Arsenio Balisacan


Arsenio Molina Balisacan is a Filipino economist and academic serving as the first chairperson of the , the country's antitrust agency enforcing prohibitions against anti-competitive business acts and practices. Prior to his appointment in the commission, he served as the Philippine Socioeconomic Planning Secretary from May 2012 to January 2016 under the administration of President Benigno S. Aquino III. As Socioeconomic Planning Secretary, he concurrently served as director-general of the National Economic and Development Authority, and as chairman of the boards of the , Philippine Institute for Development Studies, , and .
Prior to his Cabinet appointment, he was professor and dean of School of Economics of the University of the Philippines Diliman and concurrently executive director of the . On secondment from UP, he served as the Director-Chief Executive of the , one of the centers of excellence of the , in 2003–2009.
Before joining the faculty of UP in 1987, he was research fellow at the East-West Center in Honolulu and economist at the World Bank in Washington, D.C.
A holder of PhD in economics from the University of Hawaii at Manoa, he has been an Academician of the National Academy of Science and Technology since 2008.

Early years

Balisacan was born in Solsona, Ilocos Norte, a remote town located at the foot of the Sierra Madre mountain range. Balisacan's father was initially a farm tenant tilling fields in a resource-poor, isolated village of the town. When their nun relative convinced his father to take on a janitorial job in Laoag City, they had to leave their farm life behind. In the city, Balisacan, his five other siblings and their parents stayed in a land where they were later evicted. Balisacan said he was in high school when their family was forced out of the property and had to go back to their tiny village at the easternmost part of Ilocos Norte. “It was tough. It was only later on that I realized that we were an informal settler. We were squatting in somebody’s land. I was already in high school, we were evicted from that place, and we had to return to that old town of ours,” Balisacan recalled.
From his primary-school days all the way to his postgraduate studies, Balisacan had to rely on scholarships, grants, and part-time employment as his family was poor. He spent most of his formative years of basic education under the tutelage of Divine Word College of Laoag and completed the last two years of secondary education in Ablan Memorial Academy of Solsona where he graduated as the valedictorian. Balisacan credits his mother's aunt, Isidra Rivera, who was mayor of the town of Solsona, as his early inspiration in life. “She devoted selflessly her life to this town,” he says. “She had actually very little physical possessions in life, especially when viewed in today’s cadre of local politicians. What she had in abundance was deep respect and love by her people, unblemished credibility and genuine concern for the poor.”
When things got worse, Balisacan's eldest brother graduated from Divine Word College. Armed with an Accounting degree, Balisacan's eldest brother was offered a job in Cebu City by Atlas Mining.
The job allowed his brother to bring their family to Cebu to live. Balisacan, who was an Agriculture scholar at the Mariano Marcos State University, had to stay behind in Batac, Ilocos Norte.
Read more of his early years in these featured articles, "Arsenio M. Balisacan: Resolute at 25" by Cai Ordinario, Business Mirror Anniversary Issue and "Top Philippine Economist to Visit Hawaii" by Belinda Aquino, Hawaii Filipino Chronicle.

Education

Balisacan received a B.S. degree in agriculture from the Mariano Marcos State University in 1979, graduating magna cum laude. Awarded a graduate scholarship by the Southeast Asian Regional Centre for Graduate Study and Research in Agriculture, he then took up a Master of Science degree in agricultural economics from the University of the Philippines Los Baños, from which he graduated in 1982. He received his Ph.D. in economics from the University of Hawaii at Manoa in 1985, with the dissertation "A positive theory of economic protection: Agricultural Policies in Developed and Developing Countries".
Balisacan received critical support from the East-West Center while studying at the University of Hawaii. He served as research intern from July 1982 to May 1984 and was a Joint-Doctoral Research Intern from May 1984 to September 1985 under the Resource Systems Institute of EWC. Upon earning his PhD he served as a research fellow from October 1985 to March 1986.
Part of his pioneering PhD dissertation on the political economy of agricultural policy was later published in the Review of World Economics titled, “” in 1987.
He was named as one of the 100 outstanding alumni at the University of the Philippines Los Baños, ’s centenary. He was conferred the 2016 Distinguished Alumni Award by the East-West Center and East-West Center Alumni Association , the 2006 Distinguished Alumni Award by the UPLB Alumni Association, the 2005 Outstanding Alumni Award by the East-West Center Alumni Association Philippines, and the 2004 Most Distinguished Alumnus Award by the Mariano Marcos State University.

Professional career

Early career as economist

As Balisacan wrapped up his PhD studies at the University of Hawaii Manoa, he took up a post as a research fellow at the East-West Center in 1985–1986. He then moved to Washington D.C. in 1986 to serve as an economist for the World Bank.

Return to the Philippines as an academic

He came back to the Philippines in 1987 and became an assistant professor of economics at the University of the Philippines Los Banos until 1988, when he moved to UP Diliman and joined the faculty of the University of the Philippines School of Economics, eventually receiving an academic appointment as full professor in 1995.
Balisacan was a recipient of various academic and professional awards. He was elected as academician to the National Academy of Science and Technology of the Philippines in 2008. NAST is the country's peer-elected group of select individuals who have made outstanding contributions to science and technology.
As a highly respected academic, he held various positions in academic organizations and advisory groups locally and abroad. He was a member of the board of academic advisors of the Chinese Center for Agricultural Policy at the Chinese Science Academy and president of the .
He was chairman of the board of academic advisors of the Asian Institute of Management's Center for Bridging Societal Divides and member of the policy advisory council of the Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research.
Balisacan also became president of the – the national learned society for economists – in 2006.
He founded the , an internationally refereed journal, and served as its editor in 2004–2015.
He also became an adjunct professor at the Australian National University in 2011–2015.

Department of Agriculture

Seconded from UP, he served as Undersecretary for Policy and Planning at the Department of Agriculture Philippines from 2000 to 2001, also serving as Officer-in-Charge at the Agricultural Credit and Policy Council. In this capacity, he served as the Philippine chief negotiator in the World Trade Organization Agriculture Negotiations and in various bilateral agriculture negotiations. He returned to this position as Undersecretary for Policy and Planning at the Department of Agriculture for a brief stint in 2003.

SEARCA

Balisacan's abilities as an institution builder are most exemplified by what he has done to bring the Southeast Asian Regional Center for Graduate Study and Research in Agriculture, one of the centers of excellence of the Southeast Asian Ministers of Education Organization, to new heights as it continues the journey for relevance and excellence as a development institution. Serving as the center's director and chief executive in 2003–2009, he restructured the institution to respond to the changing needs, demands, and priorities of its stakeholders, especially the need for institutional capacity-building in the region's less developed countries in the wake of globalization, environmental degradation, and global climate change. Sound financial management, coupled with innovative approaches to institutional partnerships to reach out to stakeholders, enabled the center not only to regain lost ground, but also to achieve a respectable level of financial sustainability. Indeed, the work and activities of SEARCA became visible again not only in the region it covers but also to the rest of the world. His accomplishments at SEARCA is summarized in his exit report titled,

UP School of Economics

Back at UP, in 2010, Balisacan was appointed dean of the School of Economics at the University of the Philippines Diliman. As dean, he concurrently served as executive director of the and chairman of the .

NEDA

Balisacan held these academic posts until he was seconded from UP to the National Economic and Development Authority when Philippine President Benigno S. Aquino III asked him to serve as Secretary of Socioeconomic Planning. Aquino signed his appointment papers on May 10, 2012, and was confirmed by the bicameral Committee on Appointments of the Philippine Congress on February 6, 2013.
As secretary of socioeconomic planning and, concurrently, director-general of NEDA, Secretary Balisacan was tasked to address the critical constraints that make economic growth slow, uneven, and exclusive to certain segments of the Philippine society.
Concurrent to his role as secretary of socioeconomic planning and director-general of NEDA, he served as Board Chairman of the Philippine Institute for Development Studies and the Philippine Center for Economic Development; the first Governing Board Chairperson of the Public-Private Partnership Center of the Philippines; and the first Board Chairperson of the Philippine Statistics Authority
At these key positions, Secretary Balisacan was able to influence policies, programs, and projects to facilitate inclusive economic growth, employment creation, and poverty reduction. He was partly to be commended for the recent remarkable performance of the Philippine economy. In 2010 to 2016, the seven-year average growth of the Philippine economy was 6.2 percent, the country's fastest in 40 years. Recognizing the importance of maintaining the momentum, he and his senior colleagues in government work on crafting a forward-looking agenda, , which articulated a vision for an inclusive and prosperous Philippines. Through , the next administration adopted the Ambisyon Natin 2040 as the long-term vision for the Philippines. The order resonates in the administration's medium-term development blueprint, the . Today, the Philippine economy remains one of the best-performing developing economies in Asia.

PCC

Following the passage of the Philippine Competition Act by Congress in 2015, President Benigno S. Aquino III formed the Philippine Competition Commission in January 2016, appointing Balisacan to serve as its first chairperson. is an independent quasi-judicial body created to promote and protect market competition by prohibiting anti-competitive conduct and practices, including cartels and anti-competitive mergers. As the country's antitrust agency, PCC plays a key role in helping achieve a vibrant and inclusive economy and advancing consumer welfare.
Balisacan's effective leadership, combined with a competition act that gives the enforcer broad powers, has gotten the PCC off to a good start, placing the commission among the top emerging enforcers in developing countries only two years after its formation. Nonetheless, he faces formidable challenges as competition czar because the Philippines is cited as one of the most restrictive economies in the world.

Select books and journal publications

Balisacan regularly runs 15 to 25 kilometers on weekends and 10 kilometers at least twice on weekdays, and only his government position keeps him from doing it more frequently. He has completed numerous half, three-quarter, and full 42K marathon events, both locally and abroad. His last 42K was in . He also ran in the Chicago Marathon in October 2017 and in the Honolulu Marathon in 2012. It was in Hawaii where he discovered the sport of long-distance race, three decades ago. “I acquired the running habit while I was working on my doctoral degree in Hawaii. That was in the early 1980s,” he says. “My runs then were limited to the 10K to 21K distances. “I never left long-distance running since then, though there were several years when I skipped 42K marathons,” he says.