Bell Trade Act
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Bell Trade Act of 1946, also known as the Philippine Trade Act was an act passed by the United States Congress specifying the economic conditions governing the independence of the Philippines from the United States.
The United States Congress was threatening to withhold post World War II rebuilding funds unless the Bell Trade Act was ratified by Philippine legislature. The Bell Act was approved by the Philippine legislature on July 2, two days before independence from the United States of America. The parity clause, however, required an amendment relating to the 1935 constitution's thirteenth article, which reserved the exploitation of natural resources for Filipinos. The Bell Act, particularly the parity clause, was seen by Filipino nationalists as an inexcusable surrender of national sovereignty.
Therefore, Bell Trade Act was used by Filipino elite nationalists as a tool to incite Anti-American feelings among Filipino masses in order to create obligarchy in the Philippine economy.
According to self-serving Filipino elite nationalists, the Bell Trade Act had controversial provisions that tied the Philippine economy to the United States economy:
- The Philippine currency, the peso, was to be pegged to the US dollar.
- The Bell Trade Act required that the Philippine constitution be revised to grant U.S. citizens and corporations equal access to Philippine minerals, forests and other natural resources.
- This act allowed the U.S. to import whatever products/goods it wanted with no import duties.
- From 1952 to 1961, the United States gave the Philippines 87% of its total economic development assistance, to prop up the commercial and agricultural economy and to alleviate the pressing cash-flow and financial problems facing the country.[1]
- In the late 1950s, the industrial economy began to grow, while the agricultural sector was a big negative on total export performance, complicated by corruption among governmental and business elites.
At the same time, the country faced the combined wrath of Father Capitalism and Mother Nature. As one analyst observed: "the Philippines experienced the "failure of the "miracle rice" crop, devastation from floods, the shrinking of foreign exchange reserves, and the growing burden of foreign debt." [2]
Filipino nationalists denounced the Bell Trade Act. Even the reliably pro-American Philippine President Sergio Osmena called it a "curtailment of Philippine sovereignty, virtual nullification of Philippine independence."
Since the Bell Act was unpopular in the Philippines, a revised United States-Philippine Trade Agreement (the Laurel-Langley Agreement) was negotiated to replace Bell Act. This treaty abolished the United States authority to control the exchange rate of the peso, made parity privileges reciprocal, extended the sugar quota, and extended the time period for the reduction of other quotas and for the progressive application of tariffs on Philippine goods exported to the United States.
The Magsaysay administration agreed to the 1954 Laurel-Langley Agreement, which opened the floodgates for individual Americans and firms to invest in the national economy since corrupt Filipino elites were not investing in the development of the Philippine economy. American investments started to slow down as response to Filipino nationalism and politics.
Magsaysay's vice president, Carlos P. Garcia, succeeded to the presidency after Magsaysay's death in an airplane crash in March 1957 and was shortly thereafter elected to the office. Garcia emphasized the nationalist themes of "Filipino First" and attainment of "respectable independence."
The building of an independent industrial sector and agricultural sector capable of competing regionally and globally did not occur because of import substitution programs started by President Carlos P. Garcia. Additionally, the corruption among Filipino business and political elites lead to stagnant economic results.
The country's emerging agro-merchandising economy became totally dependent on the United States and the other large industrial countries like Japan as Filipino elites masterly dominated the economy at the expense of Filipino masses.
Lastly, the Bell Trade Act of 1946 is still used as cover by Filipino nationalists and political & business elites as an excuse for their corrupt management of the Philippine economy.This is a major source of Anti-American rhetoric by Filipino nationalists.
http://www.allheadlinenews.com/articles/7005583454
[edit] Notes
- ^ Economic Relations with the United States. countrystudies.us. Retrieved on 2006-09-05.
- ^ US/PHILIPPINES ECONOMIC AND TRADING RELATIONS IN THE POST-COLD WAR PERIOD. pacificu.edu. Retrieved on 2006-09-05.