JC Punongbayan
@jcpunongbayan.bsky.social
1.6K followers 2.4K following 140 posts
Filipino economist. 🇵🇭 Asst Prof, University of the Philippines School of Economics. 👨‍🎓 Fmr Visiting Fellow, ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute. 🇸🇬 Columnist, Rappler.com. ✍️ Author, False Nostalgia. 📕 Educ, macro, econ history. 📈 jcpunongbayan.com 🌐
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jcpunongbayan.bsky.social
My starter pack of fellow Filipino academics, researchers, and thought leaders now on Bluesky.

go.bsky.app/GrA6ymj
jcpunongbayan.bsky.social
📘 Title: Debt, Dictatorship, and Decline: The Enduring Economic Impact of the Philippines' 1980s Crisis
👨🏼‍🏫 Authors: JC Punongbayan (UPSE) & Emmanuel S. de Dios (UPSE)
📍 Journal: Review of Development Economics
🗓️ Date of publication: 4 October 2025
🔗 Read here: onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1...
Debt, Dictatorship, and Decline: The Enduring Economic Impact of the Philippines' 1980s Crisis
One of the enduring economic puzzles in East Asia is the Philippines' lagging economic performance since the late 20th century. This paper examines the long-run consequences of the country's sovereig...
onlinelibrary.wiley.com
jcpunongbayan.bsky.social
💡 We quantify the lasting economic scars from the Marcos-era debt crisis of the early 1980s—showing how authoritarian mismanagement set the Philippines' growth path back for decades. A fresh contribution to understanding the long shadow of the Marcos dictatorship on our economy.
jcpunongbayan.bsky.social
🎉 NEW JOURNAL PUBLICATION 🎉

Happy to share my latest journal article in Review of Development Economics (SSCI, Scopus), co-authored with UPSE Prof. Emeritus Emmanuel S. de Dios!
jcpunongbayan.bsky.social
🧾 Bottom line: The “boom & bust” of Marcos’s rule shows how dictatorship traded lasting development for power & rents—leaving deep scars on the PH economy.
jcpunongbayan.bsky.social
🧠 Highlights:
– Growth built on debt & short-term gains
– No shift to sustainable dev’t path
– Cronyism, rent-seeking, bad trade policy
– Debt crisis + collapse in the 1980s
jcpunongbayan.bsky.social
🔍 Marcos’s martial law years (1972–86) saw early growth fueled by borrowing & favorable global winds—but these same choices sowed the seeds of collapse by 1984–86.
jcpunongbayan.bsky.social
📍 Book: The Marcos Years: The Age of Crisis and Repression, edited by Ferdinand C. Llanes
🗓️ Date of publication: February 2023
🔗 econstor.eu/bitstream/10... (working paper version)
jcpunongbayan.bsky.social
[RESEARCH HIGHLIGHT]

📘 Title: Martial law and the Philippine economy
👨🏼‍🏫 Authors: Emmanuel S. de Dios, Maria Socorro Gochoco-Bautista, & JC Punongbayan (UP School of Economics)
Reposted by JC Punongbayan
charles.littlegreenfootballs.com
With Nazi helmets, for fuck’s sake.
newsguy.bsky.social
DHS unveils a Trumpian ICE recruitment poster.
Reposted by JC Punongbayan
mcbridetd.bsky.social
DOGE....government waste alert...
nbcnews.com
Signage around the Department of Defense offices were quickly changed to “Department of War” to match President Donald Trump’s rebrand of the organization, including Secretary Pete Hegseth’s nameplate.
jcpunongbayan.bsky.social
🧾 Bottom line:
Far from a “golden age,” the Duterte and early Marcos Jr. years illustrate how complacency, disinformation, and misplaced priorities can derail economic momentum and deepen structural weaknesses in the Philippine economy.
jcpunongbayan.bsky.social
– Duterte stayed popular despite econ troubles—disinfo & personality politics at work.
– Marcos Jr.’s first year = weak governance: inflation, agri fiascos, Maharlika risks.
– Long-term threats: education crisis, social protection gaps, energy shortages, fiscal strains.
jcpunongbayan.bsky.social
🧠 Highlights:
– TRAIN, CREATE & “Build, Build, Build” fell short.
– 2018 inflation + pandemic recession exposed weak econ management.
– Poverty drop in 2018 owed more to earlier growth & 4Ps than Duterte’s policies.
jcpunongbayan.bsky.social
[RESEARCH HIGHLIGHT]

📘 Title: Much a Duterte about nothing: Continuity, complacency, and crisis in the Philippine economy (2016–23)
👨🏼‍🏫 Author: JC Punongbayan (UP School of Economics)
jcpunongbayan.bsky.social
🧠 Key finding #3:
High electricity prices also deter foreign investors + hurt expansion of local firms.

💡 Policy insight:
If PH wants to revive manufacturing, we need cheaper & more reliable electricity.
jcpunongbayan.bsky.social
🧠 Key finding #1:
High power prices → industry peaks earlier at lower income levels → declines faster afterward.

🧠 Key finding #2:
🇮🇩 Indonesia (low power costs) → metals & chemicals boomed.
🇵🇭 Philippines (high costs) → shifted to less power-intensive, labor-intensive subsectors.
jcpunongbayan.bsky.social
🔍 Why did PH deindustrialize so early?
Our study shows high electricity prices played a big role. ⚡️

Using data from 33 countries (1980–2014) + PH regions (1990–2014), we find that costly power discouraged investment in power-intensive industries.
jcpunongbayan.bsky.social
📍 Journal: Journal of Asian Economics, Vol. 61
🗓️ Date of publication: 16 April 2019
🔗 Read here: doi.org/10.1016/j.as...
jcpunongbayan.bsky.social
[RESEARCH HIGHLIGHT]

📘 Title: The role of power prices in structural transformation: Evidence from the Philippines
👨🏼‍🏫 Authors: Majah Ravago, Arlan Brucal, James Roumasset & JC Punongbayan
jcpunongbayan.bsky.social
💡 Whether you’re a student, policymaker, or fellow social scientist, I hope this interview inspires you as much as it did me.

#EconTwitter #Economics #Philippines #UPSE #SocialScience
jcpunongbayan.bsky.social
🧠 Highlights:
✅ Why you need to learn mainstream economics to critique it
✅ The rise (and limits) of empirical methods in economics
✅ The role of UPSE in shaping Philippine technocracy
✅ Advice for young economists on theory, passion & responsibility
jcpunongbayan.bsky.social
We talk about:
▪️ His years as a student activist
▪️ His mentors, especially José Encarnación Jr.
▪️ His work on trade, economic history, and institutions
▪️ UPSE’s legacy and influence in Philippine policymaking
jcpunongbayan.bsky.social
🔍 What is it about?

This interview traces the intellectual and personal journey of Prof. Emeritus Noel de Dios—from his early Marxist roots to his engagement with neoclassical economics and institutional theory.
jcpunongbayan.bsky.social
📘 Title: Conversations with Social Scientists: Economist Emmanuel S. de Dios, PhD
👨🏼‍🏫 Author: JC Punongbayan (UP School of Economics)
📍 Journal: Social Science Diliman
🗓️ Date: August 2024
🔗 Read here (FREE to download): journals.upd.edu.ph/index.php/so...
Conversations with Social Scientists: Economist Emmanuel S. de Dios, PhD | Social Science Diliman: A Philippine Journal of Society and Change
journals.upd.edu.ph