The Freeman

Government debt load eases in May

MANILA— After repaying its debt to the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, the national government saw its obligation­s ease in May, but concerns remain as mounting obligation­s threaten to limit the state’s spending choices.

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Treasury data released on Friday revealed the state’s debt stock trimmed 2.1% month-on-month to P12.5 trillion in May. Of the outstandin­g debt levels, 69.7% came from domestic sources while 30.7% came from external creditors.

Arresting the growth of the debt pile was the result of the national government’s P300 billion repayment of the BSP’s provisiona­l advances, which were meant to help the state address its growing deficit. This was paid in full last month.

Since the beginning of the year, debts have accumulate­d by 6.5% or P767.2 billion.

Broken down, domestic borrowings reached P8.67 trillion in May, inching down 3% from the end-April levels. External debt grew 0.1% month-on-month, largely due to the effect of a depreciati­ng peso that cost P15.04 billion.

A fast growth of debt means the Marcos Jr. administra­tion would need to find ways to bag larger revenues for public spending while navigating a tight fiscal space.

By the end of 2021, state liabilitie­s already accounted for 60.5% of the country’s gross domestic product, the highest ratio since 2005 and breaching the 60% threshold deemed manageable for emerging market economies.

“We think that the plan to outgrow debt by continuous­ly banking on 7% GDP growth is a bit too optimistic. Next year, GDP will lose its momentum from base effects coming from the pandemic and the economy will face headwinds from slower economic growth of advanced economies,” Domini Velasquez, chief economist of China Banking Corp., said.

“Eventually, we think that the government would eventually resort to increasing taxes to help lower the country’s debt stock. There are many options that will not disproport­ionately hurt the poor,” Velasquez added.

 ?? PHILSTAR.COM ?? Motorists are caught in a traffic jam en route to Taft Avenue in Manila on Monday morning, June 27, 2022 as roads are closed ahead of the inaugurati­on of Ferdinand Marcos Jr. on June 30.
PHILSTAR.COM Motorists are caught in a traffic jam en route to Taft Avenue in Manila on Monday morning, June 27, 2022 as roads are closed ahead of the inaugurati­on of Ferdinand Marcos Jr. on June 30.

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