
The Philippines Revolution
What are the alternatives to neoliberalism?
by James Petras
Z magazine, March 1999

Nearly 100 years ago, U.S. Marines invaded the newly independent
Philippines and killed anywhere from a quarter of a million (U.S.
military estimates) to a half million Filipinos in the course
of colonizing the archipelago. The legacy of 50 years of U.S.
colonial rule is palpable in the slums and streets of Manila,
the misery and poverty of the countryside, and the three million
Filipinos forged to migrate abroad in search of a livelihood.
During a visit to the Philippines to participate in a conference
on "Alternatives to Neoliberalism" I talked with peasant
and trade union activists and leaders, as well as intellectuals,
academics, and leaders of the major left-wing movements. The picture
that emerged was a far cry from a recent headline in the Wall
Street Journal (WSJ), "Philippines Economy is Bright Spot
in Southeast Asia." The Philippines we are told hasn't experienced
the economic meltdown that has occurred in neighboring Southeast
Asian countries. It will supposedly experience a 1 percent growth
in 1998 (with a 2.5 percent population growth).
What the WSJ failed to mention is that, unlike the rest of
Southeast Asia, the Philippines has been in crisis for several
decades: the reason there isn't a boom to bust cycle is that there
never was a boom to begin with. In the Philippines over 65 percent
of the population was mired in poverty before the so-called Asian
Crisis took hold.
For a brief period in the early to mid l990s the Philippine
economy seemed (at least to Wall Street pundits) to be on its
way to becoming an Asian Tiger. Growth rates of 5 percent in 1994-1995
and substantial increases in exports accompanied a large influx
of foreign investment. The "boom" was predictably short-lived,
collapsing by 1997-1998. The reason was quite simple; the bulk
of the foreign investment capital (over 75 percent) was "portfolio
investments," unproductive investments in the stock market
and short-term, high interest T notes. With the collapse of Asian
markets, the speculators fled. Most exports were really re-exports
of semi conductors, electronics and garments with little value
added-products assembled with cheap labor.
Middle class consumerism was fueled by cheap imports that
led to huge balance deficits covered by foreign loans that resulted
in debt service payments that exceed $5 billion, close to 40 percent
of total export earnings. The Ramos and Estrada Governments cover
the deficits by slashing the social budget and selling off valuable
public mining, energy, and transportation enterprises.
The Philippine economy is largely floating on the $6 billion
dollars that Filipino workers send home. If it wasn't for overseas
remittances, the Philippine economy would crash into a major recession
or worse and families living in poverty would be starving.
The second major growth sector of what the WSJ calls the "bright
spot" is tourism-the bulk of which is linked to sexploitation-with
over 100,000 prostitutes in Manila. With politicians, police officials,
and local entrepreneurs deeply implicated, Manila and adjoining
towns have become a pedophile's paradise: young boys and girls
from 7 to 12 years old are a principle source of foreign exchange
earnings and sexual abuse. The promotion of tourism, a pet project
of newly elected President Estrada, has other insidious effects:
scarce farmlands cultivated by poor peasant families are being
seized and converted to golf courses. The Philippine National
Inquirer (November 14, 1998) reported, "200 families have
for decades tilled farms within a 500 hectare (zone in Central
Luzon) that is being groomed as the next Jet Ski and golf destination."
I visited peasants working plots averaging less than one acre.
They were well organized and engaged in highly intensive and productive
farming raising a few pigs, growing basic staples, while producing
a small surplus of pineapples and mangoes for sale to cover their
everyday needs. They are being threatened with expulsion to expand
"export production." Already a nearby country club had
drawn off water from an adjoining river eliminating fish from
their diet and making irrigation difficult. Organized by the KMP,
the leftist peasant union, they mobilized to defend their meager
plots. The military police assassinated one of their leaders,
accusing him of being a member of the guerrilla group the New
Peoples Army.
The "reconversion of farmland" and the massive displacement
of peasants has led to violent confrontations and the massive
exodus of peasants into what are probably the worst slums in Asia-and
perhaps the world.
Over the past decades multinationals have set up assembly
plants and invested in mining and timber, while local Philippine
owned businesses and light consumer goods industries have emerged.
However, most industry is heavily dependent on machine imports
and semi finished goods. Most foreign investment is based on extracting
raw materials and exploiting cheap labor producing semi finished
goods. Most of the urban poor are employed in the so-called informal
sector: in construction, services, commerce where they are paid
far below the minimum wage and are subject to the harshest exploitation
by Filipino sweatshop owners. This new "national bourgeoisie"
is of
- ten subcontracted to U.S. and Japanese garment and toy manufacturers.
The ranks of the urban poor grow daily as the Asian export markets
collapse and thousands of factory workers are laid off weekly.
While some of the Southeast Asian regimes are questioning some
of the basic tenets of the free market dogma, Philippine President
Estrada has plunged ahead with ever more comprehensive trade liberalization
measures, bigger reductions in social expenditures, and more lucrative
privatizations. To curry favor with the U.S. at the November APEC
(Asian Pacific Economic Conference) meeting, Estrada was the only
head of state that echoed Vice President Gore's attack on Malaysian
Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamed, ostensibly over the human rights
issue but in reality directed at the Malaysian regime's imposition
of capital controls on the movements of profits.
Agrarian Reform
Despite the growth of urban sprawl, traffic jams and giant
malls, the Philippines still remains a largely agricultural society,
in the sense that over 60 percent of its 75 million people live
in rural areas. It has been the agrarian question which has been
the center of political and social struggle and military confrontation
since the Spanish conquest, the U.S. colonization, the Japanese
occupation and the more recent counter insurgency conflicts.
Despite presidential pronouncements from McArthur to Marcos
and from Aquino to Estrada, declaring the need for agrarian reform,
the great bulk of the rural labor force remains without land or
without adequate land to provide for their families. Almost 70
percent of the rural labor force is landless. Among rural cultivators,
approximately 67 percent own three hectares or less accounting
for 20 percent of the total land. On the other hand, .5 percent
owns 50 hectares or more, accounting for 20
percent of the cultivatable land. The problem for small holders
is not only land ownership but also land leasing. Most peasant
cultivators are basically tenant sharecroppers who are obliged
to hand over from 60 to 80 percent of their crop to the landowners.
Since most tenant farmers cannot subsist between sowing and harvesting
because of low rates of return, they borrow money from usurers
at an average rate of 20 percent per month and sell their crops
in advance to merchant landowners for one-tenth the price that
the final consumer purchases it in the city.
While in the past century and into the early part of this
century, the large landed estates were run by rent collecting
landlords, that some analysts described as "semi feudal,"
in recent years the land has been taken over by real estate speculators,
commercial plantation enterprises, tourist and development operators,
and merchant-usurer notables with urban ties. The problem is not
only exploitation, but also eviction and destruction of livelihoods,
families and communities, and forced relocation to the festering
slums of the city. This new bourgeoisie is basically Filipino
and while it may utilize some of the earlier techniques of feudal
exploitation it has diversified investments into lucrative urban
endeavors, particularly financial speculation and real estate
investment. They also engage as sub contractors in assembly plant
operations. The past distinctions between a "comprador"
or commercial bourgeoisie and a national industrial bourgeoisie
have by and large vanished. Filipino capitalists convert rural
rents into industrial capital to exploit assembly plant labor
or to buy urban property, evicting urban squatters in order to
build high rise office buildings to collect urban rent.
The neoliberal arguments of "efficient" use of land
to justify evictions of peasants are not convincing. Orlino Mercado,
a regional Department of Agriculture research division chief,
pointed out that "economic reconversion" means that
Central Luzon farmers stand to lose a research laboratory for
upland farming technology and an inland fishpond, nurseries for
upgraded stocks of sheep, goats, and carabso and a source of high-grade
saplings for cashews, mangoes, and other fruit crops. In the province
of Tarlac San Vicente farming families would be without land,
their productive activities halted, their future unsure.
Increasingly, foreign multinational corporations are becoming
dominant, not only in the traditional mining and plantation export
sector, but also in the domestic market. U.S. licensed soft drink
consumption is one of the highest per capita in the world. U.S.
"cultural" media products saturate the Philippine market.
U.S. retail subsidiaries, from fast food outlets to department
stores, are ubiquitous, alongside overseas Chinese and Japanese
banking and assembly plant operations. In 1995 domestic capital
accounted for only 41 percent of total equity investments. Multinationals
got 30 percent of total sales and almost 20 percent of total profits
among the top 2,000 corporations in the country.
The story of modern foreign economic domination of the Philippines
has its origins in the gory chapters of military occupation. In
1899 when the U.S. Iaunched its invasion of the Philippines by
sending 21,000 soldiers and officers, they expected a quick and
easy victory over their "dark skinned" adversaries.
Instead they found that the "rag tag" revolutionaries
had the support of the immense majority of the peasants and laborers
and that they could not be easily defeated. Early on General Shafter,
a field commander, declared, "It may be necessary to kill
half of the Filipinos in order that the remaining half of the
population may be advanced to a higher plane of life than this
semi barbaric state of affairs."
After President Ferdinand Marcos declared martial law in the
early 1970s, the country gradually polarized between the Communist-led
anti-Marcos opposition and the supporters of the dictatorship.
Washington provided massive military and economic aid to sustain
its client dictator and the peasants provided able recross for
the NPA and local militias.
By 1985 the NPA and its political expression, the National
Democratic Front (NDF), had established parallel governments in
10,000 of the 41,000 barrios on the country. The NPA numbered
20,000 in arms and the Communist Party was growing into the tens
of thousands.
For the U.S. the fusion of the anti-dictatorial and anti-imperialist
movement under Communist leadership posed a serious problem. Marcos
had been a loyal client for almost 20 years, yet he was increasingly
a liability as more and more sectors of the moderate middle class
was joining the leftist-led underground organizations and semi
legal movements. Washington pursued the policy of dumping the
dictator to save the state, a policy pursued earlier in Latin
America and subsequently throughout Asia. Essentially, this involved
driving a wedge between "radical" and "moderate"
opposition to the dictatorship by facilitating negotiations for
the restoration of elections and the departure of the dictatorship
on terms that preserved U.S. strategic military and economic relations.
Washington's strategy found the ideal formula in Cory Aquino,
anointed by conservative Cardinal Sim, as the repository of democratic
values. Widow of an assassinated opponent of the Marcos dictatorship
(Benigno Aquino), a novice to politics, highly touted by Cardinal
Sim and the U.S. Embassy, Cory Aquino ran against Marcos in the
Presidential elections of 1986. Marcos's fraudulent victory, however,
provoked a massive outpouring of dissent and civic opposition,
later dubbed a "people's power" movement, despite the
fact that Aquino and her closest economic advisors were tied to
the old and new business landowner elites. The massive popular
protest caught the left off guard. They expected the fraud, boycotted
the election, and played a marginal role in the subsequent protest,
expecting the populace to turn from electoral to revolutionary
politics. They were wrong. With the defection of several key Generals,
the backing of the U.S. Embassy and the Catholic hierarchy, civic
protests successfully ousted Marcos and Aquino was installed in
power.
The anti-dictatorial movement organized in BAYAN and the NDF
splintered. Some sectors of the middle class joined the Aquino
administration; others retired from the radical movements and
became active in NGO's, working with the agrarian reform agencies
of the new government. At the other extreme, elements of the NPA
with visions of urban insurrections launched a series of urban
attacks on political and military targets. The Aquino regime,
after going through the motions of a cease-fire with the NPA,
set down conditions that effectively dismissed their socioeconomic
and nationalist program. Despite early promises of an agrarian
reform, very little land was actually expropriated, squatters'
titles were questioned and evictions increased. Where land was
distributed to small holders, the payments exceeded their ability
to pay, driving many into bankruptcy.
The most retrograde aspect of what the U.S. National Endowment
for Democracy (which bankrolled Aquino's campaign) decried as
the democratic transition, was the regime's organization of dozens
of paramilitary groups throughout the country. The paramilitary
groups, according to a detailed study at the time by the New York-based
Lawyers Committee for Human Rights, included criminals, as well
as fanatical religious sects, the most notorious of which was
the Tadtad (which means "chop-chop"), a reference to
their practice of slashing their victims to death with bolo knives
or machetes. Armed vigilante groups (over 200 between March and
October 1987) sprang up throughout the country, sponsored by the
Aquino-backed Armed Forces and local landlords. And the targets
were guerrillas or guerrilla sympathizers, but also trade unionists,
peasant activists, human rights workers, and whoever questioned
the democratic credentials of the regime.
While the first two years of the Aquino regime actually surpassed
the last years of the Marcos dictatorship in human rights violations,
the left went through a series of splits over tactics. An "insurrectionist
faction" launched a series of violent assaults, including
assassinations that undercut middle class support and offered
a pretext for the regime to further clamp down on popular struggles.
The end of the Aquino regime in retreat and a new round of elections
led to the election of former Marcos crony General Ramos.
The main features of the three elected presidents, Aquino,
Ramos, and Estrada, are a profound commitment to corruption, corporations,
and collaboration with Washington. Hundreds of millions of dollars
annually leak overseas to the bank accounts of overseas entrepreneurs
and politicians, creating an artificial lack of capital, an invitation
to submit to the IMF and World Bank. Liberalization of trade has
turned the Philippines, an agrarian country, into a net importer
of what were previously basic staples- rice and sugar, as cheap
imports drive peasant producers bankrupt.
Despite Aquino's backsliding on the U.S. military bases, the
Pentagon's leases at Subic Bay and its air bases were finally
canceled. With the collapse of capitalism in Asia and mounting
popular protest in Indonesia, Washington is angling for a new
base of operation.
As expected, the current Philippine President Joseph Estrada
offered his services. Washington and Estrada are in the process
of signing a Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA) which in effect would
be the functional equivalent of a U.S. military base, giving Washington
a strategic jumping off location to intervene if and when the
Asian economic crises turns into a social upheaval. Estrada, in
order to cover up his servility to U.S. strategic interests argued
that the VFA would align the U.S. with the Philippines in its
dispute with China over the Spratlys, uninhabited reefs off the
northern coast. The U.S. undercut Estrada by indicating no disposition
to enter into the dispute: lackeys take orders they don't give
them.
After almost a decade of decline and division, the major left-wing
movements appear to be regaining support. The NPA has gone through
a period of rectification and self-criticism and while continuing
to engage in sporadic military actions has concentrated its efforts
in reorganizing support in the villages. Political and social
organizing against the thousands of daily abuses has once again
brought it back into contact with villages that were NPA strongholds.
While most of their gains are in more remote areas, distant from
the major cities, and military installations, their increasing
support has led the military to discard the idea that the NPA
is simply a "police problem" to be handled by the military
police. Likewise the NDF seems to have regained some of its public
recognition through its various campaigns particularly in the
anti-VFA movement, as well as its efforts to form multi-sectoral
opposition to neoliberalism, IMF policy prescriptions, and to
work with a plurality of international groups that are not Maoists.
Probably the most significant emerging forces are found in
the KMU and the KMP, the urban trade union and peasant movement.
The KMU is a social political trade union, which combines a struggle
over day-to-day issues at the workplace with a broader opposition
to imperialism and capitalist exploitation. I was impressed by
the way in which all the workers pitched in to prepare the meals
during the convention, brought their own sleeping bags, and engaged
in informal discussion. It was an egalitarian and comradely climate.
With the exception of some construction workers' unions in Japan
and the Brazilian Landless Workers' Movement, the KMU did not
seem to have significant international ties with other militant
confederations, as in South Korea, India, Italy, etc. Whether
this was mainly a problem in communication or a deeper problem
of its Maoist legacy, I cannot tell.
The KMP is probably the single most important mass organization
on the left in the Philippines. Led by a peasant organizer, Rafael
Mariano, the KMP through its regional affiliates has been in the
forefront of the struggles fighting land grabbers, speculators,
government agencies, and their military cohorts who are forcibly
evicting peasant producers. With close to 500,000 affiliates and
sympathizers through regional or local organizations the KMP represents
the best hope that the Filipino peasants have in resisting the
growing encroachment of capitalist land speculators, real estate
developers, tourist operators, plantation owners, and landlords.
The NDF like the NPA continues to recycle a Maoist view of
Philippine society as "semi feudal" and "semi colonial"
at a time when capitalist relations have reconverted landed estates
into international tourist havens and landlord investors bankroll
speculative ventures of every sort. While rents and interests
continue to be paid by indebted tenants, the merchant landowners
now channel these rents into new exploitive business ventures
or bank their earnings overseas through international capital
networks. The idea of fighting "semi feudalism" has
also served as a bridge for many ex-leftist leaders, including
NPA commanders, to join "modernizing" capitalist enterprise
or become part of the Aquino, Ramos, and Estrada regimes, which
have their own brand of " anti-feudalism, turning landed
estates into upscale country clubs.
Apart from the traditional left, the Catholic Church is deeply
divided. Cardinal Sin represents the Vatican line of collaboration
with the neoliberal regimes and rigid opposition to birth control,
nationalism, and social transformation. On the other hand, the
rank and file nuns and priests are active in the barrios, schools,
and in the countryside working with leftist social movements.
At a meeting at the University of the Philippines over half of
the 1,000 students attending (topic "Imperialist Globalization
and Alternatives") were from Catholic high schools and private
colleges, in many cases accompanied by their teachers and principles.
There is today a vast array of active movements fighting in
barrios, plantations, factories, schools, and campuses. The fundamental
problem is their fragmented nature and sporadic activity. With
the breakdown of the radical umbrella movements in the mid 1980s,
no single organization has emerged capable of bringing the groups
together. While the struggles against neoliberalism and globalization
seem to brook consensus, there is not the same level of emotional
energy that linked forces against the personal dictatorship of
Ferdinand Marcos. The imperial dictates of the market are omnipresent,
the cruel consequences of land foreclosures are visible in the
ugly slums of Manila. What is needed is a revitalized Philippine
road to socialism free from the baleful consequences of outdated
dogmatic formulas.
Asia
watch