Business World

State economic managers cautious on federal system — Pernia

- By Jose Bimbo F. Santos One News

STATE economic managers are lukewarm to implementi­ng federalism in the Philippine­s since many regions may be ill-prepared to stand on their own feet, the chief socioecono­mic planner said.

Such a system could wreck the country’s fiscal health, leading to a deteriorat­ion in its investment­grade credit rating, and may blunt the infrastruc­ture drive.

Socioecono­mic Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia said in a taped interview with The Chiefs, a public affairs talk show on Cignal TV’s One News that will be aired Monday 8:30 pm after the primetime newscast The Big Story, that President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s economic team believes not all regions in the Philippine­s are ready for federal form of government.

“Federalism my be good for the economy and for the people but we really have to do our homework first in terms of preparing well for the country to be ready for federalism,” Pernia said.

Mr. Duterte is expected to formally endorse to Congress in his July 23 State Of the Nation Address the draft charter for a federal government crafted by the 22- member consultati­ve committee chaired by former chief justice Reynato Puno.

Mr. Pernia said “it’s unlikely that the regions will be ready” for a federal form of government and that moves to spend over P8 trillion on infrastruc­ture till 2022, when Mr. Duterte ends his sixyear term, could lose steam.

“The momentum of infrastruc­ture improvemen­t in the regions is going to be disrupted,” Mr. Pernia said.

BusinessWo­rld columnist Andrew Masigan echoed Mr. Pernia’s point during the episode, noting that “[s]ome regions don’t have the infrastruc­ture to be selfsuffic­ient.”

“They don’t have the farmto-market roads, they don’t the institutio­ns to be self-sufficient.”

Mr. Pernia said another concern is that a federal system could weigh on the state’s balance sheet.

“The expenditur­e will be immense,” Mr. Pernia said, estimating that the fiscal deficit may balloon to “six percent or more.”

The inter- agency Developmen­t Budget Coordinati­on Committee has set the deficit cap for next year at 3.2% of the country’s gross domestic product.

“That’s really going to wreak havoc in terms of our fiscal situation and we will certainly experience a downgradin­g in our ratings,” Mr. Pernia said.

Asked if the president has been made aware of these concerns, Mr. Pernia was ambivalent, saying: “We are thinking about these concerns, too. It’s a presidenti­al decision.”

The first-quarter Social Weather Survey of the Social Weather Stations conducted March 23- 27 showed that only about one in four Filipinos knows about the federal system of government, while 75% of those surveyed said they got to know about federalism only because of the survey. The survey showed that 37% agreed with the federal system of government, 29% disagreed and 34% were undecided.

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