Introspective

鈥淚 dismantled oligarchy in PH without declaring martial law鈥︹ was President Rodrigo Duterte鈥檚 boast to the soldiery in Jolo, Philippines, on July 13. This inspired a mushroom cloud of reactions. Some pointed to the lie of the avowed neutrality of Malaca帽ang on the ABS-CBN franchise issue; others to the claimed dismantling of the oligarchy as premature; still others, to the possible mere replacement of one set of oligarchs by another of a friendlier persuasion.

Duterte鈥檚 claim coming after the franchise denial to ABS-CBN was commonly understood as gloating over the take down of the Lopez family. The Lopez group, though no longer among the most powerful among the business groups, still wears the unique distinction of surviving the ire, and figuratively getting the better of the dictator Ferdinand Marcos. A similar gloating followed the giving up under duress by Manuel 鈥淢anny鈥 V. Pangilinan (MVP) and Jaime Augusto Zobel de Ayala (JAZA) of their respective company鈥檚 claim to the billions of pesos awarded by the international arbitral courts in Singapore. These novel thrusts against those previously viewed as untouchable overlords serve as object lessons to the oligarchy.

President Duterte, looking bored and unengaged through most of his July 27 State of the Nation Address (the aside 鈥Kung hindi nyo naintindihan, lalo na ako!鈥 [If you do not understand it, I especially don鈥檛] was revealing) came alive when entering his comfort zone calling out and demonizing enemies: the drug lords, the owners of the two telcos, and Senator Franklin Drilon. Congress was chastised for wasting time on political dynasties when it should be dismantling true oligarchs.

There clearly was a disconnect between Duterte鈥檚 and Drilon鈥檚 use of the term 鈥渙ligarch.鈥 The disconnect, so off-footing and yet so ubiquitous, got me ruminating. If you loathe what blows out of a ruminant鈥檚 backside, cease reading or don a face mask.

Many current discussions on oligarchs and oligarchy become quickly tedious for lack of common definitions. The question 鈥淲ho is an oligarch?鈥 elicits different answers. President Duterte鈥檚 call out of MVP and JAZA as true oligarchs implies a definition that, at first blush, does not stray from the textbook oligarchy: the rule by a few. This goes back to Aristotle who wrote in Politics Book 3 that 鈥渙ligarchy is when men of property have the government in their hands; democracy, the opposite, when the indigent, and not the men of property, are the rulers.鈥 MVP and JAZA are 鈥渕en of property鈥 and there are a scant 鈥渇ew鈥 others in their club. In most discourses, this rule by a few causes discord and poverty and is roundly denounced. Not to Aristotle: the ideal government in Politics is an 鈥渙ligarchy of virtuous men.鈥 Oxymoron?

In Aristotle as well, great economic wealth curves the political space in favor of its owner regardless of the owner鈥檚 behavior 鈥 a type of iron law echoing Robert Michel鈥檚 The Iron Law of Oligarchy (1911). Among the Greeks of that era, democracy had a dark synonym with chaos. Thus, salvation lies only with virtuous oligarchs who, either by temperament or by study of philosophy, pull their preponderant weight to advance not their own but the welfare of all. Was Aristotle na茂ve?

That virtue and wealth can coexist in the same person has been exiled from many well-meaning minds following anarchist Pierre-Joseph Proudhon鈥檚 new doctrine of property: 鈥淧roperty is theft.鈥 Oligarchs are thus thieves covered in legal finery. Somewhere along the way, either they or their forebears had hoodwinked the community. This thieving kind has to be erased from the face of the earth, a goal which Stalin in Ukraine and Pol Pot in Kampuchea accomplished with clinical brutality.

Senator Drilon defines the 鈥渙ligarch鈥 differently: 鈥淚t is not in wealth that you are an oligarch; you are an oligarch if you use your power to promote through the political system your own interests.鈥 (July 15, 2020, Online Media Forum). To be an oligarch in Drilon鈥檚 sense requires three elements: (i) he is a man of wealth and property, (ii) he employs his wealth to bend the political space (iii) to advance or protect his exclusive interest. Drilon departs somewhat from the contemporary textbook definition of oligarch, given, say, in Winters鈥 Oligarchy (2011): you are one if you belong to the few who own 鈥溾assive material resource that can (italics mine) be deployed to defend or enhance鈥 your exclusive social position.鈥 For Drilon, being an oligarch is a behavior: you are consciously employing wealth to bend rules in your favor; for Winters, being an oligarch is a state: having enormous wealth curves the political space in your favor despite the owner鈥檚 proclivities. Winter鈥檚 and thus the textbook oligarch echoes Aristotle鈥檚 by virtue of great wealth鈥檚 automatic curving of the political space; Drilon鈥檚 oligarch is closer to Aristotle鈥檚 by virtue of behavior: he can bend rules for himself but can also bend rules for all. Warren Buffet鈥檚 support of a higher income tax on the rich seems to instantiate this genre! By contrast, Proudhon鈥檚 鈥渙ligarchs as thieves鈥 is alien to Aristotle and progeny.

Duterte鈥檚 oligarch, however, seems closer to Proudhon鈥檚: expropriation of the oligarch鈥檚 property on the presumption of theft. Both MVP and JAZA, who occupy most of the telco landscape, also have long-term contracts with the government on the distribution of water. These contracts have been adjudged by international arbitral courts as valid and above board. And yet Duterte threatened them with expropriation, even after forcing them to give up their claim on the arbitral awards. That is how you treat Proudhon鈥檚 property owners. Perhaps a case of JM Keynes鈥 鈥淧ractical men (being) the slaves of some defunct economist.鈥

Every science begins with a taxonomy: the classification of phenomena into well-defined groups, say, into different taxa (biology) or into different flavors (in particle physics). Withoutproper definitions, we run around in circles forever. Clearly, by the Aristotle-Drilon definition, the 鈥渞obber barons鈥 of the Gilded Age of the USA were oligarchs 鈥 they were fabulously wealthy and they rode the US Congress to secure or protect exclusive benefits. But this baronetcy of robbers also led to the creation of millions of productive jobs and a world-beating US economy. Warren Buffet and Jeff Bezos, who built fabulous wealth away from the political sphere and judiciously avoided overt political involvement for exclusive interests are, by definition, not in the same fold. By contrast, Kapitan Lucio Tan, whose political connections were said to have led to the blocking of 鈥渟in tax鈥 adjustment bills for decades, was an oligarch. So was the late 鈥淒anding鈥 Cojuangco who actually headed a political party and shaped policy on the Tobacco Levy. JAZA and MVP are clearly out of their league. By the Proudhon-Duterte definition, however, they all are the same banana deserving of expropriation.

With convenient exceptions, of course.

 

Raul V. Fabella is a retired professor of the UP School of Economics, a member of the National Academy of Science and Technology and an honorary professor of the Asian Institute of Management. He gets his dopamine fix from bicycling intra-subdivision and tending to flowers with wife Teena.