* This is my column in BusinessWorld last October 08, 2018.
The Philippines’ inflation rate has been rising nonstop
ever since the TRAIN law was implemented: 2.9% in December 2017, 3.4% in
January 2018 (first month of TRAIN law), 3.8% in February, 5.7% in July, 6.4%
in August, and 6.7% in September.
This is the country’s highest inflation rate in nearly a
decade, since 7.2% in February 2009. The increase largely came from the food
and non-alcoholic beverages index, a big component of the overall consumer
price index (CPI), which increased to 9.7% last month.
So the Philippines is now the undisputed inflation king
or queen of Asia. Year to date (Ytd, January to September), 2018 inflation is
already 5.0%, a lot higher than the government target of 2-4% full year 2018.
Numbers below, those with updated January-September 2018
data are Indonesia, Philippines, S. Korea, Sri Lanka, Thailand and Vietnam. The
rest have January-August only (see Table 1).
In the stock market, the Philippine Stock Exchange (PSEi)
as of Oct. 5 closing was the second worst performing in the world. China
(Shanghai) has been the #1 worst performing for several months this year but
last week, it has recovered while the Philippines and Turkey continued their
slide.
Last 52 weeks, PSEi (-14.8%) is also the second worst in the world after China (Shanghai, -15.8%).
To control high inflation, the most visible action by the
government comes from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) raising domestic
interest rates. I do not think that this will be effective since the current
inflation is largely cost-push, starting from TRAIN tax hikes in January and
exacerbated by high world oil prices. This is not demand-pull inflation.
Another action is agricultural import liberalization,
expanding rice importation to help reduce domestic rice prices, and replacing
quantitative restrictions (QR) with tariffs of up to 35%, the bill is being
hastened in Congress. The impact so far is not clearly felt as rice prices
remain high.
One ‘action’ by government is non-action on fare hike
petitions by buses, jeepneys, taxi, and air-con vans or ‘UV Express.’ The
government has become terribly insensitive and Machiavellian in pinning down
public land transportation operators to endure very high oil prices with no
corresponding fare hike, except the P1 increase in jeepneys which is still not
sufficient.
Domestic airlines’ petition to have fuel surcharge on
ticket prices have been granted and this will have inflationary pressure from
October onwards. Another pressure will come from a series of wage hikes.
One single most important measure that government can do
to reduce inflation is to cut the VAT rate from 12% to around 8% and
significantly reduce the exempted sectors. My best example for suggesting this
is Malaysia. It had a gross sales tax (GST) of 6% until May then it was
abolished in June. Its average inflation rate three months before (March 1.3%,
April 1.4%, May 1.8%) was 1.5%, became 0.3% three months after (June 0.8%, July
0.9%, August 0.2%).
High and multiple taxes are always inflationary. To help
reduce high inflation, taxes should be smaller and fewer. The number of
politicians, bureaucrats and subsidies forever should be smaller and fewer too.
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See also:
BWorld 254, Duterte inflation in prices and political insecurity, October 01, 2018
BWorld 254, Duterte inflation in prices and political insecurity, October 01, 2018
BWorld 255, Improving passenger convenience, innovation vs regulation, October 03, 2018
BWorld 256, Mandatory and coercive welfarism by private enterprises, October 07, 2018
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