Pork-and-Beans Economics Model
- An analysis why the Philippines is not
progressing fast.
Every country is
proud of its own products and services, the value of which is a healthy measure
of economic growth (GDP).
In teaching economics, one approach is to use a model product, in this case the
popular pork-and-beans. What we can do to simplify the analysis is to fold a
piece of paper in three columns. On the first, write the components of the product,
on the second and third, locally produced and imported,
respectively. It's a simple checklist. The setting is the Philippines, and
countries with similar conditions.
Here is a checklist on the components and make of Pork-and-Beans, the so-called people's favorite (Check if item is locally produced or imported. Qualify your answers.)
1. White beans
2. Tomato
3. Onions and other spices
4. Pork
5. Tin can
6. Paper label
7. Label pigments
Process
8. Labor
9. Make of tools & equipment
10. Advertising & marketing
Tropical countries, like the Philippines, import white bean which is a
temperate crop. The tin can is imported, made from iron ore the subject country
earlier exported. Likewise the paper label and packaging materials are imported
made from pulp wood and minerals also exported by the subject country. In short
we export the raw materials and import the finished products.
How about the piece of pork? Well, the animal is raised locally, but the corn
and other feed ingredients and medicine may be imported. Corn which comprises
80 percent of the animal feed is often cheaper to buy in the world market. How
about the tomato? It could be a product of farmers under contractual agreement
with the manufacturing company. While labor is provided locally the consultants
and executives are under the discretion of the company.
Definitely the machines and equipment, owning to their sophistication in
automation and computerized operation, large volume of production, come from
abroad. So with many other tools of the industry.
For our learning methodology, the class may be divided into groups. Each group
presents the results of its analysis, and solutions to the problem. The output
is a consolidated report which includes resolutions and advocacies. Since this
is a simple exercise, further research is recommended.
Next time you pick from the shelf in a supermarket such products as coffee,
sardine, wheat bread, milk, or an item as seemingly innocent as mineral water,
think of the pork-and beans model. It can be
transformed into a real progressive model for a developing
country.
The economics of pandesal (wheat bread) follows the pork-and-beans model. It is even worse because we do not grow wheat here, The idea of pioneering into wheat production in pre-Edsa revolution era was to increase the share of controlling the wheat industry by Filipino farmers and entrepreneurs, from grain production down to primary and secondary processing, home- and community- based, in much the same as rice, staple food of 80 percent of Filipinos. On the contrary the Edsa Revolution favored the multinationals to monopolize wheat importation, milling into flour, and into an equally gargantuan feed industry, cum soybeans, feed wheat and other ingredients of poultry, hogs, fish and livestock feeds.
I recommend this study in the academe and research institutions, preferably on the graduate level. ~
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