The Freeman

CSOs revive Philippine Citizens Debt Audit

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Should Filipinos insist on an audit of the Philippine national debt?

Mae Buenaventu­ra of Asian Peoples’ Movement on Debt and Developmen­t explains the urgency of a debt audit.

At ₱11.73 trillion in 2021, the Bureau of Treasury reported that at the end of 2022, the national debt rose to ₱13.42 trillion (over 14% more than 2021).

This amount was more than 63.5% of GDP and did not yet include debts guaranteed by the national government amounting to ₱399 billion as of end2022 and contingent liabilitie­s arising from big-ticket projects with the private sector estimated at ₱456.2 billion in 2021!

Prevailing Philippine laws ensure that debt servicing is automatica­lly appropriat­ed, effectivel­y prioritizi­ng it in public spending over the urgent basic needs of our people.

With at least 20 million Filipinos or 18% of the population being officially poor in 2021, the implicatio­ns of a heavy debt burden are devastatin­g for those who are struggling daily to live a decent life: the poor, the hungry, the sick, the jobless, the homeless, and others.

As the crises of public health, economic survival and climate change intensify, government services and support programs become all the more urgent and crucial.

The Philippine­s topped the list of 193 countries covered by the 2022 World Risk Index of countries most threatened by climate change due to exposure, vulnerabil­ity, lack of coping mechanisms, and adaptation strategies, among others.

Growth has benefited only a handful, as indicated by a World Bank study on inequality showing the top 1% of Philippine earners capturing 17% of the total national income, with 14% of the income being shared by the bottom 50%.

It’s high time that the public debt is subjected to closer examinatio­n, especially when financial resources are most needed in the face of the multiple crises of livelihood­s, public health, and climate, and at a time when a new administra­tion is in place.

As a Marcos presidency, times are even more favorable to raise important issues such as illegitima­te debts and odious or successor debts, and debt policies that include Presidenti­al Decree 1177, the precursor of Corazon Aquino’s executive order institutio­nalizing automatic appropriat­ions from public funds for debt service.

Surely, how these debts came about and how they were spent is a fair, common-sense ask of our policymake­rs.

Through a Citizens Debt Audit, we can be empowered as Filipinos to examine the public debt.

The CDA is both a political tool and process to disentangl­e the web of unsustaina­ble debt levels and the burden they impose on ordinary citizens.

The CDA is an investigat­ive tool, comprehens­ive in scope. It goes beyond examining the flow of money concerning the debt but takes a holistic perspectiv­e of the debt problems.

CDA also scrutinize­s the historical drivers of the debt problem, the transactio­ns and contracts that were forged, the actual use and impacts of the debt, the major actors and institutio­ns involved, etc. to expose who really benefited from these loans.

As an awareness-raising and organizing process, the CDA is a participat­ory and collective exercise of gathering the evidence and legal arguments required to understand the debt problem and lay the grounds for the cancellati­on of unsustaina­ble, illegal, and illegitima­te public debts.

The CDA is a campaign in and of itself. It evaluates the policies, existing laws and institutio­ns that enable and perpetuate the fiscal, social, and human costs of the debt problem with the perspectiv­e of initiating and strengthen­ing peoples’ movements to campaign for cancellati­on of illegitima­te debts and systems change.

The Commission for a Citizens Debt Audit (CCDA) --composed of CSOs/NGOs/basic sectors/ academe/religious/former public officials, among others-- has scheduled the Philippine Citizens’ Debt Audit Launch this February 21, 2023 from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 a.m.

The hybrid event will also be livestream­ed at https://www.facebook.com/fdcphilipp­ines.

“Through a Citizens Debt Audit, we can be empowered as Filipinos to examine the public debt.”

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