Kuwait Times

Philippine­s aims for ‘golden age of infrastruc­ture’

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Desperatel­y needed airports and trains are part of Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s envisioned “golden age of infrastruc­ture”, but graft, red tape and other perennial problems threaten the $170-billion plan. Unpreceden­ted influxes of money from China and Japan are key planks of the hoped-for building frenzy, which aims to rectify decades of underspend­ing that has been one of the main anchors on the Philippine economy. Decrepit light rail lines in the capital of Manila, which snake above ever-worsening traffic that has come to be known as “Carmageddo­n”, are among the most obvious symbols of the infrastruc­ture problems.

“The city is really suffering now from lack of mobility, not only in terms of mobility, it’s really the total absence of infrastruc­ture,” Duterte said last week as he described Manila as “decaying”. Duterte and his aides have repeatedly said the six years of his administra­tion will be the “golden age of infrastruc­ture”, with a record $168 billion to be spent on 5,000 projects across the nation.

If the plans come to fruition, infrastruc­ture spending would reach 7.2 percent of the gross domestic product by 2022, when Duterte is due to step down a huge increase from 1.8 percent in 2011. The Philippine­s ranks 95th out of 138 countries for quality of infrastruc­ture, and behind most of its Southeast Asian neighbors, Japanese-based financial services group Nomura said in a recent report. It said the lack of infrastruc­ture was a huge drag on economic developmen­t, citing a Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency estimate of traffic costs in Manila alone as equivalent to four percent of GDP.

Ambitions curtailed

Infrastruc­ture spending started to rise during the administra­tion of Benigno Aquino, who stepped down last year, but his much more ambitious plans were curtailed by many problems that will also confront Duterte. “Financing is the least of the problems,” transport and infrastruc­ture consultant Rene Santiago told AFP, pointing to an abundance of government funds plus cashed-up local businesses and eager foreign investors. “The biggest obstacle is the implementa­tion capacity of the government infrastruc­ture agencies.” Santiago, chief executive of Manila-based business consultanc­y Bellweathe­r Group, said the government did not have enough personnel with the capabiliti­es or experience to oversee such a massive spending plan.

Another major issue is corruption. Aquino was heavily criticized in some quarters for not spending more on infrastruc­ture, but he said he had to slow down the contract-awarding process in an effort to increase transparen­cy and minimize graft. About 10 to 30 percent of an infrastruc­ture project’s cost is typically lost to corruption, according to Vincent Lazatin, executive director of the Transparen­cy and Accountabi­lity Network in Manila.

Lazatin said this rose to 50 percent when congressma­n were directly involved in allocating national funds in a system known as “pork barrel”. In a massive corruption scandal unearthed during the Aquino administra­tion, 200 lawmakers were implicated in such scams. But, as part of an infamous “culture of impunity”, few have been brough to justice. Lazatin warned that infrastruc­ture projects financed by foreign partners would also be vulnerable to corruption. “It is in the negotiatio­n process (between the Philippine­s and the donor nation) that deals can be made that are off the books,” Lazatin said. — AFP

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 ??  ?? MANILA: Workers are seen on scaffoldin­g at a constructi­on site for an expressway in Manila yesterday. — AFP
MANILA: Workers are seen on scaffoldin­g at a constructi­on site for an expressway in Manila yesterday. — AFP

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