Business World

Right-sizing gov’t force could help fund free tuition program

- Elijah Joseph C. Tubayan

THE FINANCE chief said that additional revenues from the proposed rightsizin­g bill may aid in creating fiscal space in funding the free tuition law.

As the Developmen­t Budget Coordinati­on Committee ( DBCC) is identifyin­g possible sources of funding for what economic managers have tagged as an “unaffordab­le” free tuition program in all state universiti­es and colleges ( SUCs), Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III said rationaliz­ing functions of government agencies may raise money to make the program fiscally sustainabl­e.

Asked whether the newly approved program would be a fiscal risk for the government, Mr. Dominguez said in an interview with the press last Friday at the Finance department headquarte­rs in Manila: “Any expenditur­e without the correspond­ing identifiab­le revenue will put a squeeze on the budget deficit at the percentage allowed. In our case 3% is actually a very hard ceiling.”

“Anything you spend more is going to be, it has to come out from something, either you raise more money or you cut other expenses. Rightsizin­g is good, maybe this rightsizin­g will pay for something like this. Who knows,” Mr. Dominguez added.

Republic Act No. (RA) 10931 or the Universal Access to Quality Tertiary Education Act was signed into law by President Rodrigo R. Duterte last Friday, just hours before the end of the 30- day period that would have seen the bill lapse into law.

Budget Secretary Benjamin E. Diokno earlier said that the law, which would be implemente­d in the first semester of school year 2018-2019, would cost about P100 billion a year, but qualified that it would be difficult to appropriat­e a budget for the program for the long term given the SUCs’ rapid expansion.

Funds saved from the implementa­tion of the rightsizin­g act is projected to amount to P24.276 billion in the first year of implementa­tion, which is about half of the expected P54.629-billion total cost from retirement and separation incentives shelled out.

Mr. Diokno, who heads the committee in crafting the law’s implementi­ng rules and regulation­s ( IRR) said that it may disallow SUCs’ “use of income” — funds raised from tuition and other school charges that are used for research, and other projects of the school — and may ask Congress a supplement­al budget if it fails to find space in the proposed P3.767- trillion 2018 budget.

This is only one of the populist measures passed by the administra­tion that warrants a fiscal expansion, such as public infrastruc­ture, and the military and uniformed personnel pay hike. Currently pending for a bicameral conference prior to the President’s signature is the promised free irrigation for farmers. —

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