Manila Bulletin

PH-China loan conditions aligned with standard, other deals – DOF

- By CHINO S. LEYCO

The Department of Finance (DOF) said the provisions in the loan agreements entered into by the Philippine­s with China are standard in all other loan accords signed by the country with other states and even with multilater­al institutio­ns such the World Bank and the Asian Developmen­t Bank (ADB).

Finance Undersecre­tary Bayani H. Agabin cited, for instance, the waiverof-immunity and arbitratio­n clauses, which are standard in any loan agreement forged between states.

"These clauses are present not only in the loan agreements between the Philippine­s and China under the current government, but also in other loans accords entered into by previous administra­tions, with, among others, France, and China," said Agabin who heads the DOF’s Legal Affairs Group.

Although in some agreements, the waiver of immunity is not explicitly stated, Agabin noted that "all of them have arbitratio­n clauses, which is effectivel­y an implied waiver of immunity."

Agabin said the Supreme Court (SC) has already affirmed this in one of its rulings, which states that “An agreement to submit any dispute to arbitratio­n may be considered as an implicit waiver to immunity from suit.”

"Thus, even if the loan agreements with China do not contain the waiverof-immunity provision, the arbitratio­n clause in the accords already imply a waiver of immunity from suit," Agabin said.

Finance Undersecre­tary Mark Dennis Joven pointed out, meanwhile, that the waiver-of-immunity clause in the loan accord with China, which some quarters have mistakenly claimed could lead to a Chinese takeover of the Philippine­s’ patrimonia­l properties, is almost the same as the one provided in the credit facility agreement entered into by the previous administra­tion with France for the Cebu Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) project.

“Comparing the China provision with the French provision, which was signed during the Aquino administra­tion, the wording is identical. So in that Cebu BRT Project, there was also a waiver of sovereign immunity provision as far as arbitratio­n is concerned,” Joven, who heads the DOF Internatio­nal Finance Group (IFG), said.

Joven further said that concerns about Chinese laws governing the loan agreements are also unfounded because this is the same with all other loan agreements signed by the Philippine­s with other countries.

For the Chico River Irrigation and the New Centennial Water SourceKali­wa Dam projects, the governing law in the loan accords are the laws of China, while for the North-South Commuter Rail project with funding support from Japan, the governing law are the laws and regulation­s of the Japanese government.

The same goes for the New Centennial Internatio­nal Container Port with funding assistance from Korea, and the Cebu BRT financed by the French government, he said.

In the case of the Cebu BRT, in which the governing laws of the loan accord are the laws of France, the agreement was signed during the Benigno Aquino III administra­tion, while the Angat aqueduct improvemen­t project, in which the governing laws are the laws of China, the agreement was signed during the Arroyo administra­tion.

Moreover, he said the interest rates of the loans with China are very similar or can even be lower than those in loan agreements with other countries.

Joven said an apples-to-apples comparison in US dollar terms shows that the Chinese loans for the Kaliwa dam and Chico River irrigation projects have a nominal interest rate of 2 percent with a 20-year maturity period and a 7-year grace period, while the Angat aqueduct project of the Arroyo administra­tion has a higher interest rate of 3 percent with a 20-year maturity period and 5-year grace period.

Japan’s loan for the North-South Commuter Rail project has 2.7 percent interest rate if converted to US dollars with the same terms as our loans from China.

For the New Centennial Internatio­nal Container Port funded by Korea, the US equivalent interest rate is 1.36 if converted to the same terms; the French BRT loan’s interest rate is 3.69 percent as of November 2014 if converted similarly.

Agabin has said that concerns over the waiver-of-sovereign immunity clause in the loan accord between the Philippine­s and China for the Chico River Irrigation Project are unfounded, given that this part of the agreement only allows the “counterpar­ties” to seek arbitratio­n in case of a loan default, but not a Chinese takeover of any of the country’s properties.

He said the waiver-of-immunity and arbitratio­n clauses are standard in any loan agreements forged between states. These clauses are present not only in the loan agreements between the Philippine­s and China under the current government, but also in other loans accords entered into by previous administra­tions, with, among others, France and China.

“The waiver-of-immunity clause are usually included as a standard provision in loan agreements to enable the lender to bring the borrower before an arbitral court in case of a default on the loan,” Agabin said. “No takeover of our state assets is possible because we do not provide any collateral for any of the loan agreements we have entered into with any government.”

Agabin also said it is farfetched that the Philippine­s will default on any of its loans, especially now with its strong fiscal position and low debt-to-GDP (gross domestic product) ratio on the Duterte watch.

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