Text
                    Philippine Economy
and Politics
Jose Ma. Sison
Julieta de Lima
Aklat ng Bayan Publishing House
October 1998


F irst Edition 1998 All Rights Reserved  By Aklat ng Bayan Publishing House  PUBLISHER'S NOTE  The articles included in this book were first published in the 19803: "Jose Maria Sison On the Mode of Production" in 1983, in Midweek Magazine and The New Philippine Review; and the lecture series, "Philippine Crisis and Revolution", in 1986 in various publications in the Philippines and abroad. Both works have been widely reproduced, translated and reprinted since.  The introduction, "An Update: Qualitatively Unchanged Conditions", emphasizes the continuing validity of the characterization of Philippine society as semicolonial and semifeudal against certain wrong trends of thought aimed at undermining the new-democratic revolution.  The idea of publishing this book came about in the course of the Second Great Rectification Movement, which has involved serious study and review of the basic principles of the Philippine revolutionary movement.  Revolutionary education, propaganda and agitation against the continuing onslaught of imperialist and pro-imperialist petty-bourgeois propaganda require the reading and study of the articles in this book.  The widespread and deepening crisis brought about by the neoliberal policies of deregulation, liberalization and privatization —notably the current financial and economic crisis— and the resurgent people's struggles to oppose these make the analysis of Philippine society and revolution presented in the articles in this book even more interesting and enlightening.  The current grave crisis of the world capitalist system and domestic ruling system underscores the significance and relevance of the content of this book.  October 1998  Printed in the Philippines 
PREFACE  This book presents the historical background and continuing fundamentals of the economy and politics in the Philippines.  It is timely as it clarifies the essential factors at work in the making of the present grave socioeconomic crisis and the scandalous return of the Marcoses and the worst of their cronies to power and privilege.  There has been no social revolution since the fall of Marcos in 1986. There have only been variations on the same theme of imperialist domination and reactionary puppet rule, from Marcos through Aquino and Ramos to Estrada.  The fundamentals of the semicolonial and semifeudal society persist, for so long as the progress of the new-democratic revolution has not reached the goal of overthrowing the rule of the comprador big bourgeoisie and landlord class that serve foreign monopoly capitalism.  In the first half of the 803, the chronic crisis of the mling system worsened to the point of splitting the reactionary classes and enraging the broad masses of the people against the consequences of imperialist-directed Keynesian “development” of the 705.  In the last half of the 90s, the same chronic crisis once more plunges into an exceedingly intolerable level. The broad masses of the people are made to suffer unprecedented oppression and exploitation and cry out in pain against the consequences of neoliberal “free market” globalization, embraced by the successors of Marcos.  Whatever are the policy dictates of IMF, World Bank and WTO. the consistent objective of foreign monopoly capitalism is to fimher exploit and oppress the toiling masses of workers and peasants.  The imperialists and the local exploiting classes, together with their ideological and political agents, are shamed by the bankruptcy of their position and are worried to death by the rising wave of the new-democratic revolution. Jose Ma. Sison  Julieta de Lima  October 10, 1998 
Table of Contents  INTRODUCTION 3 ON THE MODE OF PRODUCTION 19 Forces of Production 20 Relations of Productions 24 Semifeudalism 25 Development Scheme of the U.S.-Marcos Regime 31 “Land Reform” 35 Export-oriented Manufacturing 39 Neocolonial Industrialization? 42 World Capitalist System 45 Rural Development 48 Capitalism in the Philippines? 52 Feudalism As Social Base of Imperialism 55 The Marcos Ruling Clique 58 Crisis and Revolution 61 LECTURES ON PHILIPPINE CRISIS AND REVOLUTION 65 I. HISTORICAL ROOTS OF THE PHILIPPINE CRISIS 67 Precolonial Societies 67 Colonial and F eudal Society 69 Philippine Revolution 70 Colonial and Semifeudal Society 72 Semicolonial and Semifeudal Society 74 The Marcos Fascist Dictatorship ' 76 The Current Situation 78 II. CRISIS OF THE SEMIFEUDAL ECONOMY 81 The Productive Forces 81 The People in Production 82 Productive Relations 83 Ever Worsening Economic Crisis 85 III. CRISIS OF THE NEOCOLONIAL STATE 89 Continuance of US. Domination 89 Big Comprador-Landlord Dictatorship 91 Further Crisis of the Neocolonial State 93 The Marcos Fascist Dictatorship 95  The Post-Marcos Situation 98 
2 Table of C ontents  IV. CRISIS OF PHILIPPINE CULTURE The Dominant Cultural Forces The Antinational Role The Antiscientific Role The Antipeople Role  V. CRISIS 1N INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Foundation of U.S.-R.P. Relations The Crisis of U.S.-R.P. Relations Worsening Crisis in Philippine F oreign Relations  VI. THE NEW DEMOCRATIC MOVEMENT New Democratic Program The People's War The Legal Struggle  VII. ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT Nationalization of the Economy National Industrialization Genuine Land Reform Economic Planning Foreign Economic Relations  VIII. A NATIONAL, SCIENTIFIC AND MASS CULTURE The New Democratic Cultural Revolution The National Aspect The Scientific Aspect The Mass Aspect  IX. INDEPENDENT FOREIGN POLICY An Independent Foreign Policy Relations with the U.S. Relations with Asia, Afiica and Latin America Relations with Socialist Countries Relations with Other Capitalist Countries  X. PROSPECTS OF THE PHILIPPINE REVOLUTION The Ever Worsening Crisis The Growing Revolutionary Forces  Index  101 101 103 106 107  109 109 111 115  117 118 120 122  125 125 126 128 129 129  131 131 133 134 136  139 139 140 142 143 144  147 147 151  155 
INTRODUCTION  An Update: Qualitatively Unchanged Conditionsl  am deeply pleased and grateful that my long interview with Julie, “On the Mode of Production in the Philippines” in 1983, while I was still detained by the Marcos fascist dictatorship, and my series of lectures as research fellow of the Center for Asian Studies of the University of the Philippines, “Philippine Crisis and Revolution”, in April-May 1986 are published together in this volume, Philippine Economy and Politics.  Since its congress of reestablishment on December 26, 1968, the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) has described Philippine society as semicolonial and semifeudal. The Philippine political system has been semicolonial since 1946, under the indirect rule of U.S. imperialism through the parties and politicians of the local exploiting classes. The Philippine economic system has been semifeudal since the first decade of the 20th century, exploited by the homegrown comprador big bourgeoisie and landlord class in the service of foreign monopoly capitalism.  Correspondent to the semicolonial and semifeudal character of Philippine society, the CPP has put forward the general line of national democratic revolution through protracted people's war under the leadership of the proletariat. The strategic line of encircling the cities from the countryside and accumulating strength in the countryside until it becomes possible to seize the cities realizes and activates the basic class alliance of the working class and the peasantry.  In this regard, the CPP has deployed its cadres in the countryside in order to build the people's army and the peasant movement, solve the land problem as the main problem of the democratic revolution and build the people's democratic power even while reactionary state power is still entrenched in the cities. Responding to the demand of the peasant majority of the people for an agrarian revolution, the antifeudal line is the main component of the general line of national democratic revolution.  ' Written in April 1995 and slightly revised in November 1996. 
4 Philippine Economy and Politics  0n the Question of Semifeudalism  Some opponents of the general line of national democratic revolution pretend to be anti-imperialist and progressive and therefore avoid questioning the description ‘of the Philippine ruling system as semicolonial or neocolonial. But they concentrate on attacking the description of the Philippine economy as semifeudal in order to do away with its precision, confuse the situation and exaggerate "development" or prospects of it under the auspices of the imperialists and the local reactionaries and attack the general line of the national democratic revolution, especially the strategic line of protracted people's war.  The Philippine economy has been called many names—"fi'ee enterprise", "market", "mixed", "developing", "dependent-capitalist" and so on. But none of these is more precise than "semifeudal" in denoting the level of development of the productive forces and the relations of production, particularly the shift from the feudal economy of the 19th century under Spanish colonialism to the semifeudal economy of the 20th century under U.S. imperialism. Bourgeois economists adopt their own terminology to stress private ownership of the means of production, the commodity system or the primacy of the market and the promise of development under capitalism. And political counterrevolutionaries wish to get rid of the term semifeudal to impugn the general line of national democratic revolution through protracted people's war.  In its entire 20-year period of rule from 1966, especially during its imposition of fascist dictatorship on the Filipino people from 1972 to 1986, the U.S.-Marcos ruling clique aggravated and deepened the agrarian, preindustn'al and semifeudal character of the Philippine social economy. It did not undertake national industrialization and land reform but exacerbated the socioeconomic problems inflicted by foreign monopoly capitalism, domestic feudalism and bureaucrat capitalism.  Under the policy dictates of the U.S. and such multilateral agencies as the IMF and the World Bank, the Marcos regime poured domestic as well as borrowed foreign resources into big comprador operations, bureaucratic corruption and into a military buildup. It made a big portion of agricultural production of staples dependent on imported inputs under the "green revolution", expanded mineral and agricultural raw-material production for export, maintained the infiastructure for the exchange of raw-material exports and manufactured imports and deepened the dependence on imported  machinery and inputs. 
Introduction 5  However, in the late 19703, a handful of subjectivist elements within the CPP started to question and undermine the description of the Philippine economy as semifeudal, agrarian and without basic industries. They cited data on the commodity system, wage relations, the increase of rural and urban oddjobbers and distribution of gross output values. They came to the conclusion that‘the Philippine economy was no longer semifeudal, implying that it was already industrial capitalist without analyzing the kind of industry that existed and the socioeconomic relations.  In effect they credited the Marcos regime for "industrializing" the Philippines. They also exaggerated the extent of the urban population as 40 percent and implied that the purported percentage increase in urban population was due to industrialization and not merely due to the exhaustion of the land frontier in the 1960s and the increase of the unemployed and oddjobbers in both rural and urban areas throughout the 19703.  The subjectivists falsely claimed that the Philippines had been industrialized and urbanized to an extent that it was necessary to "modify, adjust and refine" the general line of the national democratic revolution through protracted people's war. In fact, they were undercutting and assailing this general line. They were rationalizing the urban-basing of the CPP central leadership and the concentration of cadres in the cities. They were promoting revisionism by pushing subjectivist and opportunist lines of  thinking.  In 1980, the subjectivists pushed distinguishably "Left" and Right opportunist lines of policy. They blamed the founders of the CPP for the supposed inaccuracy of describing the Philippine economy as semifeudal and for the supposed neglect of revolutionary work in the urban areas. They obscured the fact that the proletarian revolutionary cadres of the CPP had been ceaselessly developing the legal democratic movement in the urban areas since the entire decade of the 19603 and that it was the open rule of terror of the Marcos regime rather than the antifeudal line of the Party that had required the urban-based legal democratic movement to go underground in the 19703.  Throughout the 19803, the worst of the Left opportunists pushed the line of accelerating the advance of the armed revolution through urban—based armed insurrections, incited by armed city partisans, and through premature enlargement and "regularization" of units of the people's army. They had contempt for the legal and defensive character of the struggle in the urban areas and for the constant necessity of ever expanding and consolidating the mass base in the urban and rural areas through painstaking mass work. 
6 Philippine Economy and Politics  "Lefi" opportunism was pushed either under the premature notion of "strategic counterofi‘ensive" or making urban-based insurrections the leading factor in the process of armed revolution. They kept on wishing for an exceptional conjuncture of domestic and international factors that would invalidate the strategic line of protracted people's war. They considered as more important the external rather than the internal factors of the revolutionary process and confused the principal and secondary aspects of this process. They took the victorious uprisings in Vietnam in 1945 and in Nicaragua in 1979 out of historical context and cited these as the best models of the Philippine revolution.  At the same time, the Right opportunists pushed, the erroneous line that the urban-based legal mass movement was of higher importance than the rural- based armed struggle, and that more people would be attracted to the united front and to the revolution if ,the leadership would be entrusted to the anti- Marcos section of the reactionaries under the concept of a bourgeois-nationalist "New Katipunan" and that the leadership of the working class and the CPP would have to be cut down or even liquidated. Under the stimulus of funding from Western Europe, the urban-based Right opportunists produced a considerable amount of bourgeois reformist propaganda and drew as well as withheld CPP cadres from the countryside.  In any communist party, even at its best, there is always an internal basis for the emergence and development of subjectivism and opportunism because of the inflow of petty-bourgeois elements who fail to remould themselves to become genuine proletarian revolutionaries and because there is the constant impact of influences fiom outside the Party, either from the social environment in general or fiom deliberate attempts of the enemy to penetrate and influence the CPP. The dangers of subjectivism and opportunism rise when ideological, political and organizational standards for Party membership are lowered as in certain urban-based units of the CPP and when the antifascist aspect of the revolutionary struggle is cut off from the anti-imperialist and antifeudal aspects.  The communists are always bombarded with the oficial development theory of foreign monopoly capitalism and the local reactionaries. In the absence of or due to the weakening of Marxist-Leninist study, the unremoulded petty—bourgeois elements in the CPP can become impressed with the glossy presentation of "development" programs and projects of the reactionaries, the heavy importation of consumer goods and rapid infi'astructure- building financed through deficit-spending and foreign borrowing. Whenever a communist party is ideologically and politically lax, the class enemy can even introduce or recruit in place agents to sow political confusion. In addition, there are those outside the Party who pretend to be Left and progressive, deliberately address themselves to the communists and spread wrong notions 
Introduction 7  about the Philippine economy which in fact assist the counterrevolutionary line of the barefaced enemies of the Philippine revolution.  After the imposition of martial rule on the Philippines, the so-called social-democrats, who are in fact Christian democrats trained for anticommunist work but who deck themselves out as progressive competitors of and alternatives to the communists, circulated the notion that the Marcos regime even if repressive had adopted an excellent economic policy of development under the auspices of the IMF and World Bank. The Lava revisionist group openly capitulated to the Marcos regime and misrepresented it as representative of the national bourgeoisie, as one interested in "noncapitalist developmen " and as one trying hard to free itself from a U.S.-dictated policy of "neocolonial industrialization". The flunkeys of Soviet social-imperialism presumed that industrialization was a foregone conclusion and that the struggle was only about whether it is foreign-owned or Filipino- owned with Soviet aid.  Those who presumed that the Philippines had become "dependent capitalist" also tried to sow confusion in petty-bourgeois circles about the character of the Philippine economy. They preached that it had become useless to distinguish the Philippine mode of production from the globalization of production in which the effective terms are only the metropolis and the peripheny. Among the preachers of “dependent capitalism” were neo- Kautskyites who recycled the theory of ultra-imperialism (unilinear spread of the capitalist mode of production to all countries) and/or the Trotskyites . They babbled that the Philippine economy was no longer semifeudal and that it was no longer valid and important to take into account the distinct Philippine mode of production in the face of the globalization of capital and the meu'opolis-periphery schema. It was implied that the ground had been taken away fi'om the strategic line of people's war.  A highly placed "development" technocrat of the Marcos regime (now the head of the CIA-instituted Philippine Rural Reconstruction Movement [PRRMD who had "defected" to the NDF in December 1977 drummed up the line of "reexamining" the Party's analysis that the Philippine economy is semifeudal and found resonance among some members of the CPP Central Committee. The push for a reexamination was based on superficial observations of the commodity system in agriculture involving types of cash crop such as onions in Bongabon, Nueva Ecij a.  In 1978, the CPP wavered in its criticism and repudiation of modern revisionism. No Marxist-Leninist criticism and repudiation was made of the already clear ascendance of the Chinese revisionists headed by Deng in China. Marxism-Leninism-Mao Zedong Thought became depreciated. Some members 
8 Philippine Economy and Politics  of the CPP Central Committee started to float the notion that the Soviet Union and China were similarly socialist and that their socialist economies were being strengthened by capitalist-oriented reforms.  In 1979 Philippine military intelligence omcers were telling several prisoners, suspected as high cadres of the CPP, that they could be releasedTfirom prison immediately if they pledged to push the line that the Philippines was no longer semifeudal and that the Marcos regime had made substantial economic progress under the auspices of the IMF and the World Bank.  In the late 1970s, the Filipino assets of US. intelligence agencies (CIA and DIA) inserted themselves into and used the U.S.-based Katipunan ng Demokratikong Pilipino (KDP) to question the description of the Philippine economy as semifeudal and push the twisted line of "support the Philippine armed struggle, drop Mao Zedong's theory of people's war and seek the decisive support of the Soviet Union". Soon, the KDP openly attacked the CPP. Some of the KDP activists pretended to remain loyal to the CPP but in fact continued to push such notions as that "export-oriented manufacturing" could be the cutting edge of U.S.-inspired industrialization and that democratization was simply a matter of overthrowing Marcos, without the need for people's war.  By the early 1980s, there was already a loud debate in narrow petty- bourgeois circles whether the Philippine economy was semifeudal or not. I responded to the attempts of the opportunist elements within the CPP and pseudo-Lefi elements outside the CPP to sow confusion regarding the character of the Philippine economy. It so happened that Julie was already out of prison and could relate to me developments in the current debate and bring to me reference materials every weekend. We agreed on the format of an interview by her with me on the Philippine mode of production in order to clarify the essential character of the Philippine economy and counter the  wrong notions about it.  It is of vital importance to publish this interview in this volume in order to bridge the economic analysis in the founding documents of the CPP in 1968 and Amado Guerrero's Philippine Society and Revolution in 1970 on the one hand and the current reality and information about the Philippine economy on the other hand and in order to counter the persistent attempts of anti-CPP elements to discredit the Marxist-Leninist analysis of the Philippine economy as semifeudal and undermine the general line of the national democratic revolution through protracted pe0ple's war. 
Introduction 9  The Semifeudal Economy, 1960-90  The Philippine economy continues to have no industries producing basic metals, basic chemicals and capital goods from the local primary production of raw materials. It remains basically agrarian even as it has some kind of floating industry dependent on imported capital goods. The socioeconomic relations are dominated by the cOmprador big bourgeoisie and the landlord class in the service of foreign monopoly capitalism.  The semifeudal economy is a commodity system that has departed from the feudal economy of self-subsistence but it is one dominated by the comprador big bourgeoisie rather than by a homegrown industrial bourgeoisie. The urban-based comprador big bourgeoisie is in close partnership with the rural-based landlord class. At the same time, the whole semifeudal economy is a neocolonial preindustrial or an agrarian adjunct of the world capitalist system.  Whatever are the current proportions of gross output values and employment in the agriculture, industry and service sectors of the economy, all these are dependent on imported equipment, fuel, other raw materials and manufactured components from abroad. The latest high-tech tools may be used in any sector but the Philippine economy until now does not produce these tools. Production for local consumption as well as for export has become more import-dependent than ever under the policy of trade liberalization. Agn'cultural and mineral production for export and low value-added production of semiconductors, garments and toys for reexport have consigned the Philippine economy to chronic foreign trade deficit and ever mounting foreign debt.  In all sectors of the economy, the imported producer and consumer goods count high in the gross output values. Subtracting the value of the import content will reveal the following: the highest net value is still contributed by agricultural and mineral ore production and the rising high payments for the imports. In essence, the imports are paid for in part by export income (mainly from raw-material exports) and in another part by an increasing amount of foreign borrowings.  The export of cheap labor for unskilled work has become a bigger earner of :breign exchange than any of the agricultural, mineral or manufactured exports. EIowever, the income of the overseas contract workers is not large enough to :lose the foreign trade gap. The export of cheap labor is a manifestation of he inability of the economy to employ the huge number of college-educated iilipinos who are driven to take menial jobs abroad. 
10 Philippine Economy and Politics  Under the Aquino and Ramos regimes, like their predecessor Marcos regime, the Philippine reactionary government has rabidly followed the same policies dictated by foreign monopoly capitalism. These have run counter to national industrialization and land reform, aggravated and deepened the agrarian and semifeudal character of the economy and, in the face of international credit difficulties, compelled the state to resort more and more to local public borrowing, privatization of state assets, increasing the tax burden and attracting short-term speculative foreign capital.  It is instructive to go over some important data fiom 1960 to 1990 in order to see how much the Philippine economy has undergone degradation. According to official statistics, some 15.4 percent of the labor force was in industry in 1960. This dropped to 15.0 percent in 1990. Within the industrial sector, manufacturing plunged from 12.1 percent share of employment in 1960 to only 9.7 percent in 1990. In 1979, it was supposed to have gone down to 14 percent. The upward fluctuation to 15 percent in 1990 is not believable but is still indicative of retrogression. This is evidence of de-industrialization rather than industrialization. The proportion of employment in manufacturing has become smaller in the period of "export- oriented" manufacturing since the 1970s than in the earlier period of "import- substitution" manufacturing in the 19503 and 19605.  The share of industry in the gross national product (GNP) is supposed to have risen from 28.5 percent in 1960 to 32.9 percent in 1990. Most of this share of industry (34.3 percent in 1991) is contributed by manufacturing (25.4 percent), construction (5 percent) and utilities (2.5 percent), all of which are import-dependent for equipment, fuel, other raw materials or component parts. Manufacturing of consumer goods accounts for an average of 55 percent in 1985-91, petroleum and coal processing 32.6 percent and local fabrication of imported basic metals, reassembly or fi'inge-processing of manufactured components and repairs, 10.7 percent.  Eighty percent out of the 76,288 manufacturing firms surveyed recently employ on the average onelto nine people and 800 large firms employing more than 200 people and above comprise only one percent and account for half of the total manufacturing labor force. Of the total value in manufacturing, 71.4 percent is overconcentrated in Metro Manila, Southern Tagalog and Central Luzon.  Employment in agriculture is supposed to have fallen from 61.2 percent in 1960 to only 45.2 percent in 1990 and the share of agriculture in the GNP is supposed to have decreased from 31.1 percent in 1960 to 23.2 percent in 1990. The service sector is supposed to have absorbed mainly the labor force shifiing from agriculture, especially in the form of rural and urban 
Introduction 1 1  oddjobbers who are in fact unemployed or grossly underemployed. Anyhow, "employment" in the service sector is supposed to have risen from 23.5 percent in 1960 to 43 percent in 1993 and the share of the service sector in the GNP from 40.4 percent in 1960 to 43.9 percent in 1990.  The former "Left" and Right opportunists in the CPP who have become outright traitors to the Philippine revolution and the Filipino people have made so much out of their continuing false claim that the Philippines has become far more urbanized than Russia during the Bolshevik revolution or China during the protracted people's war of liberation in order to rationalize the erroneous line of shifting the focus of the revolutionary movement from the rural to the urban areas and basing themselves in the latter even while the people's war is still at the stage of the strategic defensive.  They produce the high figure of at least 40 percent urban population by adding up the population of Metro Manila, the provincial cities, provincial capitals and town centers. By the same measure, the proportion of the urban population in Russia in 1917 and China in 1949 should be far bigger than that in the Philippines. Russia and China have far longer histories of urbanization under feudalism and the development of handicrafts and manufacturing. Moreover, Russia was also radically different from semifeudal China by having basic industries and an industrial bourgeoisie which was strategically dominant in the economy but politically subordinated to the czarist autocracy.  Out of the total Philippine population of 27,088,000 in 1960, the pepulation of Metro Manila and all provincial cities was 5,370,000 or 19.8 percent, with Metro Manila accounting for 2,460,000 or 9 percent. Out of the total Philippine population of 60,703,000 in 1990, the population of Metro Manila and all the provincial cities was 13,012,000 or 21 percent, with Metro Manila accounting for 7,928,000 or 13 percent.  The increase in city population from 19.8 percent of the total national population in 1960 to 21 percent in 1990 is not really big and does not necessan'ly mean either real urbanization or industrialization. Only a small portion of the urban population enjoys such amenities as piped-in water and electricity. In fact, the conditions of rural backwardness and poverty are brought into the cities by the huge reserve army of labor (unemployed) coming fiom the countryside.  Philippine cities are basically centers of operations of the comprador big bourgeoisie and not of an industrial bourgeoisie. The prevalent kind of economic activity in Metro Manila is commercial rather than industrial and in provincial cities there is generally a small area as center of commercial activity. The population outside the small commercial centers in so-called 
12 Philippine Economy and Politics  provincial cities is actually rural. The provincial capitals and town centers which are not classified as cities have generally less commerce and less urban amenities than those classified as cities.  The same incorrigible opportunist elements who have unduly credited the Marcos regime for "indusu'ializing" and "urbanizing" the Philippines and who have faulted the CPP for refusing to accept this wrong view are still the same elements who have praised the Aquino regime for "economic recovery" and who have self-contradictorily declared that the Ramos regime is still in the process of making the agrarian Philippine economy a "newly-industrializing country" by the year 2000. Consistently, they wish the big comprador-landlord regiine to industrialize the Philippines in the vain hope of liquidating soon the protracted people's war. Thus, they have shamelessly pushed the line of "seeking convergences" with the "development" program of the Ramos regime, pretending to criticize it up to a certain point but on the whole  supporting it.  On the Question of Dictatorship and Democratization  In the upsurge of the broad popular struggle against the Marcos fascist dictatorship fi'om 1983 to 1986, after the outrageous assassination of Benigno Aquino and when the anti-Marcos reactionaries became emboldened to oppose the dictatorship, the "Left" opportunists exaggerated the possibility of winning total victory or taking a major share of political power in the ofling through urban insurrections and premature regularization of the NPA and became unmindful of the conspicuous grave loss and weakening of the mass base in the rural areas, starting fi'om 1984, and the occurrence of Kampanyang Ahos in Mindanao, starting fi‘om 1985, due to the putschist line.  At the same time, the Right opportunists exaggerated the possibility of winning a major share of political power upon the condition that they prevailed with their bourgeois reformist line. They wished the revolutionary forces to tail after the leadership of the anti-Marcos reactionaries, engage solely or mainly in legal struggle and become mere footstool for the anti-Marcos  reactionaries in their rise to power.  The most corrosive line that the Right opportunist elements (under the influence of the Filipino assets of US. imperialism) pushed within the CPP was the one presuming that there would be "democratization" and a simple case of expanding the "democratic space" through legal struggle if the Marcos fascist dictatorship had been replaced by another big comprador-landlord clique, especially one headed by the widow of Aquino. 
Introduction 13  They claimed that with the end of the personal dictatorship or autocracy of Marcos, the ensuing "elite democracy" would still constitute "democratization" open to reform and to conversion into "popular democracy" through reformist legal struggle. The series of dichotomies between dictatorship and democratization and between "elite" and "popular" democracy was meant to obfuscate the persistence of the joint class dictatorship of the big compradors and landlords even alter the fall of Marcos in the absence of a successful people's war.  After the fall of Marcos in the manner foretold by the earlier fall of Baby "Doc" Duvalier in Haiti and military juntas in Latin America, through the combination of a big split in the reactionary armed forces and a popular uprising, the Filipino assets of U.S. imperialism and the "Lefi" and Right opportunists in the CPP combined to declare that the CPP had nothing to do with the downfall of Marcos, had become marginalized and had suffered a strategic defeat because of its boycott policy in the 1986 snap presidential elections.  They misconstrued democracy as merely the "democratic space" for them within the ruling system in terms of civil and political liberties, claimed that there was no more ground for people's war and deliberately obfuscated the fact that the joint class dictatorship of the comprador big bourgeoisie and the landlord, class and the open rule of terror was persistent, despite the temporary liberal facade of the Aquino regime. In fact, the Aquino regime retained or made worse the antiworker and antipeasant decrees of Marcos and General Ramos intensified the military campaigns of suppression against the revolutionary forces and the people.  The "Left" opportunist exponents of urban insurrectionism and military adventurism who had been responsible for the consequent grave damage to the rural mass base and for Kampanyang Ahos in Mindanao as early as 1985 also joined the Filipino assets of US. imperialism and the Right opportunists in recriminations against the Party_ for the boycott policy error and in making misrepresentations about the character, implications, magnitude and consequences of this error. Both "Left" and Right opportunists in effect asserted that the banned revolutionary forces should have participated in the Marcos-staged elections and considered the boycott policy as the Pany's biggest error in its entire history.  The most blatant assets of US. imperialism compared the Aquino regime to the Magsaysay regime as one effectively undercutting the revolutionary movement by restoring "democratic institutions and processes" and seriously carrying out "land reform" under a U.S.- and World Bank-supported mini-Marshall plan. They boasted that the post-Marcos period was one of democratization through legal institutions and processes, rendering useless and 
l4 Philippine Economy and Politics  outdated the armed revolution. Since then, they have ceaselessly prated about alternatives (including foreign-funded NGOism, job placements in the reactionary government, electoral politics and the like) to the armed revolution rather than to the oppressive and exploitative ruling system. They conveniently forget the fact that the CPP was reestablished in 1968 and built the NPA in 1969 when Marcos was the big display in Washington's "show window of democracy" in Asia and he too was threatening to carry out land reform.  The popdems, socdems, Bisig and the like were all happy to take a ride on the Aquino bandwagon. Even the old line pro-Soviet revisionists wanted to take the ride with them immediately after serving the Marcos regime for a long time. The Right opportunist line within the CPP described the Aquino regime as a "liberal democratic" regime worthy of critical support. The "Left" opportunists responsible for unprecedented damage to the revolutionary movement and for Kampanyang Ahos in Mindanao ceaselessly overstated the boycott policy error as the biggest error ever in the history of the CPP in order to cover up their far graver culpability in Mindanao and elsewhere in the country.  Amidst all the attempts at confusing the revolutionary forces, I delivered the series of lectures on Philippine crisis and revolution at the Asian Studies Center of the University of the Philippines from April to May 1986 in order to clarify the new situation and the big comprador-landlord class character of the U.S.-Aquino regime and update Amado Guerrero's Philippine Society and Revolution. The Political Bureau of the Central Committee of the CPP subsequently adopted this series of lectures as basic study material for the Party in 1987 and was able to circulate and promote it in 1988, much to the chagrin of the incorrigible Right opportunists and the "Left" opportunists who were then on the path of turning into blatant Right opportunists, revisionists and even criminal gangsters from year to year.  It is of vital importance to publish again this series of lectures on the Philippine crisis and revoltItion to demonstrate that all along there has been a timely response to attempts of the agents of US. imperialism and the incorrigible opportunists at confusing the ranks of the revolutionaries and the people about the post-Marcos period and to heighten the fighting consciousness of communists and all revolutionary militants.  This series of lectures has upheld the continuing validity and vitality of the national democratic revolution against foreign monopoly capitalism, domestic feudalism and bureaucrat capitalism. It has helped carry over the revolutionary cadres and the masses from the Marcos to the post-Marcos period along the general line of national democratic revolution and to foil the US. imperialists, 
Introduction 15  the local exploiting classes and their special agents to destroy or derail the armed revolution.  The Second Great Rectification Movement  The incorrigible "Left" and Right opportunists within the CPP have fully exposed themselves as counterrevolutionary opponents of Marxism-Leninism, the CPP and the national democratic revolution. They are now shameless bootlickers of the U.S.-Rarnos regime and barefaced traitors to the revolutionary cause. Irony of all ironies, they have chosen to expose themselves and act viciously as counterrevolutionaries during the presidency of General Ramos, the continuity man in the open rule of terror under the joint class dictatorship of the comprador big bourgeoisie and the landlord class.  After failing in their vicious attempt to liquidate the CPP from the inside, they continue to specialize in slandering the CPP and the entire revolutionary mass movement. In so many devious ways, they deny the persistence of the joint class dictatorship of the comprador big bourgeoisie and landlord class. They obscure the continuing rule of open terror under the Aquino and the Ramos regimes and claim that human rights violations have been on the decline, despite the brutalities of Lambat Bitag I, II and III and other military campaigns under the "total war" policy or "low—intensity conflict" directed by US. imperialism. Having fully exposed themselves as special agents of psychological warfare, they have become more and more ineffective in their attempts to sow confusion.  The conjuncture and convergence of the three sectors of neocolonialism (government, big business and foreign-funded NGOs), the false promises of "Philippines 2000" and the escalation of the "total war" policy, the brutal military campaigns and intrigues of "low intensity conflict", the opportunist errors and crimes, the open betrayal by the incorrigible opportunists and revisionists and the anticommunist ideological and political offensive of the imperialists and their local lackeys in connection with the disintegration of the revisionist parties and regimes abroad have failed to break or demoralize the forces of the national democratic revolution.  Instead, the revolutionary forces have reaffirmed basic revolutionary principles, have drawn strength from their reservoir of ideological, political and organizational accomplishments, have repudiated the errors and crimes of the "Left" and Right opportunists and have raised the fighting will and capabilities of the people. The victory of the Second Great Rectification Movement cannot be fully understood without reading and studying the 
l6 Philippine Economy and Politics  interview on the Philippine mode of production and the series of lectures on the Philippine crisis and revolution.  These countered the most devious and vicious attacks on the general line of the national democratic revolution in the 19805 and laid the ground for the Second Great Rectification Movement. F rom year to year since 1988, the proletarian revolutionaries in the Central Committee of the CPP increasingly combated the "Left" and Right opportunist currents until the Second Great Rectification Movement was carried out in a comprehensive and deepgoing way, starting in 1992.  Jose Ma. Sison 
Jose Maria Sison On the Mode of Production  By Julieta de Lima-Sison 
l9  JOSE MARIA SISON ON THE MODE OF PRODUCTION  Julieta de Lima  1982, many fiiends and acquaintances in the academe asked me for the views of my husband on many questions being debated by them concerning the dominant character of the mode of production in the Philippines.  8 con after I was out on temporary release fiom detention on March 30,  The main issue raised may be expressed in the following manner: Has the U.S.-Marcos regime pursued a policy of industrialization and thereby changed the backward semifeudal character of the economy?  I propounded this and other related questions to my husband. We engaged in lengthy discussions during my weekly visits to him. I also provided him with the latest available economic data as well as analyses and articles fiom various viewpoints.  I took mental notes of his answers. Every time I got home from his prison cell, I would commit these to writing. He gave me the leeway to write freely on condition that I would be faithful to his ideas.  Due to our many years of intellectual intercourse and research partnership (since 1959), I felt confident in putting this question-and-answer article into shape. However, due to so many absorbing obligations, including childcare and puine engagements on behalf of political prisoners, I was able to finish the final draft only last July 1983.  The typescript of the final drafi became a discussion paper of several fi'iends, most of whom are brilliant economists and political scientists. They subsequently gave comments and suggestions which my husband and I further discussed and took into account in finalizing the article in its present form.  This article is an efi‘ort to make a comprehensive and deep going study of the mode of production in the country and shed light on the current ruinous economic crisis. 
20 Philippine Economy and Politics  Forces of Production  Q1: Will you describe the forces of production in the Philippines? As much as you can, present the level of development of the means of production and the mass of actual producers.  A: The forces of production in the Philippines are still mainly and essentially agrarian and non-industn'al. They are backward or underdeveloped.  The means of production generally lacks a backbone in capital goods industries. There are no heavy and basic industries, no machine—tool industry, no basic metal and chemical industries, no engineering industries beyond the superficial handling or slight processing of components that have already been basically processed abroad. Even hand tools are imported to the extent of 85 percent, according to the economist Alejandro Lichauco. The rest of our hand tools are fabricated locally from imported metals. Whatever modern industrial equipment the country has is imported and paid for by earning from the export of raw materials (mainly agricultural: sugar, coconut, logs, etc.) plus an increasing amount of foreign loans.  The U.S. imperialists and their big comprador agents have so far been quite successful in preventing the country from acquiring the kind of equipment that would industrialize it in a profound and comprehensive way. They have allowed only some light manufacturing, heavily dependent on imported equipment, semi manufactures and raw materials. The situation is tragic because we have a comprehensive and abundant natural resource base for heavy and basic industries to work on.  Under the present regime, even the light manufacturing that serves the domestic market has been virtually crushed. The so-called import-substitution industries of the fifties and the sixties are being displaced by the straight importation of finished products. An embellishment on this scheme is the promotion of the so-called export-oriented industries which are even more import-dependent and which are actually involved in mere fi'inge processing and packaging for local market penetration, tariff circumvention and reexport.  The promise of Marcos in 1979 to put up eleven major industrial projects has not materialized. Since the beginning, however, it has been clear that these projects were mere tokens of industrialization which, even as such, are strongly opposed by the very foreign monopoly interests whose investments Marcos wants for these projects. Afier four years, the result is one overpriced copper smelter with a capacity limited to 30 percent of ore production in the country. It is under the control and manipulation of Japanese interests which have their own copper smelters to protect in J apan. 
0n the Mode of Production 21  Despite its slogan of "economic developmen ", the fascist dictatorship has not put the economy into extensive processing of the raw materials that it has long been producing for export. The bulk of Philippine exports continues to be raw sugar, copra, coconut oil, logs, metal ores and concentrates, and so on. Primary products account for practically all actual earnings on exported goods, with agricultural exports accounting for at least 80 percent.  It is claimed by government technocrats that we cant a lot fiom reexport of garments, electronics and the like. This is not true. We lose a lot on these so- called manufactured exports because of the high cost of imported equipment and "raw" materials, tariff circumvention, transfer-pricing, profit remittances, capital repatriation, debt services, royalties, and the infrastructure and special facilities put up for them.  Agricultural land totalling 12 million hectares in 1980 is still the principal means of production in the country. It produces the food staples for the people and some amount of raw materials for local light manufacturing and handicrafts; and the overwhelming bulk of surplus products for export.  There is negligible use of modern technology (primarily imported) beyond peasant brawn, hand tools, plow and draft animals on land devoted to food crops (chiefly rice and corn) which comprises 64.6 percent of total agricultural land; and coconut land which comprises another 25.8 percent. The promotion of costly imported farm inputs (chemicals, equipment and irrigation facilities) during the seventies affected only a few hundreds of thousands of hectares.  Even on land devoted to sugarcane, banana, pineapple and other new crops for export, which comprises no more than seven percent of total agricultural land and where there is a relatively more impressive use of tractors and chemicals, reliance on sheer brawn and traditional peasant tools is still widespread. Sugar lands, which comprise only 3.5 percent of total agricultural land are still worked mainly by peasants and farm workers using hand tools rather than by workers operating harvester combines and other farm machinery.  No more than four percent (480,000 hectares) of total agricultural land is worked by tractors. Harvester combines are still a rarity and are a socially explosive proposition amidst the abundance of cheap farm labor that cannot 'be absorbed elsewhere. As of this year (1983), only a few landlords on a few thousands of hectares have turned to harvester combines. In this decade, the steeply rising costs of imported inputs and the falling price of agn'cultural exports hold back the adoption of modern technology even by export-crop landlords. 
22 Philippine Economy and Politics  According to NEDA figures, there were supposed to be nine million peasants and farm workers accounting for 52 percent of employment; 2.5 million industrial workers, 14 percent; and 6 million service workers, 34 percent in 1979. Let us accept these figures on face value and reinterpret them. Note, however, that 1979 was a far better year for nonagricultural employment than any of the succeeding years of the 1980s.  Of the direct producers of goods, peasants and farm workers comprise 78 percent and industrial workers 22 percent. There are four peasants and farm workers for every industrial worker. If the category of service workers is disaggregated, the great majority would be found to be direct adjunct and immediate spillovers of agriculture and the peasantry. Even in construction, mining and provincial "manufacturing", many non- regular workers are sidelining peasants.  Most peasants (poor and middle peasants) have the following means of supplementary livelihood: farm work for others, fishing, forestry and animal husbandry, handicrafts, construction or carpentry, hauling and petty peddling. Seasonal farm work for others though is the premier sideline occupation and is the main recourse for surplus labor in the countryside.  The proportion of industrial workers (in manufacturing, mining and quarrying, construction and utilities) is even more unimpressive. Only 74 percent of these are in so-called manufacturing; and in turn, 70 percent of workers in manufacturing are employed in small fabricating and repair shops, each employing less than ten workers and therefore hardly qualifying as truly manufacturing enterprises.  Only a minority of so-called service workers (in transport, communication and storage, trading and banking, and other services, including government, entertainment, etc.) possibly not more than 30 percent - are regular wage earners. In the main, these regular wage earners are employed by the government (some one million are civilian and military employees) and by the multinational, big comprador and middle bourgeois firms. Most so-called service workers are actually underemployed or have no regular employment or are even unemployed but are misrepresented as fully employed by NEDA statistics. Many are superfluous helpers of their own families, house servants, street peddlers, shop attendants, porters, scavengers, prostitutes and the like who do not receive regular wages.  During the 1970s, the proportion of both industrial and agricultural employment shrank. Industrial employment stood at 17.6 percent in 1970 and went down to 14 percent in 1979. Agricultural employment stood at 59 percent in 1970 and went down to 52 percent in 1979. Employment in the service sector, 
0n the Mode of Production 23  meanwhile, is made to appear as having risen from 23.5 percent in 1970 to 34 percent in 1979, supposedly absorbing the decrease of employment in both industry and agriculture.  Since 1980, unemployment has been increasing by leaps and bounds, especially in the industrial and service sectors. The unemployment rate is now running at more than 50 percent, at least 25 percent above the chronic rate of 25 percent (established fiom the Bell Mission Report up to the Ranis Report), especially if we take into account all out-of-school youth ten years old and above and women. A worsening state of depression and unemployment afflicts the entire economy.  Some people say that the Philippine economy is already industrial rather than agrarian because, for instance, the 1979 GNP figures show that agriculture accounts for only 27.3 percent of gross national product and is outstripped by industry at 33.1 percent and services at 39.7 percent.  These figures are misleading. We must take into account the high imported content of the product of both industry and service sectors and the consumption orientation of such imports, and the lack of industrial development. The gross output value of the service sector is bloated; this sector is also the most import- dependent sector of the economy although it does not produce goods. The gross output value of agriculture tends to be undervalued because most of the agricultm'al product remains with the peasants for their subsistence and needs and does not reach the market.  In their attempt to sustain the illusion of industrial development, the technocrats of the fascist dictatorship constantly overestimate the entire GNP, overvaluing the gross output of both industrial and the service sectors. Even the IMF was scandalized by the NEDA claim of a 4.9 percent grth rate for 1982 and ordered it to scale down the figure to something less incredible. The figure was finally lowered to 2.6 percent. Even this is highly questionable in many  respects.  The Philippine GNP is supposed to be dependent on foreign exchange to the extent of 40 percent. So it must shrink as primary export receipts, foreign loans and other foreign exchange receipts decrease. Whether the GNP grows bigger or smaller, its content is nonetheless non-industrial. To a great extent, it reflects rising expenditures for imported manufactures, decreasing primary exporter income and a rising debt burden. 
24 Philippine Economy and Politics  Relations of Productions  Q2: Will you describe the relations of production? As much as you can, present the socio-economic classes as determined by the ownership of the means of production, position in the organization of production, and the methods of expropriating the product. Will you point out the single most dominant class that dictates on the entire relations of production?  I assume that you can apply on the entire mode of production the term that you used in the document to refer to the character of the relations of production. It is feudal, semifeudal, semi-capitalist, in transition to capitalism or already capitalist? Explain why you do not use the terms other than your choice.  A: Under the auspices of U.S. imperialism, the comprador big bourgeoisie has become the single most dominant class in the Philippines. It is the stande bearer of dominant semifeudal production relations. In collaboration with the foreign monopolies, it is in command of a commodity system that consists mainly and essentially of raw-material exports and manufactured imports; and that gives the most strategic importance to the production of raw materials for export. '  The comprador big bourgeoisie has replaced the landlord class as the No. l exploiting class in 20th century Philippines. And certainly, the dominant production relations can no longer be called feudal although feudalism is still a large and widespread fact. In a certain sense, we can speak of foreign and feudal domination. But we use the term semifeudal both to describe the general and basic character of the relations of production and focus on the strategic role of the comprador big bourgeoisie.  We caxmot call the dominant production relations capitalist because it is a comprador big bourgeoisie rather than a national industrial bourgeoisie that has hegemony over them. As a matter of fact, the semifeudal trading big bourgeoisie in combination with U.S. imperialism and feudalism prevents industrial capitalist development under the national bourgeoisie. 
0n the Mode of Production 25  Semifeudalism  Q3: But why choose the term semifeudalism, instead of semi- capitalist or in transition to capitalism?  A: The term semifeudal stresses the fact that as far as the local productive system is concerned, the comprador big bourgeoisie is linked more to feudalism historically and currently than to industrial capitalist development, which is blocked so long as the economy is an appendage of US. imperialism and remains within the orbit of the world capitalist system.  Semifeudalism can be used in two senses:  (1) To sum up the economy that is shackled by two moribund forces»- imperialism and feudalism; and  (2) to refer to the dominance of the comprador big bourgeoisie and the kind of production it promotes (primarily raw material production- for-export).  Such terms as "serni-capitalist" or "in transition to capitalism" obscure the persistence of feudalism and the commanding position of semifeudalism, as well as the fimdamental anti-imperialist and anti-feudal tasks of the national democratic revolution in the era of modern imperialism and proletarian revolution. The Philippines is not at all on the way to becoming fully capitalist. No wrong impression should be created about this. The national bourgeoisie is shackled by US. imperialism and by the comprador big bourgeoisie and landlord class—it can be liberated only together with the basic masses of the  people.  Let us look more closely at the comprador big bourgeoisie. It is the principal u'ading and financial agent of the US. and other transnational corporations. Among the local exploiting classes, it owns and controls the largest and most important trading, financial and other facilities in the so-called service sector which are not direct subsidiaries of foreign corporations. According to a study made by Doherty, about sixty big comprador families control the majority of big banks and the so-called investment houses. All these are essentially merchant banks.  Through import-export transactions and lending operations, the comprador big bourgeoisie amasses wealth in the form of commercial profit and interest, and draws to itself the highest concentration of capital from the surplus product of the country. Together with the multinational firms, the big comprador firms 
26 Philippine Economy and Politics  give the highest salaries to their white collar employees. But the profits are very high and the rate of exploitation actually the highest. The profits are drawn not only from the productivity of the employees but fi'om the entire production and distribution system in the country.  The export-import operations of the comprador big bourgeoisie, including the sale of imported inputs to small merchants, is a semifeudal rather than a capitalist phenomenon: it is a mercantile rather than an industrial phenomenon.  The comprador big bourgeoisie and the landlord class are close allies. Many big compradors are also big landlords. Thus, it is apt to speak alternately of the big comprador-landlord class. This class owns big plantations. These are after all the main source of raw-material exports. The big compradors thus assure themselves of a reliable supply base and a source of foreign exchange. They have been responsible for the semifeudal practice of hiring farm workers at peon wages in sugar and coconut plantations. But they also have some lands wherein they exploit a large number of tenants by collecting land rent.  Of course, the big compradors have large interests in sugar centrals and coconut mills, and in such other major sources of exports as mining and logging. They also own certain light manufacturing enterprises which are the largest and most profitable. But most characteristically, they follow the foreign monopolies in opposing national industrialization and the development of a well balanced economy.  Only as a result of the strong popular and national bourgeois demand for national industrialization do they grudgingly concede at certain times to the establishment of more light manufacturing industries which are import dependent. And they control the imported inputs and the most profitable enterprises. They give a semifeudal character even to the industrial sector of the economy by preventing the establishment of heavy and basic industries in a comprehensive manner.  Because of their advantageous position, they can give higher wages to their workers than the national bourgeoisie. But the rate of exploitation is far higher in their firms because the profits are so high in relation to the wages. But in relation to workers in capitalist countries, their workers' wages are much lower. The surrounding feudal backwardness breeds a large reserve army of labor, the source of cheap manpower for the big comprador firms.  More than any other exploiting class, the big compradors control and use the state as a source of economic privilege, and as a large client. High government officials also use their public office to cut into big comprador operations. These big bureaucrat capitalists are essentially big compradors. With the protection of the fascist state, they tend to monopolize the big contracts and accumulate land 
0n the Mode of Production 27  rapidly. But they stay within the bounds of the big comprador class and the semifeudal system.  It is right to concentrate fire on the U.S. multinationals but wrong to overlook the big compradors, especially the fascist compradors. Most import and export transactions pass through the big compradors. Even Westinghouse has to pass through the mediation of Disini and Marcos for it to sell a nuclear plant to the Philippine government. It is standard practice for U.S. multinational firms to use local big comprador firms. Filipino exporters and importers of whatever size make use of the big comprador banks.  The landlord class is still the dominant class in the Philippine countryside. It is the standard-bearer of the persistent feudal relations of production. In the most obvious manner, it owns vast tracts of land and collects rent from the great mass of tenants on assigned plots. To further enlarge the surplus product it extracts, it uses other methods of exploitation, such as the hiring of farm workers, usury, merchant operations, renting out of farm equipment and draft animals and the like which may be called semifeudal forms of exploitation.  The scope of landlord exploitation includes not only the tenants but also the poor and middle owner-cultivators and the farm workers. Thus, the economic conu'adiction is not simply one between landlords and tenants but between landlords (both old- Style and new-style) on one side and the peasants (i.e., poor and middle) and farm workers on the other. Semifeudal methods of exploitation proceed from and augment feudal ownership and methods of exploitation. There is a circular relation between the feudal and the semifeudal, in the absence of capitalist or socialist industrial development. Old-style landlords who collect rent from tenants are far more numerous and own far more land than the new- style landlords who hire farm workers. Feudalism is an indubitable fact even if we conservatively estimate that 40 percent of all Philippine farms are tenanted.  In the absence of genuine land reform, apart from the current rent reduction and anti-usury campaign of the revolutionary movement, claims that the tenancy rate went down from 39 percent of all farms in 1960 to only 29 percent in 1971 is completely unbelievable. There has been no deve10pment whatsoever to reduce the estimated 52 percent in 1964. This should be much higher now, because the few token sales of land to the tenants since then are far outstripped by the accumulation of land by the landlords, especially under the fascist dictatorship — notwithstanding its bigger claims of land reform. A study by Ernesto M. Valencia points out that estimates of the tenancy rate by researchers range from 40 percent of all farms in 1975 (Aguirre) to 90 percent on the basis of a sample of 14 provinces in 1972 (Fergusson). 
30 Philippine Economy and Politics  among them want full- scale national industrialization. But it takes more than entrepreneurship to protect local products and advance industrialization. Doing away with the entire semifeudal production relations involves the nationalization of political power.  The national bourgeoisie draws its profits fi‘om extracting surplus value from the mass of its workers. There is a contradiction between the two classes. But they can unite to oppose foreign monopoly capitalism. The national bourgeoisie can be in alliance with workers, peasants and urban petty bourgeoisie to end foreign and feudal domination and achieve a national democratic revolution.  The fact that peasants together with the farm workers continue to be the maj ority of producers and that the industrial workers have been a shrinking minority goes to show that the Philippine economy is far from being capitalist. If the national bourgeoisie rather than the comprador big bourgeoisie were the ruling class, the modern industrial proletariat would be growing and become the maj ority of direct producers. It should then be aiming for a socialist revolution rather than a national democratic revolution. At any rate, the modern industrial proletariat IS the most advanced productive force and canies the ideology that IS correctly guiding the Philippine revolution.  Only in a broad or loose sense can we speak of a large working class by lumping together all wage-earners, like the industrial, service and fatm workers. In trade union work, for instance, we do not limit ourselves to the industrial workers. But they are certainly the core of the entire trade union movement. In the analysis of the mode of production, we should distinguish the modem industrial proletariat from the rest of the wage-earners if we are to con'ectly measure the extent of capitalist development.  So far, it is only the urban petty bourgeoisie that we have not discussed. The urban petty bourgeoisie includes the small entrepreneurs, the small merchants and the general run of independent or salaried professionals and technicians. Most of them are employed by the reactionary government and by the imperialist, big comprador and middle bourgeois firms.  The urban petty bourgeoisie is the lowest stratum of the bourgeoisie. In general, it receives a higher income and enjoys a more comfortable life than the toiling masses. It can send its children to school to receive professional and technical training under a pro-imperialist and big comprador ideology. But in the worsening crisis of the semifeudal economy, it finds itself increasingly exploited and becomes drawn to the revolutionary movement of the toiling masses.  Among the reactionary economists, it is standard practice to divide the GNP by the population and speak of per capita income. This is a mere abstraction that 
0n the Mode of Production 31  obscures the fact that only a few grab the surplus product of society and the rest receive subsistence incomes. The GNP includes the super-profits of the multinational firms, the profits and interest income of the comprador big bourgeoisie and the rest of the collection of the landlord class. Normally, only some eight percent of the local population receive salaries and fees large enough to make them enjoy a comfortable life. What is left for some 90 percent of the people to divide in the form of wages and crop share is so small that they must sufl‘er a life of want and misery  Development Scheme of the U.S.-Marcos Regime  Q4: What is the so-called development scheme of the U.S.-Marcos regime? Does it have anything to do with industrialization? Some individuals insist that the US. has been industrializing the Philippines since 1970 or even earlier. Please comment.  A: Development is a term much abused by the imperialists and local reactionaries. It needs clarification. Economic development properly means industrial development for a country that is underdeveloped, agrarian and semifeudal.  Industrialization is the engine and leading factor of economic development. It must be accompanied by genuine land reform or agrarian revolution to clear the ground of feudal and semifeudal obstacles, to release the surplus product appropriated by the landlords and big compradors, develop agriculture as the source of food and raw materials and create a large domestic market mainly among the peasants and the growing working class. There has to be a comprehensive and balanced development of heavy industries, light industries and agriculture.  In this light, the US. imperialists do not have a development scheme for the Philippines. What it has is a pseudo-development scheme which opposes industrialization and genuine land reform and aggravates the underdevelopment of the Philippine economy. The main thrust of US. policy has been to overload the country with foreign loans and to directly invest in it so as to facilitate sale by the US. of its finished products at increasing prices and its purchase of raw materials at decreasing prices.  If we review US. economic policy as transmitted through the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank reports and recommendations since the early 19603 (when the United States decided to put the US. Agency for International Development, the US. Export-Import Bank and US. economic 
32 Philippine Economy and Politics  missions in low profile as channels of economic policy dictation), we will discover that the main line imposed on the Philippine government has always been "export-oriented development" and countering the demand for national industrialization.  "Export-oriented developmen " has meant, first of all, promoting raw- material production-for-export and providing this with infrastructures, more milling equipment, transport, storage and other facilities. To supplement this, food production has also been promoted. And raising agricultural productivity is deemed far more important than any pretense at land reform. The United States, J apan and other capitalist countries provide supplies for production and manufactured goods for consumption.  The early 19605 was a time for the United States to turn back the Filipino- owned light manufacturing industries and the demand of the national bourgeoisie and the people for industrialization. The import and foreign exchange controls that had favored and stimulated the growth of light manufacturing industries during the 19503 were dismantled. Decontrol was the key move to cut down what the US. imperialists considered over presurnptuousness of Filipino Firsts- era.  The early 1960s was also a time for the United States to make some accommodations for Japan and other capitalist countries in the Philippine and other Asian markets. Thus, the World Bank became more active in this part of the world and the Asian Development Bank was established to oversee the sharing of the market. The capitalist countries devastated in World War II had started to overbrim with their industrial production. It was thought that the Philippine market for foreign manufactures would expand as the country would go on programs of infrastructure-building and of expanding capacity for raw- material production.  It was expected that the irnport-dependent industries established would wither on the vine and that tariff protection would be gradume reduced and then removed. The imported manufactures would sweep away the so-called import- substitution industries or these industries would be absorbed by joint ventures controlled by the multinational firms. However, the national bourgeoisie through its nationalist spokesmen in Congress and the press proved for some time to be resilient not only in resisting complete economic annihilation but also in preventing the enactment of a foreign investment law satisfactory to the United States.  Although President Macapagal had done the United States a good turn by giving way to fiill decontrol in 1962, he would subsequently be junked for failing to produce a foreign investment law. At that time, the United States was anxious 
0n the Mode of Production 33  to head off by a full decade the termination of the Parity Amendment and the Laurel-Langley Agreement in 1974. Thus, Marcos would be anointed as the new replacement. And in the latter half of the 19608 he was able to deliver the laws on investment incentives and export processing zones. A review of the type of investments made by the US. and other foreign firms since any point in the 19603 up to the present would show that these have been in trading, banking, import-dependent manufacturing, mining, oil exploration and agriculture. There have been no heavy and basic indusu'ies established to significantly advance local industrialization. Even the Iligan Integrated Steel Mill project of Macapagal has been sabotaged by J apanese foreign creditors, especially the steel interests, and by the present administration.  "Export-oriented industries" were projected in the late 19603 with the plan to put up the Bataan Export Processing Zone (BEPZ) and the Philippine Car Manufacturing Program (PCMP) or the car assembly program. The PCMP was the centerpiece of this supposed industrialization thrust.  With the glaring failure of the car assembly program in the late 19703, it became the turn of garment-and-electronic end-processing to be pushed into prominence.  Since the late 1960s, the so-called export-oriented manufacturing has been ballyhooed as the spearhead of industrialization. Export-oriented manufacturing is a tricky term. It suggests that the Philippines is manufacturing surpluses for export. And Marcos and his technocrats dare claim that manufactured exports are becoming the main export-earners. But, in fact, as earlier pointed out, these are actually reexports that actually yield no dollar earnings for the country if the high cost of imported raw materials and equipment, transfer pricing, profit remittances, tariff exemptions and the high cost of building the infrastructures for the export processing zones are taken into account.  The "car manufacturing" program is about the worst of "export-oriented manufacturing". This has simply been a scheme to import knockdowns and completely built cars to circumvent the tariff walls, sell cars entirely to the country mainly to government offices and private firms to which foreign loans have flowed as well as to the military which has been getting the lion's share of government appropriations and siphon off a large part of the foreign loans pumped into the country.  "Export-oriented industries" are extremely dependent on imported equipment, finished components, semi-manufactures and raw materials and are merely a part of the perpetuated basic pattern of exchanging Philippine raw materials with foreign manufactures. A huge portion of the products of these 
34 Philippine Economy and Politics  pseudo-manufacturing enterprises are actually sold in the Philippine market far beyond limits set by official regulation.  The Philippines has been consistently dependent on raw-material exports whose prices have been increasingly depressed while the prices of imported manufactures have been soaring. It has gone into heavy borrowing (from $2.0 billion in 1972 to $18 billion in the first quarter of 1983) in order to be able to continue importing consumption goods and some equipment for light manufacturing and to support a program of wanton public spending for non- industrial purposes: roads, bridges, ports and dams, military build-up, nuclear, geothermal and hydroelectric plants, the cultural center complex, five-star hotels and other tourist facilities, etc.  It was the neo-Keynesian notion of the World Bank under McNamara that loans to the developing and underdeveloped countries like the Philippines would pump prime the recessive capitalist countries.  Indeed, these countries have been able to sell a lot of construction equipment and structural steel; energy plants; cars, ships and planes; computers and other office equipment; home appliances; farm equipment and chemicals; armaments; etc. And the multinational firms, the bureaucrat capitalists and the rest of the big compradors have made a killing. But the Philippines is reeling from inflation and the depression of its exports. It cannot pay its foreign debts except by incurring more debts.  What has happened to "export-oriented development"? The country has become ever more dependent on imported manufactures. The foreign trade deficits of the Philippines have kept on growing. The trade deficit for 1982 was $2.8 billion, the balance of payments deficit, $1.135 billion. The underdevelopment of the Philippine economy has only been aggravated.  In 197 9, Marcos threatened to launch eleven major industrial projects and acknowledged the lack of industrialization under his rule. After four years, he has put up only one — the copper smelter - which is of limited capacity, overpriced through the usual corrupt mediation of bureaucrat capitalism and, worst of all, controlled by Japanese interests that have their own copper smelters back home to protect. The copper smelter is a token industrial proj ect that cannot change the character of the economy and will most likely sufl‘er the same fate as that of Macapagal's Iligan steel mill project in the 19603.  At any rate, the IMF-World Bank combine has already told Marcos to stop talking about major industrial projects and to stick to "rural development" gimmicks like the Kilusang Kabuhayan at Kaunlaran (KKK). There have always been funds for capital-intensive infrastructure and energy projects but no funds for industrial projects. Lack of capital is the argument against industrialization 
0n the Mode of Production 35  and at the same time for letting foreign investors into high and quick-profit areas of the economy.  The reactionaries do not carry out genuine land reform that could expand the domestic market but they use the limited domestic market as an argument against industrialization. They deliver speeches about the need for technology transfer but only to justify the foreign investors' privilege of owning enterprises in the c0tmtry on the ground that they own the technology (including the most commonplace technology and even mere packaging or trademark).  There is also a lot of speechifying against protectionism in accordance with U.S. textbooks. But the purpose is to make import liberalization acceptable even while Philippine exports are subjected to protectionist measures in the U.S. and other capitalist countries. Marcos and the technocrats are capable of saying anything in forums or negotiations, short of asserting the economic sovereignty and determination of the Filipino people to achieve industrial development.  After so much talk about "universal banking" being geared to industrialization, it turns out that this is merely a device for crony corporations to further raid state and private banks and then for them to turn themselves in for receivership. The National Development Corporation which is supposed to be in charge of industrial proj ects is overloaded with many crony corporations.  “Land Reform”  Q5: What is the score on land reform? To what extent has it touched the land problem?  A: [ban Facts and Figures (No. 75) states that only 1,684 tenants on 1,538 hectares of rice and corn lands have fully paid for their land and gained land titles under the Marcos "land reform" as of the end of 1980. The number of tenants becoming owner-cultivators is only 0.04 percent of the estimated total number of tenants of all crop lands and 0.02 percent of all tenants within the scope of the so-called Operation Land Transfer (0LT). This insignificant number of successful amortizing owners consists mainly of those who are not even full-time tenants or have sources of income other than their tenancy, such as foreign or urban employment of some members of the family.  The joke is that it will take four millennia for Marcos to emancipate all the intended 0LT beneficiaries in rice and corn lands. And yet the land problem in the rest of the country will have become bigger. Of course, the joke overlooks 
36 Philippine Economy and Politics  the fact that there is a growing revolutionary peasant movement all over the country.  As of 1980, there were 113,704 tenants of 184,189 hectares of rice and corn lands that were supposed to have become "amortizing owners"; i.e., they have started to pay for the land according to a 15-year installment plan. These tenants are a measly two percent of all tenants of all crop lands; and 28 percent of all tenants slated for conversion into "amortizing owners". The land being amortized is 1.5 percent of all crop lands, 2.7 percent of all rice and corn lands and 25 percent of tenanted rice and corn lands slated for expropriation by the Land Bank.  As of 1980, also, more than 80 percent of "amortizing owners" defaulted on 80 percent of total payments due. Defaults are due to the high price of land (which is not any lesser than the going market price or is often based on inflated production figures), past and current debts, various exactions such as those under the Samahang Nayon and Masagana 99, crop failures, the rising costs of production and subsistence; and the government policy of pressing down the price of farm products. Tenants, including "amortizing owners", are now selling their tenancy rights because of indebtedness to usurers.  One way of weighing how colossal is the "achievemen " of Marcos in land reform is to compare the 1,684 tenants of 1,538 hectares (0.9 hectare per tenant, a far cry from 3 hectares if irrigated and 5 hectares if unirrigated as promised by PD. 27) to the 267 corporations and 95 corporate farms or agroservice corporations which have acquired 86,017 hectares within the same period under General Order 47.  The number of hectares acquired by the successful "amortizing owners" is even smaller in comparison to the amount of land transferred to the fascists fiom landlords out of power, owner-cultivators, settlers and minorities. The "infiastructure" program, the threat of expropriation under the "land reform" program, and control of the banks have enabled the fascists to amass land. The fascists buy land cheaply from landlords out of power and grab land from settlers and minorities on untitled lands.  The illusion of land reform is also conjured by the formal conversion of a few hundreds of thousands of rice and corn tenants into so-called leaseholders who remain tenants in areas where there is yet no armed peasant movement. These leaseholders are obliged to pay a fixed rent of 25 percent of the annual average crop of three "normal" (best) crop years prior to the leasehold agreement. The tenants are simply obliged to deliver the fixed rent, irrespective of actual crop. The system has been devised as a counterinsurgency measure. But this has been defeated in a number of ways by revolutionary peasants. In the old 
0n the Mode of Production 37  tenancy system, the commonplace 50-50 sharing was based on the actual crop certified to by overseers or by the resident landlord himself.  The landlords ensure the expectation of a higher rent from the tenant under the fixed rent system by dictating falsified high production figures as the basis for the leasehold agreement. They are driven to do so for fear that their land would come under expropriation and the average crop year would be used as the basis of the land price.  The fixed rent system is so biased against the tenants that when crop failure occurs (which does occur at least once every three years) they ask the landlords to revert to the old sharecropping system. The fixed-rent system has been devised as a countermeasure to the tenants' harvesting part of the crop without the knowledge of the landlord. The tenants are simply obliged to deliver the fixed rent.  All rice and corn peasants of poor and middle status are severely victimized by the policy of the fascist dictatorship to press down the prices of their products while the costs of production and subsistence are made to rise rapidly. There has been an increase in rice production but the income of the peasants has been cut down by the rising cost of imported inputs. Small and medium owner-cultivators have been forced deeper into indebtedness and bankruptcy. They are preyed on by the state no less and by the big compradors, the landlords, the rich peasants and merchant usurers.  Some peasants seemed to have benefited from Masagana 99 in the 19703 only because they avoided paying back the loans. The loans were actually usurious, despite its supposed below—market rate of interest. Aside from interest and service charges there were also the large overprice of supplies, Samahang Nayon fees, grease money for follow-up expenses, etc. When these were withdrawn or when payments were demanded, the peasant borrowers who tried to pay their loans found themselves in financial trouble.  Under the shadow of the imperialist banks and multinational suppliers, the fascist compradors have been the biggest local predators. They have overpriced the construction of irrigation facilities and other infrastructures to enlarge their cut. And so, irrigation fees and taxes have risen fast. They have hooked the peasants to the miracle rice varieties and imported chemicals, the local trading of which they monopolize. The prices of these inputs have been jacked up without letup. And yet the buying price of rice and corn is pressed down by fascist decree.  Agricorporations have inveigled some rice and corn peasants to go into corporate farming with them. These peasants have been reduced to the status of 
38 Philippine Economy and Politics  farm workers and cheated in the accounting of income and expenses. Excessive charges are made for loans, management, machines, chemicals, irrigation, etc. The peasants find themselves falling more and more into debt and losing tenancy and ownership rights to the agricorporations.  The peasants and farm workers in export-oriented agriculture have suffered terribly from the depressed prices of their crops. The tenants here are outside the scope of the official pretense of land reform and are often prevented from planting rice or corn. The farm workers are the most victimized by conditions of unemployment and underemployment. Owner—cultivators go bankrupt. Even the landlords who are out of power and who have difficulties in getting crop loans or paying them back are compelled to sell their land to the landlords in power at various levels of the fascist hierarchy.  In frontier areas, old style and new style landlords (Filipino and foreign) are forcing settlers and national minorities to become either contract growers, tenants or farm workers or to simply leave their land at gunpoint. Pasture lease, "palayang bayan", corporate farming, compact farming, "agro-industrial development" and counterinsurgency campaigns are the pretexts and devices for landlord acquisition of tilled and untilled land in the fi'ontier areas. Spontaneous resettlement and swidden agriculture are already being blocked by landlordism as major alternative means of livelihood for the landless tillers.  The land problem has become worse under the fascist dictatorship. From 1970 to 1980, agricultural land still expanded fiom 8.9 million to 12 million hectares. The 3.5 percent annual rate of agricultural land expansion outstrips the 2.6 percent population growth rate from 1975 to 1980. But the rate of land accumulated by the landlords continues to outpace the rate of agricultural land expansion.  It can be expected, however, that the regime will drastically reduce the tenancy rate on paper. If it could do so for the period 1960-1970, there is no reason why it will not do it again for the period 1970-1980, because its claims on the success of the entire land reform program have been far more preposterous. At any rate, the aggravation of the land problem has made the ground far more fertile for revolution in the countryside. Bogus land reform has only exacerbated rather than reduced the land problem. 
0n the Mode of Production 39  port-oriented Manufacturing  : Is "export-oriented manufacturing" industrializing the country and king it depart from the colonial exchange of raw materials and foreign nufactures? There are those who hold the notion that it has done so. :Tow does the so-called export-oriented industries compare with the import- Tgnbstitution industries of the 19503?  ?jgliiflgffa ,»;:.';;'.9«' . r  A: If the country is to industrialize, it will have to establish heavy and basic industries. Export-oriented manufacturing"—e. g. "car manufacturing", garments and electronics—involves the slight and fringe processing or mere assembly of imported components.  You can call this pseudo-manufactm'ing. The workers are limited to doing handicraft, not even manufacturing. Sewing and embroidery, screwing finished components together, making upholstery, shoemaking and the like are old handicraft skills in the country.  Only a few tens of thousands of workers are factory employed. More jobs are farmed out to and spread thinly among urban and rural poor women who work in their individual homes. The factory workers are paid extremely low wages. Those who work in their own villages are paid by the piece at an even lower rate. The peasant women use their spare time from farm work to do their "manufacturing". They receive small amounts of cash and make no accounting of how much in rent, plant facilities, light, insurance, interest, etc. they save the multinational firms and the big compradors from paying in addition to the expenditure of labor power that is too cheaply paid.  There is a misconception that the "export-oriented industries" are a medium of technology transfer and therefore promote industrialization. But, precisely, basic and core processes are kept away from the country. It is not "export- oriented industries" that prompt the World Bank to call such places as Taiwan, South Korea and Brazil "newly industrializing countries" but it is some tokens of heavy and basic industries.  The United States through the IMF-World Bank combine has repeatedly made it clear that the Philippines has to concentrate on "rural development" and not on "major industrial projects" even if these are mere tokens of indusuialization and controlled by the multinationals as proposed by Marcos. The crisis of the world capitalist system is such that no funds can be had for these. Why should the US. and other major capitalist countries industrialize the Philippines while they all want to sell industrial products abroad, revive their idle capacity and reemploy their unemployed? 
4O Philippine Economy and Politics  Marcos will not go far beyond his Japanese-controlled copper smelter of limited capacity. Even the "export-oriented industries" are in a tight squeeze by protectionist measures in capitalist countries. And the "import-substitution industries" are in an even worse situation.  The "export-oriented industries" cannot industrialize the Philippines nor make it depart fi'om the colonial exchange of domestic raw materials and foreign manufactures. These industries facilitate the entry of manufactures into the Philippines and help perpetuate the country's over dependence on raw-material production-for-export.  The "export-oriented industries" are a device not only for exploiting cheap Filipino labor-intensive processes but also for circumventing tariff walls and penetrating the local market. A great portion of the "manufactures" is sold in the local market. The so-called car manufacturing program is simply an excuse to avoid paying high tafifi duties on cars by importing certain proportions of knockdowns and completely assembled cars. Assembly of the knockdowns is passed off as manufacturing. All the cars are sold in the local market at higher prices than those abroad on the ground that local "manufacturing" is more costly.  Now let us compare the "import-substitution industries" to the "export- oriented industries". Both are dependent on importation of equipment, manufactured components and raw materials, and cannot lead to industn'alization. "Export-oriented industries" are far more import-dependent and therefore cannot possibly promote local industrialization. These also involve a smaller range of product lines whereas the "import- substitution industries" have involved a wider range of product lines and more processing, and could easily be integrated with heavy and basic industries were these to be established.  The "export-oriented industries" only appear to provide a lot of employment. Actually, they provide regular factory employment only to a few. In comparison, the "import-substitution industries", which cover a wide span of light manufacturing for the domestic market, have generated a lot of regular employment and have been responsible for the Philippines being rated as No. 1 in degree of development in Southeast Asia in the 19503 and 19603. With the official bias against light manufacturing for the domestic market taking its toll, the Philippines together with Indonesia is now at the bottom of the list of economic sluggards in Southeast Asia.  "Export-oriented industries" are a far bigger drain on foreign exchange. The import costs of equipment and raw materials range from 60 to 92 percent of the value of garment and electronics for reexport. There is a lot of transfer-pricing aside from the open remittance of profits, capital repatriation, debt payments, management fees, royalties, etc. The government has been obliged to give tariff 
0n the Mode ofProduction 41  exemption and has spent a great amount of borrowed funds to build the export processing zones.  The Philippines makes no foreign exchange earnings but incurs huge losses on the reexport of garments and electronics, contrary to the claims of Marcos and his technocrats that these are maj or export earners. They are merely looking one-sidedly and uncritically at the income side of the foreign trade sheet with regard to these reexports. By far, the traditional raw-material exports are still the main export earners.  In 1981, electronic reexports was $313 million but import cost of materials and accessories was $287.7 million. Thus, only $25 million was gained The import cost was 92 percent of export value. This, however, is not yet the net fOIeign exchange gained because out of this will have to be taken the profit to be remitted, interest for loans, capital to be repatriated, etc. by the foreign multinationals.  In 1982, the garments manufacturers are said to have exported $450 million worth of garments but the import cost of raw materials alone that have been converted into garments is $350 million. Hence, only some $100 million or 22 percent constitute the foreign exchange earnings without yet discounting the depreciation cost of imported equipment, repatriated profit of foreign owners of garment factories, etc.  The "export-oriented industries" or reexport enterprises are now shrinking in the face of decreasing quotas and other protectionist measures imposed by the capitalist countries. They easily fold up without much loss. Their plants and equipment are flimsy and overvalued for purposes of transfer-pricing. The world over, they are notoriously known as "gypsy industries" because they can come and go very easily without being held back by any real substantial capital investment.  However, light manufacturing industries for the domestic market are in even more serious trouble. These are being cut down by import liberalization, devaluation, outright deprivation of foreign loans, etc. Since 1979, the front for the imperialist trade offensive has widened rapidly.  In the 1970s, many of the import-substitution industries managed to survive while a lot of foreign loans flowed in and the multinational corporations concentrated on selling construction equipment, structural steel, motor vehicles, energy plants, computers, appliances and the like. But in the 19805, the economic and financial crisis of the world capitalist system is such that the foreign creditors and the multinational corporations have become even more intolerant of the so-called "import-substitution industries". 
42 Philippine Economy and Politics  Neocolonial Industrialization?  Q7: Is there any truth to the insistence of certain quarters that the U.S. and the Marcos regime are seriously carrying out neocolonial industrialization and land reform in order to make the country a modern industrial neocolony and to dissipate social unrest? It is claimed that "export-oriented manufacturing" is turning the country into a manufacturing base of the U.S. and other multinational firms. Some say that the Philippines is already a "newly industrializing country". Others say that it is already capitalist. What are the implications of such claims as far as the revolutionary movement is concerned?  A: The U.S. and the Marcos regime are carrying out a policy of anti- industrialization as borne out by facts already cited. What has been going on is not neocolonial industrialization but neocolonial anti-industrialization.  One cannot ignore the main fact that the imperialist creditors (IMF, World Bank, Asian Development Bank and private banks) and the U.S. and other multinational firms have been pushing the importation of manufactures into the country and for export. Thus, the Philippines finds itself extremely overburdened with foreign loans wasted on consumption-oriented and non-industrial projects.  The wastage of huge financial resources has drawn the country further away from establishing heavy and basic industries and aggravated its underdevelopment. The funds that have been poured into overpriced and substandard roads; bridges and ports; the five-star hotels, private palaces and offices and oflice buildings; fancy office equipment and fleets of vehicles for government offices; the enlargement of the parasitic central bureaucracy and the military; etc. could have profoundly and comprehensively industrialized the country. But instead, these are burdens on the back of the people within the framework of underdevelopment.  The imperialist export of surplus capital (direct investments and loans) has revolved around the export of surplus manufactures of so many sorts, except the equipment that would enable us to produce our own industrial equipment (i.e. capital goods). The so-called export-‘oriented manufacturing is nothing but sham manufacturing of limited scope and as already said cannot industrialize the country. Aside from taking advantage of cheap local labor to some limited extent for minor but labor-intensive processes, the purpose of the transnational corporations in establishing these types of enterprises is to go around tariff barriers and exploit the local market.  The so-called export-oriented manufacturing has also been used for some time as a propaganda device to create the illusion of industrialization. Until 
0n the Mode of Production 43  recent years, "export-oriented manufacturing" together with construction-related manufacturing (cement, metal, fabrication, wood processing, etc.) used to bloat the figures for manufacturing in the GNP. With the tightening of foreign credit, the share of manufacturing and the whole of industry has shrunk.  Under the regime, manufacturing and the whole of industry have actually shrunk in terms of real net output and employment.  As research industrial projects which have been proposed by Marcos seriously or not since 1979 and by the ASEAN since 1975, the World Bank and the U.S. and J apanese transnational corporations have consistently resisted them. Despite the come- on for foreign monopolies to invest in these projects and to control them, they have consistently insisted that the local market is too small and that they can more than adequately supply it from their existing plants elsewhere, mainly in their home countries.  Even if all the proposed eleven industrial projects had been put up, these would have been no more than mere tokens of industrialization to deviously qualify the Philippines as a "newly industrializing cOuntry". But the most forceful argument used against these now by the creditors and the transnational corporations (TNCs) is that the Philippines cannot afford them and cannot get foreign investments and loans for them.  Regarding land reform, the U.S.-Marcos regime itself admits that it has not solved the land problem although it boasts that it has accomplished more than any previous regime. It should be pointed out that this current regime has aggravated the land problem. Certainly, it has made bigger promises and claims and relatively bigger tokens of land reform than any previous regime. But all these are overshadowed by the most unbridled and most massive transfer of land to a new set of landlords in power.  The nationwide expansion and intensification of people's war based mainly on the peasant masses is the clear-cut proof of the intolerable aggravation of the land problem. If genuine land reform had been undertaken by the regime, the Communist Party of the Philippines and the New People's Army would not have found the ground so fertile for armed revolution.  There is no industrialization and land reform going on to dissipate social unrest as claimed by certain pseudo-revolutionaries. There is in fact the intensification of fascist, foreign and feudal exploitation and oppression. The national democratic revolution of the broad masses of the people is moving forward. 
44 Philippine Economy and Politics  It was in the late 1960s when Lavaite patriarchs actively espoused the line that US. imperialism had been seriously taking steps to effect industrialization and land reform since the 1950s. They adopted this line to explain that "US.- inspired economic reforms" rather than Lavaite misleadership had caused the defeat of the armed revolutionary movement in the 19503; and to oppose the revolutionary line which was being drawn up in the late 19605.  Subsequently, the patriarchs found a gullible mouthpiece that proceeded to publicize the line that armed struggle would be even more futile in the late 1960s and onward because the US. and the Marcos regime were supposedly even more determined to industrialize the Philippines and carry out land reform. Since then, this mouthpiece has never tired of harping on the line and muddleheadedly mixing the pseudo-Marxist premises with the absurd claims of the World Bank, the TNCs and the technocrats about "economic restructuring" in the Philippines.  Since their open surrender to the U.S.-Marcos regime in 1974, the Lavaites have become so immersed in their collaboration with the fascists that they have become even more blind to such obvious facts as the U.S.-Marcos opposition to local industrialization and land reform and the nationwide cumulative growth of the revolutionary mass movement.  The Lavaites pretend that the Philippines is already industrializing and at the same time protest that the MNCs are the owners or controllers of the enterprises and employers of an increasing mass of Filipino workers. And then the Lavaites console each other that the growing proletariat would eventually fall on their lap and that they would one day put one over the US. and Marcos by suddenly turning the proletariat against them in the fashion of an urban uprising as in the Russian revolution in 1917. They forget that in the experience of the Bolsheviks and the Russian people, the fighting proceeded to the countryside for an extended period.  The same Lavaite quarters overrate "export-oriented manufacturing" and the bogus land reform as having advanced and increased the magnitude of the modern industrial proletariat. Thus, even without the token heavy and basic industries as in Taiwan and South Korea, a Lavaite mouthpiece has gone on to claim even ahead of the World Bank that the Philippines is a "newly industrializing country".  There are those who assert that the Philippines is already capitalist because the working class is supposed to be in the majority already. They lump together all those categorized as industrial, service and farm workers and obscure the important distinctions among them. They do see that even the industrial workers in the Philippines are attached mainly to import-dependent light manufacturing, there being no heavy and basic industries. 
0n the Mode of Production 45  The consistent line of the Lavaites is that a protracted people's war based mainly on the peasantry is out of the question. They thus pretend to pin their hopes on a working class that is supposed to be expanding fast in an imaginary process of industrialization. But unfortunately for them, the Lavaites are shunned by the masses of workers for collaborating with the regime.  All attempts of the Lavaites to justify their continuing failures and, worse, their collaboration has proven to be utterly fiJtile. Even the Soviet theorists have been uneasy and disturbed about the Lavaites' conceding that the US. and the Marcos regime are carrying out industrialization in the counn'y as this preempts a Soviet ofl‘er of "noncapitalist development" to the regime.  World Capitalist System  Q8: It is supposed that "neocolonial industrialization" is unstoppable and that it is supposed to have been determined by a "new international division of labor (NIDL)" and "internationalization of capital" under which the capitalist countries concentrate on capital-intensive high-technology industries and shift labor—intensive industries to developing countries such that these countries can become industrialized and depart from the colonial exchange of raw-material exports and manufactured imports. How does this relate to Lenin's theory of modern imperialism and the going facts in the world capitalist system now?  A: There is a limit to the transfer of labor-intensive processes to the developing countries. The capitalist countries do not on their own initiative transfer labor- intensive processes or industries to the developing countries to the point of industrializing these countries and depriving themselves of captive markets for their surplus manufactures as well as sources of cheap raw materials.  In the United States and other capitalist countries, there is the objective process of rapid constant capital build-up. The labor-intensive processes are being automated. At the same time, it is the subjective wish of the political and economic leadership of the capitalist countries to cope with their unemployment. Thus the transfer of labor-intensive processes to the developing or underdeveloped countries is extremely limited and cannot by any stretch of the imagination lead to the industrial development of these countries.  Were the capitalist countries to allow developing countries to industrialize, the capitalist crisis of overproduction would worsen at a far more accelerated pace. The usual practice of the monopoly capitalists in the face of losses or a rapidly decreasing rate of profit is to cut down production or discard their inferior plants in favor of more efficient ones rather than allow the underdeveloped or developing countries to acquire their own industrial capacity. 
46 Philippine Economy and Politics  The foreign monopoly capitalists constantly fear and oppose any permanent reduction of their overseas market, especially because their high-technology industries employ a very limited number of people.  Let us take, as an example, the steel industry which is so important in the process of industrialization. The United States would rather keep idle or melt down so many of its steel plants than have these transferred to developing or underdeveloped countries. The steel plants conceded to a few entities like Taiwan, South Korea and Brazil are mere tokens of limited capacity, and their economies are hog-tied by the continuing need to be supplied with so many types of basic and special steel products from the capitalist countries in a wide range of construction proj ects.  A few token industrial proj ects have been conceded by the United States and other capitalist countries to a very few developing countries only because of the strong demand of the latter and not because of voluntariness on the part of the former. As much as they can, the capitalist countries maneuver to limit the industrial projects and tie them down for the purpose of extracting more advantages for their home industries.  The Philippines is a good example of an underdeveloped country that is held down to having no more than import-dependent light manufacturing. And it has even been obliged to retreat fi'om a wide range of light manufactm'ing that serves local needs and to opt for the flimsier processing of a few items for reexport. In brief, the dominant TNC want to supply entirely finished products to the Philippine market. This point seems not to be grasped by those who claim neocolonial industrialization for the country.  Modern imperialism would cease to be what it is if it were bent on industrializing the developing countries. The main and essential scheme of the imperialists is still to supply the underdeveloped and developing countries with manufactured products in exchange for cheap raw materials. The export of surplus capital in the form of direct and indirect investments serve the unequal exchange of manufactured surpluses of the capitalist countries and raw materials of the developing countries.  The imperialists draw their superprofits from unequal trade and from the investments and loans attendant to this trade. If this trade is called colonial, it is because it originates from colonial times; it does not mean that its importance is dissolved under modern imperialism. On the contrary, its importance has grown in the era of imperialism. One who uses the term neocolonialism as a synonym for imperialism should not be misled that the colonial pattern of trade has to be replaced by something like "neocolonial industrialization". 
0n the Mode of Production 47  The facts in their entirety and decisive detail do not show that the capitalist Commies have taken the initiative to form a "new international division of labor" and allowed the developing countries to industrialize and depart from their dependence on raw material production for export and importation of finished products. One simply has to look into the facts behind the struggle of the third World for a new international economic order. North-South dialogues and cOnfrontations are becoming more and more bitter.  And here come the Lavaites claiming that everything has been settled on the initiative of the imperialists who through the TNCs have supposedly decided to indUStrialize developing countries with a small number of run-away shops fi'om the capitalist countries. The book Development Debacle by Walden Bello, et a1, exposes completely the falsity and failure of the promised industrialization of the Philippines through "export-oriented manufacturing".  , As the capitalist crisis of overproduction worsens, the capitalist countries and their TNCs, directly and through their banks, dictate on developing countries to desist from proposing industrial projects, bring down tariff barriers, borrow at more onerous terms, devalue their currencies, etc. The capitalist countries push their respective trade ofl‘ensives at the expense chiefly of the underdeveloped or developing countries. At the same time, the former impose quotas and other protectionist measures against export and reexports of underdeveloped or developing countries.  The Lavaites eclectically pick up all sorts of false ideas and give credence even to false claims of the World Bank and the TNCs to support their line that the us. imperialists and the Marcos regime are industrializing the country. In the process, they unwittingly cast away the Soviet theory of noncapitalist development in favor of a theory of industrialization by the TNCs. In this regard, the only thing that the Soviet Union can be happy about the Lavaites is their trying to obscure the third world demand for a new international economic order.  The Lavaites are so opposed to the national democratic revolution and so attached to the regime that they have degenerated to the point of crediting U.S. imperialism with an imagined industrialization of the country. Industrialization will take place when the country and the people are fi‘eed from foreign and feudal domination.  The notion that the developing countries can be industrialized by the transfer of labor intensive industries from the capitalist countries is supposed to have originated from the work entitled The New International Division of Labor by West German scholars Folker Froebel, Jergen Heinrich and Otto Kreyer, of the Max Planck Institute. Since then, some apologists for the TNCs have used this notion to overrate the TNC role in the so-called industrialization of the 
48 Philippine Economy and Politics  developing economies. Then, the Lavaites adopted the notion, called it neocolonial industrialization and flaunted it as if it were an improvement on Lenin's theory on modern imperialism.  The notion is not really new. Kautsky and his disciples in the Second International hailed the domination of the imperialists over the colonies and semicolonies on the ground that this would achieve a civilizing mission and the peaceful development of the dominated countries into capitalism. In exchange for their raw materials, they were supposed to acquire industrial productive capacity and become capitalist. But, then as now, the imperialists with the collaboration of the local reactionaries have persistently tried with all their might to keep the dominated countries as a cheap source of raw materials and a lucrative market for their manufactures.  We are still in the era of modern imperialism and proletarian revolution. The essentials of Lenin's theory on'modern imperialism are still valid today. The basic conditions from which he drew basic principles have continued. He has correctly presented imperialism as the highest and final stage of capitalism. It is moribund capitalism, the eve of social revolution in both capitalist and underdeveloped and developing countries. The term neocolonialism is a mere variant of the term imperialism and it does not mean industrialization of underdeveloped countries by foreign monopolies or TNCs because in fact no such industrialization is taking place.  Rural Development  Q9: What can one say about the notion that together with the "land reform" program of the U.S.-Marcos regime such measures of rural development as the miracle rice program, increased use of imported farm inputs, the fixed rent systems, the rapid increase of farm workers, corporate farming and compact farming, crop diversification, animal breeding programs, putting—out jobs to villages and the Kilusang Kabuhayan at Kaunlaran (KKK) have resulted in a significant advance from feudalism towards capitalism?  A: In the absence of genuine land reform which breaks up feudal and semifeudal social relations, these measures of "rural development" can only benefit the big compradors and big landlords at the expense of the peasants and fann workers. Some crumbs fall to the rich peasants and merchant usurers. These measures cannot by themselves effect any significant advance from feudalism and semifeudalism or from the overall semifeudal character of the economy. 
0n the Mode of Production 49  The miracle rice program has increased the productivity of peasants over a few hundreds of thousands of hectares of land and expanded the market for US. agricultural chemicals. But the peasants have had to suffer the higher costs of production, especially the imported inputs (fertilizers, pesticides, irrigation facilities, etc.). These have cut down their share of the crop and forced them into debt. and further penury. The semifeudal big compradors headed by the fascist ruling clique have collected the biggest commercial profits on the importation of the inputs. The peasants have been further squeezed by the fixed rent arrangement and by the price control on their products.  The peasants in Central Luzon and elsewhere who did not pay or made only token payments for the Masagana 99 loans, which were in fact extremely usurious, appeared to have gained much fiom the miracle rice program. But when Masagana 99 was terminated, they found themselves in deep u'ouble. Since then, owner-cultivators have been selling away their lands; and tenants, their tenancy rights because of increasing debts they cannot pay. Both poor peasants and farm workers have been bogged down more deeply in the mire of feudalism and semifeudalism.  The fixed-rent arrangement between the landlord and the so-called leaseholder is still very much within the embrace of feudalism. Generally, the fixed rent is paid in grain because the landlords want to take advantage of the higher prices during the lean months, thus, there is the quedan system. At any rate, land rent paid in the form of labor, crop share or cash (in this historical sequence) by tenants is feudal.  The rapid increase of farm workers is a semifeudal phenomenon rather than a full capitalist phenomenon; precisely because there is no industrial capitalist development to absorb dispossessed peasants as the rate of land accumulation by file landlords is running faster than the expansion of tillable land. The increase of farm workers in Central Luzon and other old settlements is dramatic because the fi'ontier area for resettlement all over the country has closed.  It is said that farm workers are now 55 percent of the farm population and are bigger in number than the peasants with definite plots to till. We are not sure of the accuracy of this figure. It is difficult to make a national survey distinguishing the farm workers who depend mainly or wholly on their wages and the poor and middle peasants who augment their income as farm workers. But assuming that the figure is correct, it does not mean any significant advance into capitalism away from semifeudalism. On the other hand, it means that the semifeudal economy is bursting at the seams with surplus labor that it cannot employ. The direction is more towards a new type of democratic revolution than towards capitalism. 
50 Philippine Economy and Politics  Land concentration mainly by landlords and semifeudal rich peasants continues. Foreign and local farm capitalists still have to deal with local owners of land. However, the new-type landlords take the initiative of employing capitalist processes such as getting crop loans, using imported agricultural inputs, hiring farm workers, etc.  On its own track, modern corporate farming is expanding rapidly and has had a violent impact on the poor peasants, settlers and national minorities, who continue to be displaced, especially in Mindanao. But it still covers only an insignificant part of the total agricultural land. It is far more productive and profitable though than farming that uses only the cheap labor of farm workers and does not use modem machinery and equipment. Compact falming so-called is still negligible: it covers only a few showpiece areas of the Ministry of Agrarian Reform.  The foreign agricorporations are expanding the land they control by going into "growers' agreements" with the National Development Corporation, landlords and owner-cultivators. These corporations take the initiative of promoting new crops for export, like banana, pineapple, rubber, palm oil, soybeans in Mindanao. The cultivation of more types of crops for the benefit of foreign agricorporations and local landlords reinforces feudalism and semifeudalism. So many owner-cultivators, for example, have been dispossessed of their land and turned into tenants and farm workers as a result of rapid land accumulation by the fascists, landlords and the foreign agricorporations.  The sale of imported agricultural inputs by big compradors to small merchants is a semifeudal rather than a capitalist phenomenon. It is a mercantile rather than an industrial phenomenon because the inputs, which come from outside the economy, are not produced by local industries.  The animal breeding programs of the reactionary government are also big comprador operations. Foreign breeds are imported at great overprice and at public expense. These are farmed out mainly to the landlords. However, these are still a mere drop in the sea of backyard animal breeding. But even if big animal farms do arise, the big compradors and landlords will still own them.  Incidentally, there is now a back-to-the-carabao campaign together with a back-to-organic fertilizers (especially composting and azolla) campaign as a result of dwindling foreign exchange for importing farm equipment and fertilizers.  Farm-out jobs in the garments and electronic enterprises are decreasing. Contrary to the claims of the Lavaites, these have not caused a bit of industrialization in the barrios. In general, these have been sidelines for peasant women during their slack periods, the compensation per piece being small. It is 
0n the Mode of Production 51  .not true that entire farming villages have given up farming in order to rely entirely or mainly on these farm-out jobs. It is also an exaggeration to say that the garments enterprises at their peak in the seventies created 500,000 jobs in the barrios compared to only 15,000 in factories.  Like the assembly of cars, trucks and motorcycles and the garments and "electronic enterprises, the KKK has also been overrated by the Lavaites as a major component of what they call neocolonial industrialization, especially because there is so much Marcos propaganda about tie-ups with US. chain department stores. Some KKK products (especially handicrafts) may indeed be exported. But these do not mean any degree of industrialization.  The KKK is essentially a propaganda gimmick in the face of the worsening economic crisis. It has been used to deflect attention from the rapacity of the fascist dictator and his cronies; and the bankruptcy of the regirne—all of which are being mercilessly exposed by soaring inflation and massive unemployment.  The KKK was cooked up when the crony corporations were making a raid on so-called rehabilitation fimds. An extremely high proportion of KK fimds is spent on propaganda and superfluous administrative personnel and consultants superimposed on the pre-established projects of "rural developmen " under ministries and other ofiices other than the Ministry of Human Settlements.  The project headings of the KKK are: agro-forestry, marine culture, waste utilization, cottage and "light industries" (quotes are ours); shelter and shelter components, and services. Old projects are simply being given the KKK signboard. Worse, the bureaucrats and the military are cutting more and more into KKK funds for themselves. But they get only chicken shit in comparison to what the fascist dictator gets. 
52 Philippine Economy and Politics  Capitalism in the Philippines?  Q10: What is your view of the following notions:  a) that Spanish colonialism being mercantile capitalist and applying bourgeois jurisprudence converted Philippine agriculture into capitalist property by overruling clan communalism as early as the 16th century;  b) that capitalist countries in trading heavily with the Philippine colony developed capitalist agriculture and turned the entire colony capitalist as early as the 19th century; and  c) that the Philippines is capitalist because the surplus products go through the market but is a dependent one because the surplus products end up with the imperialists?  Each of these notions comes from different quarters.  A: I understand why you have put all three notions together in one question. They have one thing in common. They fly away from a primary consideration of the forces and relations of production in the Philippines. The fundamental difference between Marxist and bourgeois economics is that the former is not carried away by the appearances of the market but starts with and focuses on the productive system.  Let us take up the first notion and review both European and Philippine economic history as well as the interaction of Europe and the Philippine colony as well as the result of such interaction.  Indeed, manufacturing and mercantile capitalism were the driving forces behind Spanish colonialism. But this colonialism did not have to apply any bourgeois jurisprudence to put Philippine agriculture under its control. The Philippines was taken by force and conquest; the conquerors subsequently imposed the encomienda system for administrative and tribute-collecting purposes. This system is a military-feudal device with historical roots reaching down to the time of slavery. This talk of bourgeois jurisprudence being applied on Philippine agriculture in the 16th century to make it capitalist property is utter nonsense.  It should be pointed out that to this day, bourgeois jurisprudence in the Philippines affirms and protects feudal rights, especially in land. The ownership of land by landlords is a bane that continues in the Philippine economy. But the 
0n the Made of Production 53  feudal property rights of landlords are upheld by the bourgeoisie for fear that an attack on it might impugn the entire concept of private property.  In the 16th century, clan communalism was not pervasive in the Philippines. The overwhelming majority of the natives had already developed a certain degree of civilization far beyond the savage condition of clan communalism and basically advanced from the barbaric condition of tribalism. Tribal features were merely vestigial. Among the elements of civilization were literacy, use of metals and existence of classes.  To the extent of at least 80 percent, the natives lived in local communities with populations ranging fi'om 300 to 20,000 along the seacoasts, big rivers and lakes. They had wet rice agriculture and dry rice agriculture. They had well developed handicrafts that included'metal crafi, cotton and hemp weaving and the making of large boats capable of carrying fifty (caracoa) to 300 persons (joanga). The caracoa was a commonplace craft for trade and war.  The ruling families and sections of the freemen privately owned most of the metal tools, wet rice land and slaves; appropriated the entire product of the slaves; received rent from serfs or partial slaves; and controlled the use of communal lands. The surplus product of society was large enough to stimulate intercommunity and inter-island trade as well as trade with neighboring lands, China and those of Southeast Asia.  Trade with China is most revealing. The natives traded rice, cotton, beeswax, hardwood, tortoise shell, pearl and gold in exchange for iron, lead, bronze, fishing nets, silk and porcelain.  The self-contained barangay paradigm of previous historians is extremely misleading. We have been disabused of this by a careful reading of the Spanish chronicles and evaluation of archeological, anthropological and prehistoric evidences. We should not confuse the civilized natives with those who had not gone beyond clan communalism (Aetas) and tribal communalism (most upland communities). These were in the minority even in the 16th century.  In the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries, military-feudal methods of exploitation, like tribute collection, requisition, labor and military conscription were applied in the main to extract surplus product for the colonizers. It was sheer plunder.  Even as the him, some lay conquistadores and the native Chieftains all together steadily developed such feudal practices as private land accumulation, collection of rent, trade monopolies, levies on merchants, religious fees, etc., slavery also persisted and grew until it really went down. It must be stated 
54 ' Philippine Economy and Politics  thoughfithat slavery never reached the proportions that it did in America. There, Africans were traded to be turned into slaves for the plantations.  Slaves in the Philippines during the first two centuries of Spanish colonial rule included those who were taken captive in military expeditions against the Moros and upland tribes, and those imprisoned for running away from labor and military conscription. The slaves were used as rowers of galleons and military boats or even as permanent workers in public works, as well as house and field servants.  In the entirety of Spanish colonial rule, feudalism provided the great bulk of the surplus product that went to the colonizers and their native taskmasters. In the 19th century, feudalism became fully developed and matured under the stimulus of foreign trade with the capitalist countries that needed an increasing amount of commercial-industrial crops.  We can proceed to the second notion. It is wrong to say that Philippine agriculture became capitalist and that the whole Philippine economy likewise became capitalist in the 19th century simply because of the external stimulus provided by commerce with capitalist countries. Feudalism, on the contrary, flourished as never before in the whole country.  The increasing sale of agricultural crops to the capitalist countries pushed the total production of these crops as well as crop specialization and domestic trade. The general efi'ect was to drive the friar landlords and the widespread native and mestizo landlords to accumulate land and collect higher rent from the tenants. In the whole country, the maturing feudal relations were still dominant over such semifeudal elements as the commodity system and the big compradors.  Whether they leased lands to native sublandlords or hired foreign managers as they later did, the friars went on a rampage of arbitrarily grabbing land and increasing land rent. The encouragement given by foreign trade to feudal exploitation pushed the people to revolution. It is obvious why the revolution most frequently burst out in the areas where the fn'ar estates existed.  Let us turn to the third notion. In presenting the mode of production, one does not start with the market. Otherwise, one is liable to get misled and insist that there never has been any mode of production other than capitalism.  For instance, even in a slave mode of production the product of the slaves as well as the slaves themselves are traded, i.e., go through the market. In a feudal society, the landlords also deal with the merchants. The key question is not how the surplus product is distributed but how it is produced and exacted from the real producers. The mode of production called slavery is called slavery because 
0n the Mode of Production 55  the main portion of the surplus product is produced by slaves rather than by serfs or other classes in society.  Not all the surplus product of the present semifeudal economy goes to the imperialists. The landlords, big compradors and the imperialists get their respective shares. The imperialists derive their superprofits through unequal trade, direct investments and loans; and hold the levers to suit the pattern of production and trade to their advantage.  The Philippine mode of production is in the orbit of world capitalism and is dependent on it. But in its distinct or particular mode of existence, it is semifeudal and not capitalist. The term “dependent capitalism” can lead to more confusion than clarity.  Feudalism As Social Base of Imperialism  Qll: In what sense is feudalism the social base of imperialism?  A: There are those who insist that feudalism is not and has never been the social base of imperialism in the country. They say that imperialism is so strong that it does not need feudalism. They confuse the destruction of feudalism by capitalism in the development of the capitalist countries and the use of feudalism by modern imperialism to the latter's advantage in the colonies and semicolonies.  In the Philippines, U.S. imperialism has relied on feudalism historically and currently in various social spheres: economic, political and cultural. It is not out of weakness that U.S. imperialism uses feudalism but out of cleverness and strength. The main interest of U.S. imperialism is not to develop and industrialize the Philippines and turn it into one more capitalist competitor but to retain it as a supplier of raw materials and as a market for U.S. manufactures through the instrumentality of the landlords and the big compradors who in the main are also big landlords.  In the economy, the landlords are in charge of the production of crops needed by the imperialists and which form the bulk of exports. All landlords in the production of staples and export crops grab the biggest amount of surplus value and use this to get the U.S. manufactured goods for consumption. They waste what would have been investible resources and prevent Philippine industrialization. They hog the land and assure Philippine backwardness and vulnerability to imperialist domination. 
56 Philippine Economy and Politics  In politics, the reactionary political leaders, from the level of municipal mayors to that of the president, are generally landlords. It would certainly be foolish for American politicians to come and take over the functions of their local taskmasters. There certainly is no danger of that happening in the Philippines.  This is also true in the economy. It would be foolish for Americans to supplant the landlords from old establishments in feudal and semifeudal areas. US. agricorporations have always preferred moving into fi'ontier areas at the expense of settlers and national minorities. Now, they also prefer to go into "growers' agreements" with the state, the landlords, and owner-cultivators. So far, the landlord class in the Philippines has held its ground all over the country, and has certainly not given way to local capitalists.  In culture, U.S. bourgeois and imperialist culture is an overlay on the feudal culture spawned by Spanish colonialism and the Catholic Church. U.S. imperialism does not dare eradicate and replace the feudal culture that still persists in a big way. It would rather ride on it and use it just as it does with the landlord economy.  It was Lenin who pointed out that modern imperialism allies itself with feudalism in the colonies and semi-colonies. The modern industrial bourgeoisie which destroyed the feudal economy in capitalist countries is not to be confused with foreign monopoly capitalism impinging on the backward economies of colonies and semicolonies. U.S. imperialism has pushed the growth of semifeudalism and the comprador big bourgeoisie but not to the point of making the Philippines a modern industrialized neocolony or an individual capitalist country.  It is also inappropriate to quote from Marx and Lenin regarding the modern industrial bourgeoisie in 19th century England and early 20th century Russia and suggest that such a bourgeoisie is already directly in command of the Philippine economy. The ruling bourgeoisie is the comprador big bourgeoisie, an element of modern industrial bourgeoisie in the Philippines and the landlord class; and does not yet have a local base in heavy and basic industries for the light manufacturing it is engaged in.  The Lavaites are a source of confusion. Sometimes they admit the obvious imperialist domination in the country. At other times, they assert that a modern industrial bourgeoisie is already ruling the country when they wish to call the country capitalist.  The first to publicly attack the formulation, "Feudalism is the social base of imperialism in the Philippines," was Dr. Jesus Lava, Sr. in 1970. He enumerated 
0n the Mode of Production 57  a series of U.S.-directed and U.S.-financed activities and called these the social base of US. imperialism in the Philippines.  Even enlightened neoclassical economists understand that foreign monopoly and the feudal bottleneck in the economy are the obstacles to the growth of capitalism in the country. Proletarian revolutionaries know that if they defeat the landlord class in the countryside, imperialism and the big compradors would have nothing to stand on in the country except a few city enclaves where they would not be able to stand for long.  There are those who join the Lavaites in saying that the formulation, "feudalism is the social base of imperialism," is inapplicable to the Philippines simply because it is drawn (or "derived", a pejorative term of original geniuses) from Mao. They do not know that even Mao cannot claim originality for the basic principle involved.  Modern imperialism has been experienced and observed in Common by so many people in colonies and semi-colonies. Why should not entire peoples or their thinkers and leaders arrive at certain common formulations? What would be sad is if these formulations are not supported by facts and analysis.  Will Marxists now stop being Marxist because they draw basic guiding principles from Marx, Lenin, Stalin, Mao and Ho? No theoretical advance can be made without the illumination and further testing of priorly proven ideas as one engages in the concrete analysis of concrete conditions. The formulation in question amrms a general similarity of semicolonial and semifeudal conditions between presocialist China and the Philippines today. The Philippines, of course, has so many particularities different fiom those of old China. 
58 Philippine Economy and Politics  The Marcos Ruling Clique  012: Will you discuss further the class character of the Marcos ruling clique?. Some Lavaites claim it represents "the ascendancy of the reformist national bourgeoisie over the feudal lords and the compradors". Some other people say that this clique has pushed capitalism and industrial development by using the state to pool unprecedentedly large financial resources to reinvest. Are these claims true? What more can we expect from this clique? Is there any chance that it would take the nationalist bourgeois alternative?  A: The claim that the Marcos ruling clique is representative of a national bourgeoisie ascendant over the big compradors and big landlords does not accord with the facts. The Marcos ruling clique is the extreme section of the big compradors and big landlords and grabs the lion's share of the wealth of these classes by virtue of its autocratic power.  Marcos conspired with U.S. imperialism to set up the fascist dictatorship in 1972 precisely to attack with unbridled force the rising anti-imperialist movement of the people and to reverse the patriotic decisions of the Supreme Court then on the Quasha and Luzteveco cases. Even before the declaration of Martial Law in 1972, the Marcos ruling clique had pushed investment laws to enable the U.S. to head off the termination of the Parity Agreement and the Laurel-Langley Agreement so as to perpetuate "parity rights" through "national treatment" of foreign investors.  From the time that he assumed power, Marcos led his clique in utilizing his autocratic powers to take over entire lines of big comprador businesses and maj or enterprises and become the ascendant section of the comprador big bourgeoisie. Within the fiamework of subservience to U.S. imperialism, this ruling section has become the wealthiest and most reactionary section of the comprador big bourgeoisie.  By controlling and manipulating state and private banks and trading corporations, this clique has gained a private monopoly of the sugar, copra, coconut oil and logging businesses. It has made large cuts into mining enterprises and in the banana business. It casts a shadow over the entire raw- material production for export of the country.  By engaging in heavy foreign borrowing for nonproductive and non- industrial purposes and thus having a large amount of fimds to manipulate, this fascist elite has rapidly become the Number One financial and trading agent of the U.S. and other transnational corporations. Among the big compradors, the 
0n the Mode of Production 59  crony corporations have benefited the most from the state loans and loan guarantees for the importation of goods for immediate consumption and consumption-oriented infi'astructure, energy, tourism and similar programs.  The crony corporations or groups of companies headed by the Benedictos, Disinis, Silverios, Cuencas, Cojuangcos, Romualdezes, Tans, Dees, and other Filipino and Kuomintang dummies are essentially big comprador entities acting as agents of the US. and other multinational firms. They engage in a dizzying variety of businesses, but none of these are in heavy and basic industries.  Their businesses include banks, investment houses, insurance, trading, agricultural mills, construction, real estate, hotels, mining, logging, plantations, import-dependent light manufacturing, garments, electronics, car assembly, fertilizers, shipping, electricity, telephone, mass media, gambling joints (jai-alai and casinos), and so on. The edge of the cronies over their big comprador competitors is provided by the power of the autocratic overlord.  All kinds of tricks of bureaucrat capitalism at its worst have been used in favor of the new oligarchy. Loans and loan guarantees have been made with little or no loan collateral. Secret decrees and informal orders have been made to grant special privileges. Special levies are imposed on the people only to be treated as private funds. Customers of utility firms are required to buy shares and pay ever- increasing special charges. Permanent toll gates are allowed. Goods are monopolized and overpriced and then the people are told that they enj oy ”subsidized" or "socialized" prices.  Such belated token industrial projects as the copper smelter and the coco- chemical plant (after seventeen years of Marcos rule) do not change the anti- industrial character of the fascist compradors. These projects are mere tokens and have been undermined from the beginning by bureaucratic corruption and by the control exercised by foreign lenders and investors. The tokenism involved in these projects is no different from that in the bogus land reform.  Economic and financial policies and activities in the country are more than ever dictated by the imperialist banks and the US. multinational corporations. Marcos is now prohibited from even pretending to be for industrialization. He is told to concentrate on "rural development" and to further press down the national bourgeoisie and the entire people through increased taxation, devaluation, import liberalization, inflation, and so on.  Aside from having become the biggest compradors in the country, the top fascists have become the biggest landlords. They have accumulated huge estates and mills for sugarcane, coconut, bananas, rice, corn and other major agricultural products for export. They have used the banks to take over the land of the 
60 Philippine Economy and Politics  landlords out of power and even that of owner- cultivators. They have used various pretexts—agro-industrial estates, export processing zones, tree farming, counter- insurgency, pasture leases—to grab lands from poor settlers and minority communities.  As the economic crisis is worsening at home and abroad and getting foreign loans is becoming more dificult and onerous, many of the crony corporations have collapsed and state and financial institutions are made to answer for the huge unpaid loans of these bankrupt firms. Have the fascists made profit losses in the process? No! To make their pyramids or bubbles, they have gotten loans with little or no collateral, have overpriced goods and services paid for by these firms and have engaged in sheer "creative accounting".  The fascists have contributed nothing to Philippine industrialization. Instead, they have aggravated the underdevelopment of the economy. They have mortgaged the country away and auctioned it ofl‘. Together with the imperialists, they have plundered it and brought out a tremendous amount of social wealth. The top fascists stash away their loot abroad in the form of secret bank accounts, choice real estate, blue-chip stocks, trust funds, gold bullions, jewelry and art collections.  Is there any chance that the fascist gang of big comprador- landlords would take the bourgeois nationalist alternative? There is no indication that they will change their character. Sometimes Marcos pretends to complain of "politically unpalatable" economic dictates from his imperialist master. But he does so only to raise his standing as a puppet. He has been consistent in assuring U.S. interests and repressing the people.  There have been instances in semifeudal countries when some bureaucrat capitalists have swung from a big comprador to a bourgeois nationalist posture. But so far, Marcos has not shown any desire or ability to do so. Time is running fast against him. The political and economic crisis is worsening so fast that he will soon be consigned to the place where he is awaited by Chiang Kai-shek, Ngo Dinh Diem, Lon Nol, the Shah of Iran and Somoza.  The Lavaites have become so degenerate in their collaboration with the fascists that they arbitrarily separate Marcos from U.S. imperialism and misrepresent him as a national bourgeois. They therefore get entangled in the most confused and self-contradictory statements and claims.  In a vain attempt to further confuse the people, the Lavaites claim that the revolutionaries are attacking Marcos exclusively. They have been saying this since the late 19603. They must be literally deaf, dumb and blind; or they must be so self-deluded that they can ignore the identification of the U.S.-Marcos 
0n the Mode of Production 61  combine as the enemy as well as the promotion of the national democratic line against U.S. imperialism, feudalism and bureaucrat capitalism.  Crisis and Revolution  Q13: Will you discuss the economic crisis in the Philippines? Are the forces of production outgrowing the semifeudal relations? How is the class struggle developing in the mode of production as well as in the superstructure? Bring the discussion to the prospects of revolutionary change.  A: The semifeudal mode of production in the Philippines is in constant or chronic crisis. It carries over from the nineteenth century the crisis of an overripe feudalism, which was not solved by the old democratic revolution because of U.S. imperialist intervention and conquest.  U.S. imperialism seemed to break up feudalism during the first decade on the century as the friar estates were purchased, public lands were opened for settlement and the 1903 census showed that the tenancy rate plummeted from its 19th century peak to only 18 percent. But the fi-iar estates eventually came under the ownership of landlords and not of peasants. Also, the settlers were always overtaken by the landlords. From decade to decade, the tenancy rate rose.  U.S. monopoly capitalism has retained and superimposed itself on feudalism, smashing local handicrafts and hindering the development of comprehensive local manufacturing. It has subordinated feudalism to the unequal exchange of manufactured imports and raw-material exports which had made the comprador big bourgeoisie more dominant than the landlord class in the resultant semifeudal economy.  This mode of production is afllicted protractedly not only with the old unresolved crisis of feudalism but also with that of the world capitalist system, particularly imperialism which is moribund capitalism and which is ever in crisis. The Filipino people, especially the workers and the peasants, constantly strain under the yoke of foreign and feudal exploitation.  The chronic economic crisis has been plunging fi‘om one level to another due to internal and external factors. The forces of production have been growing in a lopsided manner. And the foreign monopoly firms together with the local exploiting classes have been robbing the toiling masses of the surplus product and keeping them at worsening levels of subsistence and impoverishment. 
62 Philippine Economy and Politics  The rate of agricultural land expansion has exceeded the rate of population growth from decade to decade, mainly because of spontaneous peasant resettlement and opening of new Jand. But the rate of land accumulation by landlords runs faster. Now, the frontier areas have practically become closed to further resettlement. Peasant settlers and even minority nationalities are being deprived of their homesteads and ancestral lands.  In old and new settlements, the peasants are being proletarianized—dispossessed of land and tools—and yet there is no industrialization to absorb this growing surplus labor. Too many people are competing for seasonal farm work and they are spilling over into the cities to compete for odd jobs. Unemployment is rampant.  The land problem has become more acute than ever before. Thus, the agrarian revolution of the peasants and faxm workers against the landlord class is breaking out on a national scale. Going along with the growth in strength of the armed peasant army and other people's organizations, the current general campaign for rent reduction and elimination of usury is bound to rise to the level of land confiscation from the landlords and free distribution of land to the tillers.  Feudalism is still the main socio-economic problem. It involves the vast peasant majority of the people. The largest amount of surplus product is drawn from this class and is divided among the exploiters. Together with foreign monopoly capitalism, feudalism must be done away with in order to liberate the forces of production in the county.  By way of "industrial development", U.S. imperialism has promoted agricultural milling, extractive enterprises, slight processing of local raw materials, the "import-dependent import-substitution" manufacturing for domestic consumption of the fifties and more recently the far more import- dependent "export-oriented manufacturing" for reexport and domestic market penetration.  Actually, financial resources have flowed most and in a rapid manner into construction, utilities, transport and communications, tourist facilities, the military, the least useful parts of the bureaucracy and so on. All these have high import requirements and have drawn away resources from the genuine deveIOpment of the country’s productive capacity.  As the US. imperialists and the regime prate abou "export-oriented development", the Philippine economy has moved further away from industrialization and has become more dependent on the unequal exchange of raw-material exports and manufactured imports. The proportion of industrial employment, especially manufacturing, to total employment has gone down. 
0n the Mode of Production 63  The problem of unemployment and underemployment has become so severe in both rural and urban areas. Unemployment has kept on rising above the chronic rate of 25 percent. The export of cheap skilled and unskilled labor and the emigration of professionals and highly trained technicians are a manifestation of the inability of the economy to absorb the growing manpower.  The foreign debt has increased by leaps and bounds to support nonproductive projects and activities, to cover the rapidly widening trade debt and servicing of accumulated foreign debt. This debt is being used to tighten the stranglehold of the imperialist banks and firms on the Philippine economy.  The Philippines is now being required to extend more privileges to foreign investors against long-standing nationality requirements, fiirther liberalize imports, make drastic devaluation of the peso, increase the tax burden of the people, etc. For the multinational firms to expand their ownership of enterprises, they do not have to make new investments. They can choose to simply convert the foreign loans and supplies into takeover equity.  The imperialist scheme of things is however, self-contradictory and self- defeating. The US. and other transnational corporations want to perpetuate the Philippines as a source of cheap raw materials, a market for their manufactures and a field of direct and indirect investments for non-industrial purposes. They keep on extracting superprofits. Their plunder goads the people to rebel.  The worsening of foreign and feudal exploitation is such that it now tightly squeezes not only the toiling masses of workers and peasants but also, the urban petty bourgeoisie and the national bourgeoisie and goads them all to rise up. Even among the big compradors and landlords, there is a sharpening conflict as the clique in power seeks to grab all economic and financial advantages.  The struggle between the exploiting and exploited classes within the mode of production is reflected and concentrated in the superstructure. The state is used by the ruling class, or specifically the ruling clique, to oppress the people and make possible the continuance of their economic exploitation. In turn, the people have stood up to fight the law for their rights and interests.  As the most progressive force, the working class builds its revolutionary party, a people's army based among the peasants and a united fi'ont that embraces all patriotic and progressive classes, including the urban petty bourgeoisie and the national bourgeoisie.  The revolutionary party of the proletariat applies the universal theory of Marxism-Leninism on concrete Philippine conditions and seeks to lead and unite 
64 Philippine Economy and Politics  with the entire people. The program of national democratic revolution is laid down and carried out to rid the country of foreign and feudal domination.  The class struggle is undertaken not only in the economic sphere of the Philippine semifeudal society but also in the political and cultural spheres on the superstructure. It is in the political sphere that the most decisive battles are fought. As the ruling class employs armed counterrevolution to preserve the relations of production, the working class, the peasants and the rest of the people wage armed revolution to destroy the existing relations of production and liberate the forces of production.  It is when U.S. imperialism escalates intervention and launches aggression that the national character of the struggle appears to submerge the class character of the struggle. But the two are inseparable. Even when the national struggle is more prominent, the class struggle underlies it.  In the national democratic revolution, the aspect of national liberation is waged against U.S. imperialism; and the aspect of democracy is waged against the fascist dictatorship and feudalism. Agrarian revolution is the most effective means of achieving democracy and mobilizing the strongest popular force to defeat U.S. imperialism and fascist dictatorship. 
Philippine Crisis And Revolution  Ten lectures delivered at the Asian Center University of the Philippines April-May 1986  By Jose Maria Sison 
67  I. HISTORICAL ROOTS OF THE PHILIPPINE CRISIS 15 April 1986  chronic and current crisis that afflicts semicolonial and semifeudal Philippine society. Causing this crisis are U.S. imperialism, feudalism and bureaucrat capitalism. These must be seen in the historical flux in order to explicate them in general yet sufficiently concrete terms.  The main thrust of this discussion is to trace the historical roots of the  For a background in depth, we need to discuss first the precolonial societies in the archipelago that has come to be known as the Philippines as well as the colonial and feudal society that was brought about by Spanish colonialism. Then we can discuss the semifeudal society that was brought about by U.S. imperialism through its colonial (1902-1946) and semicolonial (1946 onwards) periods in Philippine history.  In dealing with such distinct social formation, we will present the mode of production and superstructure and seek to account for the shift from one social formation to another. The main objective is to devote the most attention to the present semicolonial and semifeudal society, the outgrowth of fascist dictatorship and the new situation after the overthrow of the Marcos despotism.  Precolonlal Societies  In the strict disciplinary sense of history based on ample written records, Philippine history started in the 16th century with the Spanish chronicles. From these, assisted by archeological, ethnolinguistic, anthropological and protohistoric data, we can have a fairly good idea of precolonial societies in the Philippines.  The dominant social formation in the 16th century Philippines upon the advent of Spanish colonialism was to be found in riverine and maritime areas peopled by the current major ethnolinguistic groups like the Ilocanos, Ibanags, Kapampangans, Tagalogs, Bicolanos, Cebuanos, Warays, Hiligaynons, Tausogs, Maranaws and the like. Out of a total population of one million, probably 80 percent were in these communities. 
68 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  There were socioeconomically integral communities with populations ranging up to 20,000 like those of Jolo and Manila. The mode of production had elements of slavery and serfdom.  Wet rice agriculture was supplemented by dry rice agriculture. Handicrafts, such as earthen pottery, weaving, blacksmithing and boat building were well developed. There were no megalithic structures but the wooden houses of the uppermost class were large and boats as large as the caracoa (capable of carrying 50 to 100 passengers for trade and war) were commonplace.  As ruling class, the datu families owned the slaves, the metal tools, animals, the boats and wet rice lands. The slaves did not have a share of their produce but the serfs had a share of paid tribute in kind to datus and freemen. There was also an intermediate class of freemen who owned their tools and wet rice land, and had a share of dry rice land and kept their produce.  There was trading with the hill tribes. There was wide-ranging inter-island trade going beyond the ethnolinguistic boundaries. There was trade within Southeast Asia and with China and Japan. The most important commodities traded were porcelain, silk, and metal products from China, and beeswax, hardwood, rice, cotton, tortoise shells and other tropical products from the country.  The highest sociopolitical formation was the $qu sultanate. Under the Sultan, a mling comcil whose omcers had well defined functions assisted him in his autocratic rule. There was a well-developed structure of political and religious leaders.  In other areas, the rajah or the leading dam in a conglomerate of barangays ruled either autocratically or was reliant on a comcil of datus in varying degrees. Barangays (basic social unit of the time) often cohered on the basis of tribute making, trade or war.  In addition to the existence of social classes and the use of metallurgy, literacy was widespread enough to make the precolonial societies civilized. Islam had taken root since the 14th century in the 8qu archipelago and portions of mainland Mindanao, and was being proselytized up to Manila. But animism and polytheism held sway in most areas of the country. Among the art forms flourishing were the song, instrumental music, poetry, ritualistic drama, carvings, tattooing, jewelry making, earthen pottery, weaving. 
Historical Roots of the Philippine Crisis 69  Colonial and Feudal Society  Capitalism at its manufacturing stage was burgeoning in Spain in the 15th century. It became the driving force behind Spanish mercantilism and colonialism which came to the Philippines in the 16th century. Through her colonial expeditions and plunder, Spain contributed much to the primitive accumulation of capital in Europe but economic development in Spain itself would stagnate.  In the more than 300 years of colonial rule in the Philippines up to the closing years of the 19th century Spanish colonialism effected the formation of a colonial and feudal society over most of the northern Malay archipelago—the Philippines.  In the first 100 years of Spanish colonial rule, the encomienda system was used to integrate the small, disparate precolonial societies; collect tributes, spread the Catholic faith; and organize labor and military conscription. This military-feudal device was transitional to the formation of a colonial and feudal society.  Since the onset of their rule, Spanish colonial authorities undertook sheer colonial plunder to serve the Manila-Acapulco trade and sustain themselves in administering the country, pacifying the recalcitrant natives and living in comfort. The Manila-Acapulco trade was so profitable because the galleons were made out of timber cut and hauled by conscripted labor, constructed also by conscripted labor and rowed by penal slaves. Moreover, there was the unrecorded sale of cheap rice and cotton to the Chinese merchant fleets.  In the latter part of the 18th century when feudalism had greatly developed, the Spanish colonial authorities decided to promote large scale cultivation of export crops due to the increasing demand for such crops from the industrial capitalist countries of Europe (especially Britain) and also due to the waning of the Manila-Acapulco trade.  In the 19th century, foreign trade involving Philippine agricultural exports and foreign manufactured imports pushed the maturation of feudalism and resulted in the emergence of the commodity system within the natural economy. Certain areas specialized in export crops and other areas in staple crops for domestic consumption. Agricultural specialization pushed the accumulation of land by him and native landlords as well as domestic trade.  Eventually, the Spanish colonial system, dependent on plunder through taxation and trading monopolies was clearly seen as an obstruction to the 
70 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  development of export-oriented agriculture and to foreign trade with industrial countries.  By arbitrarily expanding their landed estates and raising land rent, the Spanish friars were clearly seen by the people as the chief feudal exploiters in the country. Of course, having been the main all-round administrative support at the local level for the colonial rulers, the friars were hated by the people for accumulated sins of racial discrimination, oppression and exploitation.  In fact, a theocratic state prevailed in the Philippines. There was unity of church and state. The friars were under royal patronage and were an instrument of colonial policy. They had widespread presence and dominated the local native oficials who were restricted to the municipal level of administrative authority.  The political and moral prestige of the trials was first impugned on a wide scale by the rise of the secularization movement which demanded the replacement of the friars by secular priests who were natives. But it was the social unrest among native leaseholders and tenants in fi'iar estates which led to the most dramatic repressive colonial measures and in turn incited peasant resistance.  The Catholic Church was the principal cultural institution in the country. It exercised ideological-theological monopoly. The type of education it promoted on the widest possible scale was catechetical. It tried to wipe out what it considered works of paganism or it adapted native cultural forms in order to infuse them with colonial and clericalist content.  Up to the middle of the 19th centm'y, the natives in significant number who reached the level of higher education were the secular priests. It would only be subsequently that a significant number of the children of the native landlords and merchants would reach the college level and take on non-religious professional courses.  Philippine Revolution  The Philippine Revolution of 1896 was the first national and democratic response of the Filipino people to colonial and feudal domination. The leading class of this revolution was the ilustrado class. It consisted essentially of the educated children of landlord, bureaucratic and merchant families who adopted the ideology of the liberal bourgeoisie. 
Historical Roots of the Philippine Cn'sis 71  At first, in the 1880s, the ilustrados like Jose Rizal took the reformist line of seeking liberal reforms within the framework of Spanish colonialism. They carried out the propaganda movement in Spain because of the intolerable intellectual, political, and socioeconomic conditions in the Philippine colony. The best of the reformists, like Jose Rizal and Marcelo H. del Pilar, were able to expose and criticize the worst features of colonialism and feudalism.  Upon the total fi'ustration of the reformist movement, culminating in the arrest of Jose Rizal and the suppression of La Liga Filipina (the most ambitious organizational project of the liberal reformists), the Katipunan was established and emerged as the political organization of the revolutionary liberal bourgeoisie to lead the Filipino nation in fighting for national independence against Spanish colonialism.  The principal leader and founder, Andres Bonifacio, was himself an enlightened worker. Membership was drawn fi'om the enlightened urban petty bourgeoisie, workers and other urban poor, peasants, and the rest of the people.  The exposure of the Katipunan to the fi'iars and the subsequent craékdown led to the outbreak of the Revolution of 1896.  This revolution may be described as a national and bourgeois liberal revolution. But unlike the bourgeois liberal revolutions of Europe, this was not motivated by an existent manufacturing or industrial capitalism. The Filipino revolutionary leaders were bourgeois liberal by enlightenment outside fi'iar schools, and by aspiration for a thriving industry and commerce, something they had observed in Europe.  Manufacturing in the Philippines was still negligible. The best of this was cigar manufacturing which had started in an earlier century. The development of manufacturing in general was stifled by the importation of manufactured goods.  While the Filipino nation was disadvantaged in the unequal exchange of manufactured goods and agricultural export crops, the ever rising exactions of the colonial authorities and fi'iars made the colonial and feudal society intolerable to the Filipino people. The native landlords, merchants, bureaucrats, workers and peasants were incensed by the colonial oppression.  The most numerous class of the peasantry was the most exploited. As in the liberal democratic revolutions in Europe, the peasantry became the main force of the Philippine revolution. But with regard to the land question, the Filipino liberal revolutionaries centered their antifeudal attack on the fi'iar landlords.  As far as extirpating Spanish colonialism was concerned, the old democratic revolution of 1896 was successful. The Philippine Revolutionary Government 
72 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  and Army under Emilio Aguinaldo were able to win victory on a nationwide scale. A revolutionary congress in early 1899 framed the Malolos Constitution as the fimdamental law of the Filipino nation.  This constitution upheld the national sovereignty and independence of the F ilipino people; the principles of a republican and democratic government; a bill of rights; the separation of church and state; and the nationalization of the friar estates.  The Filipino revolutionary movement pushed forward a national and democratic culture. It was inspired by a progressive ideology. It issued publications, and promoted cultural works. It set up the prototype of a university, and put together Filipino professionals in the social and natural sciences.  U.S. imperialism intervened to interrupt the Filipino revolution. It employed superior military force and the language of conservative liberalism in order to defeat the revolution and conquer the nation. The Filipino revolutionaries were not ideologically, politically and organizationally prepared to fi'ustrate and carry out protracted revolutionary war against an industrial capitalist power.  When the revolution spread to the provinces away from those with fi'iar estates, the native landlord class which adopted a patriotic stand increased their part and influence in the Philippine government. This government, therefore, was in no position to inspire the peasantry to engage in a protracted people's war on the basis of struggling against both US. imperialism and feudalism.  Colonial and Semifeudal Society  The defeat of the Philippine revolution resulted in the direct colonial rule of modern imperialism or monopoly capitalism, the highest stage of capitalism, over the Philippines. Capitalism in the US. had advanced from the stage of free competition in the 19th century to that of monopoly capitalism in the 20th  century.  Monopolies had become dominant in the American economy. Bank capital, traditionally merchant, had merged with industrial capital. US. capitalism was impelled to export not only its surplus commodities but also its surplus capital. In the competition among capitalist powers, the United States was looking after its own monopoly interests. Through monopolies, trusts, syndicates, cartels and the like, the United States had moved into an world epoch of intense struggle for colonial and semicolonial domination. The struggle for a redivision of the world among the colonial powers led to war. 
Historical Roots of the Philippine Crisis 73  The defeat of the Philippine Revolution also resulted in the nonsolution and the retention of feudalism. U.S. monopoly capitalism immediately adopted feudalism as its all-round social base. However, within the first decade of the 20th century, it expropriated most of the friar estates for redistribution and opened the public land for resettlement by the landless peasants.  The token land reform undertaken by the U.S. colonial rule remains, to this day, the largest of its kind. But the landlord class would continue to accumulate land and would take over even the redistributed land fi'om the friar estates as well as the resettled land of the public domain.  Under the aegis of U.S. dominated "free trade," the unequal exchange of agricultural exports and manufactured imports which started under Spanish colonial rule expanded, especially because the mediation by Spanish colonialists through outright plunder had been removed. The U.S. brought in investments for the establishment of sugar mills and the slight processing of some agricultural products. It also developed mining and the production of mineral ores for export.  In the interaction of U.S. monopoly capitalism and domestic feudalism, what may be termed as a semifeudal economy prevailed in the country. A F ilipinized comprador big bourgeoisie became the dominant class on top of the landlord class under Spanish colonial rule. This import-export elite had been entirely foreign in the 19th centmy.  The comprador big bourgeoisie had dominated the essentially commercial cities of the Philippines. It acted as the trading and financial agent of the foreign monopoly firms. It was a matter of course that the big compradors also accumulated land as their reliable supply base for export crops. Thus we often speak of the big comprador-landlord class. But the landlord class remained a distinct class dominating the countryside and accumulating land for the production of export crops and staple crops for domestic consumption.  Direct U.S. colonial rule lasted up to the outbreak of World War II. The United States immediately conceded local administration up to the provincial level to elective and appointive native officials. It also gradually appointed F ilipinos to positions in the national bureaucracy and to legislative assemblies.  These assemblies went through stages of development—from the purely appointive Filipino-American Philippine Assembly under the Organic Law of 1902 through the elective Bicameral Assembly under the Jones Law of 1916 to the National Assembly under the Tydings-McDuflie Law and the 1935 Constitution. Also, under the Philippine Commonwealth government, the president of the Philippines was elected, but at the same time subject to the authority of the United States. 
74 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  For the first time in Philippine history, political parties were allowed to exist and operate openly and legally. But of course, the puppet party called the Federalista Party was sponsored by the U.S. colonial authorities even while they suppressed patriotic parties and organizations. Eventually the Nacionalista Party, which adopted the slogan of "immediate, complete and absolute independence," became dominant within the parameters of U.S. colonial rule.  As soon as U.S. colonial rule started, it coopted the ilustrado leadership of the revolution and the entire range of professionally and technically qualified men. They were immediately absorbed into the bureaucracy and businesses. And the United States rapidly expanded the educational system in order to produce more professionals and technicians for the rapidly expanding bureaucracy and businesses. The pensionado system was adopted to put the most brilliant Filipinos through American indoctrination mills in the U.S. itself.  The official ideology imposed by the United States on the Philippine educational and cultural system was supposed to be liberal democracy. But this was mere sugar-coating for the colonial rule of a monopoly capitalist power. This conservative liberalism ran counter to the anticolonial progressive liberalism of the old democratic revolution.  Semicolonial and Semifeudal Society  After World War II, the United States gave up direct colonial rule in conformity with the Tydings-McDuffie Law and the Philippine Constitution. But before nominally granting independence to the Philippines, the United States made sure that it would continue to dominate the Philippines economically, politically, militarily, culturally and diplomatically.  The U.S. took advantage of the devastation caused by the war. War damage payments were granted only in exchange for the maintenance of fi'ee trade and U.S. ownership of public utilities and natural resources-based enterprises under the Parity Amendment and the Bell Trade Act. Subsequently, this privilege would be prolonged under the Laurel-Langley Agreement.  At any rate, most of the war damage payments went to U.S. firms, high bureaucrats, big compradors and landlords. The U.S. reconquest resulted in the reconstruction and rehabilitation of the sernifeudal economy. The foreign trade enterprises, public utilities, plantations and agricultural mills, mining enterprises and agricultural-based processing plants, were restored. 
Historical Roots of the Philippine Crisis 75  Due to the rapid expansion of the lopsided exchange of undervalued raw material exports and overvalued manufactured imports, the Philippines suffered a severe foreign exchange crisis in 1949. Export and foreign exchange controls had to be imposed. The allocation of limited foreign exchange favored the importation of capital goods and other essential imports.  At the beginning, the US. Bell Mission recommended this policy of controls. Eventually this would be rejected by the US. in the late 19508. The growth of so-called import-substitution industries or import-dependent light manufacturing industries owned by the Filipino national bourgeoisie spawned the "Filipino First" policy. The Macapagal and the Marcos regimes would subsequently be used by the US. to counter the growing demand for national industrialization.  The International Monetary Fund and the World Bank would emerge prominently from the early 19603 onwards to dictate economic, monetary and fiscal policies, encouraging high foreign borrowing and high spending for the infi'astructures and mills of an export-oriented raw-material producing semifeudal economy.  The United States retained its military bases in the Philippines and thus continued to violate the national sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Philippines. It also controlled the Armed Forces of the Philippines by the latter's dependence on US. indoctrination, strategic planning, higher officer training and logistical support. U.S. control of the main component of state power makes it extremely subservient to US. imperialism.  With Filipino puppet oflicials assuming all positions in national adminisu'ation, the phenomenon of bureaucrat capitalism became pronounced as never before. Increasingly, government oficials made use of their public offices to raid the national treasury, cut into loan contracts and public projects, and amass assets in capital and land.  The United States continued to control the Philippine educational system through education officials and cultural leaders who had been soaked in the US. educational system. These propagated pro-imperialist and anticommunist ideas as did U.S. textbooks and other cultural materials. The continued dominance of English over the national language facilitated the persistence of colonial mentality.  In the same way the US. monopoly capitalism had superimposed itself on feudalism to produce a semifeudal economy, the modern factors of US. cultural aggression overlaid and coordinated with the most reactionary local cultural factors, including the institutional Catholic church, in order to produce a 
76 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  semifeudal and semicolonial culture. The mixture of medieval and pro- imperialist values is often considered a split personality complex of the formally educated Filipino.  The Marcos Fascist Dictatorship  The semicolonial and semifeudal system is a social system in constant crisis. It is afflicted by two moribund forces: foreign monopoly capitalism and domestic feudalism. For these forces to persist and maintain their dominance, they restrict the growth of productive forces and use political repression.  There is not a single decade in the 20th century that has not been marked by peasant social unrest and uprisings since the utter failure of the token land reform undertaken by the U.S. coldnial regime. By the 19503, there were militant peasant movements and peasant uprisings in Central Luzon and Southern Luzon.  Dun'ng the Japanese occupation, the peasant movement in Central Luzon was able to build a people's army against the fascist invader and weaken landlord power. After World War II, the first serious peasant war under the leadership of a proletarian party broke out. This was defeated through the Lavaite misleadership and the military superiority of the United States and the local reactionary classes.  It appeared that the land problem was relieved by the token land reform undertaken by the puppet regimes fi'om Magsaysay to Marcos. But in fact, the peasants themselves tried spontaneously to relieve their land hunger by resettling on public land. But the land frontier available for spontaneous resettlement was exhausted towards the end of the 19603. Thus the entire country would be confronted by the problem of landless peasants and the proliferation of farm workers competing for fewer farm jobs in old settlements.  The worst of U.S. monopoly capitalism as a moribund force was of course felt during the Great Depression in the 19305 and the explosion of World War II, which destroyed the productive forces of most capitalist countries and many of the colonies and semicolonies. As a result of World War II, more socialist countries arose and the national liberation movements spread widely to constrict the imperialist spheres of influence, areas of invesunents and markets.  After the reconstruction of the devastated countries, including Western Europe and J apan, there was the problem of the U.S. accommodating them in the world capitalist market, including the colonies and semi-colonies. In the 19605, the U.S. decided to undertake the policy of pouring in loan capital into 
Historical Roots of the Philippine Crisis 77  underdeveloped countries like the Philippines for purposes of building up their infrastructures, covering deficits 1n foreign trade and balance of payments, and thus allowing the sale of manufactured supplies from capitalist countries which were already troubled by recurrent and prolonged bouts of recession and inflation.  This U.S. policy was touted as one of development for the Philippine economy. But in fact this aggravated the agrarian, preindusu'ial and semifeudal character of the Philippine economy and put it into the quagmire of foreign indebtedness. The fact that foreign loan capital for nonindustrial purposes was far outrunning foreign direct investments for any productive enterprise, exposed the complete anti-indusuial and counterproductive thrust of foreign monopoly capital. The Philippines was compelled to incur tremendous amounts of foreign debt, but could never pay these back on the basis of its perpetuated agrarian economy. Also, those import-dependent enterprises described as export-oriented manufacturing enterprises like those in garments and semi-conductors were in fact more of dollaran devices, worse than the so-called import substitution enterprises of the 19503.  Under the conditions in which U.S. imperialism and domestic feudalism became more and more exploitative and counterproductive, the fascist dictatorship of Marcos arose in 1972 upon the instigation of the U.S. to suppress the resurgent anti-imperialist and antifeudal movement. The United States and the ruling puppet clique of Marcos were no longer capable of ruling in the old way with trappings of bourgeois liberal institutions and processes.  It can also be stated that the entire ruling system of big compradors and big landlords could no longer rule in the old way and settle their differences amicably. At the same time, the revolutionary forces of the proletarian party, the peasant-based people's army and the national united fi'ont, had started to grow. The legal forces of the national democratic movement were also demanding the 'end of the semicolonial and semifeudal system in favor of a national and democratic system.  The fascist dictatorial regime of the U.S.-Marcos clique could prolong its rule for so long as foreign loans (which could never be paid back) and U.S. bilateral assistance came in to assist the regime in undertaking infrastructure projects, coping with the first oil shock, beefing up the military and covering deficits in foreign trade and the balance of payments. In the entire span of the life of the fascist dictatorship, the raw materials exports of the Philippines were depressed and could not yield any surplus in foreign trade.  Possessed with autocratic power, Marcos and his fascist clique undertook the most gigantic and worst bureaucrat capitalist plunder ever seen in Philippine 
78 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  history. Bureaucratic corruption augmented monopoly capitalist and feudal exploitation in plundering the country and sucking dry the blood of the Filipino people.  When foreign loans could be had only at extremely onerous terms starting in 1979 and subsequently foreign loans at whatever terms dwindled in the early 19805, the fascist dictatorship of Marcos shook from its foundation to its rafters, and eventually collapsed in 1986 under the blows of the toiling masses, the middle social strata and the antifascist sections of the reactionary classes.  The Current Situation  The inciting moment for the broadest possible range of antifascist forces to rise up against the Marcos despotism was the assassination of Benigno Aquino, Jr., in 1983. Since then the anti-Marcos and antifascist faction of the reactionary classes had moved to discredit the Marcos dictatorship.  It became possible to finally overthrow the Marcos fascist clique in 1986 because the revolutionary masses had conducted struggle since 1972 and even before that, because the United States and the Catholic Church came to fear that the prolonged stay of Marcos in power would hasten the victory of the armed revolution and because all patriotic and progressive forces participated in the people's uprising that protected and supported the military forces breaking away from the regime.  But the toppling of the Marcos regime does not mean the end of the chronic and current crisis of the semicolonial and semifeudal ruling system. Greater efl‘orts are needed even only to dismantle the remaining structure of fascist dictatorship and to flee the people once and for all from oppression and exploitation.  There has been no social revolution yet. The ruling system persists, The ruling classes of big comprador and big landlords continue to ride roughshod over the people. The oppressive state remains. The Armed Forces of the Philippines as the main component of the reactionary state remains intact and completely carried over from the Marcos regime to the Aquino regime.  On the scale of one, two or three years, the Aquino regime is threatened by the comeback forces of the fallen regime and the rising ambitions of military groups. The new regime is faced with grave problems left by the Marcos regime and with the ever worsening crisis of the dying ruling system. The rising anti- imperialist and antifeudal demands of the people must be satisfied. 
Historical Roots of the Philippine Cn'sis 79  The national democratic revolution continues. The Filipino people continue to struggle for national sovereignty and democracy; land reform and national industrialization; a scientific, national and mass culture; and an independent  foreign policy. 
81  II. CRISIS OF THE SEMIFEUDAL ECONOMY 18 April 1986  shape it into a semifeudal one, and put it firmly within the orbit of the world capitalist system. The commodity system has prevailed over the natural economy of self-sufliciency. But domestic feudalism has merely subordinated itself to an external industrial power.  I l .S. monopoly capitalism has impacted on the Philippine economy to  The distinctness of the Philippine mode of production is due mainly to its deepseated prior feudal character in the 19th century, the persistence of feudalism and the evolvement of semifeudal relations that mediate U.S. monopoly capitalism and domestic feudalism.  Let us describe first the current forces and relations of production that comprise the semifeudal mode of production in the Philippines. Then we can discuss the ever worsening economic crisis due to foreign monopoly capitalism, domestic feudalism, and bureaucratic corruption.  The Productive Forces  The forces of production are mainly agrarian and nonindusu'ial. They are generally of a low level of technology. They are backward or underdeveloped.  Agricultural land totaling 12 million hectares in 1980 is the principal means of production. It produces the food staples for domestic consumption; the overwhelming bulk of surplus products for export and some amount of raw materials for local processing.  There is negligible use of modern farm technology beyond peasant brawn, hand tools, plow and work animals on lands devoted to rice, corn and coconut, all of which comprise 90.4 percent of total agricultural land. The promotion of costly imported farm inputs and equipment during the 19703 affected only a few hundred thousands of hectares. Estimates range from 500,000 to 800,000 hectares.  Even on land devoted to sugarcane, banana, pineapple and other new crops for export, which comprises no more that 7 percent of total agricultural land, and 
82 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  where there is relatively more impressive use of tractors and chemicals, reliance on sheer brawn and traditional peasant tools is still widespread. No more than 4 percent of total agricultural land is worked by tractors and other farm machinery.  Every piece of modern equipment in the agricultural, industrial and service sectors of the economy is imported. It is paid for with foreign exchange earned on raw material exports, mostly agricultural. Deficits incurred in foreign trade are covered by foreign loans and earnings on the export of labor.  Even hand tools are imported to the extent of 85 percent. And of course, the remaining 15 percent are fabricated locally fi'om imported metals. There are no well-established industries which produce fi'om the available local raw material basic metals, basic chemicals, capital goods and the like.  What is passed off as the industrial sector consists of mining and quarrying, construction, utilities and light manufacturing which are all dependent on imported equipment, basically processed materials, semi-processed materials and raw materials, especially fuel.  And of course, the service sector which consists .of transport, communications and storage, trading and banking and other services, including government, entertainment and the like, is also dependent on imported equipment.  The People in Production  According to NEDA figures, there were nine million peasants and farm workers, accounting for 52 percent of employment; 2.5 million industrial workers, 14 percent; and six million service workers, 34 percent, in 1979, which was a year of economic growth still bloated by excessive foreign borrowing.  These figures indicate, therefore, that peasants and farm workers comprise 78 percent of the direct producers of goods and industrial workers 22 percent. There are four peasants for every industrial worker.  Most peasants (poor and middle peasants) have the following means of supplementary livelihood: farm work for others, fishing, forestry and animal husbandry, handicrafts, consu'uction or carpentry, hauling and petty peddling. Seasonal farm work is the most common sideline occupation, and is the main recourse for surplus labor in the countryside.  Only 74 percent of indusm'al workers are in manufacturing; and in turn 70 percent of workers in manufacturing are employed in small fabricating and repair 
Crisis of the Semifeudal Economy 83  shops, each employing less than ten workers and therefore hardly qualifying as truly manufacturing enterprises.  The figure for employment in the service sector is bloated by decreases of employment in the agricultural and industrial sectors during the 19703. Agricultural employment went down from 59 percent in 1970 to 52 percent in 1979; and industrial employment from 17.6 percent in 1970 to 14 percent in 1979. The employment rate of the real producers of goods has decreased from year to year since 1979.  Only a minority of service workers—possibly not more than 30 percent-are regular wage earners. In the main, these regular wage earners are employed by the government and by the multinational, big comprador and middle bourgeois firms. Most of the so-called service workers are actually underemployed or have no regular employment or are even unemployed but are misrepresented by government statistics as fully employed.  Productive Relations  The comprador big bourgeoisie is the dominant class in the relations of production. It determines the semifeudal character of the economy. As the chief trading and financial agent of US. monopoly capitalism, it lords over the commodity system and decides the system of production and distribution.  The big compradors own the highest concentration of capital (merchant capital) involved in the unequal exchange of raw-material exports and manufactured imports. They amass commercial profits through import-export Operations and domestic wholesale; and interest through banks and quasi-banks.  In most or many cases, they are big landlords because their landed estates are their reliable sources of export crops. They also invest heavily in mining and other extractive enterprises; service enterprises other than banking and trading ‘and import-dependent enterprises.  Upon the behest of US. monopoly capitalism and in accordance with their own class interest, the comprador big bourgeoisie opposes and prevents the comprehensive indusu‘ialization of the Philippines and shares with the landlord class the fear of land reform.  The landlord class remains a distinct class. It now runs second to the comprador big bourgeoisie as the exploiting class. It owns the largest tracts of land and amasses land rent from the tenants. It also engages in other forms of 
84 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  exploitation such as the hiring of farm workers, usury, unfair trading of crops and farm inputs, renting out of farm equipment and animals at excessive rates, and so on.  The landlord class is far more widespread than the comprador big bourgeoisie based in the cities. At the first instance, it collects the largest amount of surplus products in the country, not only from the tenants and farm workers, but fi-om all the peasant masses.  From this surplus product, the landlord class yields to the comprador big bourgeoisie payments for imported goods for high consumption, as well as for the productive needs of agriculture. The foreign monopolies extract their superprofits through the big compradors or through direct subsidiaries.  The landlords own most of the best agricultural land and continue to accumulate land. They take away the surplus product not only fiom the greatest number of real producers, but also fi'om the course of national industrialization.  The big bureaucrat capitalists are big compradors and big landlords who have stood out as such by using their public offices, privileges issued by the state, state banks and state enterprises to amass private capital and land. In Philippine history, the most outstanding example of bureaucrat capitalism would be that of the fallen Marcos regime.  Using his autocratic power, Marcos was able to manipulate government firms and projects, foreign loans, export earnings, state funds and privileges to make his family and his cronies the wealthiest and most exploitative clique of big comprador and landlords, surpassing the long-established super-rich like the Roxases, Ayalas, Zobels and Sorianos. The problem now of the fallen Marcos clique is how to retain most of its assets in the face of the Commission of Good Government.  National entrepreneurs who are mainly in light manufacturing and own the means of production, belong to the middle bourgeoisie. They use local and imported components in varying degrees. They have a desire to push national industrialization forward and assume the prime position in the economy, but are pressed down by the foreign monopolies, the big compradors and the landlords.  The entrepreneurial middle bourgeoisie is directly engaged in the management of its productive enterprises. It engages in the exploitation of workers through the extraction of surplus value, and often gives wages that are lower than those given by foreign and big comprador firms. But these firms actually reap a higher rate of profit; and worse, they take out their superprofits from the country or divert these from the course of national industrialization. 
Crisis of the Semifeudal Economy 85  The urban petty bourgeoisie in general undergoes increasing exploitation in times of ever worsening crisis, tends to side with the working class and peasantry, and influences the national bourgeoisie to oppose modem imperialism, domestic feudalism, and bureaucratic corruption. ‘  The industrial proletariat is the most progressive productive force in the country today. It sells its labor power to the owners of capital. It sufl‘ers from low wages that are further eroded by the ever-soaring prices of prime commodities. Mass layoffs and lack of new job opportunities are always threatening the workers in the current crisis.  The industrial proletariat comprises some 15 percent of the people. It is desirous of national industrialization so as to enlarge its number and strength, and thus is exceedingly eager to struggle against foreign and feudal domination.  The peasantry is the most numerous and exploited class in the semifeudal economy. It consists of some 75 percent of the people. It suffers from feudal and semifeudal exactions, and struggles for land reform.  The peasantry is vehemently opposed to the rapid accumulation of land by Filipino landlords and foreign agricorporations. The displacement of peasants from the land is rapidly increasing the ranks of farm workers and peasant revolutionaries.  Ever Worsening Economic Crisis  Being an appendage of US. monopoly capitalism, the Philippine agrarian semifeudal economy suffers from US. trade and investment policies, which are dictated to Philippine authorities directly by US. authorities, multinational firms and banks; and through multilateral agencies like the IMF and the World Bank.  The US. does not wish the Philippines to undertake national industrialization and genuine land reform because it wants to perpetuate the unequal exchange of its surplus manufactured goods and cheap Philippine raw materials. It also wants to dump its surplus agricultural products on the Philippines.  The US. is pushing import liberalization hard because it wants to pursue a trade offensive to reduce its huge trade deficits. Import liberalization will certainly smash the small number of Filipino industries, which are dependent on imported equipment, basically processed components, semi-processed components, and raw materials, especially fuel. 
86 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  The U.S. is always demanding the free flow of foreign direct investments into the country and the most excessive privileges for these, including the most blatant violation of economic sovereignty, tax exemption, accelerated depreciation allowances, unrestricted capital repatriation and profit remittances, and so on.  But in fact U.S. direct investments have moved into the country unevenly and into quick profit areas. A small amount of investment fetches huge amounts of superprofits. The U.S. has always made sure that it controls strategic lines of business but makes its investments in such a way that these do not result in the fimdamental and comprehensive industrialization of the country and in a balanced economy.  The Philippine economy is now required to concentrate on agriculture after a period of being overloaded with foreign loans for infi-astructure projects, agricultural and mining mills, five-star hotels and other grandiose tourism facilities, and other unproductive or remotely productive projects.  With agricultural exports as the mainstay for earning foreign exchange, the Philippines suffered an accumulated total trade deficit of $16 billion from 1972 to 1983. There is not any number of agricultural products which can earn enough foreign exchange, even only to reduce the foreign trade deficits. The method being used lately to reduce foreign trade deficits is to reduce imports, including the most essential goods for local industries. Thus, the entire economy is depressed both by a failure to sell Philippine raw-material exports in sufficient volume and at a good price and by the idling of Philippine industries.  The Philippines is overloaded with foreign loans that it can never really pay back fi'om its agrarian economy. The accumulated foreign debt is now $20 billion. The Philippines will continue to sink deeper into the debt trap. Even only to keep up with debt service payments, now about $3 billion a year, the Philippines will have to incur new foreign debts. The Philippine foreign debt crisis will be further aggravated by the reduction of foreign exchange earnings from labor export.  The U.S. wants to press down wages and increase the tax burden even as local industries and agriculture are depressed. And yet the inflation rate is high because of both demand-pull due to the scarcity of goods and cost-push due to the heavier tax burden, budgetary deficits, high interest rates and debt service  payments.  U.S. monopoly capitalism is objectively and unwittingly killing the Philippine economic system. This phenomenon of murder emerged clearly when the U.S. pushed its pseudo-development and anti-industrialization program through the Marcos fascist dictatorship which was supported by an avalanche of 
Crisis of the Semifeudal Economy 87  foreign loans, encouraged to aggravate and deepen the agrarian and semifeudal character of the economy, and which was given all the leeway to undertake the most unbridled bureaucratic corruption and build up the coercive apparatuses of the state.  The political downfall of Marcos and his cronies does not necessarily solve the ever worsening economic crisis. A major portion of their assets in capital and land, which includes at least $10 billion stashed away abroad, may be successfully confiscated by the state. But this will eventually fall into the hands of another faction of the same big comprador and landlord class.  What is an obvious fact is that the economy has been bled white. And what is developing is a more violent struggle for economic and political power among factions of the exploiting classes. At least two factions, the Aquino and Marcos factions, are girding and maneuvering for a battle royale under conditions of an ever worsening socioeconomic crisis.  The national bourgeoisie is agitated by the threat of being wiped out economically by import liberalization and other antinational and anti-industrial policies, and tends to make stronger demands for protection.  The urban petty bourgeoisie continues to suffer a worsening life of misery and want. It does not cease to swing towards the direction of revolutionary politics and conjoin with the toiling masses in a common struggle. The intelligentsia is most revolted by the fact that its professional and technical skills are ill-remunerated or are being wasted in a depressed semifeudal economy.  The working class is incensed by rampant unemployment, low wages and ceaseless inflation. This class is continuously turning the trade union movement into a school of revolution. Many of the disemployed workers have given up job- hunting and are turning in the direction of social revolution.  The continued thrust of the US. and reactionary economic policy to promote plantation projects is absurd in the face of a depressed world market for agricultural commodities, and yet if it succeeds it is bound to exacerbate the land problem and incite further peasant unrest and armed revolution in the countryside.  It is the rapid accumulation of land by old and new-style landlords, sweeping over old settlements and overtaking new settlements in the frontier areas, which has made fertile the ground for a peasant-based and proletarian-led armed revolution in a semicolonial and semifeudal country berefi of an industrialization program to absorb displaced peasants. 
88 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  Every major policy and course of action being undertaken within the parameters of the semifeudal economy is coming to a dead end. The contradictions within the mode of production are leading to social revolution. 
89  III. CRISIS OF THE NEOCOLONIAL STATE 22 April 1986  1946. This latter rule may be called semicolonial or neocolonial. Due to the ceaseless demand of the Filipino people for national independence, U.S. imperialism fomd it necessary to rule the country through such exploiting classes as the comprador big bourgeoisie and the landlord class and their political representatives up to the national level of the state.  The U.S. shifted from direct to indirect colonial rule over the Philippines in  This state is the highest and largest political and social organization in the country. It encompasses the entire Philippine society-each and every Filipino citizen. It claims to carry and enforce the sovereign will of the Filipino people; transcend and mediate the differences and conflicts of individuals, groups and classes; and requires obedience from the people in the name of law and order within Philippine territory.  The illusion is fostered a priori that the state is above classes and for the national interest and general welfare. But in fact, it is the coercive instrument of exploiting classes against the exploited and, in the case of a semicolonial state, it is the instrument of an imperialist power.  The formal availability of civil liberties and the existence of suasive entities like a representative assembly, competing political parties, mass organizations, mass media and the like tend to obscure the class character of the state.  But in time of crisis and revolution, the character of the state as an instrument of class coercion becomes conspicuous. The state comes out naked as a set of coercive apparatuses like the army, the police, the courts and prisons in the service of U.S. imperialism and the local ruling classes.  Continuance of U.S. Domination  Before yielding nominal independence to the Philippines, the U.S. made sure as early as 1945 in an agreement with President Osmefla and in the 1946 Treaty of General Relations that it would retain U.S. military bases in the 
9O Philippine Crisis and Revolution  Philippines in violation of the 'Tydings-McDufiie Law and the 1935 Constitution, which permitted only naval fueling stations.  Then the U.S.-R.P. Military Bases Agreement was extracted from the Philippine neocolonial state in 1947. This agreement was ratified by the Philippine Senate but never by the U.S. Senate.  And it has remained as an executive agreement between the U.S. and Philippine presidents despite prolonged misrepresentation in the press as a u'eaty until a few years ago.  The U.S. military bases have continued to violate the national sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Philippines; to exercise a coercive influence on every puppet regime in the country; to exact heavy social costs from the people; to tie the country to the imperialist schemes of the U.S. in Asia and beyond; and to put the people under the threat of annihilation in case of a nuclear war.  The U.S. military bases are a constant reminder of the U.S. intervention and aggression starting in 1898, the humiliating and bloody conquest of the people, and several decades of direct U.S. colonial rule. These bases are the landmark of perpetuated U.S. aggression and domination.  The U.S. military bases are tied in with U.S. military assistance and the economic support fund to the Philippine government. Dependent on foreign exchange which is constantly being drained by trade payments, superprofit remittances and debt servicing, this government falls easily for a compensation package in connection with the U.S. military bases.  The U.S. has not only military bases of its own in the Philippines but also tight control of the main component of the Philippine neocolonial state, the Armed Forces of the Philippines. As early as 1935, through Commonwealth Act No. 1, called the National Defense Act, the U.S. secured full control of the AF P in preparation for the conversion of the Philippine colony to a semicolony.  The U.S. controls the AFP because the latter is dependent on it for antipeople and anticommunist indoctrination, strategic planning, strategic intelligence, omcer training and military supplies. The Joint U.S. Military Assistance Group exercises a far greater influence on the AFP omcers than the top ofiicialdom of the Philippine civil government does.  By their training and mentality, AFP officers are subservient to the U.S. But the U.S. always recruits from among them intelligence assets of the Cenual Intelligence Agency and the Defense Intelligence Agency. Thus, the fascist dictator Marcos could not do anything to reverse his downfall, despite his 
Crisis of the Neocolom'al State 91  carefully built system of patronage within the AFP, when the U.S. finally decided to withdraw support from him.  The tradition of hewing to the U.S. line, which started with the first Filipino mercenaries used by the U.S. to attack the Filipino revolutionaries in the Filipino-American War, is well entrenched in the AFP. The U.S. has been responsible for building the AFP, fi'om its original units to its current ones.  The AP P is the most dependable puppet organization of the U.S. in the Philippines and the most antagonistic to the national and democratic aspirations of the Filipino people. These aspirations are always misconstrued as "communism" by the AFP. And "democracy" is made to mean pro-imperialism, anticommunism and service to the exploiting classes.  Big Comprador-Landlord Dictatorship  Distinct from being a coercive instrument of U.S. imperialism, the Philippine neocolonial state is a joint class dictatorship of the comprador big bourgeoisie and the landlord class. So long as this state conforms to the demands of the U.S., the exploiting classes use it to protect and promote their interests in the mode of production and superstructure of the semicolonial and semifeudal society.  So long as the exploited classes of workers and peasants do not raise demands which openly conflict with the interests of the exploiting classes, the neocolonial state appears as a benign institution acting in the interest of the people.  But whenever the interest of the exploiting and exploited classes clash, even only in particular situations involving a workers' strike or a peasant demonstration, the fact easily emerges that the coercive apparatuses of the state are in the service of the exploiting classes. Under conditions of a crisis of a general character, the coercive class character of the state becomes far more conspicuous.  In coordination with or after failure of suasive means to deceive and calm down the aggrieved toiling masses, the exploiting classes can escalate the show and use of brute force fi'om the level of private army and civilian armed gangs through the local police to any of the major services of the Armed Forces of the Philippines: first the constabulary and then the Army and other additional forces, like the navy and air force. 
92 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  Because of builtein U.S. control of the Armed F orces of the Philippines and conformity to US. interests, the exploiting classes through their political representatives make sure that the Armed Forces of the Philippines is their instrument by adopting their own policies and ensuring that appointments and promotions of oflicers are consonant with such policies.  There is, however, no indivisible unity among the reactionary classes of big compradors and landlords. There are bitter struggles for political supremacy and control of the state between factionsof the same reactionary classes.  In any exploitative society, the state is not only a general protector of the exploiting classes, but is a specific shortcut of the ascendant clique or faction of exploiters to self-aggrandizement in the economy and entire society at the expense of other factions and the entire people.  Under relatively normal conditions, the contending factions of the ruling classes of big comprador-landlord politicians have peaceably competed for political power through a two-party system. The Nacionalista and Liberal parties were the two dominant parties up to 1972.  Under conditions of a much-worsened economic crisis, the political crisis of the ruling system also worsens to the point of armed conflict among factions of the ruling classes. The lessening of economic loot for the factions intensifies their political struggle.  The economic crisis results in widespread social unrest and in the rise of an armed revolutionary movement. The pressures of the armed revolution tend to crack up the neocolonial state and encourage the factions of the ruling classes to wage bitter struggles against each other.  The first grave test for the neocolonial state came in 1949 when amidst the serious economic crisis due to the depletion of foreign exchange, the Quirino and Laurel factions of the ruling Liberal Party and opposition Nacionalista Party intensified their political struggle almost to the point of a civil war.  At the same time, the revolutionary movement of the toiling masses led by the Communist Party of the Philippines was already waging armed struggle against the neocolonial state. Soon after the 1949 elections, characterized by fraud and terrorism, which kept Quirino in the presidency, the Laurel faction was so enraged that it agreed to ally itself in armed struggle with the people's army. This faction, however, subsequently backed out.  To shore up the ruling system, the US. deliberately strengthened the armed forces to fight the revolutionary forces, and built up the political image of Magsaysay to override the Quirino and Laurel factions. The newly beefed-up 
Crisis of the NeocoIom'aI State 93  Armed Forces of the Philippines, with 36 new battalions, was directed by U.S. agents to give support to Magsaysay in his drive for the presidency in 1953, even as he transferred fi-om the Liberal Party to the Nacionalista Party.  It was not the gimmickry of Magsaysay and his CIA adviser Col. Lansdale that beat the armed revolutionary movement; it was mainly the self-defeating errors in ideology, politics, organization and military strategy of the Lavaite leadership of the revolutionary movement—errors "which were taken advantage of by the newly beefed-up Armed Forces of the Philippines.  Further Crisis of the Neocolonial State  After the backbone of the Hukbong Mapagpalaya ng Bayan was broken from 1950 to 1952, the neocolonial state was able to revitalize and refurbish itself through a program of controlling imports and foreign exchange and favoring foreign-owned enterprises; and through a program of rapidly expanding the public school system.  The revolutionary movement could have preserved its strength and persevered in struggle. But the Lavaite leadership adopted one policy after another leading to the almost complete annihilation of the Communist Party of the Philippines and the revolutionary movement throughout the 19503. By 1960, the remnants of the Hukbong Mapagpalaya were no longer in any fruitful contact with the Communist Party of the Philippines.  The establishment of F ilipino-owned industries encouraged a wave of economic nationalism and there was increasing demand for comprehensive indusu'ialization. The U.S. decided to hit back by demanding full decontrol and also tried to extract a foreign investments law from then President Macapagal, to perpetuate parity rights under the new euphemism of "national treatmen " in anticipation of the 1974 termination of the Laurel-Langley Agreement.  The moves of the U.S. to counter the anti-imperialist trend in politics and the economy and the deleterious effects of full decontrol generated a much stronger anti-imperialist mass movement in the 19608. This movement included the workers, peasants, the urban petty bourgeoisie and the national bourgeoisie.  Both the working class and the national bourgeoisie were agitated by the negative impact of full decontrol on local industries. The peasantry began to stir because of their increasing misery and demanded land reform, especially because the land frontier had been exhausted for spontaneous resettlement by the landless tillers towards the end of the 19603. 
94 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  The abrupt constriction of job opportunities for educated youth turned into a maj or problem for the ruling system in the early 1960s. The educational system continued to produce more and more professionals and technicians with no assurance of employment.  Throughout the 1960s, organizations and alliances of the working class, peasantry, youth, teachers, other professionals and businessmen, arose and grew in strength. They sought to arouse, organize and mobilize the people along the line of the national democratic revolution. The militant actions of the mass movement were often physically attacked by the forces of the State.  On December 26, 1968, the Communist Party of the Philippines was reestablished on the theoretical foundation of Marxism-Leninism, adopted the general line of the people's democratic revolution and declared armed struggle and the united front as its two main weapons. On March 29, 1969, the New People's Army was established under the CPP leadership to carry out armed struggle, agrarian reform, and mass base-building in the countryside.  The CPP declared that the crisis of the ruling system was already so gave that the ruling class could no longer rule in the old way, that the people were desirous of a revolutionary change of government and that the revolutionary party of the proletariat was being established in order to lead the people.  In the 1969 presidential elections, Marcos expended huge amounts of funds and perpetrated fraud and terrorism to get himself reelected. When he made his state-of-the-nation address before the Philippine Congress on January 25, 1970, a huge crowd of youth and workers and other urban poor massed in fi'ont of Congress to condemn his antinational and antidemocratic policies and his sham reelection.  The demonstration was physically attacked and dispersed by the police and the military. The demonstrators fought back. Thus started the First Quarter Storm of 1970. Malacaflang was besieged by protesters on January 30, 1970 and the military minions again attacked them, killing six students in the process. More demonstrations and marches followed. The forces of the state assaulted the demonstrators and marchers whenever they approached the U.S. Embassy and Malacafiang Palace.  The economic and financial crisis was admitted by the U.S.-Marcos ruling clique as it undertook the devaluation of the peso and adOpted the floating rate system in F ebruary 1970. The political crisis was dramatized by the ever- growing militant mass actions from 1970 to 1972; the armed struggle initiated by the CPP and NPA in Tarlac; anti-imperialist decisions of the Supreme Court on the Quasha and Luzteveco cases; and the articulate anti-imperialist voices in the Philippine Congress and Constitutional Convention. 
Crisis of the Neocolonial State 95  The Constitutional Convention was ofl‘ered by the regime as a way of allaying the violent contradictions in society. But in fact Marcos had intended to bribe and capture it; and use it for legitimizing a fascist dictatorship and prolonging his rule.  It is relevant to recall that when he assumed the presidency in 1966, Marcos appointed himself as secretary of national defense and started to have a tight hold on the Armed Forces of the Philippines by favoring, promoting and putting in command his relatives, friends, and confieres from his region. When he yielded the position as secretary of national defense to someone fi'om his region, a system of personal loyalty to him ran through the entire Armed Forces of the Philippines.  In August 1971‘, he masterminded the bombing of Plaza Miranda, which almost wiped out the entire national leadership of the opposition Liberal Party. He blamed this on the CPP and NPA, and proclaimed the suspension of the writ of habeas corpus.  He would restore the writ of habeas corpus in January 1972, due to overwhelming public pressure and the landslide victory of the Liberal Party in the local and senatorial elections. But he had had his dress rehearsal for the declaration of martial law and the establishment of a full-blown fascist dictatorship under the banner of anticommunism.  The Marcos Fascist Dictatorship  To lay the basis for his power grab, Marcos had continued disrupting the legal democratic mass actions of the people and had engineered a series of petty bombing incidents. He and his closest military agents created all the trouble in order‘ to blame the Communists and make them the pretext for declaring martial law.  The autocratic ambitions of Marcos and the rapacity of his bureaucrat capitalist clique coincided with the U.S. schemes of hardening the Philippine neocolonial state in the face of U.S. defeat in its war of aggression in Indochina and with the worsening of the political and economic crisis of the ruling system.  The full emergence of the fascist dictatorial regime of the U.S.-Marcos clique through the declaration of martial law and the coup against the neocolonial republic on September 21, 1972 manifests beyond doubt that the semicolonial and semifeudal system was dying and that the ruling class of big comprador and landlords could no longer rule in the old way. 
96 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  The bourgeois—democratic trappings of the joint class dictatorship of the big compradors and landlords were scrapped. An open rule of terror by a fascist autocracy was sprung on the people by the ruling big comprador-landlord clique.  Supreme executive, legislative and judicial authority was grabbed by Marcos. He interpreted the commander-in-chief provision in the 1935 Constitution as a license for limitless authority and autocratic law-making. He placed all elected local oficials at his mercy, padlocked Congress, assumed all judicial authority over cases involving national security and public safety, dictated on the constitutional convention, dissolved all the legal political parties, took over the mass media, and did so many other things in order to monopolize political power.  He efl‘ected the mass arrest of all his opponents and critics in Congress, the constitutional convention, political parties, mass organizations, mass media, universities, and so on. He expanded and intensified bloody campaigns of suppression against the Moro peoples and other Filipinos in the comtryside.  The most important instrument of the fascist dictatorship was, of course, the Armed Forces of the Philippines. It was rapidly beefed-up and was given the lion's share in government expenditures. The police was integrated with the Philippine Constabulary, and paramilitary forces were organized at top speed all over the country.  Marcos was able to tighten his control over the Armed F orces of the Philippines by expanding the Presidential Secm'ity Command and the National Intelligence and Security Authority under his top hatchetman Gen. Fabian C. Ver, and by putting his close relations, fi'iends and provincemates or regionmates in command of the Armed Forces of the Philippines.  The U.S. encouraged Marcos to beef up, control and use the AFP for so long as he served the interests of U.S. imperialism. He rationalized U.S. domination by using the Red scare. He assured the U.S. of perpetual and unhampered use of U.S. military bases. He gave in to every demand of the U.S. multinational firms and banks and the U.S.-controlled multilateral agencies like the IMF and the World Bank.  In exchange, the U.S. increased bilateral military and economic assistance and allowed the fascist regime to draw colossal amonmts of foreign loans. These foreign loans were directly for pseudo-development projects like infiastructures, tourism facilities and others, but were also indirectly for allowing the release of more peso funds in the government budget for the rapid military buildup.  As if to provide a solution to the armed revolution and to defeat the people's army in the countryside, Marcos pretended to have a land reform program as the 
Crisis of the Neocolom‘al State 97  cornerstone of a new society. But in fact this did not mean the transfer of any significant amount of land to the landless tillers, but rather to his close relatives, business cronies, political associates, military oflicers, and to foreign agricorporations. There was a massive land dispossession of peasants, national minorities and even landlords who were his political opponents.  The direct social base of fascism is bureaucrat capitalism. The Marcos drive for absolute power vis-a-vis the Filipino people had always been motivated by the desire to acquire private assets in capital and land through the use of political power. And when his autoeracy reigned, his pillage and phmder of the country knew no bounds.  Even as he did away with bourgeois-democratic rights, institutions and processes under the 1935 Constitution, Marcos held such rigged voting exercises as citizens' assemblies, referenda, plebiscites and elections. In each exercise, he sought to - filrther entrench himself in power, legitimize his fascist regime, and deceive the people.  The tmdoing of the" Marcos fascist dictatorship was due to the increasing deterioration of the economy, characterized by the aggravation of its agrarian and semifeudal character, depression of raw material exports, excessive foreign borrowing and tmbridled bureaucratic corruption; the advance and growth in strength of the armed revolutionary movement and the broad legal democratic mass movement; the outrageous perpetration of countless military atrocities and abuses, including the assassination of Benigno Aquino, which revolted the people and most of the reactionaries; and finally the junking done by the us. and Catholic Church, the split in the ranks of the AFP, the dramatic breakaway of Enrile and Ramos, and the people's uprising from February 22 to 25, 1986.  The cost of the U.S.-inspired fascist dictatorship to the Filipino people is extremely high. More than six million were displaced fi'om their homes and land. Some 150,000 people were killed, and another 100,000 were injured in the course of AF P military operations. Many were subjected to torture and summary execution. At least 70,000 were arbitrarily detained for at least one month. Htmdreds of thousands Were subjected to the humiliation of taking an oath of allegiance to the regime and being misrepresented as NPA and MNLF sm‘renderees.  And the cost to the ruling system is extremely high The political and economic crisis of the mling system has become deeper, more diffith to relieve, and more fatal. The contradictions among the reactionaries are bound to become more violent and disintegrative of the system. The revolutionary movement has grown in strength and continues to advance. There is no way out 
98 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  of the deterioration of the agrarian and semifeudal economy and the foreign debt trap except through social revolution.  The Post-Marcos Situation  There is the illusion among the reactionaries that the ascendance of the Aquino regime has preempted the rise of the revolutionary movement.  What is being obscured is the fact that the Aquino regime has assumed the burden of responsibility in coping with the grave problems left by Marcos and with the ever-worsening political and economic crisis of the ruling system due to foreign and feudal domination.  Even the task of dismantling the structures of fascist dictatorship and reestablishing the formal democratic rights is not yet over.  Moreover, the Marcos forces are not yet completely out of contention for power. These are far stronger than those who are now in power. These have large assets inside and outside of the country, armed followers inside and outside of the AFP, and political agents and followers at every level.  In a relatively short time, upon the failure of the Aquino regime to solve the problems besetting the country, the Marcos forces are bound to expand and intensify their opposition to the Aquino regime. The conflict between the Marcos and Aquino forces is now more two-sided than when Marcos used to monopolize political power and one-sidedly inflicted violence on his political rivals and the revolutionary forces.  A battle royale is in the offing between the Aquino and Marcos forces. This promises to be more violent and more disintegrative of the ruling system, and this provides conditions for the accelerated advance of the revolutionary  movement.  We assume that Aquino as president can build her own bloc within the AFP, and put it on top of the Enrile-Ramos-RAM bloc and the Marcos bloc.  The Marcos forces can utilize to their own advantage their own bloc within the AF P for maneuvering against the Aquino bloc and the Enrile-Ramos-RAM bloc, and playing off one bloc against the other. The three blocks are in for a dangerous game under conditions of an ever—worsening economic crisis.  Insofar as it remains within the parameters of foreign and feudal domination, the Aquino regime is incapable of solving the economic crisis. The nonsolution 
Crisis of the Neocolom'al State 99  of this crisis, the growing challenge of the Marcos forces, and the resistance of the Enrile-Ramos-RAM bloc to the rise of the Aquino bloc within the AFP, are likely to destabilize the Aquino regime.  The people's power that has been able to topple Marcos and install Aquino as president is of an antifascist quality. To be able to keep itself in power, the Aquino regime has to follow the development of a people's power that is comprehensively anti-imperialist, antifeudal, and antifascist. and link up with people's power which is in constant development whether the Aquino regime likes it or not.  Despite the fluctuation from an unabashed fascist tyranny to a new reactionary regime with a liberal-democratic tendency, the ruling system continues to be in the process of decline and disintegration. and the revolutionary movement continues to build and develop the people's democratic power. 
101  IV. CRISIS OF PHILIPPINE CULTURE (1946 to the Present)  25 April 1986  and the newly emerging forces in the economy and politics are also those in culture. These contradictory forces and their essential contradictions take ideological forms and involve definite apparatuses in the sphere of culture.  Culture is the reflection of the economy and politics. The dominant forces  Culture encompasses the modes of existence and trends of thought in philosophy, politics, economics, the natural and social sciences, art and literature, jurisprudence and morality. The apparatuses of culture include institutions, various types of organizations and personnel that concentrate or specialize in cultural work.  However, culture is not simply the ideological reflection of current forces and contradictions in the economy and politics. It is also the accumulation of notions, customs, habits and the like which date as far back as prehistory, and which persist in current circumstances for so long as there are carriers and they are part of the social psychology of the people.  The main concern of this discussion is to present the crisis of Philippine culture in relation to the crisis of the semicolonial and semifeudal society. We focus on the dominant cultural forces as they seek not only to reflect but also to react to politico-economic realities and trends, and in the process contradict newly emerging cultural forces and play their reactionary role in the crisis of Philippine culture and society.  Let us focus on the dominant forces as they play their antinational, antiscientific and antipeople roles against the newly emerging forces .of a national, scientific, and mass culture.  The Dominant Cultural Forces  The two dominant cultural forces in the Philippines are US. imperialism and the Roman Catholic Church. The first is the more dominant force. In the 
102 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  semicolonial and semifeudal culture of the Philippines, these forces purvey the dominant ideas and control the dominant cultural apparatuses.  In defeating the old democratic revolution and imposing its power on the Filipino people, the U.S. employed not only its superior military prowess and its readiness to promote the rise of a resident or Filipino comprador big bourgeoisie but also the ideology of a pro-imperialist liberal democracy to coopt the revolutionary nationalism and progressive liberal democracy of the old democratic revolution.  The U.S. built and expanded the public educational system and established the University of the Philippines in order to purvey the propaganda of modern imperialism (couched in the terms of conservative liberal democracy) and produce literate workers and more native professionals and technicians than the colonial and feudal system could accommodate.  To produce the cream of U.S.-educated Filipinos, the U.S. undertook the pensionado system in the U.S. colonial period. In the semicolonial period, the U.S. has instituted scholarship grants lmder official agencies and private American foundations to produce a new cr0p of pro-U.S. academicians, government technocrats, and private managers. It has systematically provided training for Filipino military officers in the U.S. forts.  At every level of the Philippine educational system, pro-imperialist concepts and methods hold sway through U.S.-trained educators and U.S.-oriented programs of study and study materials. These make up the latest colonial mentality of the educated Filipinos who come mostly from the urban petty bourgeoisie and exceptionally from the toiling masses; and who pursue careers as high bureaucrats, professionals in private practice, business executives and military officers.  The mass media comprise one more cultural field dominated by U.S. imperialism and its cultural agents. The print and electronic media have grown as vehicles of pro-imperialist and reactionary propaganda and advertisers of U.S. products and shapers of Filipino consumer taste. U.S.-made movies and TV programs and U.S.-oriented radio programs are the most efl‘ective purveyors of pro-imperialist concepts and style, including the most vulgar and decadent notions.  The Catholic Church adjusted itself to U.S. domination as soon as this started at the beginning of the century. The Church had big comprador agencies during the Spanish colonial period, and could sell its fi'iar estates to expand its big comprador interests in banking and new commercial firms. 
Crisis of Philippine Culture 103  Since then. the Church has maintained its essentially feudal ideology together with the ascendant ideology of modern imperialism and reluctantly accepted the principle of separation of church and state. The superimposition of modern imperialist ideology on feudal ideology has reflected the semifeudal "economy and politics.  As an institution, the Chugch has been a strong ideological defender and ‘sanctifier of the comprador big bourgeoisie and landlord class. Its cultural influence is widespread among the people through catechetical work, rituals, sermons, prayer campaigns, publications and Christianized native customs or  what is called folk Christianity.  The pontifical University of Sto. Tomas is no longer as prestigious as it used to be when it was at the apex of the educational system in the Spanish colonial period. But the church has developed its own extensive educational system. It accounts for most of the private schools at every level, rivals the public Educational system at the primary and elementary levels, and surpasses it at the Secondary and tertiary levels.  The "best" Catholic schools are well known as schools for the children of the exploiting classes. And even if the social encyclicals of the Pope denounce both capitalism and liberalism on the one hand, and socialism and Marxism on the other, in order to uphold the spiritual mission of the Church and feudal 'Values as being transcendent over social classes, the Catholic universities and {Eolleges are in fact efficient propagators of bourgeois economic theories, inethods of business management and the most rabid anticommunist, antipeople find counterrevolutionary ideas.  The Catholic traditional facilities, schools, mass media and other modern facilities augment the maj or nonsectarian facilities in spreading pro-irnperialist find reactionary ideas and in producing men and women with mixed-up values of feudal idealism and bourgeois subjectivism.  The Antinational Role  In laying the foundation of semicolonialism through unequal economic and military agreements in the latter half of the 19403, the US. used the Cold War to equate anti-imperialism with communism as malapropism and cussword. Cleverly, the US. and its Filipino cultural agents counterposed the abstract liberal concept of individual rights against the concept of national sovereignty and against that of the Philippines as an independent nation-state. 
104 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  U.S. imperialism has been playing the most forceful role in opposing the national sovereignty and independence of the Filipino people. For F ilipino patriots to stand for national sovereignty and independence is to meet the indifference or disdain of the U.S.-leaning intellectuals and incur the loss of opportunities within the cultural and educational system, if not gain the dreaded classification of "subversive."  An effective subaltern of U.S. imperialism in fostering colonial mentality and discrediting the anti-imperialist movement as a communist ploy is the institutional Catholic Church. It has played the special role of counterposing religious sentiments against the anti-imperialist movement in the same manner that it did during the Spanish colonial period against the anticolonialist movement.  In the 19505, the Church vociferously opposed in quick succession the anti- imperialist revolutionary movement, the propagation of such national liberal treasures as the Noli and Fili, the Recto nationalist crusade, the progressive liberal works in the University of the Philippines and President Garcia's "Filipino First" policy. As intellectual commandos of the Church, American Jesuits and their F ilipino disciples stood out in seeking to suppress anti-imperialist and anticolonialist ideas and in pushing the Antisubversion Law.  In the 1960s, however, the anti-imperialist initiative of proletarian revolutionaries and their united front with progressive liberals moved to counterattack the pro-imperialists and cold Warriors, and won great victories for the anti-imperialist movement in the political and cultural fields. A new democratic culture with a strong content of anti-imperialism sprang up despite continued U.S. cultural aggression through American foundations. Marxism- Leninism took the lead in the great intellectual and cultural movement.  F ilipino intellectuals became increasingly proud of their own national language and used it in defiance of the longstanding supremacy of English in classrooms, official communications and high literature. Pride in the revolutionary tradition and folk achievements in the national cultural heritage  was also strong.  In 1970-72, a new democratic cultural revolution burst out arid flowered. Large numbers of the educated began to question, criticize and reject the imperialist features of American culture and education. They were agitated by the crisis of the ruling system and inspired by the growing mass movement. Special mention should be made of the First Quarter Storm of 1970. The educated were disgusted with the U.S. war of aggression in Vietnam, and were encouraged by the example of an increasing number of American intellectuals rej ecting the reality and ideological presumptions of U.S. imperialism. 
Crisis of Philippine Culture 105  The imposition of the fascist dictatorship in 1972 was the desperate answer of the U.S. and local reactionaries to the rising anti-imperialist movement. Like all other revolutionary forces, the forces of the cultural revolution continued to grow in the urban underground and guerrilla zones.  The fascist dictatorship carried out the U.S.-dictated PCSPE (Presidential Committee to Study Philippine Education) recommendations to "streamline" the Philippine educational system for the supposed purpose of turning out more technically skilled graduates for the foreign multinational firms. But jobs were never significantly increased by the foreign monopolies in the increasingly depressed economy.  The fascist regime also carried out the U.S.-dictated policy to produce more textbooks funded by World Bank loans. The textbooks became vehicles of pro- imperialist and fascist propaganda to augment the daily propaganda churned out by the controlled mass media.  Public education was starved of government funds. And the teachers were deprived of decent pay as the students also suffered higher costs of living and study.  Leaders of the Catholic Church endorsed or condoned the fascist dictatorship of the U.S.-Marcos clique because it presented itself as an anticommunist force. But in most of the 1970s and onward, progressive religious leaders and church people rose in increasing numbers to side with the people in defense of their human rights in the face of outrageous atrocities and abuses by U.S.-instigated fascists, as well as in defense of their national rights in the face of imperialist plunder through multinational firms and banks, and the violation of national sovereignty and territorial integrity through U.S. military bases.  The defection of the educated from the antinational cultural control and influence of U.S. imperialism as well as the increase of religious progressives who take a patriotic stand within the Catholic Church are a manifestation of the crisis of a cultural system which is pro-imperialist and reactionary.  Serious breaches in the dominant cultural forces are bound to widen and be taken advantage of by the forces of the new democratic cultural revolution. 
106 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  The Antiscientific Role  It is easy to be impressed with the scientific and technological advances of the U.S., and to fall into thinking that the U.S. can help in the scientific and technological progress of the Philippines.  However, if we consider that the U.S. opposes national industrialization of the Philippines and wants our country to remain agrarian and to hope for nothing more than some labor-intensive enterprises, then the U.S. cannot be expected to be the wellspring of scientific and technological progress for the country while it remains semicolonial and semifeudal in character.  The Philippine educational system is deliberately berefi of programs to promote studies in the basic social sciences. However, it produces a considerable number of engineers and technologists whose number is quite excessive relative to the job opportunities in the preindustrial economy. So they take on jobs as sales personnel of the multinational firms. And those who cannot get jobs locally, emigrate.  The relative excess of engineers and technologists was the result of a rapidly expanding educational system in the 19508 and 19605 and a slowly expanding educational system falling behind the increase of children and youth of school age in most of the 19703. The general deterioration of the educational system that has become obvious in the 19803 will produce less engineers and technologists even for emigration.  There has also been a lessening of demand from the U.S. and elsewhere abroad for health professionals, engineers, technologists and skilled workers.  While some people like to flatter themselves that the export of professionals and skilled labor is a manifestation of the progressive status of the Philippines, it is actually a manifestation of stagnance and crisis—the inability of the national economy to absorb that which has to be exported at a cheap price despite the high costs of education that Philippine society has to shoulder.  There is also one phenomenon that is being missed. While some professionals choose to seek jobs abroad, others join the revolutionary movement. This is one phenomenon that manifests a grave crisis in the system. As a matter of fact, an increasing number of students and college graduates are predisposed to join the revolutionary movement. The entire urban petty bourgeoisie is swinging to the side of the toiling masses in a common struggle against oppression and exploitation.  Philosophy, the social sciences, arts and letters, law, education, economics and business courses are fields of explicit and extended theorizing and 
Crisis of Philippine Culture 107  propagandizing by the cultural and educational agents of U.S. imperialism and the Catholic Church.  The overwhelming majority of college students and graduates are in these fields. In less critical times, they are the carriers of the most unscientific, obscurantist, pro-imperialist and reactionary ideas. But in more critical times, they are assailed by basic ills of society which their formal education cannot explain and they are drawn to the scientific theory and practical struggle of the proletarian revolution and the broad national democratic movement.  Some can reject both the bourgeois subjectivism of imperialist ideology and the medieval metaphysics of the most numerous church and find their way clear to proletarian revolutionary theory and practice. Others learn to keep whatever is scientific and useful in their formal education and even their religious convictions and at the same time understand and accept the general program of the new democratic revolution.  The conspicuous swing of college students and graduates to the national democratic movement is a manifestation of the crisis of Philippine culture and society. They are calling for relevant education and the radical transformation of society.  The Antipeople Role  U.S. imperialism and the Catholic Church have produced together a semicolonial and semifeudal culture that suits the comprador big bourgeoisie and the landlord class as ruling classes.  This culture serves to rationalize, sanctify, legitimize and prettify the system of oppression and exploitation. It seeks to disarm and lull the oppressed and exploited people mentally, emotionally and morally and make them accept their condition.  At the highest level of the cultural system, the ruling classes reign supreme as the policymakers, owners and controllers of the main cultural institutions, the educational system, the mass media and all other major means of influencing the thinking, feeling and morality of the people.  The intelligentsia is the recruiting ground for the most efficient cultural personnel of the ruling classes. But the overwhelming majority of the intelligentsia cannot climb the social ladder from the level of the salaried to that of the ruling classes. In times of crisis, the intelligentsia tends to link up with the 
108 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  toiling masses of workers and peasants and increasingly criticizes and denounces the system of oppression and exploitation.  The semicolonial and semifeudal culture does not only assert in explicit and subtle ways the prerogatives of the big compradors and landlords, but also deprives millions of children of educational opportunities and limits most of the school children to the level of Grade IV, a level which does not guaxantee literacy. It further churns out a vulgar and degrading cultural fare to distract the toiling masses of workers and peasants from their own class interests and from the class struggle.  But the crisis of the economic system breaks out into a crisis of the political system. The social unrest and the inability of the ruling classes to rule in the old way result in the most bitter economic and political struggles within the ruling classes and between the ruling and the ruled classes. The class struggle extends to the cultural field.  In seeking to win political power, the most advanced productive and political force-the working class—is represented by its party which has a theory and a practical program which encompasses not only economic and political objectives but also a cultural objective—the new democratic culture—to arouse and muster the basic alliance of the working class and peasantry as the main force, and to win over the middle social strata in a national united fi‘ont.  This new democratic culture serves the people and combats the antipeople culture of the semicolonial and semifeudal society. 
109  v. CRISIS IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS 29 April 1986  hilippine foreign policy is a captive of U.S. foreign policy. It reflects the Psemicolonial or neocolonial status and domestic policy of the Philippines.  U.S.-R.P. relations are the most important of Philippine international relations. However, let us first discuss the foundation of these relations and point to the unequal and conflicting interests of a client-state and the master state. These spell the chronic and current crisis of Philippine foreign policy.  Then we can also see the crisis of this policy in relation to other capitalist countn'es, the newly liberated countries, the national liberation movements and  the socialist countries.  Foundation of U.S.-R.P. Relations  The foundation of US-R.P. relations is defined by a series of unequal treaties, agreements and laws. These have been called special relations, so special that they spell U.S. control of both the domestic and foreign policies of the Philippines.  On the day that the U.S. granted bogus independence to the Philippines in 1946, the U.S.-R.P. Treaty of General Relations was signed by the president of the semicolonial republic. This treaty recognized the perpetuation of U.S. property rights and the U.S. military bases and required the formulation of Philippine foreign policy under the wings of U.S. foreign policy.  The U.S. Bell Trade Act of 1947 extended the period of free trade, spelled out the subordination of the Philippine peso to the U.S. dollar and required the Parity Amendment in the Philippine constitution. The Parity Amendment allowed U.S. investors up to 100% equity in corporations exploiting natural resources and operating public utilities.  The Laurel-Langley Agreement of 1954 did not only reaffirm the Parity Amendment, but also unconstitutionally extended its coverage to all kinds of businesses, including the holding and utilization of private agricultural lands. The revised tariff schedule and the quota system still encouraged the exportation 
1 10 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  of raw materials and the importation of finished products fi'om the United States. The agreement formally relinquished control over the Philippine monetary system, but in fact the economy had become dependent on the U.S. dollar through trade with the U.S., U.S. investments, and loans.  The U.S.-R.P. Military Bases Agreement of 1947 puts in detail U.S. violation of Philippine sovereignty and territorial integrity through U.S. military bases sitting on extensive tracts of land. The agreement practically allows U.S. military forces to control the entire country by exempting them from Philippine jurisdiction even outside of the bases, and by allowing them to be expanded or increased upon the decision of the U.S..  The U.S.-R.P. Military Assistance Pact of 1947 ensures U.S. control over the Armed Forces of the Philippines. Through the Joint U.S. Military Advisory Group (JUSMAG), the U.S. extends strategic and staff direction, logistics, training and intelligence coordination to the AFP. U.S. military advisors have been participating in the military operations of the AFP.  The Economic and Technical Cooperation Agreement of 1951 allows the U.S. to plant U.S. economic and technical advisers in every strategic branch of the Philippine government. These advisers direct and influence policies, conduct imperialist propaganda, gather economic and political intelligence, and see to it the "aid" results in quick profits for U.S. firms on foreign loans, grants and peso counterpart ftmds through purchases of U.S. commodities and excessive payments for U.S. contractors and experts.  Agents of U.S.-AID (and its predecessor agencies) have not only been economic and technical agents of U.S. monopolies, but have also doubled as cultural aggressors, CIA agents and advisors and trainers of the Philippine Constabulary and local police agencies in crowd dispersal and counterinsurgency.  The U.S.-R.P. Mutual Defense Pact of 1951 allows the U.S. to use aggressor troops to intervene in the internal afi‘airs of the Philippines under the pretext of securing "peace" and ”mutual security." It is practically an extension of the U.S.-RP. Military Bases Agreement.  The Manila Pact of 1954 created the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO) for the "regional defense of Southeast Asia.” It could be invoked to involve the Philippines in U.S. adventures in other comtries in the region, and also to involve SEATO member-eounn'ies, mostly non-Southeast Asian countries, in Philippine affairs. But the SEATO was paralyzed by contradictions between the U.S. and other member-countries. 
Crisis in International Relations 1 l 1  The agricultural commodities agreements are governed by U.S. Public Law 480, otherwise known as the Agricultmal Trade Development and Assistance Act. Through these agreements, the U.S. disposes of its surplus agricultural products by dumping them on the Philippines. These are used to keep certain "intermediate" industries (flour, textile, cigarettes, animal feeds and the like) under control. These are used to manipulate local agricultm'al production. The proceeds from the sale of U.S. agricultm'al products are used to support propaganda campaigns and educational exchange programs.  U.S. governmental agencies like the AID, USIS, the Educational Board, and the Peace Corps, and foundations like the Asia Foundation, Rockefeller Foundation, and Ford Foundation play an important role in the Philippine cultural and educational system. Exchange programmes for various sectors and travel, study and research grants are used to glorify the "American way of life" and propagate antinational and antidemocratic ideas.  The Crisis of U.S.-R.P. Relations  In the entire semicolonial period, U.S.-R.P. relations have always been in crisis and have fallen deeper in crisis from decade to decade. This crisis in U.S.- RP. relations as well as in the entire range of Philippine external relations springs fi'om contradictions in a U.S.-dominated Philippine society.  The U.S. was able to impose unequal treaties and agreements as the foundation of its continued domination of Philippine and foreign policy because the U.S. presented itself as the liberator of the country from Japanese occupation and the giver of Philippine independence, took advantage of the devastation of the country and the hardship of the people, and unleashed the rabid anticommunist propaganda of the Cold War.  But the revolutionary forces that had grown out of the crisis of the world capitalist system and World War II eventually waged an armed struggle against the harsh policies and campaigns of the U.S. and the local reactionaries to suppress them. The countenevolutionary policies and campaigns emerged from the rapidly deteriorating socioeconomic conditions.  The defeat of the armed revolution and the foreign exchange and import controls paved the way for the further rehabilitation and recovery of agriculture and mining and the build-up of industries dependent on imported equipment, Spare parts, fIJCl and raw materials during the 19503. 
1 12 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  The U.S. was able to use Philippine expeditionary troops in the Korean war in the early 19505 and use Philippine foreign policy and Filipino agents in counterrevolutionary activities in Southeast Asia, especially in Indonesia and Indochina, during the 19505 and 19605.  At the Afio-Asian people's conference in Bandung in 1956, the delegation of the Philippine government headed by Carlos P. Romulo stood as an apologist of U.S. foreign policy rather than as a defender of Philippine sovereign interests and a supporter of the newly liberated countries and national liberation movements in Asia and Afi'ica.  From the latter half of the 19405 to the entire 19605, the U.S.-directed Cold War raged in the Philippines and pushed foreign policy to take the same antagonistic position of the U.S. towards the socialist countries and the anti- imperialist countries and movements in Asia, Africa, and Latin America.  But in the 19605, the national democratic movement in the Philippines was resurgent, and strongly opposed U.S. armed intervention and aggression in Vietnam. The use of Philippine mercenary troops in Vietnam always faced strong opposition from the people and in the Philippine Congress and the press. These troops had to be dispatched under the signboard of civic action and then as medical group rather than as a military contingent.  Another strong demand of the national democratic movement was the broadening of Philippine foreign relations and the establishment of diplomatic and trade relations with socialist countries in view of the worsening economic and foreign trade crisis, especially in the late 19605.  Throughout the 19505, the Western European capitalist countries and Japan, devastated during World War II, had successfully rebuilt their industrial economies. In the 19605, the U.S. had to accommodate these other capitalist countries in the Philippines and elsewhere.  The constriction of the world market for the industrial products of the capitalist countries first as a result of the emergence of several socialist countries in the aftermath of World War II, and then as a result of the reconstruction of the devastated capitalist economies, meant the cheapening of raw materials and the price of labor in the colonies and semicolonies, including the Philippines.  The International Monetary Fund took a more prominent role than the Import-Export Bank in promoting the free flow of foreign exchange and foreign investments; and attending to the foreign exchange crisis of the Philippines through stabilization loans for covering balance of payments deficits. The World Bank also became prominent in pushing economic policies in favor of 
Crisis in International Relations ‘1 13  infrastructure projects, the expansion of agricultural and mining mills and all other proj ects that would draw away funds from genuine industrial development.  The Asian Development Bank was established. The proportioning of shares in the bank indicated accommodation by the U.S. to Japan and other Western European countries. The ADB would augment the efi‘orts of the World Bank in promoting infrastructure and agricultural proj ects.  In the latter half of the 1960s, the U.S. was able to enlarge its special economic privileges in the Philippines through the Foreign Investments Law, the Export Processing Law, and other laws. These laws were made in anticipation of the termination of the Laurel-Langley Agreement and the Parity Amendment. The term "national treatmen " was coined to preserve parity rights for the U.S. multinational firms.  Also in the late 19605, the U.S. pushed the formation of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) as a bloc of regional economic cooperation and free trade and as a political bulwark against the impending revolutionary victories of the Indochinese peoples. But the ASEAN would also advocate a zone of peace, freedom, and neutrality in Southeast Asia.  From 1970, anticipating its withdrawal fi‘om or defeat in Indochina, and recognizing the worsening economic and financial crisis of the world capitalist system, the U.S. decided to explore the opening of diplomatic and trade relations with the People's Republic of China.  In 1970 onwards, the economic and financial crisis in the Philippines had worsened due to huge deficits in foreign trade and balance of payments. These deficits could be covered only by large doses of foreign loans. The export crop and mining facilities had been overexpanded in the Philippines and elsewhere. And export income for the country was going down.  The imposition of the fascist dictatorship in 1972 would result in the aggravation of the agrarian and semifeudal character of the economy, the wastage of resources in infrastructure and other show-ofl projects, military buildup, and the unlimited remittance of superprofits by the multinational corporations and unbridled graft and corruption; and the rapid rise of foreign debt to a level that it cannot be paid back and serviced.  Marcos reversed the patriotic decisions of the Supreme Court on the Quasha and Luzteveco cases, which decisions curtailed U.S. ownership of land and holding of maj ority seats by foreigners in Philippine corporations.  Through his 1973 constitution and decrees, Marcos expanded the extraordinary privileges of U.S. multinational corporations. At certain junctures 
1 14 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  during the Marcos fascist dictatorship, there had been steps taken by the regime to relieve itself of grave problems, and to widen diplomatic relations.  With U.S. consent and with the purpose of being stricken ofl‘ the blacklist during the oil embargo in 1973, the Philippines improved its relations with the Arab countries to the point of voting in favor of Arab and Palestinian countries in the United Nations and elsewhere.  Other motives of the Philippine government in improving its relations with the Arab and Islamic countries were to strengthen its position against the Moro National Liberation Front in the Islamic Conference, and to get a share of the construction boom in the Middle East.  In 1975, Sino-Philippine relations were established. The purposes of the U.S.-Marcos regime included easing the way for future Sino-U.S. relations; eroding the relations between the CPP and the CPC and widening the foreign market for the depressed Philippine exports. Subsequently, the Philippines also established relations with more Eastern European comtries, including the Soviet Union.  But under constraint of U.S. imperialist control, the Philippines was never able to avail itself fully of trade and other economic relations with the socialist countries. Occasionally, Marcos would threaten to engage in counter-trade or barter trade with them in order to dispose of its surplus commodities and to get productive and essential goods in return. Also, at rarer times, he would threaten to secure productive equipment fiom socialist countries on a deferred payment plan, with a part of the annual product of the new enterprises as payment. But he was merely making boasts to embellish his singleminded policy of serving the interests of the U.S. and Japanese multinational firms and falling deeper into the debt trap.  At certain times, he would also threaten to join the conference of nonaligned countries. But he was well satisfied with being a conference observer. He had absolutely no interest in dismantling the U.S. military bases in the country.  In 197 8, Marcos entered into a five-year protocol agreement on the U.S. military bases, which pretended to recognize Philippine sovereignty over the said bases but assured the U.S. military forces of tmhampered use of base facilities and the prerogative of participating in counterinsurgency operations under the pretext of securing the bases.  The illusion of the U.S. paying rent or compensating for the use of the bases has been created by adding military grants, foreign military credit sales, and training under the Military Assistance Program; and grants and credits under the AID. The annual compensation for the continuing violation of Philippine 
Crisis in Inlemational Relations 1 15  sovereignty and territorial integrity was a measly $100 million for the years 1979-84 and $180 million for the years 1984-88. The AFP troops have'merely taken oVer the perimeter jobs of Filipino private security guards to create the illusion of Philippine control over the U.S. military bases.  In ASEAN, the Philippines had serious conflicts with Malaysia over the issues of the Philippine claim on Sabah, the oppression of the Moro and Muslim people in Mindanao and the hundreds of thousands of Moro refiJgees in Sabah. The ASEAN has been stymied by the Philippine-Malaysian conflict. And, of course, the dictum in the ASEAN Accord for a zone of peace and neutralization without foreign military bases and nuclear weapons have remained unheeded by the Philippines.  Worsening Crisis In Philippine Foreign Relations  So far, the Aquino government has not issued any foreign policy declaration departing from the well-entrenched foreign policy dictated by the U.S.. On the other hand, there are indications articulated by the current regime that the same basic foreign policy will remain. After all, fundamental changes in foreign policy can occur only upon a determination to change the semicolonial and semifeudal society.  The Aquino government is determined to conform to the dictates of the IMF, World Bank, Asian Development Bank, the foreign private creditors and the U.S. and other multinational firms. This government is eager to attract the multinational firms, receive U.S. bilateral assistance tied to special privileges for U.S. firms and to the U.S. military bases, beg for better terms on the accumulated foreign debt and get the country deeper into foreign indebtedness.  The policy thrust is to concentrate on agriculture and shun industrialization, liberalize imports, freeze wages, broaden the domestic tax base, and so on.  There is no indication that the new regime will resort to countertrade with socialist countries so as to dispose of its mainstay export commodities and get productive and other essential goods in return or to build industrial plants payable on installment by a portion of its annual product or income. The regime, however, has decentralized and de-monopolized trading with socialist countries. (The monopoly used to be operated by Marcos and his cronies through the Philippine International Trade Council.)  The regime has consistently declared that it is for respecting the U.S.-R.P. Military Bases Agreement until 1991, and is keeping its options open. But as 
l 16 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  early as 1988, the regime will be negotiating a new five-year protocol agreement which will cover the period 1989-94 beyond the 1991 lapse of the entire U.S. Military Bases Agreement.  The regime continues to be dependent on U.S. military supplies and economic support funds that are tied to the U.S. military bases. Considering the economic and political crisis of the ruling system and the inevitable desperation of those who fix themselves within this system, the regime is bound to extend the life of the U.S. military bases, unless political and diplomatic preparations are made for the opposite possibility.  There is no clear way for the Philippines to resolve its impasse with Malaysia over the Sabah claim, the Moro refiJgees in Sabah and so on. The Philippine government continues to pay lip service to peace and neutrality in Southeast Asia, but has not acted decisively to gain membership in the conference of nonaligned countries by abrogating the U.S. Military Bases Agreement and banning nuclear weapons in U.S. bases in the country.  The Philippine government cannot perform a creditable role in the Third World struggle for a new international economic order, and for fi'eedom, justice, progress and peace as long as U.S. imperialism and the local reactionary classes continue to ride roughshod over the Filipino people and determine Philippine  foreign policy. 
117  VI. THE NEW DEMOCRATIC MOVEMENT 4 May 1986  continuation of the old democratic revolution of 1896 for national liberation and democracy. But it is a new type of national democratic revolution because it is now led by the working class and it is being conducted in a semicolonial and semifeudal countty in the era of modern imperialism and world proletarian-socialist revolution.  The new democratic revolution of the Filipino people is underway. It is a  The old type of democratic revolution was led by the liberal bourgeoisie and was guided by bourgeois-liberal theory which was the revolutionary ideology most applicable to the Philippine colonial and feudal society in the late nineteenth century. That revolution won nationwide victory against Spanish colonialism. But U.S. imperialism, a new type of colonial power, conquered the country; and it was beyond the comprehension of the liberal bourgeois leadership of the revolution.  The world went into transition fi‘om the era of bourgeois capitalist revolution to that of the proletarian-socialist revolution. It would take the great Lenin to extend the Marxist critique of capitalism to a critique of modern imperialism and explain the requirements of social revolution in the East.  In semicolonial and semifeudal Philippines, the working class has grown significantly from its rudiments in the late nineteenth century, and has become the most advanced productive and political force. It has formed not only trade unions for economic struggle but also a party for revolutionary political struggle as early as 1930 when the CPP was originally founded. This party is guided by the revolutionary theory of the working class, which is Marxism-Leninism, and applies this theory on the concrete conditions of the Philippine revolution in order to make a practical program of new democratic revolution. 
1 18 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  New Democratic Program  The new democratic program seeks the liberation not only of the working class, but of the entire Filipino people from oppression and exploitation by U.S. imperialism and by such local ruling classes as the comprador big bourgeoisie and the landlord class.  The classes composing the Filipino people are the working class, the peasantry, the urban petty bourgeoisie, and the national bourgeoisie. All of them have a common interest in the new democratic program, which is essentially the revolutionary struggle for national liberation and democracy against U.S. imperialism, feudalism and bureaucrat capitalism.  The new democratic program covers comprehensively such fields as politics, economics, culture and international relations.  In politics, the main demand is for the assertion of national sovereignty and the free exercise of civil liberties; in economics, for development through national industrialization and land reform; in culture, for a national, scientific and mass-oriented culture; and in intemational relations, for an independent foreign policy.  The ultimate political objective of the new democratic revolution is the establishment of a people's democratic state which is led by the working class through its party, and is based on the broad alliance of the working class, peasantry, urban petty bourgeoisie and the national bourgeoisie.  The people's democratic state replaces the neocolonial state and realizes fully the new democratic program. U.S. imperialism and the local ruling classes cease to oppress and exploit the people, especially the toiling masses of workers and peasants. Upon the victory of the new democratic revolution a constitution is instituted.  The people's democratic state is republican in character and is truly representative of the various patriotic and progressive forces. The people enjoy civil liberties and elect their leaders. No longer are the exploiting classes allowed to take cover under the classless abstraction of individual liberties in order to monopolize and manipulate political parties and the electoral processes.  The most respected political organizations and leaders are those who shall have proven to have been the most resolute, the most efl‘ective and the most loyal to the people in the course of the new democratic revolution. The civil bureaucracy shall have been reoriented and reorganized. And the main component of the state, the Armed Forces of the Philippines, shall have been replaced by the people's armed forces. 
The New Democratic Movement 1 19  But, of course, there is no straight road to the total victory of the new democratic revolution and the full accomplishment of the new democratic program.  The neocolonial state is used by the ruling classes and their foreign master to attack the organized forces of the new democratic movement and the entire F ilipino people and squelch the new democratic demands.  The neocolonial state has been used to render illegal and suppress the most resolute and effective organizations and leaders of the new democratic movement and has therefore justified the people's war waged by the Communist Party of the Philippines, the New People's Army, and the National Democratic F ront.  Notwithstanding the brutal essence of the reactionary state, there are those political organizations and leaders persevering in a legal struggle for basic reforms towards the attainment of national liberation and democracy.  The national democratic movement is not, after all, the monopoly of the armed revolutionaries. It is a broad movement of the toiling masses of workers and peasants and the middle social strata, the political Lefl and Middle forces, and the armed and unarmed revolutionaries. They are waging various forms of  revolutionary struggle—legal and illegal.  The class leadership in the new democratic movement belongs to the working class. But this is not enough. This would be isolated and futile if not buttressed by a series of supports: the basic alliance of the working class and peasantry; the combination of the working class, peasantry and urban petty bourgeoisie as the basic forces of the revolution; and the broad national united front of these basic forces with the national bourgeoisie.  The neocolonial state is not really awesome and unbeatable. It is rotten to the core. The political and economic crisis of the ruling system has already resulted in a fourteen-year fascist dictatorship and continued to worsen and provide the basis for the possible reemergence of fascist dictatorship despite the current “democratic” tendency of the new regime.  The destruction of the neocolonial state is not only due to the growth in strength and advance of the annihilative forces of the new democratic revolution, but also due to the self-disintegration of the ruling system through increasingly violent contradictions of factions within the ruling class.  Thus, in addition to building the broad national united front of all patriotic and progressive forces, the revolutionary forces take advantage of the increasing 
120 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  violent conflicts within the ruling classes in order to isolate and destroy the enemy.  The People's War  The Communist Party of the Philippines was reestablished on December 26, 1968 on the theoretical foundation of Marxism-Leninism. Its congress of reestablishment repudiated and rectified the errors of the Lava and Taruc- Sumulong cliques in the old merger party of the Communist and Socialist parties of the Philippines; and made a correct analysis of Philippine history and current conditions in order to set forth revolutionary tasks.  The CPP proceeded to rebuild itself ideologically, politically and organizationally; and to create and employ its two weapons, which are the armed struggle and the united front. On March 29, 1969, it established the New People's Army and discreetly paved the way for a united front organization, the National Democratic Front, whose Preparatory Commission was established on April 23, 1973 in the wake of the imposition of martial law and fascist dictatorship in 1972.  Within the range of the national united front, the rural united front was formulated by the CPP. The rural class line was for the working class through its revolutionary party to rely mainly on the poor peasants and farm workers, win over the middle peasants and neutralize the rich peasants and enlightened gentry in order to isolate and destroy the power of the despotic landlords.  Since the begiming, the CPP has been detennined to conduct armed struggle, agrarian revolution and mass-base building as integral components of the protracted strategy of people's war—encircling the cities from the countryside and eventually advancing on the cities.  The NPA had only 35 firearms and was located in the second district of Tarlac in 1969. It had only 350 high-powered rifles and was concentrated in Isabela but was present in small areas of twelve provinces in six regions of the country at the onset of the fascist dictatorship in 1972.  In 1986, according to press reports, the high-powered rifles of the NPA nm up to so many thousands in several scores of guerrilla fronts in the overwhelming majority of the Philippine provinces. The CPP is now in 63 provinces.  The fascist dictatorship did not only fail to crush the CPP and the NPA but served to fan the flames of the revolutionary armed struggle. Furthermore the 
The New Democratig Movement 121  tyranny provoked the Moro National Liberation Front and the Moro people to wage an armed struggle for national self-determination.  The NPA has been on the strategic defensive but has been waging tactical offensives in order to accumulate strength. The AF P has been on the strategic offensive and has been hit at precise moments and places that only the NPA knows beforehand. The firll-time fighters of the NPA, in varying unit strengths, have been able to seek and create opportunities for ambushes, raids and other forms of ofl‘ensives. The strategic stalemate is now foreseeable and is based on cumulative victories.  Wherever it is, the NPA is deeply loved and enthusiastically supported by the peasant masses because it has been able to carry out land rent reduction, push out landgrabbers and punish despotic landlords and bad elements, eliminate usury; arrange fair farm wages and fair prices for farm products, and help raise agricultural production.  The NPA is not yet redistributing land at no cost to the landless tillers, except in areas where it succeeds in driving out the despotic landlords and landgrabbers or in persuading landlords to let peasants and farm workers use idle land. The agrarian revolution depends on the armed strength of the NPA. The peasant masses appreciate this principle.  The NPA also gives priority to demanding higher wages for workers in capitalist enterprises in the countrysides. Never are the interests of workers prejudiced by the tax obligations of capitalists who are also allowed to operate at a reasonable or tolerable rate of profit.  While the neocolonial state still exists, the CPP, NPA and NDF are already creating a people's democratic government in the rural areas. The relatively most stable organs of democratic power are the revolutionary barrio committees, with supporting committees for organization, education, defense, land reform, finance, livelihood, health, arbitration, cultural affairs, and others.  Also supporting the organs of democratic power are the mass organizations for workers, peasants, youth, women, children, cultural activists and so on. These mass organizations have general and specific fimctions. The able-bodied members are organized and trained as the people's militia, the deep reserve and support of the guerrilla fighters of the NPA.  The backward villages are being turned into advanced political, economic and cultural bulwarks of the new democratic revolution. Upon the multiplication of guerrilla zones, guerrilla fronts have increased and have already expanded to cover town centers and portions of provincial cities. 
122 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  The big problem for the ruling classes is that they cannot solve the political and economic crisis of their own system and the armed revolutionary movement is ceaselessly growing in strength and advancing.  The Legal Struggle  The cause of the new democratic revolution is just. It is the cause of the entire F ilipino people. It can be legally espoused and acted upon by any patriotic and progressive entity-a party, organization or individual-without having to be a communist.  The reactionaries characteristically commit the error of reacting violently to the espousal of the new democratic cause. It is against their class character as big compradors and landlords to preempt the communists by taking up the new democratic cause or responding to the basic demands of the new democratic movement. And their big problem is how to separate the proletarian revolutionaries and progressive liberal democrats. Both are bound by the just cause of the new democratic revolution.  Thus, the reactionaries have been unable to suppress the legal forces of the new democratic movement. Not even the fascist dictatorship could. The legal struggle of the new democratic movement advanced precisely because of the repressive regime, even if in the first two years of martial rule it appeared that the movement had been successfully repressed.  One of the big failures of the Lavaite leadership in the revolutionary movement after World War II was its failure to invigorate the legal urban mass movement beyond 1950. Even after opting for parliamentary struggle as the main form of struggle and ordering the remaining units of the Hukbong Mapagpalaya ng Bayan in the mid-l950s to convert themselves into organizational brigades, which did not materialize, the Lavaites failed miserably to launch militant forms of legal struggle in the urban areas.  It would only be on March 15, 1-961 that the first anti-imperialist and civil libertarian mass action could be held. Five thousand UP students together with some faculty members organized by the Student Cultural Association of the UP and the Inter-Fraternity and Sorority Council, stormed the Philippine Congress to protest the Committee on Anti-Filipino Activities (CAFA) witchhunt against certain constituents of the UP for certain writings and other activities allegedly in violation of the “Anti-Subversion” Law. 
The New Democratic Movement 123  There were smaller rallies along the new democratic line fi'om 1962 to 1964. These were capped by a militant rally of 3,000 workers and students at Malacaflang Palace against the Parity Amendment and the Laurel-Langley Agreement.  But after the formation of progressive study groups in the trade union movement and several universities and colleges, .and the founding of the Kabataang Makabayan on November 30, 1964, the militant legal struggle of the new democratic movement advanced at an accelerated rate to make the 1960s a decade in sharp contrast to the 19508 in terms of carrying forward the anti- imperialist and antifeudal movement.  Demonstrations, each exceeding 10,000 participants, were initiated by KM, and participated in by a peasant association, the Socialist Party of the Philippines, and the Movement for the Advancement of Nationalism.  The marches and rallies were the dramatic manifestations of the steady ideological, political and organizational work conducted by proletarian revolutionaries who eventually repudiated the Lavaites in 1967.  The Imprecedentedly militant and large mass actions of the First Quarter Storm of 1970 Were the outcome of the worsening crisis of the ruling system and the resurgence of the new “democratic movement since the 19603. The legal struggle of the new democratic movement surged forward until the imposition of martial law on the country in 1972. However, in late 1974 there were already steps taken to put up new legal organizations in various sectors to uphold the people's interests and denounce human rights violations.  The spell of the fascist dictatorship in the cities was broken when in 1975 the workers' strike movement broke out at La Tondefia and spread to 300 factories and other work places all over the country. Other workers, urban poor and students would take the one and participate in demonstrations defying the fascist dictatorship.  The noise barrage which swept Metro Manila after the 1978 Interim Batasang Pambansa election should have been taken as a signal for the new democratic movement to take the remaining years of the 1970s by storm. But the Opportunities for advancing the legal struggle of the new democratic movement were not fully availed of.  At any rate, new democratic organizations and coalitions in various sectors emerged in the early 19805. Denunciations and demonstrations against the fascist dictatorial regime of the U.S.-Marcos clique became stronger and more frequent. The people's war in the countryside also made dramatic advances. 
124 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  The outrageous assassination of Benigno Aquino, Jr. would ignite the colossal mass actions that raged from 1983 to 1986, up to the military revolt and people's uprising from February 22 to 25, 1986, which sealed the fate of the U.S.-propped Marcos fascist dictatorship. The scandalous electoral fraud and terrorism in the 1986 "snap election" pushed all forces to the left of Marcos to converge on him and bring him down.  The long-term struggle of the national democratic movement had discredited and weakened the fascist dictatorial regime of the U,S.-Marcos clique“ And the U.S. and the local reactionaries outside of the Marcos clique were mortally afraid of the swift advance of the revolutionary movement if Marcos stayed in power any longer. So they decided to let him fall even as the forces of the new democratic movement participated in the February events.  From 1980 to the downfall of Marcos, the economic and political crisis of the ruling system resulted in acute social discontent and turbulence. Although Marcos is already overthrown, the crisis of the ruling system continues, and the people's democratic struggle goes on to complete the dismantling of the structures of the fascist dictatorship, and to pursue the anti-imperialist and antifeudal line. 
125  VII. ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT 9May 1986  and rich natural resource base, including fertile land, forests, waters, and most minerals essential to industrialization. There is no question that a modern industrial economy can be built on the basis of the raw materials available in the country.  The Philippines has a rapidly growing labor force and a comprehensive  The forces of production are already straining against the semifeudal relations of production. But, aside from using economic means to restrain the growth of the productive forces, U.S. monopoly capitalism and the local reactionary classes of big compradors and landlords are employing the power of the neocolonial state to keep the people at the direst level of subsistence.  The economic development of the Philippines is impossible without the assertion and exercise of the sovereign will of the Filipino people against the US. and local exploiting classes. Every crucial measure to remove the semicolonial and semifeudal fetters on the forces of production involves the exertion of that sovereign will.  By economic development, we mean the planned and well balanced development of industry and agriculture—with national industrialization as the leading factor and an agriculture benefited by genuine land reform as the basis of development.  Nationalization of the Economy  The optimum condition for economic development is the nationalization of the economy. This involves the exercise of the political and economic sovereignty of the Filipino nation, and the liberation of the economy from the clutches of US. monopoly capitalism.  Economic policy must no longer be dictated by the US. agencies, transnational firms and banks, or through such U.S.-controlled multilateral agencies as the IMF and the World Bank; but must be decided by the Filipino 
126 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  people themselves through their patriotic leaders and economic policymakers and planners.  Unequal agreements and laws extending extraordinary privileges to U.S. investors must be abrogated. The national patrimony must be protected. The strategic industries, the major sources of raw materials and the major channels of distribution must be controlled by the people's democratic state.  Filipino entrepreneurs must be given the necessary incentives and support in economic areas where privat’e initiative is productive—through sole proprietorship, partnerships, cmperatives, private corporations and joint ventures with the state.  Free rein must be given to the economic effort of the state and Filipino entrepreneurs, instead of allowing foreign investors and their agents to control the domestic patterns of production and consumption and to take superprofits out of the country.  The dominance of U.S. and other transnational firms and banks and the U.S.-controlled multilateral financial agencies must be ended. In case of aggression or economic blockade by these, the assets of unfi-iendly corporations belonging to the aggressor country can be summarily nationalized or flow. Otherwise, the terms of expropriation can be amicably settled through negotiations.  The assets of the bureaucrat capitalists and other traitors must be nationalized. However, big compradors who have no record of treason may be allowed to convert their merchant capital into industrial capital, but without allowing them to control the economic and financial system. The agricultural land of the landlord class is subject to land reform.  Nationalizing the assets of foreign and local exploiters means releasing the forces of production and developing both industry and agriculture. It must be recognized that the productive assets in a semifeudal economy are still backward and the people's democratic state must lead in laying the foundation of modern industry.  National Industrialization  National industrialization is the main engine in genuine economic development. There can be no way out of the mire of agrarian backwardness and 
Economic Development 127  no way for absorbing the ever increasing surpius labor without national industrialization.  Raw material production must be expanded mainly for local processing in the country. Industries must be established to produce basic metals, basic chemicals, capital goods, precision instruments and the like.  Comprehensively, the primary, secondary and tertiary stages of industrial production must be carried out in the country. To limit production to primary commodities for emort, like agricultural and mineral products, is to prevent the country from freeing itself fiom the status of a backward, agrarian and semifeudal economy.  Heavy industry is necessary. But overconcentration of investments in heavy industry must be avoided. Light industry or manufactm-ing for immediate consumption needs of the people must be expanded as rapidly as possible. This bridges the gap between heavy industry and agriculture.  The present import-dependent manufacturing enterprises, whether of import- substitution or export-oriented variety, can be made reliant on Philippine industries for capital equipment, semiprocessed components and raw materials as far as possible, and can be expanded as part of the development of light industry.  After taking into account the needs of the people and the economy, surpluses in agriculture, mineral and industrial production can be exported in exchange for capital goods and essential consumer goods that are not as yet produced or cannot be produced in the country. The main thrust is to acquire capital goods that enhance national industrialization.  To supplement domestic savings for industrial investments, loans for industrialization must be sought. New industrial plants can be paid for on a deferred payment plan, with a portion of the annual product or income as the  payment.  All Filipinos with managerial, scientific and technical skills must be encouraged to participate in national industrialization, Their ranks can be increased by expanding admission to scientific, engineering and vocational- technical schools.  Foreign experts can be admitted on an exchange basis, or hired in connection with the inflow of new equipment and technology. But Filipino experts must take over within the shortest possible time. 
128 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  Genuine Land Reform  Genuine land reform ends feudal ownership of land and all feudal and semifeudal forms of exploitation. This emancipates the peasant majority of the people not only economically but also politically. This brings about the substance of democracy.  The key measure in genuine land reform is the free distribution of land to the landless tillers, including the poor and lower middle peasants. There is enough land to distribute and make every peasant household self-suficient.  Tenanted land, land illegally acquired, land foreclosed by state banks, idle and excess portions of export-cropland, public land held under false pretenses (pasture lease, tree farming, etc.), and logged-over land suitable for agriculture can be distributed free to landless tillers.  F ragmentation of land ownership in land reform does not detract from large- scale production. There should be cooperativization in stages for the purpose of raising efficiency in production, marketing and the like.  Integral to the program of land distribution should be provisions for low- interest credit, technical assistance, irrigation and other agricultural facilities; organic and chemical fertilizers; low-priced farm equipment, feeder roads and the like. Peasant associations and cooperatives can help themselves and at the same time receive appropriate assistance fi'om the state.  Land reform releases the surplus product fi'om the clutches of the landlord class. With the peasant masses acquiring more purchasing power, the domestic market for national industry is greatly expanded. As national indusu'ialization advances, the peasant masses raise agricultural production of the food and raw- material requirements of indusu'y.  Genuine land reform and national industrialization are complementary and interactive. One is impossible without the other. Land reform without national industrialization cannot break out of the semifeudal economy. National industrialization without land reform is tmattainable because it cannot accumulate capital and is deprived of a wide domestic market.  Genuine land reform ends the flow of the surplus products fi‘om the peasants and farm workers through the parasitic landlord class to comprador big bourgeoisie and finally to the us. transnational corporations; and begins the flow of the surplus product fi'om the peasants to national industry. 
Economic Development 129  In return, the national industry provides the peasants with goods . for production and consumption; and absorbs the surplus labor in the countryside arising fi'om the mechanization of agriculture and fi'om population growth.  Economic Planning  Economic planning is needed to achieve rapid but well proportioned and balanced development from the backward economic and technological level of a semifeudal economy. To depend on the blind forces of the market is not only to stunt and allow the lopsided growth of the economy, but also to remain vulnerable to the dictates of the US. transnational corporations and the local exploiters.  Heavy industry is necessary to lay the foundation of national industrialization. But to make excessively rapid investments in heavy industry to the point of neglecting light industry is to fail in the simultaneous accumulation of capital and satisfaction of the immediate needs of the entire people, especially the peasant masses.  There has to be a well-proportioned development of heavy industry, light industry and agricultm’e. Only with economic planning can the proportions be properly determined.  There also has to be a planned development of the economy in the various regions. No single region should continue to monopolize the bounty of industrial development.  There has to be a fair economic correlation of industrial sites, sources of raw materials and market. The export bias must be replaced by an orientation to process and market the final products mainly in the country.  Certain areas of the economy are best designated for management and investments by the state, joint state-private ventures, private corporations, cooperatives and individual petty commodity producers.  Foreign Economic Relations  The accumulated foreign debt of the Philippines has become so large that it can never be paid back nor even serviced, except by incurring new debts. It is 
130 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  probable that the heavy debtors in the Third World like the Philippines would someday cancel their foreign debts or simply fail to make interest payments.  In preparation for the debtors' voluntary strike of involuntary default, the Philippines should expand and develop its economic relations with socialist countries, within the Third World and with the lesser capitalist countries so that the US. cannot effectively cut 03‘ supplies from the country and use other retaliatory measures.  Barter trade can be pursued so that the Philippines can dispose of its raw material exports and get in return capital goods and essential consumer goods.  Also, the Philippines can seek foreign loans for industrial development, especially from the socialist countries. The new. industrial plants can be paid for with a portion of their annual product or income;  By the time that there shall be a people's democratic state resolutely carrying out a policy of national industrialization, the socialist countries and the relatively advanced Third World countries shall have achieved higher levels of development and shall be in a position to extend more accommodations in trade and industrial loans to the Philippines. But these of course shall merely supplement the Filipino people' self-reliant efl'orts at economic development. 
131  VIII. A NATIONAL, SCIENTIFIC AND MAss CULTURE 13 May 1986  comprehensive social revolution, it is necessary to make revolution not  To accomplish the Filipino people's new democratic revolution, which is a only in the economic and political fields but also in the cultural field.  Otherwise the U.S. and the local reactionary classes could use their cultural institutions and influence to control without cease the hearts and minds of the people and facilitate counterrevolution in every field.  Up to the end of the 1950s, the attempt to resume the national democratic revolution was a dismal failure,and among the essential causes was the failure of the revolutionary party to undertake a new democratic cultural revolution.  The vigorous ideological and other cultural work of proletarian revolutionaries in the 1960s ushered in the new democratic cultural revolution which broke out in the 1970-72 period starting with the First Quarter Storm of 1970. This cultural revolution would help carry forward the new democratic revolution in a big way.  The New Democratic Cultural Revolution  Pursuant to the dictum that there can be no revolutionary movement without a revolutionary theory, the proletarian revolutionaries engaged in ideological work despite the dangers posed by the Anti-Subversion Law.  Ideological work involved the study of the classical works of Marxism- Leninism, the contemporary works of successful proletarian revolutionaries in other countries and the writings of Filipino revolutionaries. It necessarily involved the study of Philippine history and circumstances with close attention to the basic social problems of the F ilipino people and the Philippine revolutionary movement fiom 1896 to the 19503.  The point was to integrate the revolutionary theory of the vanguard class and party with the concrete practice of the Philippine revolution. The ideological work resulted in the reestablishment of the Communist Party of the Philippines 
132 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  under the theoretical guidance of Marxism-Leninism—Mao Zedong Thought, and on the basis of the program of people's democratic revolution.  What the proletarian revolutionaries did was no different from what the principal leaders of the Katipunan and the Philippine revolution had done in applying the principles of revolutionary liberal democracy on the concrete conditions of the Philippines.  The dominant pro-imperialist and feudal culture was challenged by the proletarian revolutionaries in three ways: the adoption of Marxism-Leninism as their theoretical guide; the application Of this on Philippine conditions through the program of people's democratic revolution; and the promotion of a national, scientific and mass culture.  Soon enough, the new democratic cultural revolution broke out. This took the form of massive rallies and marches, widespread teach-ins and discussion groups, the vigorous promotion of the national language, the .efllorescence of protest art and literature, the reorientation of social research and science teaching among many teachers and students. All these were undertaken along the new democratic line.  The popular call for a national, scientific and mass culture was resounding. The students, labor leaders, teachers and other professionals were in the forefront of the new democratic cultural revolution. They formed organizations in the Manila-Rizal region and other urban areas to pursue the new democratic revolution and create a new democratic culture.  At the same time, proletarian revolutionaries who were in the countryside intensified their ideological work and promoted a new democratic culture. As a matter of course, they were engaged in theoretical and political education but they also conscientiously established cultural organizations in the mral areas.  It can be assumed that the proletarian revolutionaries have advanced in their ideological and other cultural work as they have advanced in other aspects of their revolutionary work despite the rigors of the life-and-death struggle between revolution and counterrevolution.  To speak of a new democratic cultural revolution espousing and creating a national, scientific and mass culture is necessarily to affirm the fruitful activism of proletarian revolutionaries in ideological and other cultural work.  But the progressive liberal democrats have also made significant contributions to the preparations and conduct of the new democratic cultural revolution. They have done well in recalling the revolutionary spirit of 1896, 
A National, Scientific and Mass Culture 133  joining the anti-imperialist and antifeudal struggle, combating the reactionary character of the dominant church and defending civil liberties.  The progressive liberal democrats can make bigger contributions to every maj or aspect of the new democratic revolution only in combination with the proletarian revolutionaries. Both proletarian revolutionaries and progressive liberal democrats recognize that together they can win the new democratic revolution and create a national, scientific and mass culture.  Under the impact of the new democratic cultural revolution, which has militated large numbers of educated youth, quite a number of professors and other professionals who have taken higher studies in American and local reactionary schools, and even priests and nuns of the dominant church, have recognized the need for a national, scientific and mass culture.  The new democratic revolution is creating its own organizations and means and at the same time penetrating and taking portions of cultural institutions and processes which have been used to dominate the people.  The National Aspect  The new democratic culture has a national character. It upholds, defends and promotes the national sovereignty and independence of the Filipino people. It celebrates the revolutionary struggle and achievements of the Filipino nation. It inspires this nation to realize its aspirations and attain greater achievements.  It does away with colonial mentality and opposes every cultural aggression of the us. It enhances patriotism, the self-respect and the self-reliance of the nation. But it is ever ready to learn and accept foreign things that benefit the nation.  It preserves and cherishes the national cultural heritage from as far back in time as can be brought to light. It seeks to learn from the past in order to serve the present without prejudice to the future.  It promotes the use of the national language as the principal medium of official communication, education and information. The point is to facilitate the common understanding of the entire nation. The dominance of English must be ended although this language may remain the principal language for foreign intercourse. 
134 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  While it is concerned with maintaining and developing a modern nation- state, the new democratic culture embraces, respects and promotes the local languages and cultures, especially those of national minorities which have rebelled because of F ilipino chauvinism and discrimination. The plurality of these makes Philippine culture rich.  U.S. control of Philippine educational and cultural policies through direct official and unofficial instruments and indirect ones like the World Bank must be terminated. F oreign assistance for education must not result in foreign control of educational policies, staffing, scholarship and research grants, construction of facilities, acquisition of materials and textbook content and production.  Educational policies, courses of study and textbooks (especially in the social sciences and humanities) must be made by F ilipino educators imbued with the national spirit and patriotic ideas of the new democratic culture. Textbook writers must be encouraged and well remunerated.  All imported cultural materials like movies, TV programs, books, periodicals and the like as well as cultural performances which do not help in the cultural progress of the Philippines should either be highly taxed or banned, if corrupting.  F ilipino writers and artists and cultural productions must be provided with grants and other incentives through their organizations and must not be taxed. They must be enabled to live on their cultural work rather than depend on other means of livelihood.  No foreign entity whatsoever should own any major medium of communications, education or information. Political propaganda by any foreign entity would be prohibited. Commercial advertising. by" US. and other transnational corporations shall be under strict supervision and control.  The Scientific Aspect  The new democratic culture has a scientific aspect. It adopts a scientific outlook and methodology. It combats the pro-imperialist and reactionary ideas of feudal metaphysics and bourgeois subjectivism.  But it does not waste its time in public on theological and philosophical debates. It respects the fi'eedom of thought and belief. And it seeks the united fi'ont and practical cooperation of all scientists, engineers and technologists for 
A National, Scientific and Mass C ulture 135  the industrial and all-round development of the motherland whether they be dialectical materialists, bourgeois empiricists or believers in a deity.  Science and technology is promoted with the clear purpose of developing the country industrially and economically. The ranks of scientists, engineers and other technologists will be rapidly expanded.  Their scientific and technical expertise shall be used creatively and productively. No longer shall their priorities be limited to seeking positions as sales executives or minor technicians in foreign transnational corporations here and abroad. They shall be in charge of basic processes and full-scale construction.  Programs of study in the basic sciences, engineering, and modern agriculture shall be rapidly expanded. Teachers and students in these fields shall be given top priority and all-out support in remuneration and facilities. They shall be given opportunities to learn the most adaptable and latest advances in science and technology abroad through exchange programs and the acquisition of new equipment from abroad.  The scientific outlook and methodology shall prevail in the social sciences. Social Science studies and research shall concentrate on the processes of oppression and exploitation through the ages and in recent or current circumstances and on the struggles of the oppressed and exploited to liberate themselves. The point is not only to understand or interpret the laws of social change, but to change oppressive and exploitative social conditions.  The social scientists should be encouraged to do their social research among the people and not to limit themselves to library research. The point is to learn how the people themselves can change their own conditions for their own benefit without the stresses of dogmatism and bourgeois scientism and the unreasonable trend of thought and belief among the people.  In the humanities, it is part of the scientific outlook and methodology to know and respect all the cultural accomplishments of the past, preserve them for appreciation or criticism, and adopt traditional cultural forms for the promotion of revolutionary ideas and sentiments.  Social realism, revolutionary romanticism, social criticism and other healthy schools of thought and trends of style must be encouraged in new artistic and cultural creations and in critical work. Large numbers of artists must be able to live on their artistic professions through their own organizations and cultural production units. 
136 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  Health, sports, entertainment and all other cultural programs must be geared towards the mental and physical well-being and fitness of the people for social revolution and construction.  Within and outside definite programs in the natural sciences, social sciences and humanities, in direct relation to definite programs of the social revolution and construction, full play must be given to the initiative and creativity of individuals and collectives.  The professionals and technicians of the country would not go abroad if opportunities for their gainful employment and creativity were assured and expanded by the industrial and all-round progress of the country.  The Mass Aspect  The new democratic culture has a mass aspect. It serves the people, especially the toiling masses of workers and peasants, in their all-round revolutionary struggle and productive work.  To raise their own consciousness and effectiveness in revolution and production, the people must become literate. The public school system must be expanded and high school education for the youth must become universal. Campaigns must be waged to wipe out illiteracy, and must be effective because they are related to revolution and production.  The higher the level of formal education that certain persons attain, the greater is their tendency to be divorced from the toiling masses. To close the widening gap between those who have higher education and those who have lower education, there must be no let-up in promoting the revolutionary spirit that binds the two and there must be practical programs of bringing to the people the direct service of the educated as well as programs to raise the educational level of the people who have had no opportunities to enroll in formal schools.  The print and electronic media must be used to bring complete courses of study to the unschooled as well as to popularize scientific and technical knowledge on current problems in social revolution and production.  Artistic and other cultural creations which are of high aesthetic standards and which reflect the sufl‘erings, struggles and achievements of the working people must be promoted. At the same time, a great mass of artists and cultural activists must be developed to create what they can, using traditional and modern forms. 
A National, Scientific and Mass Culture 137  There must be cultural cadres who live with the people and lead the educational and cultural work among them through educational and cultural organizations.  There must be cultural cadres deployable fi'om centers ranging from the national to the municipal. And there must be cadres who come from local communities which sponsor their higher education and training for the purpose of serving them for a definite period of time.  The revolutionary orientation of education and culture and the spirit of service to the people are the motivation that will keep the professionally and technically trained in the country. So long as these motivations are instilled in them, and they get decent remuneration, the educated will not leave the country only to get higher remuneration but suffer the pain of exile.  1n the course of the new democratic revolution, cultural cadres arise in the urban centers and in the local rural communities. The new democratic revolution will .win because these cultural cadres do their work well, increase their ranks, and serve the people well. - 
139  Ix. INDEPENDENT FOREIGN POLICY 16 May 1986  (parties, mass organizations, movements and alliances) develop fi'aternal and friendly relations with their counterparts in as many countries as possible in order to counteract U.S. domination and intervention. Thus, by the time that the revolution wins, the development of people-to-people relations shall have prepared well the establishment of relations between the people's democratic state and other states.  In the course of the new democratic revolution, the revolutionary forces  Just as they encourage a certain government, which is not yet led by the revolutionary class and party, but has a patriotic and progressive tendency, to adopt significant reforms in domestic policy, the revolutionary forces push the adoption of an independent foreign policy by that government. The legal democratic forces expose and oppose the foreign policy that is subservient to that of the U.S. and propose an active independent foreign policy.  It is upon the victory of the new democratic revolution that the Philippines can fully adopt and implement this policy. That is because the revolutionary forces are in power and the domestic basis for a subservient foreign policy has been removed. The people's democratic state has to make the most out of diplomatic relations in order to uphold, defend and promote Philippine sovereignty and all other national rights and interests.  An Independent Forelgn Pollcy  An independent foreign policy is one based on national sovereignty and territorial integrity. It is he fiom foreign domination and looks after all the national rights and interests of the Filipino people and the Philippine state. Independence is but the external dimension of sovereignty and should be  exercised to aflirm and enhance the latter.  An independent foreign policy puts the Philippines on an equal footing with every other state of whatever size and strength. Under the principle of independence and equality, the Philippines can develop relations of mutual 
140 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  respect, mutual benefit and mutual support with every other state; and shunts off foreign domination and interference of any kind.  An independent foreign policy of 'the Philippines should adhere to the time- honored five principles of peaceful coexistence, which are mutual respect for sovereignty and territorial integrity, mutual nonaggression, noninterference in each other's internal affairs, equality and mutual benefit and peaceful coexistence in developing diplomatic relations and economic and cultural exchanges with other countries.  Under these principles, the Philippines can have relations with all countries irrespective of ideology and social system. These relations can be of a bilateral character as well as through multilateral organizations and agencies such as the United Nations and others which do not have any aggressive character.  The people's democratic state opposes imperialism, hegemonism, and colonialism. Just as it abhors being under the sway of these evil forces, it unites with the people of other countries in fighting these. It supports the oppressed nations and the underdeveloped countries in their just struggle for national independence and economic development. It stands firmly against foreign interference and wars of aggression, helps safeguard world peace and promotes the cause of human progress.  The Philippines can employ its diplomatic relations not only to help ensure a peaceful environment for its self-reliant all-round development and for mutually beneficial economic, cultural, scientific and technological exchanges. F oreign support and assistance to the Philippines can supplement the self-reliant efforts of the people and the Philippines can strive to give support and assistance to any country or people in need.  Relations with the U.S.  To realize a truly independent foreign policy, the Philippines and the Filipino people must first of all abrogate the unequal treaties and agreements with the U.S. as well as repeal the laws according national treatment and other extraordinary privileges to the U.S. transnational corporations.  The U.S.-R.P. Military Bases Agreement must be abrogated as soon as possible or allowed to lapse in 1991. The U.S. military bases must be dismantled because they violate Philippine sovereignty and territorial integrity and are the launching pad of aggression and a magnet for nuclear attack. 
Independent F oreign Policy 141  The Philippines stands to gain more by acquiring the permanent improvements on the land, converting the ports into international civilian ones and using the extensive land area for agriculture, mining and industrial purposes rather than by receiving some measly amount of "compensation."  The U.S.-R.P. Military Assistance Agreement must be abrogated because it puts the Armed Forces of the Philippines under U.S. control. The Philippine state remains a neocolonial one. so long as its main component, the AFP, remains dependent on U.S. planning, advice, military grants, military sales credit, officer training and so on.  The U.S.-R.P. Mutual Defense Pact must be abrogated because it allows U.S. troops to intervene in the internal affairs of the Philippines. So must the Manila Pact be abrogated as well, even if it has become practically a useless scrap of paper, especially after the dismantling of the SEATO machinery.  The Central Intelligence Agency and the Defense Intelligence Agency must be stopped from subverting the Philippines and manipulating intelligence "assets" in the AFP, the civil bureaucracy and the private sector.  The dictates of U.S. economic policy through the IMF, World Bank and other multilateral agencies must come to an end. The Economic and Technical Cooperation Agreement must be scrapped because it allows U.S. economic and technical advisers, under the pretext of aid, to subvert the Philippines.  Also, Public Law 480 I and 11 must not be used for influencing Philippine economic policy and supporting propaganda campaigns, educational exchange programs and other schemes which subvert the Philippines.  Such U.S. governmental agencies as AID, USIS, the U.S. Educational Board, the Peace' Corps, the National Endowment for Democracy; foundations like the Asia Foundation, Rockefeller Foundation, F ord Foundation, and the Asian-American Free Labor Institute; and other oflicial and private U.S. agencies must be stopped from subverting the Philippines.  There are those who say that if U.S. domination is ended by the sovereign Filipino people, the Philippines would fall into the hands of another foreign power. The answer to this is that if the Filipino people can end U.S. domination they can as well prevent domination by any other foreign power.  While the Filipino people rely on themselves in liberating themselves from U.S. domination, they can win the support of the American proletariat and people in frustrating U.S. domination, interference, intervention or aggression. The Filipino people have a wide range of international support from progressive 
142 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  countries, peoples, parties, movements and organizations in combating U.S. imperialism.  The people's democratic state in the Philippines can have normal diplomatic and trade relations with the United States as soon as this superpower ceases its domination of and aggressive schemes against the Philippines and the Filipino people.  Relations with Asia, Africa and Latin America  Before and afier winning the new democratic revolution, the Filipino people can draw abundant support fiom the countries, peoples, movements and organizations in Asia, Africa and Latin America; and they can also make significant contributions through revolutionary efforts to the advance of anti- imperialist forces in these regions which have been the victims of imperialism, colonialism and hegemonism.  The Philippine revolutionary forces can seek and develop relations of solidarity and cooperation with their counterparts in the other countries of these regions. Upon the establishment of a new democratic state in the Philippines, it shall become possible to develop both state-to-state and people-to-people relations.  It is understandable that while still out of power, the Philippine revolutionary forces lay stress on seeking and developing solidarity and cooperation with their counterparts abroad. But even then they welcome the movement of countries to expand and consolidate the non-aligned bloc and to demand a new international economic order.  The people's democratic state shall join the nonaligned bloc and help push further the demand for a new international economic order. It shall join the nonaligned and underdeveloped countries in every move against the imperialist schemes of the US. within pnd outside the United Nations and other forums.  The demand of an increasing number of countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America for freedom fi'om imperialist dictates and for economic sovereignty, development and extrication from the debt trap, is encouraging to the Philippine revolutionary forces. Political and economic cooperation among countries of Asia, Afi'ica and Latin America can be developed for their individual and collective benefit. 
Independent F oreign Policy 143  The Philippine revolutionary forces wish the Philippines to further develop friendly relations with all neighboring countries in Southeast Asia and Northeast Asia. They also wish the countries of ASEAN to realize their dream of a zone of peace and neutrality free from foreign military bases and nuclear weapons.  The Philippine revolutionary forces look forward to the establishment of a people's democratic state with an independent, neutral and nonaligned foreign policy, co-existing peacefully with all neighboring countries and developing with them relations of mutual benefit.  Relations with Socialist Countries  Socialist countries can engage in diplomatic relations with countries irrespective of their ideology and social system. But they must see to it that their diplomacy does not help the U.S. imperialists and local reactionaries in their campaigns of suppression against the F ilipino people and the revolutionary forces.  Socialist countries are bound by the principle of proletarian internationalism and must allow their revolutionary forces to have the best of fraternal relations with the Philippine revolutionary forces and extend moral and material support to them. The amount of support extended is a measure of proletarian internationalism.  The Philippine revolutionary forces, a coalition government in which they participate or a people's democratic state in the Philippines can expect from socialist countries and their peOples some amount of support in the making of an independent foreign policy and in ccping with retaliatory measures undertaken by the U.S.  A coalition government in which the revolutionary forces participate or at best a people's democratic state can get political support for its independent foreign policy and larger than usual economic and trade accommodations from socialist countries.  The socialist countries are sympathetic to commtries wanting to become economically self-reliant and to develop a national industry among others. The Philippines can exchange its commodities with capital goods as well as with essential consumer goods from socialist countries.  The Philippines can also negotiate for capital goods on a loan basis, with repayments to be made with an annual portion of the prospective product or 
144 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  income from the new industries. Soft loans for industrial development from socialist countries are in sharp contrast to the loans for infi'astructure projects and high consumerism which have sunk the Philippines deep into the debt trap.  As the U.S. squeezes it because of its colossal accumulated debt and hunger for foreign funds, the Philippines will be pressed to seek a way out of its financial and economic problems, will conjoin with other underdeveloped debtor countries in resistance and will further develop relations with socialist countries.  Relations with Other Capitalist Countries  Among capitalist countries other than the U.S., there are those who follow more the baton of the U.S. and there are those who follow it less or are assertive of their independence.  The Philippines can make use of contradictions among the capitalist countries in order to get more room for maneuver in looking after its own interests and making an independent foreign policy.  Some capitalist countries can be less demanding than the U.S. because they wish to gain further concessions for their own firms in the dog-eat-dog world of capitalism. The Philippines can skillfiilly remove the extraordinary privileges of the U.S. by encouraging other capitalist countries to expand and improve trade and other economic relations with the Philippines without the necessity of unequal treaties and agreements and imperialist privileges.  As time passes and the crisis of the world capitalist system worsens, the trend of independence fi'om U.S. dictates will gain ground in the capitalist countries of Western Europe, Oceania, Japan and Canada. These capitalist countries other than the U.S. can supply capital goods and essential consumer goods to the Philippines.  At any rate, for the Philippines and the F ilipino people to make their independent foreign policy in order to enhance national sovereignty and internal socioeconomic and cultural development, they must rely mainly on self-reliant revolutionary efforts; must unite most firmly with the nonaligned and other progressive countries of Asia, Africa and Latin America, with the socialist countries and peoples the world over, and with the proletariat and peoples of capitalist countries; and must take advantage of the contradictions among and within capitalist countries in order to frustrate the most aggressive and exploitative forces of U.S. imperialism. 
Independent F oreign Policy 145  All revolutionary and other positive forces abroad who are willing to help the Philippines and the F ilipino people in the struggle for national independence and democracy are welcome. 
147  x. PROSPECTS OF THE PHILIPPINE REVOLUTION 20 May 1986  revolution of the middle class" the combined military revolt and people's uprising which overthrew the Marcos fascist dictatorship and brought about the Aquino government.  The U.S. and anti-Marcos reactionaries describe as a "preemptive  The description seeks to obscure the long-term struggle of the revolutionary forces and the broad masses of the people against the U.S.-Marc.os regime as well as deny completely the direct and indirect participation of legal forces of the national democratic movement in the events of F ebruary 22-25.  But the description clearly implies that the U.S. and the local reactionaries (including the dominant church) finally decided to completely junk Marcos afier supporting him for a long time in order to preempt what they mortally feared as the far more rapid advance of the revolutionary mass movement if the fascist dictatorship would be prolonged in the wake of the rigged snap presidential election.  It is as if the change of president and the retreat from outright fascist dictatorship could conjure away the ever worsening crisis of ~the ruling system, the grth of the revolutionary forces and the possibilities of a coalition government (including the revolutionary forces) and the people's democratic state.  The Ever Worsening Crisis  There is no end in sight to the ever worsening economic and political crisis of the semicolonial and semifeudal system, except a revolutionary upheaval. So far, the Aquino government has not offered any set of radical measures to bring about any prolonged relief from or lasting solution to the grave social problems.  Not all the structures of the fascist dictatorship have been dismantled. The most important of these—the Armed Forces of the Philippines—has not been reoriented and reorganized in accordance with the national and democratic interests of the people. Militarization of extensive rural areas continues. Military 
148 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  campaigns of suppression against the people and the revolutionary forces have been intensified in accordance with the dictates of U.S. imperialism and the worst reactionary interests carried over from the U.S.-Marcos regime.  The major questions of national sovereignty and democracy remain unanswered by the new regime. There is no comprehensive program of economic development covering land reform and national industrialization to solve poverty, unemployment, hunger and other glaring socioeconomic problems and to bring about social justice as the lasting basis of national reconciliation and peace.  The U.S. continues to compel the Philippines to remain agrarian, import finished products liberally, wait on foreign investors to invest in non-industrial and quick profit areas, beg for international financial aid, cover deficits, service old debts with new debts and press down the incomes of the toiling masses and the middle social strata through disemployment, heavy taxation, high interest rates, inflation and devaluation.  With the continuing crisis of the world capitalist system, the depressed state of the raw-material exports of the Philippines, the inflated prices of imports and the increased difficulties of borrowing, even the upper classes of big compradors and landlords are finding the Philippine economy ever fighter than before as they have less foreign exchange for their own purposes.  Because of the tighter economic situation, the conflicts among the factions of big compradors and landlords are bound to further intensify. What the U.S.-Marcos clique initiated as the flagrant use of state power to gain political and economic advantages is the same thing required to take back and eventually shift such advantages to other private entities.  The so-called snap revolution of February has not ended violence but has paved the way for a spiral of violence among factions of the ruling classes no matter how strident they may be in spreading anticommunist bias and misrepresenting the revolutionary forces as the original, sole and chief source of violence.  The situation of the factions of the ruling classes is now more complicated and more fraught with violence than ever before. The confrontation between the Marcos faction and the Aquino faction is likely to break out in violent incidents inside and outside the Armed Forces of the Philippines.  The Marcos faction has large financial, military and political advantage which the opposition parties of the past did not have. And the Aquino faction is still in the process of deriving advantages from a presidency over a bankrupt government and economy and from the position of commander-in-chief over a 
Prospects of the Philippine Revolution 149  military that is now under the control of former trustees of the fallen dictator who are taking’direct orders fi'om the U.S.  The AFP is definitely more fi'actiousvthan ever before. There are now three blocs of officers within the AFP. These are the Enrile-Ramos-RAM bloc, the Marcos bloc and the Aquino bloc. These are stated in their order of strength  The Enrile-Ramos RAM bloc is dominant and is practically autonomous from the authority of Mrs. Aquino as president and commander-in-chief. It is based mainly in the oversized security force of the defense minister, the Philippine Constabulary and the beneficiaries of recent promotions. It is wary of both the Marcos and Aquino blocs in the AF P although it sides with the Aquino presidency against Marcos.  Despite the fall of Marcos and Ver and the ouster of notorious top-level Marcos loyalists, the Marcos bloc persists in the AF P not only because the lower Marcos loyalists officers have managed to stay on in the AFP but also because a considerable number of integree officers tend to join them in reaction to the arrogance, discrimination and bullying by PMA graduates in the RAM. The Ver- Ramas faction in the AF P deliberately cultivated in the past a following among integree officers in the Philippine Army and all intelligence services.  The Aquino block is still in the process of developing. Its next problem is how to superimpose itself on the two other blocs. This bloc includes not only the much-reduced military guards and intelligence coordinating agency directly under the President, but also the following of the deputy defense minister General Ileto in the Philippine Army and a significant number of officers in the Philippine Air Force.  Aside from the aforementioned three major blocs of politicized officers, there are the IROG and fraternities of integree officers who are proud of their numerical superiority in the overexpanded AF P and are wary or resentful of the PMA graduates in the elite of the RAM; groups of officers engaged in corruption and other criminal activities; groups of omcers who talk of making a coup d'etat but who do not know how to keep power if they seize it; and groups of oflicers and men who are secret sympathizers of the revolutionary movement.  As manifested by the intensifying conflict between the Aquino and Marcos forces and the fractiousness of the Armed Forces of the Philippines, the process of disintegration is at work within the mling social system. Under the annihilative blows of the armed revolutionary movement, the AFP is bound to crack up fin'ther. 
150 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  Within the Aquino government particularly, there is the tension between the civilian and military authority as well as among the political parties supporting the government. But of course, the relations of these parties are by and large still amicable and these parties tend to cohere against the comeback threat of the Marcos forces and are alert to the voracity of the AF P for public ftmds and US. assistance as well as to the ambitions of the military.  The already high and still rising expenditures for the military, contrasting sharply with austerity measures on the civilian side of the government, is outrageous to the people. Every increase in military expenditures will further enrage the people and isolate the Armed Forces of the Philippines.  But of course the continuing atrocities and abuses being perpetrated by the AF P in the service of foreign and feudal interests are the most outrageous to the people and are fanning the flames of armed resistance. The Aquino government has to rein in the AF P in order to pave the way for national reconciliation or to let it loose without let-up until the armed revolution smashes it completely.  Letting the AFP loose on the people is not without its risks to the Aquino government. The intensification of armed struggle can in so short a time exact a heavy financial and political cost on the government, encourage the direct line of the US. to the AF P and whip up militarist political ambitions.  If sincerely interested in a lasting truce and national reconciliation, the Aquino government has to call back the military to the barracks and reduce the force level and expenditures, dissolve the CHDF and paramilitary units and return the police to the local civilian oficials even before there is any formal ceasefire between the AF P and the NPA.  Savings as a result of the reduction of military expenditures can be used immediately for economic development and essential public services. The reduction of AF P strength will put into full play the political initiative of the civil government and cut down militarist ambitions.  Even without any formal ceasefire yet, the Aquino government can put the AF P into a standstill with the NPA and thereby at least reduce the armed conflict drastically. It is merely a matter of shifting the AFP from its strategic offensive to the strategic defensive in the same manner that the NPA has always been on the strategic defensive.  The Aquino government should cast away the illusion that the so-called new AF P has already won the hearts and minds of the people and turned these against the revolutionary movement. The so-called snap revolution has at best brought political relief to the urban middle class from the rigors of fascist dictatorship 
Prospects of the Philippine Revolution 151  but the basic problems of modern imperialism and domestic feudalism continue to afi'lict the people, especially those in the countryside.  Although the U.S. is apparently desirous of maintaining it for a while, the Aquino government itself is now increasingly pressed by the people to complete the dismantling of the structures of the fascist dictatorship and to solve the basic problems that in the first place brought about the fascist dictatorship. These are the problems of U.S. imperialism and domestic feudalism.  The Growing Revolutionary Forces  The ever worsening crisis of the ruling system provides the fertile ground for the growth of the revolutionary forces. These organized forces include mainly the Communist Party of the Philippines, the New People's Army and the National Democratic F ront. Somehow, whether they like it or not, the legal democratic forces also contribute to the advance of the Philippine revolution.  To the extent that the revolutionary organizations of the Moro people fight for national self-determination, they support the entire Filipino people's struggle for national liberation and democracy. And they in turn derive support from victories of this struggle.  The CPP has a wealth of experience for summing up and analysis under the theoretical guidance of Marxism-Leninism. The enhancement of achievements and rectification of shortcomings allow the setting forth of tasks to hasten the victory of the new democratic revolution within the foreseeable future.  Some people may say that the CPP was not able to avail itself fully of the political opportunities fi'om 197 8 to 1986 in order to advance the armed struggle and united fiont and play a far greater role in the overthrow of the Marcos fascist dictatorship and take a far greater share of victory.  But great advances were still made by the CPP. Although certain opportunities passed without maximum availment by the CPP, the ever worsening crisis of the ruling system continues to provide these for rapid revolutionary advance.  In areas where there is yet no intense armed conflict, the U.S. and local reactionaries appear to afford the niceties of civil liberties. These are conditions for developing the legal democratic forces and building the united front on a nationwide scale. 
152 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  There is no guarantee as to how far and how long civil liberties are respected. But all legal democratic forces can assure themselves with the fact that even while the Marcos fascist dictatorship rode roughshod over the people, the antifascist, anti-imperialist and antifeudal organizations and alliances could exist and wage militant mass struggles.  In comparable situation where the revolutionary armed struggle continued to advance, legal democratic forces could as well advance even as they waged militant struggles against the regime that launched the most vicious assaults against the people, especially in the countryside.  The military campaigns of suppression now being intensified in certain areas in the countryside against the people and the revolutionary armed forces cannot be successful.  The people's army has the capability of launching tactical ofl‘ensives and counterofl‘ensives not only in the guerrilla front under enemy attack but in so many other guerrilla fronts all over the country. The AF P cannot destroy the NPA in any single region by concentrating superior forces on it and reducing forces in urban areas and other regions if the forces of the NPA in these later areas conduct counter ofi'ensives to relieve the region under attack.  The sequence of the three strategic stages of people's war (defensive, stalemate and ofl‘ensive) is clearly the probable course of development. Some more time is needed to develop revolutionary armed forces in the countryside and advance in waves on urban areas. Eventually, the people's almy can make assaults on the last strongholds of its enemy.  Insurrection can be undertaken only when the ruling system is in a rapid state of disintegration without any prompt and suflicient intervention of the U.S. and the revolutionary forces can be at the core of the spontaneously rising masses and have suficient strength not only to seize power but also to keep it.  On the basis of its current strength, the NPA can use its rural-based guerrilla forces and armed city partisans to seize arms at will on a wide scale and frequently from inferior AF P units, municipal police forces, paramilitary units and private security forces.  In a matter of a few years, the NPA can fully develop the strategic defensive and reach the strategic stalemate by actively seeking and creating the opporttmities for wiping out or disarming adversary units. The strategic stalemate and ofl‘ensive are relatively brief stages if the revolutionary armed forces have the antitank and anti-aircraft weapons, avail themselves of the weapon of popular insurrection and the U.S. does not come promptly to the succor of its puppet forces in a big way as in Vietnam. 
Prospects of the Philippine Revolution 153  To make sure that they can seize and keep power, the CPP will certainly increase the quantity and quality of its cadres and members; the NPA will develop a series of fighting formations at the zone, fi'ont, regional and interregional levels; and the NDF will have to build organs of political power upwards fi'om the village level.  Upon the smashing of the military machinery of the reactionary state, the people's democratic state can be established. Before then, a lot of hard struggle has to be waged by the revolutionary forces and the people.  However, if the Aquino government is serious about national reconciliation and lasting peace, it must be ready to transform itself soon into a coalition government which pursues the anti-imperialist and antifeudal line and includes the revolutionary forces.  The crisis of the ruling system is so grave that the Aquino government will have to decide soon whether to form this coalition government or not. President Aquino herself has acknowledged that after six months of the regime it will begin to have serious dificulties if it cannot offer efl‘ective solutions to the basic  problems of the people.  It is mutually advantageous for the Aquino government and the revolutionary forces to establish a line of communication regarding national reconciliation, ceasefire and a possible coalition government as soon as possible. This line of communication is necessary if only to forestall the threat of the Marcos forces or any other threat from within the AF P in the meantime. Eventually, a coalition government can be worked out.  Monopoly of political power by a new clique 'of big compradors and landlords subservient to US. imperialism and attended to by a retinue of fresh recruits from the middle class; and the use of the same military machinery that had been used by the fallen fascist dictator to oppress the people will only serve to hasten the possible return of fascist dictatorship and the consequent victory of  the armed revolutionary movement.  Notwithstanding all the imperialist and clericalist celebration of the so- called snap revolution as a preemption of armed revolution, the root causes of the Marcos fascist dictatorship and the rise of the armed revolution can make the  Aquino government very desperate soon.  To improve its position in time to come, the Aquino government has to come to terms with the revolutionary movement on questions of national sovereignty and the realization of genuine land reform and national  industrialization. 
154 Philippine Crisis and Revolution  In a coalition government, the revolutionary forces keep their integrity, have a share of political power and retain the people's army. If a coalition government is not possible, the revolutionary forces can as always aim for the establishment  of a people's democratic state. 
Index 155  A  AFP Aquino bloc, 98, 99, 149 agrarian, 9, 106 backwardness, 126 character, 10, 77, 97, 113 development, 31 economy, 4, 5, 12, 23, 77, 85, 86, 87, 98, 127 forces of production, 20, 81 reform, 94 remain, 148 revolution, 3, 31, 62, 120, 121 agricorporations, 38, 50, 56, 85, 97 agricultural chemicals, 49 commodities, 87, l 11 crops, 54 employment, 22 exports, 9, 21, 69, 71, 73, 86 facilities, 128 inputs, 50 land, 21, 28, 38, 50, 62, 81, 84,109, 126 milling, 62 mills, 59, 74, 86, 113 product, 23 production, 4, 9, 121, 128 productivity, 32 products, 59, 85, 113, 127 raw materials, 20 sector, 82, 83 agriculture accounts, 23 and economy, 86 balance with industry, 125 capitalist, 52, 54 commodity system, 7 developing, 126 development, 129 employment, 9, 10 expon-oriented, 38, 70  Index  gross output value, 23 investment, 33 investments, 127 land, 141 land distribution, 12.8 mechanization, 129  policy, 1 15 productive needs, 84  programs of study, 135 recovery, 11 1 rice, 53, 68 service sector, 22, 23 slash and burn, 38 source of food, 31 Spanish colonialism, 52 surpluses, 127 Amado Guerrero, 8 anticommunist, 7, 15, 75, 90, 103, 105, 111, 148 antifascist, 6, 78, 99, 152 antifeudal, 3, 5, 6, 71, 77, 78, 99, 123, 124, 133, 152, 153 anti-imperialist, 93 anti-indusu-ialization, 42, 86 anti-Maroos, 6, 12 antipeople, 90, 101, 103, 108 Aquino forces, 98 Aquino regime, 12, 13, 14, 78, 98, 99 aricultural land, 21, 81 Armed Pom of the Philippines, 75, 78, 90, 91, 92, 93, 95, 96, 110, 118, 141, 147, 148, 149, 150 armed revolution, 96 armed revolutionary movement, 44, 92, 93, 97, 122, 149, 153 armed struggle, 8, 44, 92, 94, 111,120, 150, 151, 152 an forms, 68 
156 Index  banks, 25, 27, 35, 36, 37, 42, 47, 58, 59, 63, 83, 84, 85, 96, 105, 125, 126, 128 Bell Trade Act, 74, 109 Bisig, l4 Bonifacio, 71 bourgeois, 6, 8, 12, 22, 30, 52, 56, 58, 60, 71, 77, 83, 96, 103, 107, 117, 134, 135 bourgeois democratic rights, 97 broad popular struggle, 12 bureaucrat capitalism, 4, 14, 34, 59, 61, 67, 75, 84, 97, 118  C  Capitalism, 52, 69, 72 car assembly, 33, 59 Catholic Church, 56, 70, 78, 97, 102, 104, 105, 107 Catholic faith, 69 Christian democrats, 7 class struggle, 61, 64, 108 coalition government, 143, 147, 153, 154 colonial oppression, 71 colonial rule, 54, 69, 72, 73, 74, 89, 90 commodity system, 7, 9, 24, 28, 54, 69, 81, 83 Communist Party of the Philippines, 3, 43, 92, 93, 94,119,120,131,151 comprador big bourgeoisie, 3, 9, 13, 15, 24, 25, 26, 28, 29, 30, 31, 56, 58, 61, 73, 83, 84, 89, 91, 102, 103, 107, 118, 128 compradors, 34, 37, 39, 48, 50, 54, 55, 58, 84 accumulation of land, 73 and imports, 49, 50 bitter struggles, 92 bureaucrat capitalists, 84 class dictatorship, 13 conflict, 63 control and use of the state, 26 crony corporations, 58 culture, 108  defeat, 57 economic crisis, 148 fascist, 27, 29, 37, 58, 59, 96 fascist and landlords, 59 industrial capital, 126 landlords, 26, 55 merchant capital, 83 mills, 26 reactionary character, 122 ruling system, 77 state, 125 state power, 153 superprofits, 84 surplus product, 31 war damage payments, 74 CPP, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 11, 12,13,14,15, 16, 94, 95,114,117,120,121,151, 153 crisis of ovetproduction, 45, 47 Culture, 101, 131  D  data, 68 de-industrialization, 10 Democratization, 12 dependent capitalist, 7 devaluation, 29, 41, 59, 63, 94, 148 development, 4, 118 agroindusu'ial, 38 balanced, 129 capitalist, 29, 30, 49, 55 capitalist course, 28 cultural, 144 economic, 125, 140, 142, 148 economy, 26, 129 export-oriented, 32, 34, 62, 70 genuine, 62 handicrafis, 1 1 heavy industry, 129 industrial, 23, 24, 25, 27, 29, 58, 144 level of, 4, 20, 40, 130 light industry, 127 local manufacturing, 61 manufacturing, 71 noncapitalist, 45, 47 people's power, 99 
Index 157  people's war, 152 people-to-people relations, 139 policy, 77 program, 12 pseudo, 29, 31 rural, 34, 39, 48, 51 self-reliant, 140 semicolonies, 48 theory of foreign monopoly capitalism, 6 U.S.-Marcos regime, 31  Dictatorship, 12, 76, 91  fascist, 95  domestic feudalism, 4, 14, 73, 76, 77,  81,85,151  E  economic  activity in Metro Manila, 11 advisers, 110 agents, 110 agreements, 103 analysis, 8 annihilation, 32 assistance, 96 backward, 129 blockade, 126 bourgeois theories, 103 colaition government, 143 contradiction, 27 control, 126 cooperation, 113, 142 crisis, 19, 41, 51, 60, 61, 81, 87, 92, 94, 98,108, 112,113, 122,124 crisis no end, 147 crisis of the ruling system, 95, 97, 98, 119 crisis of the world capitalist system, 113 development, 21, 31, 69, 125, 130, 140, 150 exploitation, 63 genuine development, 126 growth, 82 history, 52 international order, 47  international order, 116, 142 nationalism, 93 objectives, 108 planning, 1’29 policy, 31, 75, 87, 112, 125, 141 policy of development, 7 private initiative, 126 privilege, 26 privileges, 1 13 problems, 144 program, 148 progress, 8 recovery, 12 reforms, 44 relations, 114, 130, 140, 144 restrain, 125 restructuring, 44 sovereignty, 86, 125, 142 soverignty, 35 struggle, 117 struggles, 108 support fund, 90 support funds, 116 system, 3, 86  violent struggle, 87  economy, 21, 23, 25, 30, 35, 50, 55,  56, 63, 69, 86, 87, 92, 97, 110, 127, 129, 148 American, 72 balanced, 86 character of, 7, 10, 19, 34, 87, 113 depressed, 105 export of cheap labor, 9 feudal, 56, 57 foreign debt, 63 industrial, 23, 26, 125 landlord, 56 nationalization of, 125 no heavy industry, 9 ownership of land, 52 Philippine, 10, 12, 54, 56, 62, 77, 81, 148 reality, 8 sectors of, 9, 23, 82 sectors of the, 9 semifeudal, 5, 7, 8, 29, 30, 48, 49, 55, 61, 73, 74, 75, 83 semifeudalism, 25 
158 Index  underdevelopment, 31, 34, 60 well-balanced, 26 wrong notions, 7 Employment, 10, 22 encircling the cities, 3, 120 encomienda system, 52, 69 exploitation, 27, 43, 53, 54, 61, 63, 70, 78, 84, 85, 106, 107, 108, 118, 128, 135 export of cheap labor, 9 export of professionals, 106 Export Processing Zone, 33  F  farm mechanization, 28 farm workers, 21, 22, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 38, 44, 48, 49, 50, 62, 76, 82, 84, 85, 120, 121, 128 fascist dictatorship, 4, 12, 21, 23, 27, 37, 38, 58, 64, 67, 77, 78, 95, 96, 97, 98, 105, 113, 119, 120, 122, 123,124,147,150,151,153 feudal society, 54, 67, 69, 71, 117 feudalism, 11, 24, 25, 48, 49, 50, 54, 55, 56, 57, 61, 62, 64, 67, 69, 71, 72, 73, 75, 81,118 financial crisis, 41, 94, 113 First Quarter Storm, 94, 104, 123, 131 floating rate system, 94 forces of production, 20, 61, 62, 64, 81, 125, 126 foreign debt, 9, 63, 77, 86, 98, 113, 115, 129 foreign exchange, 9, 23, 26, 32, 40, 41, 50, 75, 82, 86, 90, 92, 93, 111, 112, 148 foreign investment law, 32 foreign investments law, 93 foreign loan, 78 foreign loan capital, 77 foreign loans, 86 foreign monopoly capitalism, 14 foreign trade, 9, 34, 41, 54, 69, 70, 74, 77, 82, 86,112,113 foreign trade deficit, 9 free trade, 73, 74, 109, 113  G  genuine economic development, 126 genuine industrial development, 113 genuine land reform, 27, 31, 43, 48, 85, 125, 128, 153 globalization, 7 GNP, 10, 23, 30, 43 gross national product, 10, 23  H  high-technology, 45, 46 human rights, 15, 105, 123  ilustrado class, 70 IMF, 4, 7, 8, 23, 31, 34, 39, 42, 85, 96, 115, 125, 141 imperialism, 3, 4, 7, 12, l3, 14, 15, 24, 25, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 55, 56, 57, 58, 60, 61, 62, 64, 67, 72, 75, 77, 85, 89, 91, 96, 101, 102, 103, 104, 105,107,116,117,118,140,l42, 144,148,151,153 import liberalization, 29, 35, 41, 59, 85, 87 import-dependent, 9, 10, 20, 32, 33, 40, 46, 59, 62, 75, 77, 83, 127 import-substitution, 20, 32, 39, 40, 41, 75, 127 industrial, 5, 9, 10, 11, 20, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27,29, 30, 31, 32, 34, 39, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 54, 56, 58, 59, 60, 62, 63, 69, 70, 71, 72, 77, 81, 82, 83, 85, 87, 112, 115, 125, 126, 127, 129, 130, 135, 136, 141, 144, 148 industrial development, 35 industrial development, 45, 62, 130 industrial projects, 35 industrial sector, 82 Indusu'ialization, 31, 45, 47, 126 industrialized, 5, 42, 45, 47, 56 industry, 5, 9, 10, 20, 23, 43, 46, 71, 125, 126, 127, 128, 129, 143 
Index 159  heavy, 127 insurrectionism, 13 international economic order, 47 investments, 20, 28, 33, 42, 43, 46, 55, 63, 73, 76, 77, 86, 110, 112, 127, 129 industry, 127 Islam, 68  K  Kampanyang Ahos, 13, 14 Katipunan, 6, 8, 71, 132 Katipunan ng Demokratikong Filipino, 8  L  labor force, 10, 125 land reform, 4, 10, 14, 27, 32, 35, 36, 38, 42, 43, 44, 48, 59, 73, 76, 79, 83, 85, 93, 96, 118, 121, 126, 128, 148 land rent, 70 landlord, 3, 9, 12, 13, 14, 15, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 37, 38, 49, 56, 57, 61, 62, 70, 72, 73, 76, 83, 84, 87, 89, 91, 92, 96, 103, 107, 118, 126, 128 landlords, 31 Laurel-Langley Agreement, 33, 58, 74, 93,109,113,123 Lava revisionist, 7 Lavaites, 44, 45, 47, 48, 50, 51, 56, 57, 58, 60, 122, 123 Left opportunism, 6 Left opportunists, 12, 14 Lenin, 45, 48, 56, 57, 117 liberal bourgeoisie, 70, 71, 117 liberal democracy, 74, 102, 132 light manufacturing, 84 loans, 20, 23, 31, 33, 34, 37, 38, 41, 42, 43, 46, 49, 50, 55, 59, 60, 63, 77, 82, 84, 86, 87, 96, 105, 110, 112, 113, 127,130,144 low intensity conflict, 15  major industrial projects, 34 Malolos Constitution, 72 Manila-Acapulco trade, 69 manufacturing, 8, 10, 11, 20, 21, 22, 26, 29, 32, 33, 34, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 46, 52, 56, 59, 61, 62, 69, 71, 75, 77, 82, 127 expon-oriented, 47 investment, 33 peasant women, 39 manufacturing enterprises, 26 Mao Zedong, 7, 8 Marcos antipeasant decrees, 13 Marcos and US military bases, 114 Marcos block in the AFP, 149 Marcos clique, 123, 124, 148 Marcos constitution, 113 Marcos cronies, 115 Marcos despotism, 67 Marcos faction, 148 Marcos fall, 149 Marcos fascist dictatorship, 12 Marcos fascist dictatorship, 3, 12, 76, 86, 95, 97, 114, 124, 147, 151, 152, 153 Marcos forms, 98, 99, 149 Marcos land reform, 35, 36 Marcos overthrow, 78 Marcos peso devaluation, 94 Marcos regime, 7, 12, 14, 31, 42, 47, 48, 147, 148 Marcos mling clique, 58 martial rule, 7, 122 Marx, 56, 57 Marxism-Leninism, 7, 15, 63, 94, 104, 117,120,131,132,151 Mnndst-Lminist, 6, 7, 8 mass armt, 96 mass culture, 79, 101, 132, 133 mass movement, 6, 44, 93, 94, 97, 104, 122, 147 mass work, 5 means of production, 4, 20, 21, 24, 81, 34 mercantile capitalism, 52 
160 Index  mercantilism, 69 metallurgy, 68 military adventurism, 13 military campaigns, 13, 15, 152 mineral export, 4 exports, 9, 73 ore production, 9 production, 9, 127 products, 127 mining investment, 33 mode of production, 7, 8, 19, 24, 30, 54, 55, 61, 63, 67, 68, 81, 88, 91 monopoly capitalism, 3, 4, 6, 9, 10, 30, 56, 61, 62, 72, 73, 75, 76, 81, 83, 85, 86, 125  Nacionalista Party, 74, 92, 93 national and democratic culture, 72 national bourgeois, 26 national bourgeoisie, 7, 24, 25, 26, 29, 30, 32, 58, 59, 63, 75, 85, 87, 93, 118, 119 national democratic revolution, 4, 5, 14, 79 national entrepreneurs, 84 national industrialization, 4, 10, 26, 30, 32, 75, 79, 84, 85, 106, 118, 125, 126, 127, 128, 129, 130, 148, 153 national sovereignty, 72, 75, 79, 90, 103,104,105, 118,133,139,l44, 148, 153 neocolonial industrialization, 7, 42, 45, 46, 48, 51 neocolonial state, 90, 91, 92, 93, 95, 118, 119, 121,125 new democratic cultural revolution, 104, 131 New People's Army, 43, 94, 119, 120, 151 nonindustrial, 77, 81 NPA, 12, 14, 94, 95, 97, 120, 121, 150, 152, 153  O  oddjobbers, 1 1 oil exploration inthment, 33 old democratic revolution, 102 old democratic revolution of 1896, 71 oppommism, 6  p  Parity Amendment, 33, 74, 109, 113, 123 peasant movement, 3, 36, 76 peasantry, 3, 22, 45, 71, 72, 85, 93, 94, 108, 118, 119 peasants, 21, 22, 23, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 36, 37, 38, 48, 49, 50, 61, 62, 63, 64, 71, 73, 76, 82, 85, 87, 91, 93, 97, 108, 118, 119, 120, 121, 128, 129, 136 people's army, 5 people's democratic revolution, 94 people's war, 7, 8, 11, 13, 43, 119, 120, 123, 152 petty bourgeoisie, 30, 63, 71, 85, 87, 93,102,106,118,119 peny-bourgeois, 6, 7 Philippine Consfitution, 74 Philippine crisis, 14 Philippine Revolution of 1896, 70 Philippine Society and Revolution, 8, l4 plunder, 53, 63, 69, 73, 77, 97, 105 popdems, 14 popular democracy, 13 population, 5, 11, 30, 38, 49, 62, 67, 129 post-Maroos, 13, 14, 98 precolonial societiw, 67, 68, 69 preindustrial, 106 prices, 31, 34, 37, 38, 40, 49, 59, 85, 121, 148 productive forces, 76, 125 proletariat, 3, 30, 44, 63, 85, 94, 141, 144 propaganda movement, 71 
Index 161  protracted people's war, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 11, 12, 45, 72 pseudo-development, 96 putschist, 12  R  rajah, 68 Ramos regime, 10, 12, 15 rate of exploitation, 26 recession, 77 reexport, 9, 21, 46, 62 reformist movement, 71 relations of production, 24, 27, 52, 64, 81, 83, 125 rent, 26, 27, 28, 36, 37, 39, 48, 49, 53, 54, 62, 83, 114, 121 revisionism, 5, 7 revolution, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 11, 14, 15, 16, 25, 29, 30, 38, 43, 44, 47, 48, 49, 54, 61, 64, 70, 71, 72, 74, 78, 87, 88, 89, 92, 94, 98, 105, 107, 111,117,118,119,120,121,122, 131,132,133,136,137,139,142, 147, 148, 150, 151, 153 agrarian, 62, 64 democratic, 3, 30, 102, 117, 131, 132, 133, 137 Right opportunists, 6, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 Rizal, 71, 132 Roman Catholic Church, 101 ma] development, 48, 59  8  Second Great Rectification Movement, 15 secularization movement, 70 semi-capitalist, 24, 25 semicolonial, 3, 4, 57, 67, 72, 76, 77, 78, 87, 89, 91, 95,101, 102, 106, 107,108,109,111,115,117,125, 147 semifeudal, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 19, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 48, 49, 50, 54, 55, 56, 57, 60, 61, 64,  67, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 78, 81, 83, 85, 87, 88, 91, 95, 97, 98, 101, 102, 103, 106, 107, 108, 113, 115, 117, 125, 126, 127, 128, 129, 147 semifeudalism, 25, 48, 49, 50, 56 Semifeudalism, 4, 25 separation of church and state, 72, 103 serfdom, 68 service, 3, 9, 10, 22, 2'3, 25, 30, 37, 44, 82, 83, 86, 89, 91, 116, 136, 137, 148, 150 service sector, 82 slavery, 52, 53, 54, 68 socdems, 14 social revolution, 78 social unrest, 42, 43, 70, 76, 92, 108 social-democrats, 7 strategic counter ofl‘ensive, 6 strategic defensive, 11, 121, 150, 152 subjectivism, 6, 103, 107, 134 development, 6 sultanate, 68 superprofits, 46, 55, 63, 84, 86, 113, 126 surplus capital, 42, 46, 72 surplus labor, 22, 29, 49, 62, 82, 127, 129  T  tenancy rate, 27, 38, 61 tenants, 26, 27, 28, 35, 36, 37, 38, 49, 50, 54, 70, 83, 84 theocratic state, 70 trade liberalization, 9 trading monopolies, 69 Tydings-McDufie Law, 73, 74, 90  U  U.S. imperialism, 72 U.S.-R.P. Military Bases Agreement, 90, 140 unemployment, 23, 29, 38, 45, 51, 63, 87, 148 mequal trade, 46, 55 
162 Index  united front, 63, 77, 94, 104, 108, 119, 120, 134, 151 University of the Philippines, 14, 102, 104 urbanized, 5, 11  V  violent contradictions, 95, 119  W  workers, 9, 21, 22, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 38, 39, 44, 45, 49, 54, 61, 63, 71, 82, 83, 84, 85, 87, 91, 93, 94, 102, 106, 108, 118, 119, 121, 123, 136 working class, 3, 6, 30, 31, 44, 45, 63, 64, 85, 87, 93, 94, 108, 117, 118, 119, 120 World Bank, 4, 7, 8, 13, 31, 32, 34, 39, 42, 43, 44, 47, 75, 85, 96, 105, 112, 113, 115, 125, 134, 141 writ of habeas'corpus, 95