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By Isa Lorenzo and Malou Mangahas, Philippine
Center For Investigative Journalism
Last of two parts
President Gloria Arroyo herself gives the lie to
her administration’s avowed efforts to trim the bureaucracy of
excess personnel.
A 2008 study by the Civil Service Commission
lists Mrs. Arroyo’s office as the agency with the biggest number
of undersecretaries, assistant secretaries, advisers, assistants and
consultants in excess of caps set in law, and without civil-service
eligibility.
What to do with these Arroyo appointees is the
acid test that Ricardo Lirag Saludo must hurdle in his new post as
Civil Service chairman with a fixed seven-year tenure.
From 2002 and until he was nominated to the
Civil Service on Monday, Saludo had served as secretary to the
Cabinet and is known everywhere as a rabid defender and loyal
functionary of President Arroyo.
Saludo now recognizes that the “bloated
bureaucracy” is “clearly an issue” but whether he will move
against his boss of seven years, and their political friends and
allies, bears watching.
On October 2, 2004, President Arroyo issued
Executive Order 366 directing “a strategic review of the
operations and organizations of the Executive Branch and providing
options and incentives for government employees who may be affected
by the rationalization of the functions and agencies.”
The Executive Order instructed all departments
and agencies of the executive branch, as well as government-owned
and -controlled corporations, to scale down, phase out, abolish,
deactivate, merge, consolidate and regularize any and all agencies
that do not deliver “quality public service.”
As well, the Executive Order sought to
rationalize and improve “the quality and efficiency of government
services delivery by eliminating/minimizing overlaps and
duplication.”
In January, members of the Confederation for
Unity, Recognition and Advancement of Government Employees (Courage)
marched to protest what they claimed was the impending retrenchment
of about 420,000 civil servants.
But the Civil Service has clarified that only
the 700,000 employees of the executive branch, and not all the
1.4-million civil service workforce, would be affected by the
rationalization program.
Political hires exempted
Under Executive Order 366, an employee may
choose, “on a voluntary basis,” to opt for early retirement or
transfer to a similar position in another office.
Ferdinand Gaite, national president of Courage,
said that last January alone, a total of 8,120 personnel from the
National Food Authority, Metro Manila Development Authority, Senate,
Bureau of Customs, Bureau of Internal Revenue, and Department of
Social Welfare and Development were in line for retrenchment.
In July 2005, at a dialogue on Executive Order
366 attended by 90 managers and union leaders of national government
agencies, civil servants decried the exemption that the order
accorded President Arroyo’s executive hires.
A report said government workers expressed their
“anxiety” at the forum thus: “Presidential and political
appointees must be the first to go. In past reorganization efforts,
although positions were dissolved, others were created by political
action, especially at the top management level.”
Indeed, President Arroyo is the biggest violator
of her own executive order.
Karina Constantino-David ended her seven-year
term as Civil Service chairman on February 1, 2008, with a final
broadside. “You didn’t have this kind of excess in any previous
administration,” David told the Philippine Center for
Investigative Journalism.
A 2008 Civil Service study that David disclosed
last January showed that President Arroyo has hired an excess of 81
undersecretaries and assistant secretaries, apart from 53
presidential advisers and presidential assistants, and an unknown
number of consultants.
The Administrative Code of 1987 and various
laws, executive orders and administrative orders stipulate that
there should be at most 163 undersecretaries and assistant
secretaries in the 24 executive departments.
But the Office of the President has the biggest
number of excess hires for these positions at 31, followed by the
Department of National Defense with eight, according to the study.
The Department of Agrarian Reform comes in third
with seven excess hires, then the departments of Health, Justice,
Foreign Affairs, and Interior and Local Government, with four excess
hires each, the study said.
Big numbers still
Other official sources offer slightly different,
but similarly big, numbers of excess hires.
The 2008 Government Directory published by the
Department of Budget and Management lists the names of 14
undersecretaries, nine assistant secretaries, 42 presidential
assistants, two advisers, and one special envoy under the Office of
the President.
An online directory of personnel posted on
Malacañang’s official website lists 34 presidential advisers, 34
presidential assistants, three special envoys and three consultants,
all in the Office of the President Proper.
In addition, the Office of the President’s
Staff Directory enrolls the personnel of the Executive Secretary,
Presidential Management Staff, Presidential Legislative Liaison
Office, and the Private Offices of the President (Protocol,
Appointments, Correspondence, Internal House Affairs).
This supplemental list names 30 other
presidential appointees with the rank of undersecretary (11
persons), deputy executive secretary (seven), assistant secretary
(four) regional development officer (three), presidential liaison
officer (three), special assistant to the President (two), and
dozens more of directors and executive assistants.
To be sure, David affirms that President
Arroyo’s predecessors Joseph Estrada and Corazon Aquino have had
their fair share of political appointees.
Former President Aquino came to power in “an
unusual situation” and had to rebuild government from scratch,
hence so many of her managers were political appointees without
civil-service eligibility, David said.
But in his first administrative order, Estrada
directed members of his Cabinet to respect the positions of career
service executive officers in their respective departments, David
added.
By 1999, two reports said Estrada had hired 20
presidential consultants, 22 presidential advisers, and 28
presidential assistants, or a total of 70.
Former President Fidel Ramos, political tutor
and patron to Mrs. Arroyo, only had a handful of advisers.
Yet unlike Ramos, and despite her issuance of
Executive Order 366 supposedly to trim the bureaucracy, President
Arroyo turned the bureaucracy fatter at the top.
Overlapping functions
President Arroyo gets more than full assist on
sundry policy issues and programs from 27 Cabinet-rank secretaries,
and the executive directors or heads of 38 other executive agencies,
commissions and committees under the Office of the President.
Still, she has chosen to procure a coterie of
advisers and assistants for various specific, and often similar or
overlapping roles.
For instance, she has a presidential adviser
each for Constituency Affairs, Jobs Generation, Strategic Projects,
New Government Centers, Cooperatives, Muslim Communities, Culture,
Military Affairs, Police Affairs, Eastern Visayas, Northern Luzon,
Southern Tagalog, Regional Development, Agricultural Modernization,
Appointment, Muslim Royalty Concerns, Cagayan Valley,
Infrastructure, Foreign Affairs, Rural Electrification, Revenue
Enhancement, Subic-Clark Alliance for Development, Energy Affairs,
External Affairs, and Region VI.
In addition to the presidential advisers,
President Arroyo has hired presidential assistants for Media Affairs
and Religious Affairs, CARAGA, Western Visayas, Central Visayas,
Foreign Affairs, Education Affairs, Youth Affairs, Religious
Affairs, Mining, Anti-Smuggling, New Government Centers, Culture,
State and Foreign Visits, Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao,
Muslim Affairs, Central Luzon, Bicol, MIMAROPA, Eastern Visayas,
North Luzon Growth Quadrangle Area, Central Visayas, Region IX,
Region X, Region XII, Panay.
President Arroyo has also employed special
envoys and consultants on “DILG Matters,” Transnational Crimes,
Entertainment Industry, and a secretary-general for the “Ad Hoc
Council on Values Formation.”
Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita acknowledges
that the list of presidential advisers, assistants and consultants
may be interminable, but asserts that their maintenance cost does
not add up to much.
In a news report, Ermita had maintained that
only one or two presidential advisers were receiving salaries.
Not pro bono work
But government service should not be a pro bono
or gratis work, according to Emilia Boncodin, who resigned as Mrs.
Arroyo’s Budget secretary.
“So why are they there?” Boncodin asked.
“I think the answer is they just want the title. The title is more
important.”
The fact of the matter is even without salaries,
there are hidden costs government carries for political appointees.
For one, these appointees are accorded at least
office space, work stations, cars, secretarial and administrative
staff, and some access to miscellaneous expense accounts.
David, the Civil Service’s ex-chairman, did
the math and estimates that at the very least, the total salaries
and allowances of President Arroyo’s excess executives, and that
of their staff, amount to about P122 million a year.
Of this, she said about P65 million a year goes
to compensation of the staff personnel of the excess
undersecretaries and assistant secretaries.
It might be a drop in the bucket, compared with
the P300-billion budget in 2008 for personnel services of the entire
bureaucracy, “but P65 million is P65 million,” Boncodin said.
“You can make use of that for a lot of, but . . . you’re
assuming that all of these are nonperforming assets. I wouldn’t
say that.”
Impact beyond money
Political appointees are a burden on the budget
but to other analysts, the more serious adverse impact of too many
of them is beyond monetary value.
There is, in the view of Social Watch convenor
Leonor Briones, a question of confused roles, inefficiency and waste
of resources.
Briones, a professor in public administration at
the University of the Philippines who served as national treasurer
under Estrada, asked: “Why should she [President Arroyo] have a
Presidential Consultant on DILG matters when the DILG secretary is
at her beck and call every hour of the day?”
“Why does she need a Presidential Adviser on
Revenue Enhancement, when the Secretary of Finance and the BIR and
Customs Commissioners are constantly at her side? Why Presidential
Assistants for Panay, Pampanga, Bicol, Cagayan Valley when there are
directors and governors who regularly troop to Malacañang?”
Briones added.
To University of the Philippines political
science professor Clarita Carlos, yet another issue is that
political loyalties, more than meritocracy, seem to drive
appointments to key government posts. “For God’s sake, why
isn’t there a deeper bench in terms of choosing better people?”
Carlos asked.
A career service executive officer at the
defense department points to other adverse results of the too
frequent turnover of managers in his agency—programs are disrupted
and career service personnel denied a chance to get promoted.
The officer, speaking on condition of anonymity,
said: “A lot of the military men here are presidential appointees
serving at the pleasure of the President, so continuity [of
programs] suffers, plus, of course, they come in at the top, so you
deprive people an opportunity to go up.”
“There was a time here na since the group at
the top were not aware of how a program grew, procurements ito, it
took about two years and the program did not move,” he said.
No competitive screening
Horacio Gonzalez, chief of administrative
services at the Defense department who holds CEO-VI eligibility as
Director IV, said it would have been better if appointments to
senior government posts were made more competitive. Unfortunately,
“there is no competitive screening and a lot of subjective
decisions are made, pagdating sa appointment.”
The big puzzle to both Briones and Boncodin is
how President Arroyo can deal with so many advisers and assistants
when she hardly has time to breathe given her work load and pace.
“Does the President have the time for 50
hovering advisers when she has the entire national bureaucracy?”
Briones asked.
In Boncodin’s mind, the question is: “How
many people can you listen to? What is your span of control? So the
limit should be what is a reasonable span of control for the
President.”
It must be stressed that it was during President
Arroyo’s term that 129 task forces, including many born and bred
during her predecessors’ watch, were abolished. However, in their
stead, Mrs. Arroyo has also created over 20 new task forces.
Irrational, unrealistic
Low and iniquitous—by all accounts that is how
government pays its workers. It remains a mystery to former Chairman
David why a bounty of political allies and friends had signed up
with President Arroyo.
At the clerical level, the government pays 20
percent more than a medium-size Filipino firm, David said.
Those at the professional level—including
teachers, accountants and lawyers who make up 70 percent to 75
percent of the bureaucracy—receive 30 percent less.
Those at the managerial level that represents
1.5 percent of the civil service receive 70 percent less than they
would in the private sector.
“It’s no joke to work for 25 years or 30
years and get a take-home pay of P23,000. And you’re already a
Director. So compensation is a major aspect,” David said. Queuing
up to work as presidential adviser or assistant or consultant seems,
to David, simply “irrational and unrealistic.”
By law, government positions from the rank of
assistant secretary down are career service positions subject to
eligibility requirements. The post of undersecretary in some
instances could be occupied only by career service personnel, and in
others, by political appointees.
Political appointments now cut wider and deeper
in Philippine bureaucracy it has started to worry development
agencies and investors.
A recent National Trade Estimate report of the
Office of the US Trade Representative cites concerns that some
appointees of President Arroyo may have been chosen more for
political considerations rather than their expertise.
“Investors also have raised concerns that
regulators rarely have any background in economics, business or a
competitive economic system, which enables entrenched interests to
manipulate the legal system and regulatory process, whether by
bribery or through exploiting the lack of expertise among
regulators, to protect market positions,” according to the report.
Pending bills
There is a bill called the Government
Compensation and Justification Act pending in Congress, which aims
to review the salary of bureaucrats. Another pending bill, called
the Career Executive System Bill, aims to reverse errors and the
contradictions in law that create many gray areas.
The bill provides for the Civil Service to
appoint people to rank, from which the President would choose whom
to assign where. This means that disciplinary power is with the
Civil Service, and that it will be able to check appointments.
Cabinet secretaries would also be chosen by the directors of each
agency, with the power to choose the undersecretary and assistant
secretary left to the President.
In David’s view, the bill would be progress
enough because it “reduces the appointing powers of the
President.”
Career service personnel share the sentiment.
When it comes to appointments, the Civil Service process and tests
of “competence and fitness” must be followed, and not the will
or whim of the President, they said.
“Working in government should compel people to
establish their eligibilities,” said Gonzalez. “Having
government recognition of your profession gives you good credibility
and you have a sense of tenure and permanency.”
David added, “Being part of the Career
Executive Service should not be the prerogative of the President.”
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