesn’t scare people off with esoteric econometric models and formulas but talks about the real world – the impact of elites, special interests and institutions on a country’s economy. He also thinks there is too much focus on higher taxes, fiscal balance and infrastructure spending when structural imbalances in the economy are the more urgent impediments to growth.


In talking about our situation, Dr. Nye said it is good to take a long-term view and not be too impatient. He believes in incremental progress so long as the steps we take are in the right direction. We may not feel it today, he said, but if we have consistent growth over time, we will just wake up one day and see people are actually better off. We must, however, get things right. Our economic history, he observed, is one of constant missed opportunities.


We don’t have to be a stellar economy, he said, we only need to be ahead of our neighbors. He then illustrated his point with a little anecdote about some campers and a bear.


A couple of campers were out in the woods when both caught sight of a bear. One of the guys took his running shoes out of his knapsack and started putting it on.


“What are you doing,” the other camper asked.
“Run as fast as I can, of course,” was the reply.
“You’re silly,” the other camper said. “You can’t outrun the bear!”
“I know that,” the first guy said. “I was only intending to outrun you.”


That’s the point: we probably cannot outrun economies like China but we should be able to outrun Vietnam, Indonesia and horrors, Myanmar, Cambodia and Laos… And his advice on how we can do that is to get rid of our nationalist insecurities and open up our markets to global competition.


Dr. Nye said he doesn’t understand why we have so many laws that bar the entry of foreign investment that would create jobs here in the country. We are so afraid of having foreigners exploit our labor at home but we don’t seem to mind letting foreigners exploit them abroad, he observed. Thinking global is the way to create jobs for these workers at home, he stressed.


Modern development involves a switch from low productivity to high productivity areas. China, he said, is the latest example. Its impressive story is all about moving workers in great numbers from the low wage/low productivity rural/agricultural sector to higher productivity industrial (export)/service sectors. We, on the other hand, have policies like high minimum wages and strict employment protection in the industrial sector that prevents industry from absorbing more workers and thus spark the economy’s transformation. That is also why the unemployment rate for college graduates is higher than those with less education.


We were once the leading economy in our region, he lamented, but we squandered our early advantages through protection (import substitution), manipulated currency, anti foreign rules. 


Extreme nationalism, he said, turned the nation inwards in the 50s and 60s. Like Argentina, we basically raised the cost of capital and destroyed investment. We also slowed the growth of English in the 70s when the whole world was anxiously trying to learn it.


The key for us, according to P-Noy’s kaklase, is structural transformation which also means we have to get rid of first order distortions. He identified these as: high industrial minimum wage + regulation; restriction on foreign ownership of land and businesses; multiple barriers to competition, complex and intrusive tax system and our version of agrarian reform.


Dr. Nye thinks our land reform is ineffective and inefficient, worse than the old system. It preserves the dominant groups and kills new competition without redistribution. The rules 
benefit existing elites.


On how we run our economy over all, Dr. Nye denounced what he sees as a marriage between nationalist and populist thinking with the interests of the elite in preserving restrictions to global competition. It is only global competition that can break the stranglehold of the traditional oligarchs on the economy, he stressed. This is specially so because we have weak institutions and arbitrary enforcement of rules.


Our problem, he said, is that we Filipinos love making new laws too much. Right policies rather than more rules should do better for us. He cited the telecoms deregulation policy of FVR as one outstanding example of how opening up an industry delivered better service and contributed to economic growth. Here, the state’s role is merely to provide a level playing field.


An example of failed policy that saw massive state intervention is what has happened to the power sector and because of it, we are still suffering the region’s highest electricity rates. He does seem to have a point there because we are about to fall into that same trap of state intervention mandating massive subsidy to renewable energy through so-called feed-in tariffs that will allow vested groups to rent-seek at the expense of consumers who must bear the burden of even higher power rates.


How do we get going? Dr. Nye was realistic enough to acknowledge that the path to reform is difficult because entrenched interests will fight to keep their privileges. Even communist China, he observed, had its entrenched interests in its major cities of Beijing and Shanghai. That is why the economic revolution started in far away Guangdong and Fujian, he pointed out. And when the reforms in these second tier provinces started bringing prosperity there, it was easier to introduce similar reforms in Beijing and Shanghai.


He suggested that we open up the market in small regions, establish mini Hong Kongs or mini Singapores. I thought that was what we were trying to do with Subic but somewhere along the line, the entrenched interests prevailed and Subic is nowhere near the dream being peddled at its inception as a special free port. Its free port status (followed by countless others) just became a legal excuse to smuggle highly dutiable merchandise, another form of rent seeking by established politicians.


He also thinks we should be cosmopolitan… find ways to involve international players not beholden to local interests. We should encourage regional competition and increase market access so that different businesses are involved. Then, don’t be fixated on legal details.


Finally, he called on us to always look outwards. Filipinos, he said, are not afraid of the world, so why not let more of the world in? By allowing more globalization, you will keep Filipinos working at home and not have to send them abroad. And he said, he is making these points from the perspective he has of world economic history… of how winners and losers are made of economies through time.


I sure hope he spends more time talking to P-Noy. I am afraid it is difficult to absorb everything he has said in the course of one briefing. Dr Nye is one kaklase P-Noy should really spend more time with.


Resign?


Robin Tong and Rosan Cruz sent this one on Migz resignation.
JPE:  “An unselfish act..”
Ed A:  “A brave decision that will change the course of politics...”
Lito L:  “Bakit siya nag-resign?  Puwede namang mag-absent!”


Boo Chanco’s e-mail address is bchanco@gmail.com. He is also on Twitter @boochanco

Monday, July 25, 2011

Dr. John Nye


Opinion
Posted on July 24, 2011 08:07:11 PM
Introspective -- By Calixto V. Chikiamco

Dr. John Nye


Who is Dr. John Nye? He was the valedictorian of President Noynoy Aquino’s Ateneo high school class of 1977. After high school, he went to California Institute of Technology and got an undergraduate degree in physics. He shifted to economics, however, and obtained a master’s degree and a doctorate in economics from Northwestern University.

Dr. Nye is currently the Frederic Bastiat Professor of Political Economy in George Mason University. He’s prominent in the field of new institutional economics and is an avowed disciple of Douglass North, a Nobel Prize winner in economic science, whom he brought into the country about four years ago, to give a series of lectures on institutional economics.
Dr. Nye’s father is Chinese, a successful businessman who had fled China when the communists took over. However, his mother is Filipina, a justice in the Court of Appeals.
After an absence of many years, but after he brought North to the country, he has been visiting the Philippines. One advantage of Dr. Nye as an analyst and observer of the Philippines is that he’s both an “outsider” and an” insider.” He’s far enough that he has an unjaundiced view, uncontaminated by the usual chatter among the elite, but close enough, because he’s after all a Filipino, having been born and raised here.
I’m writing about Dr. Nye because I think he has very important things to say about Philippine economic reforms. However, except to a few in the academic and international development agency community, his views are not well-known.
It’s also too bad that despite his school ties to President Aquino, the current government seems either ignorant of or indifferent to his sharp analysis and recommendations.
He’s also different in many ways from econometric-spouting, formula-wielding economists because his views are infused with political economy and real world observations of elites, coalitions, interests, and institutions.
Dr. Nye’s main point is that the government and the international development agencies don’t seem focused on what he calls “first order” economic reforms, addressing the main impediments to growth. Too often, he says, much effort is directed toward tax increases and achieving fiscal balance or emphasizing the need for infrastructure spending but without addressing major structural imbalances in the economy.
He believes the principal problem of the Philippines is its extreme dualism: a tiny manufacturing sector employing just about a quarter of the workforce and a vast agricultural and service sector employing the rest in low-productivity, low-wage jobs. Why is this a problem? According to Nye, this is an indication that major barriers exist in moving people out of the low-productivity agricultural sector to the more highly productive modern industrial sector. Indeed, the story of China is that of a vast number of the labor force moving out of agriculture and the countryside to the industrial sector in the cities.
What is preventing this necessary migration from low-productivity sectors to high-productivity sectors, a condition found in many growth stories? According to Nye, a combination of high minimum wages and strict employment protection in the industrial sector is preventing industry from absorbing more labor. The perverse effect of these labor market rigidities is that much of the workforce is stuck in low-wage, low-productivity, short-term jobs.
Citing labor economist Manny Esguerra, Nye says that the country has one of the highest minimum wages in the world. In 2007, the Philippines had the 28th highest minimum wage in the world at purchasing power parity (PPP) rates, and the 8th highest minimum wage out of a group of 30 developing economies.
According to Nye, one evidence of the perverse effect of a combination of high minimum wages and labor protection regulations in the industrial sector is that the unemployment rate among the college educated is far higher than the unemployment rate among those who have lower levels of educational attainment. Again citing Esguerra, he says the unemployment rate is 10.6% for the college-educated, compared to 8.6% for those who only completed high school, and 3.3% for those who just finished elementary.
In other words, the high unemployment rate among the college educated shows the high barriers to entry to the regulated industrial sector while the lower unemployment rate among the less educated shows lower barriers to entry in the unregulated, but low-productivity, agricultural, and services sectors.
Labor market rigidity is an important problem because growth happens when people move from lower productivity jobs to higher productivity jobs, but that’s not being allowed to happen.
Another perverse result is that the country’s skilled labor moves to other countries to get jobs, where they are “exploited” and benefit their host country.
Other high-minded, but misguided policies such as the prohibition of conversion from agricultural land to industrial use are also contributing to this problem, says Nye.
The movement from agriculture to industry is further hampered by policies like the CARP (Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program), which keeps farms small, inefficient, and backward.
His Ateneo yearmate, President Aquino, whose principal program of government is fighting corruption, should take note, because according to Nye, “...limiting corruption without reforming a legal and regulatory system that encourages and supports a distorted economic system is both futile and is likely, even with partial success, to encourage longer-run dysfunctions by increasing the strain between what is demanded and what opportunities are being bypassed.”
On August 4, Dr. Nye will give a lecture, sponsored by Asia United Bank, on “Speeding Up Philippine Economic Growth: A Historical and Institutional Perspective.”
If you can’t wangle an invitation, you can view his lecture on YouTube through this link,http://mercatus.org/video/lessons-new-institutional-economics-development, or you can download his ADB paper at http://www.adb.org/documents/periodicals/adr/adr-vol28-1-nye.pdf.
Calixto V. Chikiamco is a board member of the Institute for Development and Econometric Analysis.
For comments and inquiries, please e-mail us at idea.introspective@gmail.com.
http://www.bworldonline.com/content.php?section=Opinion&title=Dr.-John-Nye&id=35219