Business World

Investor confidence intact — S&P

- By Melissa Luz T. Lopez Senior Reporter

INVESTOR CONFIDENCE remains fairly intact more than a year into the administra­tion of President Rodrigo R. Duterte, as policy uncertaint­y has dissipated on the economic front despite persistent political noise, an analyst at S&P Global Ratings said yesterday.

Andrew Wood, associate director at S&P for sovereign and internatio­nal public finance ratings, said investor worries about the Philippine­s have generally eased as far as fiscal policies are concerned, although risks remain due to the bloody war on narcotics and ongoing martial law in Mindanao.

“The Duterte administra­tion has shown itself to be in favor of sound and orthodox fiscal and monetary economic policy making across the board by generally keeping what worked for the Aquino administra­tion and bringing it over,” Mr. Wood said in a webcast yesterday.

“In that sense, I think political risks has somewhat declined over the past year, but of course we are still keeping an eye on the social aspects of the President’s agenda,” he added.

“The President has strong focus on improving law and order which has allegedly resulted in numerous instances of extra-judicial killings since he came to power. In our view, there remains some policy uncertaint­ies with regard to Mr. Duterte’s social agenda in particular. This is also true in terms of the applicatio­n of martial law in Mindanao.”

Thousands of people have been killed — some under dubious circumstan­ces — since Mr. Duterte took office at end-June 2016 from legitimate police operations and by suspected vigilantes as his government adopted a mailed-fist policy against narcotics peddlers and users.

“Neverthele­ss, we don’t see these policies have undermined the economic momentum in the Philippine­s or investor sentiment at this stage,” Mr. Wood said.

S&P still expects the Philippine economy to grow by 6.5% this year, which if realized would hit the low end of the government’s 6.5-7.5% growth goal and cement the country’s position as one of the fastest-growing economies in Asia.

Congressio­nal approval and enactment of the first package of the tax reform agenda will serve as a litmus test for the Duterte administra­tion — a measure long-awaited by investors as it is expected to improve the ease of doing business in the Philippine­s while trimming costs.

Mr. Wood noted that Mr. Duterte’s “pretty strong support” in Congress has been instrument­al in ensuring legislativ­e action on tax reform.

Despite concern among Mr. Duterte’s economic managers over how much support this measure has in Congress, the Senate Ways and Means committee yesterday approved Senate Bill No. 1592 ( read story on S1/ 11), which reduces personal income tax rates and offsets the expected foregone revenues with higher excise tax rates on fuel and cars, an excise tax rate on sugar-sweetened drinks, and reduced value-added tax ( VAT) exemptions. It also simplifies the estate and donor’s taxes — providing a uniform six percent rate — in a bid to encourage compliance and plug billions of pesos in leaks from these systems.

SB 1592 has a few difference­s from House Bill No. 5636 — particular­ly in the tax on sugar-sweetened drinks, the phased implementa­tion of higher tax rates on oil products, and VAT base expansion — which itself secured final-reading approval at the House of Representa­tives at the end of May.

The fresh revenue stream will fund the state’s P8.44- trillion spending plan under the “Build, Build, Build” initiative until 2022 when the current administra­tion ends its sixyear term.

At the same time, Mr. Wood said approval of tax reform — for which there will be up to five tranches — will not automatica­lly bag for the Philippine­s a credit rating upgrade from S&P, as the debt watcher would have to evaluate its long-term impact on the country’s fiscal position.

“What we need to see is more structural and a little bit more long- term in nature. We need to see this infrastruc­ture spending translatin­g into significan­tly higher real GDP growth on a consistent basis for a few years,” the analyst said.

“That [tax reform] factor alone is probably unlikely to bring the rating upward, but [it will exert] significan­t upward pressure on the rating in the future.”

The Philippine­s currently holds a “BBB” rating — one notch above minimum investment grade — with a “stable” outlook from S&P.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines