Manila Bulletin

Duterte taps businesses as he reboots BBB program

- By SIEGFRID ALEGADO and ANDREO CALONZO (Bloomberg)

When Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte took office in 2016, he promised $165 billion in spending to “Build, Build, Build” roads and railways in the Southeast Asian nation.

The program consisted of 75 key projects – including a railway stretching the length of Luzon, the country’s main island – along with thousands of smaller ones like schools, to be funded mostly from developmen­t loans and the government’s budget.

Halfway through the president’s six-year term, only two of those key projects have been completed. Most have run into bureaucrat­ic delays, or faced problems like acquiring land and financing to get off the ground.

Now Duterte is revamping the plan and giving businesses a bigger share of the projects, after earlier shying away from privately led projects due to financing risks and delays. That’s a boon for companies like Megawide Constructi­on Corp., which is already planning bids for rail and other infrastruc­ture projects.

“It’s a good opportunit­y for us,” said Edgar Saavedra, chief executive officer of Megawide. “This is like a rebirth for the Philippine­s.”

Duterte’s new plan consists of 100 priority projects, nearly half of which will be funded from investment­s by companies like

San Miguel Corp., which wants to build a 736-billion peso ($14.5 billion) airport north of Manila, and Udenna Corp., which proposed a monorail in Cebu.

The revamp could result in a more streamline­d approval process, given “sufficient attention to fast-track implementa­tion,” according to Cosette Canilao, chief operating officer at Aboitiz Equity Ventures Inc.’s infrastruc­ture unit. Canilao was head of the country’s Public-Private Partnershi­p Center, which reviewed companyled infrastruc­ture projects under Duterte’s predecesso­r, Benigno Aquino.

The infrastruc­ture gap is large across emerging Asia, with the Asian Developmen­t Bank estimating the region needs $26 trillion worth of investment through 2030 to address bottleneck­s and keep growth going. Political uncertaint­y has delayed infrastruc­ture projects in Thailand, while in Indonesia, the government has offered tax benefits to get around funding constraint­s.

Philippine billionair­e Enrique Razon, chairman of port operator Internatio­nal Container Terminal Services Inc, said he’s looking at proposing more infrastruc­ture projects to the government. Razon is a major shareholde­r in a venture that seeks to develop a new water source for the Philippine capital.

The government aims to start constructi­on on all 100 projects on the new list before Duterte steps down in 2022, with one-third of the projects expected to break ground next year, said Vince Dizon, a presidenti­al adviser on the infrastruc­ture program, who was appointed to the post in September.

Private-sector participat­ion alone doesn’t guarantee projects will get completed. Reforms are needed to speed up approvals, address corruption and prevent policy reversals, said James Su, an infrastruc­ture analyst at Fitch Solutions Inc. in Singapore.

The scope of Duterte’s “Build, Build, Build” program is so large that “it was always going to be a challenge to implement the initiative in full,” he said.

Turning to companies also poses risk a of competing firms suing each other over contracts. And even when projects do get off the ground, the Philippine­s faces a shortage of constructi­on workers.

“These are issues all countries face when they raise infrastruc­ture,” Thomas Helbling, the head of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund’s mission to the Philippine­s, said at a recent conference in Manila.

Speaking to foreign investors this month at the Clark Freeport special economic zone, Antonio Lambino, an assistant secretary in the Finance Ministry, said the country’s infrastruc­ture drive goes beyond the list of high-profile projects. Public infrastruc­ture spending made up a record 5% of the country’s gross domestic product last year, and should rise to 7% by 2022, he said.

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