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This Is My Voice (Paperback)

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INTRODUCTION To speak for "fair trade" begs the question: What is fair trade? There are many definitions, perhaps as many as the numerous groups worldwide advocating it. Google "fair trade" on the Internet and you instantly get a long list of definitions. Factories lost I have my own definition of "fair trade." It is based not on academic research and classroom discussions but on more than 50 years of directly experiencing UNFAIR TRADE - including the indescribable pain of helplessly watching all the factories I built up over several decades through backbreaking toil and self-sacrifice, employing more than 10,000 Filipino workers, shut down one by one as cheap imports - courtesy of GLOBALIZATION and LIBERALIZATION - flooded the market, destroying not just my factories but virtually the nation's entire, fledgling manufacturing sector, as well as the agricultural sector, equally bludgeoned by cheap food imports. Then, to add insult to injury, likewise helplessly watching as my erstwhile foreign principals/partners took over ownership of the marketing and servicing companies I and my talented Filipino team had built up over several decades. Again, they were able to legally mount the takeover because of our government's support for globalization and liberalization. This was a classic example of the folk saying "Iba ang nagtanim, iba ang kumain" (Others planted, others ate). My companies shouldered all the multimillion investments, risks, and hard work during the early days when the brands of my foreign partners were still unknown in the Philippines. Several decades later, after we were able to build up said brands to number-one rank in the Philippine market, my former partners - using globalization and liberalization as justification - conveniently took over my companies and harvested the fruits of our hard work. Equally painful, the same kind of injustice was done on many other Filipino companies by their respective foreign "partners." It is a definition based on more than 50 years of slugging it out as an entrepreneur in local and foreign market arenas, against gigantic competitors with financial, technological, and logistical resources far superior to mine, with awesome political connections versus my complete absence of such. It is a definition based on my reflections on those profoundly difficult experiences, along with many readings and discussions on the subject. It is a definition based on the many tragic cases I have witnessed of small Filipino entrepreneurs doing everything they could to make their businesses survive and prosper, only to be vanquished by global forces too large for them to handle. To my mind, the best way to start a clear definition of fair trade is by defining what it is NOT, in the same way that night defines day. What fair trade is not, its exact opposite, is the unholy duo of "free" trade GLOBALIZATION and LIBERALIZATION being espoused and imposed on the entire world by the World Trade Organization (WTO) through the so-called General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT). As I have stated in several speeches, first of all, there is no such thing as "free trade." Nothing in this world is free, least of all in trade. The academic definition of "free trade" is that it is "a policy by which a government does not discriminate against imports or interfere with exports by applying tariffs (to imports) or subsidies (to exports) or quotas. According to the law of comparative advantage, the policy permits trading partners mutual gains from trade of goods and services." (source: www.wikipedia.com) In the real world, it is an open secret that all governments employ both overt (e.g., tariffs) and covert (e.g., hidden subsidies) measures to influence imports and exports to favor their respective national interests - or the interests of their respective ruling elites. What fair trade is not As early as 1996, during the term of former President Fidel V. Ramos (FVR), (MORE.

Product Details
ISBN: 9781548321512
ISBN-10: 1548321516
Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
Publication Date: June 27th, 2017
Pages: 188
Language: English