Antisabotage council needs this one important factor
Commentary

Antisabotage council needs this one important factor

/ 02:12 AM September 28, 2024

The Anti-Agriculture Economic Sabotage Act, signed by the President just last Sept. 26, can significantly increase its effectiveness if a specific mechanism is implemented.

I am referring to the public-private antismuggling committee, which proved successful when it was last implemented. It reduced smuggling by 27 percent and 31 percent during the times it was activated.

Sadly, it was abolished because it was too successful and displeased certain powerful people, having caught a big fish.

Article continues after this advertisement

Under the new law, agriculture smuggling, hoarding, profiteering and financing are considered economic sabotage. The crimes carry a penalty of life imprisonment and a fine three times the value of the agriculture and fishery products involved.

FEATURED STORIES

For those who aid in smuggling, the penalty is 20 to 30 years in jail and a fine two times the value of the goods.

Indeed, this will deter smugglers, but only if there are people actually caught and penalized.

Article continues after this advertisement

We will focus on the smuggling aspect of the law.

Article continues after this advertisement

Measurements

Measuring smuggling is possible using numbers from the United Nations Comtrade.

Article continues after this advertisement

We just compare the number a country reports to us and the number we were supposed to have received.

For example, if a country reports they sent us P100 billion worth of exports, but we supposedly received only P80 billion, the difference of P20 billion indicates smuggling.

Article continues after this advertisement

In 2019, this smuggling indicator showed P500 billion. Two years later, the number ballooned more than twice to P1.2 trillion. This is disastrous to the industry and to the country, in general.

The law creating the Anti-Agriculture Economic Sabotage Council comes at an opportune time.

Headed by the President, the members are from the departments of agriculture, trade and industry, finance, interior and local government, justice and transportation. Also included are the Anti-Money Laundering Council (AMLC) and the Philippine Competition Commission (PCC).

These nine government representatives are supplemented by seven private sector representatives. They represent sugar, rice, corn, livestock and poultry, vegetables and fruits, fisheries and other aquatic products and tobacco.

The council is definitely important. But if it has no executive committee that will ensure urgent action from the Bureau of Customs (BOC), the council may suffer the same fate as other public-private councils that created several resolutions but made little to no action.

(This is because the follow-up action lacks information and necessary clout to make things happen).

Previous experience

We now compare this council with the previous antismuggling committee.

Again using UN Comtrade statistics, the latter’s presence allowed for smuggling to decrease by 27 percent. The succeeding year after it was abolished in 2005, however, smuggling rose by 104 percent.

Many years later, a very similar committee was created (with the same functions, including meeting with the BOC Commissioner monthly and reporting directly to the President). At that time, there was an even more impressive 31-percent reduction in smuggling.

Despite this, it was abolished in 2016, the first year of the previous administration.

This committee had seven members, compared to the current council’s 15. A lean body made things more manageable for quick action.

Its government representatives were the same as the council’s, except for the Department of Transportation, AMLC and PCC. There were only two private sector representatives: one for agriculture (Alyansa Agrikultura) and the other for industry (Federation of Philippine Industries). This is because the committee addressed both agriculture’s and industry’s concerns.

It is recommended that the council consider a small executive committee, possibly with a membership similar to the previous antismuggling committee with five government and two private sector agriculture representatives. This executive committee should also hold monthly meetings with the BOC chief while reporting directly to the President.

As the saying goes, “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.” The previous antismuggling committee was not broken, it was abolished.

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our daily newsletter

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

With a better executive committee at the Anti-Agriculture Economic Sabotage Council, I hope rampant smuggling will finally be stopped for our agriculture to finally flourish.

TAGS: Agriculture, economic sabotage

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our newsletter!

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

© Copyright 1997-2024 INQUIRER.net | All Rights Reserved

This is an information message

We use cookies to enhance your experience. By continuing, you agree to our use of cookies. Learn more here.