AND
it’s costly and dangerous for the nation.
The
statement is tautological, but it’s an increasingly popular idea in leadership
and management studies. And it may help explain why, four years into his term,
President Benigno Aquino 3rd is stumbling all over the place without solving
one serious problem of national life.
Like
the classic Socratic admonition, “know thyself.” the idea of being aware of
what you do not know is considered important by philosophers, psychologists and
leadership gurus.
Not
knowing can be a sign not only of ignorance, but of incompetence.
Knowledge gaps and
problem solving
In an article for the Harvard Business Review, “Do you know what you don’t know?”, the psychology teacher Art Markman explained the subject as follows:
In an article for the Harvard Business Review, “Do you know what you don’t know?”, the psychology teacher Art Markman explained the subject as follows:
“You
probably don’t know as much as you think you do. When put to the test, most
people find they can’t explain the workings of everyday things they think they
understand.
“Don’t
believe me? Find an object you use daily (a zipper, a toilet, a stereo speaker)
and try to describe the particulars of how it works. You’re likely to discover
unexpected gaps in your knowledge. In psychology, we call this cognitive
barrier the illusion of explanatory depth. It means you think you fully
understand something that you actually don’t.
“An
upsetting instance of knowledge gaps in the last decade was the profound
misunderstanding of complex financial products that contributed to the market
collapse of 2007. Investment banks were unable to protect themselves from
exposure to these products, because only a few people (either buyers or
sellers) understood exactly what was being sold. Those individuals who did
comprehend these product structures ultimately made huge bets against the
market using credit-default swaps. The willingness of companies like AIG to
sell large quantities of credit-default swaps reflected a gap in their knowledge
about the riskiness of products they were insuring.”
Markman
goes on to offer practical tips on how to overcome explanatory gaps.
1.
No matter the scale, discovering your explanatory gaps is essential. An
undiagnosed gap in knowledge means you might not fully understand a problem.
That can hinder innovative solutions.
2.
Explain concepts to yourself as you learn them. Get in the habit of
self-teaching. Your explanations will reveal your own knowledge gaps and
identify words and concepts whose meanings aren’t clear.
3.
Engage others in collaborative learning. Help identify the knowledge gaps of
the people around you. Ask them to explain difficult concepts, even if you
think everyone understands them. Not only will this help you to work through
new ideas, it will occasionally uncover places where your colleagues don’t
understand critical aspects of an explanation.
4.
When you do uncover these knowledge gaps, treat them as learning opportunities,
not signs of weakness. After all, successful innovation rests on the assumption
that you and the people around you have a high-quality understanding of the
problem.
Three exhibits of
Aquino knowledge gaps
In four years with him at the helm of our republic, it’s only to be expected that some or many of the failures and shortcomings of the Aquino administration can be attributed to knowledge gaps on the part of the chief executive and commander in chief.
In four years with him at the helm of our republic, it’s only to be expected that some or many of the failures and shortcomings of the Aquino administration can be attributed to knowledge gaps on the part of the chief executive and commander in chief.
He
entered the presidency with the barest credentials ever in national history.
Although he served three terms in the House and one term in the Senate, he came
away with no legislative accomplishment or notable achievement. And he never
served in an executive capacity in either the public or private sector.
From
his very first fiasco, the Manila hostage crisis of August 2010, to his biggest
and current setback, the voiding by the Supreme Court of his Disbursement
Acceleration Program (DAP), the pervasive belief is that he was done in by his
own ignorance.
Over
this past year, I can think of three clear instances where Aquino‘s lack of
awareness of his knowledge gaps has proved detrimental to the nation and to his
presidency.
Exhibit 1: Bernas on
Aquino’s ignorance of the law
I refer here to his lack of understanding of the DAP, which his Budget Secretary Butch Abad invented and which the President authorized and repeatedly validated by signing every fund release.
I refer here to his lack of understanding of the DAP, which his Budget Secretary Butch Abad invented and which the President authorized and repeatedly validated by signing every fund release.
Constitutional
commission delegate and constitutional law authority Fr. Joaquin Bernas, SJ,
ascribes Aquino’s lapses with the DAP to ignorance of the law.
Bernas
believes the president cannot be held liable for culpable violation of the
Constitution because the violation has to be intentional. But he adds that
Aquino was likely ignorant of the law because of wrong advice from his legal
team. Ignorance is not a ground for impeachment.
“They
didn’t know what they were doing, they thought that they were doing the right
thing. After his term, you can go after him,” Bernas says.
But
presidential ignorance here could not be more costly. Because of it, P172
billion of taxpayers’ money went into the DAP, and will probably never be seen
again.
Exhibit 2: Aquino
clueless in Japan
A second vivid example of an Aquino knowledge gap occurred during his recent one-day visit to Japan.
A second vivid example of an Aquino knowledge gap occurred during his recent one-day visit to Japan.
In
Tokyo, Aquino openly endorsed Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s move to amend Japan’s
67-year-old pacifist Constitution, “reinterpret” its anti-war provision, and
adopt the “right to collective self-defense.”
This
has raised many eyebrows here at home, none higher than those of former senator
Kit Tatad, who wrote a scathing column in the Standard. Kit commented:
“Amending
Article 9 of the Japanese Constitution would most certainly impact Japan’s
security ties with its neighbors, and there is no room at this time for a
foreign head of state to comment publicly on the ongoing process.
“Despite
this obvious red line, Aquino gleefully declaimed on the virtues of the
Japanese exercise, with no inhibitions. He said:
“We
believe that nations of goodwill can benefit only if the Japanese government is
empowered to assist others and is allowed to come to the aid of those in need,
especially in the area of collective self-defense.”
“We…do
not view with alarm any proposal to revisit the Japanese constitution if the
Japanese people so desire, especially if this enhances Japan’s ability to
address its international obligations and brings us closer to our shared goals
of peace, stability and mutual prosperity,” he added.
Tatad
concluded: “With a small pinch of knowledge of international relations and
statecraft, Aquino could have avoided making that completely avoidable
statement in Japan.”
Exhibit 3: Aquino’s
defense of DAP
Without getting an expert legal briefing, the President sallied forth in October last year to adamantly defend the DAP and threatened to barnstorm the country and shame its critics.
Without getting an expert legal briefing, the President sallied forth in October last year to adamantly defend the DAP and threatened to barnstorm the country and shame its critics.
He
declared on live TV: “The Disbursement Allocation Program is not pork barrel.
Spending through DAP is clearly allowed by the Constitution and by other laws.
DAP is only a name for a process in which government can spend both savings and
new and additional revenues.
“The
issue here is theft. I did not steal.
“Those
who have been accused of stealing are those who are sowing confusion; they want
to dismantle all that we have worked so hard to achieve on the straight path.
We were stolen from, we were deceived–and now we are the ones being asked to
explain? I have pursued truth and justice, and have been dismantling the
systems that breed the abuse of power–and yet I am the one now being called the
Pork Barrel King?”
At
the time, Aquino clearly did not know the legal intricacies of the DAP or
understand the controversy it triggered.
He doesn’t know how
our govt works
Now that the program has been ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court, he probably understands even less the reason why he lost so spectacularly in the legal battle before the High Court, and in the court of public opinion.
Now that the program has been ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court, he probably understands even less the reason why he lost so spectacularly in the legal battle before the High Court, and in the court of public opinion.
I
am convinced that throughout the period when the DAP was hatched and when he
was signing all those documents facilitating it, Aquino never once paused to
ask Abad whether the DAP was legal and constitutional. He does not know how our
government works.
He
doesn’t have a notion of what governing or running a government is all about.
The only thing he tries to grasp is power, the powers of his office. But not
how power is supposed to be used to solve national problems.
From ignorance to
arrogance
For any leader with gravitas, these lapses of judgment and understanding would be mortifying. Yet Aquino’s attitude has been the opposite.
For any leader with gravitas, these lapses of judgment and understanding would be mortifying. Yet Aquino’s attitude has been the opposite.
Instead
of being humbled, he becomes arrogant, probably amused by the thought that
ignorance rhymes with arrogance.
He
repeatedly dares his opponents and critics to impeach him, completely confident
that Congress, which he thoroughly corrupted with the DAP and PDAF, would never
impeach him.
On
this point, he again shows that he doesn’t know what he doesn’t know.
He
probably doesn’t remember that President Joseph Estrada was impeached by the
House on the sly. The impeachment complaint against Erap did not pass the
chamber through the normal process; then speaker Manuel Villar smuggled it out,
thinking of profiting politically from it. It would not have passed otherwise.
If
there’s one truth that Aquino ought to learn by heart, it’s the fact that
politics is the art of the possible. Things change.
For
all he knows, some members of Congress could develop a conscience. And some may
already have shifted their allegiance to the people.
By
Yen makabenta
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