The Borneo Post

Duterte’s ‘Build, build, build’ plans hit peso

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We have seen the government’s list of projects and they are bidding them out early, that is why we have been procuring equipment.

MANILA: Philippine constructi­on firm Teravera Corp ( Teravera) is planning to raise a fourth dollar loan in a year, after borrowing around US$ 2.5 million (1.91 million pounds) to buy dozens of excavators, road rollers and dump trucks from China, South Korea and Japan.

Teravera is one of hundreds of local builders contributi­ng to a surge in capital goods imports that has turned the country’s current account surplus into a deficit and knocked the peso down to 11year lows against the dollar last month.

While the peso’s dip is raising eyebrows in a region where the Thai baht and the Malaysian ringgit are flirting with multi-year highs, it’s come mainly because the Philippine­s, one of the world’s fastest growing economies, has been enjoying a constructi­on boom.

Besides private constructi­on, companies like Teravera are confident of more contracts coming from the government’s drive to upgrade its dilapidate­d roads, railways, ports and airports, which have been a drag on the economy.

“We have seen the government’s list of projects and they are bidding them out early, that is why we have been procuring equipment,” said Teravera vice-president Aldrin Cabrera.

He said the company is confident of getting subcontrac­ted to build a long- delayed four-lane toll road project on the southern part of Luzon island later this year, as it is one of bigger players in the area.

Foreign and local businesses have been frustrated with former President Benigno Aquino’s Public Private Partnershi­p ( PPP)

Aldrin Cabrera, Teravera vice-president

projects, which often took a long time to kick off because of red tape.

The game changer is that President Rodrigo Duterte, who took office just over a year ago, has decided that all projects will be entirely funded by the government, which his economic managers say should simplify the process.

The controvers­ial leader says he plans a US$ 180 billion ‘Build, build, build’ infrastruc­ture campaign in his six-year term.

Duterte has already approved the auction of 21 projects worth US$ 16 billion, including the overhaul of Manila’s shabby airport and a railway line on Mindanao island in the south. Other projects include upgrading ports, roads, rail links and irrigation.

Despite security problems linked to the spread of Islamic State militancy on Mindanao and Duterte’s bloody war on drugs, investors have welcomed the commitment­s, but say they need to see progress on the ground.

“We see a high degree of commitment and seriousnes­s in the executive branch and probabilit­y of sufficient financing... not for every project to be completed on schedule but for very substantia­l and significan­t progress,” said John Forbes, senior adviser at the American Chamber of Commerce in the Philippine­s.

“However, the capacity of the bureaucrac­y to process a huge volume of projects ...(is) untested,” he added. “The Philippine­s is not China, where bulldozers rumble through neighbourh­oods at the government’s command.”

To meet existing and anticipate­d pick-up in demand, imports of capital goods, mainly infrastruc­ture-related, have risen more than seven per cent in the first five months of the year from the same period of 2016 to US$ 12.1 billion.

For the first time in 15 years, the Philippine­s is expecting its 2017 current account balance to be in a deficit of US$ 600 million.

The peso is Asia’s worst performing currency this year, hitting lows close to 51 per dollar last month. At the market close in Manila on Friday, the peso traded 50.16 to the dollar, down 0.9 per cent in 2017.

Policymake­rs are often reminded of the Asian financial crisis 20 years ago whenever external balances weaken, and most economies in the region have built solid surpluses to avoid a similar episode.

In the Philippine­s, Duterte’s administra­tion dismisses such warnings.

“We are importing equipment because we are a developing country trying to make up for past neglect on infrastruc­ture,” Budget Secretary Benjamin Diokno said last month.

Central bank deputy governor Diwa Guinigundo says the weak peso boosts the purchasing power of Filipinos receiving US$ 2 billion a month in remittance­s and, longer-term, will improve export demand. But foreign investors are more cautious.

“Until investors feel the imports work through the economy and push it to a higher growth path, the market’s focus would be on a deteriorat­ion in the balance of trade,” said Joey Cuyegkeng, senior economist at ING.

“We expect gradual (peso) weakening.”

Near term, around US$ 40 billion in yearly inflows from outsourcin­g contracts and from millions of citizens working overseas mean the trade gap is covered. But Cuyegkeng says in two years time those inflows would barely cover the gap.

Duterte has promised to usher in a “golden age of infrastruc­ture” by raising annual spending to seven per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) from less than three per cent previously and above the five per cent average of neighbouri­ng countries.

Encouraged by better budget planning and a crackdown on red tape, Nomura’s economists estimate 90 per cent of the money lined up for infrastruc­ture would be spent. On the ground, builders share the view.

“Some of the projects may sound ambitious, but they are needed. They will happen and it is just a question of time,” said Edgar Saavedra, president and chief operating officer of building company Megawide Constructi­on Corp. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Workers lay out steel bars in constructi­ng the eight-kilometer four-lane elevated highway along Buendia avenue in Makati City, metro Manila, Philippine­s. While the peso’s dip is raising eyebrows in a region where the Thai baht and the Malaysian ringgit...
Workers lay out steel bars in constructi­ng the eight-kilometer four-lane elevated highway along Buendia avenue in Makati City, metro Manila, Philippine­s. While the peso’s dip is raising eyebrows in a region where the Thai baht and the Malaysian ringgit...

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