What the Philippines can learn from Japan, according to senators

MANILA, Philippines — After visiting Tokyo and meeting with Japanese leaders during an official parliamentary visit, senators picked up a few systems and policies in Japan that they hope the Philippines can learn from.

Led by Senate President Juan Miguel Zubiri, a delegation from the Philippine Senate met with Japanese government officials this week to fortify ties between both nations.

READ: Zubiri hopes PH-Japan cooperation continues under countries’ current admins

Senate Majority Leader Joel Villanueva said there are “so many things to learn” from Japan’s playbook.

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“Not just transportation and the importance of planning and continuous evaluation of their existing programs. Even in legislation,” he told reporters in a message.

READ: Zubiri, Senate peers invite Japanese PM

Among the systems in Japan that he hopes to pitch in the Philippines is the East Asian country’s employment strategy.

“Actually, their tradition is once you hire that employee from graduation, you intend to keep him or her until he or she retires,” Villanueva said partly in Filipino.

READ: Ending ‘endo’ must start with government, advocates say

Senator Mark Villar, the head of the Department of Public Works and Highways during the Duterte administration, reflected on Japan’s “really efficient” subway system when he took the train there.

“Hoping we can emulate this in the Philippines for better and more reliable public transportation,” he said in a social media post.

Villar’s post, however, prompted netizens to challenge the senator to ride public transportation in the Philippines, noting that he is in a position to draft and push for policies that would turn such a hope into reality.

“Please ride our LRT, MRT, and PNR so that you’ll have an idea on what kind of public policy measures you need to pass. Para naman ‘di tayo mauwi sa pa-hope hope na lang (So we won’t be left with just these hopes). You can literally make this happen. Go,” a netizen tweeted.

Villar was the chief implementer of the Duterte administration’s cornerstone Build, Build, Build program, which aimed to usher in a “golden age of infrastructure.”

According to UK-based think tank Pantheon Macroeconomics, the Build, Build, Build program “succeeded in ramping up much-needed investment, but clearly failed to meet its lofty goals.”

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