Last of two parts

ONE of the great tragedies of Philippine development is that the country did not fail because it lacked talent. It failed because it never learned how to keep and organize that talent at home.

In the 1950s, the Philippines stood ahead of much of Asia economically. It possessed respected universities, functioning institutions and one of the region’s most educated populations.

At roughly the same period, South Korea was emerging from war and poverty. Today, South Korea exports semiconductors, ships, automobiles, batteries, electronics and advanced technology.

The Philippines exports people. That transformation did not happen overnight. It emerged slowly through decades of policy drift, weak industrial planning, corruption and economic shortcuts that eventually hardened into national dependence.

The rise of the remittance economy

Over time, labor exportation evolved from a temporary solution into the central architecture of the Philippine economy. Remittances from overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) became the country’s financial lifeline. Tens of billions of dollars flowed home every year, supporting household spending, stabilizing foreign exchange reserves, and quietly preventing deeper social unrest.

At first glance, the model appeared successful. Families survived. Consumption remained active. Shopping malls expanded. The banking system remained liquid.

But beneath the surface, something dangerous was forming. The economy was learning to survive without truly developing. Remittances increased spending, but they did not fundamentally modernize domestic production. The country consumed more without producing enough high-value industries of its own.

In effect, survival itself became imported. And because foreign earnings kept the system functioning, the political pressure to industrialize aggressively weakened. Governments could postpone difficult reforms because the dollars arriving from abroad temporarily masked the underlying structural weakness at home.

The industry of exit

Eventually, the Philippines became extraordinarily efficient at exporting its own workforce. Recruitment agencies multiplied. Migration systems became highly organized. Entire educational pathways slowly aligned themselves toward foreign labor markets instead of domestic industrial needs.

Students increasingly optimized their futures for deployment abroad: nursing, caregiving, maritime work, hospitality, and later, business process outsourcing (BPO).

The country gradually built an economy centered not on retaining talent, but on preparing citizens to leave. A healthy economy asks:

“How do we create industries strong enough to keep our people?”

The Philippine model evolved into a different question: “How do we prepare our people to survive somewhere else?”

The brain drain republic

The consequences are now impossible to ignore. The Philippines is one of the world’s largest exporters of nurses, yet many local hospitals remain critically understaffed because international salaries vastly exceed domestic wages.

The same pattern appears across engineering, science, software development, research, and technology. The country continuously loses many of the very people needed to modernize it.

Industrial transformation requires engineers who stay long enough to build factories, researchers who remain long enough to develop institutions, and entrepreneurs willing to invest their futures locally.

But the Philippines repeatedly exports that critical mass abroad. The nation trains talent for foreign economies more effectively than it retains talent for itself.

A state built on improvisation

This brain drain becomes even more severe because domestic conditions remain deeply uncompetitive. Electricity costs remain among the highest in Asia. Internet infrastructure lags behind regional competitors. Bureaucratic inefficiency discourages investment. Manufacturing costs remain elevated. Neighboring countries built industrial ecosystems. The Philippines built migration pipelines.

As a result, domestic manufacturing never achieved the scale necessary to absorb the country’s rapidly growing population. Millions of Filipinos did not leave merely because opportunities abroad were attractive. Many left because opportunities at home remained structurally insufficient.

The real developmental question

The future of the Philippines ultimately depends on whether it can transition from a labor-export economy into an innovation-driven economy. That requires far more than slogans. It requires reliable infrastructure, lower electricity costs, modern ports, educational reform, industrial planning, research investment, and institutions strong enough to encourage long-term investment.

Most importantly, it requires creating a domestic environment attractive enough for Filipinos to remain and build their futures at home. The Philippines does not suffer from a lack of intelligence, creativity or talent. Yet economics alone does not explain the problem. The deeper issue is political architecture.

For decades, the country’s leadership governed less like stewards of a republic and more like competing feudal clans managing temporary territorial control. The Senate and the House of Representatives — institutions theoretically designed for legislation and national planning — increasingly devolved into permanent theaters of spectacle, investigations, vendettas, dynastic maneuvering and televised grandstanding.

Critical national questions requiring continuity over decades are repeatedly sacrificed to six-year political cycles, personality conflicts, corruption scandals, and electoral calculations. Industrial policy is neglected. Energy reform stalls.

Agricultural modernization remains unfinished. Research and technological investment receive rhetorical applause but limited sustained commitment. The result is a state trapped in perpetual improvisation.

Corruption and the oligarchic compact

Corruption further deepens the paralysis. Public funds intended for roads, ports, irrigation systems, education, health care, and industrial modernization are too often siphoned into patronage networks, overpriced contracts, electoral war chests and dynastic preservation.

Under such conditions, governance itself becomes consumption rather than construction. But political dysfunction alone does not explain the stagnation.

The country’s oligarchic structure also bears enormous responsibility.

For generations, powerful business families coexisted comfortably with political dynasties. Protected markets, regulatory favoritism, weak competition, and concessionary monopolies created immense private wealth while limiting broader industrial dynamism.

Too much capital flowed toward protected utilities, real estate speculation, import dependence, and consumption-driven sectors rather than globally competitive manufacturing, scientific research, or technological innovation.

In many cases, the political and oligarchic classes became nearly indistinguishable — connected through marriage, partnerships, campaign financing, and mutual economic dependence. The result was not the absence of growth. It was shallow growth incapable of transforming the country structurally.

The coming AI shock

Now, even the industries sustaining the economy face disruption.

The BPO sector, one of the country’s major economic pillars, increasingly confronts pressure from artificial intelligence capable of automating customer service, clerical processing, and routine cognitive work. Simultaneously, richer countries are tightening immigration systems while lower-cost labor competitors emerge elsewhere in Asia and Africa.

The old model of exporting massive volumes of labor may no longer remain indefinitely sustainable. The Philippines may soon discover that the global labor market it spent decades optimizing itself for is changing faster than the country itself can adapt.

The cruelest irony

Meanwhile, millions of Filipinos adapted rationally to the incentives placed before them. A nurse discovers she can earn 10 times more abroad. An engineer realizes foreign systems reward competence more predictably than domestic patronage networks. A scientist finds better laboratories overseas. A software developer encounters better infrastructure elsewhere.

Eventually, departure itself becomes the national economic strategy.

And this may be the cruelest irony of all: The Philippines continuously exports the very people most capable of fixing the Philippines. Until the country develops political institutions capable of long-term planning, reduces corruption to manageable levels, weakens dynastic monopolies, encourages genuine industrial competition, and creates conditions where merit is rewarded more consistently than proximity to power, the cycle will continue.

The Philippine tragedy is not public failure. It is that its systems made leaving more sensible than staying home.

The Senate President crowed yesterday that the party he nominally coheads, PDP-Laban, has a “pleasant problem” — too many potential senatorial candidates. Koko Pimentel’s estimate is they have up to 20 possible choices for the 12-person slate for the 2019 senatorial race. But his list includes the five administration-affiliated senatorial incumbents up for reelection next year. This is a group that has made noises that, much as it prefers to remain in the administration camp, it is unhappy with the way PDP-Laban has been designating its local leaders and candidates, and therefore prefers to strike out on its own, perhaps in alliance with the other administration (regional) party, Hugpong ng Pagbabago, headed by the President’s daughter and current Davao City mayor, Sara Duterte.

Setting aside, then, the five-person “Force,” the administration-oriented but not PDP-friendly reelectionists (Nancy Binay, Sonny Angara, Cynthia Villar, Grace Poe, and JV Ejercito), what Koko’s crowing over is a mixed bag. Some of them have been floated by Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez (with whom Mayor Duterte clashed in recent months): six representatives (Gloria Macapagal Arroyo who is in her last term in the House of Representatives; Albee Benitez, Karlo Nograles, Rey Umali, Geraldine Roman, and Zajid Mangudadatu), three Cabinet members (Bong Go, Harry Roque, and Francis Tolentino), and two other officials (Mocha Uson and Ronald dela Rosa), which still only adds up to 11 possible candidates (who are the missing three?).

Of all of these, the “Force” reelectionists are only fair-weather allies of the present dispensation; their setting themselves apart is about much more than the mess PDP-Laban made in, say, San Juan where support for the Zamoras makes it extremely unattractive for JV Ejercito to consider being in the same slate. Their cohesion is about thinking ahead: Creating the nucleus for the main coalition to beat in the 2022 presidential election. The contingent of congressmen and congresswomen who could become candidates for the Senate, however, seems more a means to kick the Speaker’s rivals upstairs (at least in the case of Benitez and Arroyo) and pad the candidates’ list with token but sacrificial candidates, a similar situation to the executive officials being mentioned as possible candidates (of the executive officials, only Go seems viable, but making him run would deprive the President of the man who actually runs the executive department, and would be a clear signal that the administration is shifting to a post-term protection attitude instead of the more ambitious system-change mode it’s been on, so far).

Vice President Leni Robredo has been more circumspect, saying she’s not sure the Liberal Party can even muster a full slate. The party chair, Kiko Pangilinan, denied that a list circulating online (incumbent Bam Aquino, former senators Mar Roxas, Jun Magsaysay, TG Guingona, current and former representatives Jose Christopher Belmonte, Kaka Bag-ao, Edcel Lagman, Raul Daza, Gary Alejano and Erin Tañada, former governor Eddie Panlilio and Cebu City Mayor Tomas Osmeña) had any basis in fact.

What both lists have in common is they could be surveys-on-the-cheap, trial balloons to get the public pulse. Until the 17th Congress reconvenes briefly from May 14 to June 1 for the tail end of its second regular session (only to adjourn sine die until the third regular session begins on July 23), it has nothing much to do. Except, that is, for the barangay elections in May, after a last-ditch effort by the House to postpone them yet again to October failed.

Names can be floated but the real signal will come in July, when the President mounts the rostrum and calls for the big push for a new constitution—or not. Connected to this would be whether the Supreme Court disposes of its own chief, which would spare the Senate—and thus, free up the legislative calendar—to consider Charter change instead of an impeachment trial. In the meantime, what congressmen do seem abuzz over is an unrefusable invitation to the Palace tomorrow — to mark Arroyo’s birthday. An event possibly pregnant with meaning.

Here’s a striking statement about love shared with me by an English college mentor. “Love knows no grammar. How it works can’t be measured by any parts or figures of speech. It goes beyond the literate and illiterate. The sad reality is that, even a fool who has got no philosophy is not spared of its harsh reality.” After almost three decades, I reminded him through a private message of his words. Here’s what he said. “Thank you, Jord. This statement about love is searing to the heart. And, yes, fools do fall for it too. But I thought that we as well speak of the beauty that it gives and not so much focus on the harsh realities. After all, our country has had enough of the negativities.” Thank you, dearest Sir Eugene.

In these decisive times when our nation trembles under the weight of corruption, inequality, and disillusionment, it is you―the youth, burning with idealism, courage, and an unyielding sense of right―who must stand at the forefront of CHANGE. The future of the Philippines hangs in the balance, calling not for silence or apathy, but for unity, conviction, and action. Let your dreams be the spark that ignites renewal; let your voices thunder against injustice; let your hands build the nation our forebears envisioned but never fulfilled. Now is the hour to awaken, to rise, and to lead the march toward a just and transformed Philippines.

Remember, the pages of our history resound with the triumphs of youth who dared to dream and act. From the Propagandists who wielded the pen against tyranny to the Katipuneros who took up arms for freedom, it was always the young who ignited revolutions and rebuilt nations. As Dr. Jose Rizal declared, “The youth is the hope of our motherland,” but that hope is not a gift to be passively claimed; it is a duty to be earned through courage and purpose.

Today’s generation must transform awareness into action―to confront corruption with integrity, to challenge inequality with empathy, and to counter apathy with participation. The time for mere commentary has passed. What the nation demands now is commitment, creativity, and collective resolve. When the youth stand united in conscience and conviction, no obstacle is insurmountable, no reform impossible. The power to redeem the nation’s promise lies not in the hands of the few, but in the awakened spirit of the many. Rise, therefore, as one generation with one objective―to forge a Philippines worthy of its people’s deepest hopes. And to those who were once the torchbearers of youth but have since laid down their fire―hear this call.

The nation does not forget its veterans of hope, those who once believed that change was possible but have since grown weary in the long twilight of disappointment. Thus far history grants no sanctuary to resignation. It demands of every generation the same unrelenting duty―to defend what is right, to confront what is wrong, and to labor still for what remains unfinished.

Now is the moment to rise again. Let not caution disguise itself as wisdom, nor comfort as peace. The courage that once stirred your youth still flickers within; rekindle it, and let it burn anew for the sake of those who follow. Your experience, tempered by time, must now join hands with the fervor of the young - to guide, to mentor, to strengthen.

Together, let the wisdom of the seasoned and the passion of the rising coalesce into a single, indomitable force for renewal. For the task of nation-building is not bound by age, but by conviction. The call of the motherland resounds to all who still believe that the story of the Filipino is not yet complete―and that redemption, though delayed, is still within our grasp if only we choose to act once more. And to those whose hands have long gripped the levers of power―hardened by privilege, dulled by entitlement―hear this with clarity: the era of self-preservation must yield to the dawn of selfless service.

The nation can no longer afford leaders who mistake possession for stewardship, nor governance for dominion. The time has come to relinquish the throne of complacency and make way for the custodians of vision, courage, and renewal.

To step aside is not to surrender, but to honor the sacred rhythm of nationhood―to allow new voices, new hearts, and new minds to breathe life into institutions that have grown stale from neglect. True leadership is an act of stewardship, and stewardship demands humility―to know when to lead, and when to pass the torch. Those who have ruled long enough must now become mentors, not masters; guides, not gatekeepers.

To the youth who will inherit this burden and blessing alike, the call is equally profound. Lead not with arrogance, but with awareness; not with impulse, but with integrity. Let optimism be your discipline―a conscious act of faith in the nation’s capacity to rise again. Lead with inclusivity that unites rather than divides, with courage that reforms rather than destroys, and with resilience that endures when hope seems frail.

For the measure of a new generation’s greatness lies not in its defiance alone, but in its wisdom to build where others have failed. Let your leadership become the living testament that the Philippines, once disillusioned, has learned at last to believe again―through you.

Now, the Filipino youth stand at a defining crossroad of history. The echoes of the past and the murmurs of the future converge upon this moment, and in your hands rests the fragile, however formidable promise of a nation reborn. You are the inheritors of unfinished dreams and the architects of what is yet to be. United in thought and deed, strengthened by the wisdom of history and the fire of conviction, you possess the power to shape a Philippines anchored in justice, animated by democracy, and sustained by the collective flourishing of its people.

The mantle of responsibility has passed to you. Do not falter beneath its weight; bear it with courage, for it is through your resolve that the nation will rise from the ruins of complacency. Let your unity transcend boundaries of region, class, and creed. Let your integrity redefine leadership, and your compassion restore faith in the Filipino spirit.

This is your hour. Let this narrative be not merely a call to awaken, but a solemn commitment―to the country that nurtures you, to the people who believe in you, and to the generations who will follow your example. Stand firm, for you are the heartbeat of a nation yearning to live with dignity once more. Speak right and shine!

Rise, Filipino youth, and let history remember that when your time came ―you stood unwavering, and the nation moved forward.