The Mindanao Examiner Regional Newspaper

'Old spending habits must go'

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CEBU - New Department of Budget and Management (DBM) Secretary Benjamin E. Diokno said he plans to reprise his role as a keen guardian of the government’s purse, vowing to correct past spending habits as he heads the agency that formulates and releases the annual budget under the Duterte administra­tion.

Diokno, 68, headed the budget department during the Estrada administra­tion, but stepped down in 2001 when then Vice President Gloria Arroyo took power. He then taught economics at the state-run University of the Philippine­s.

Diokno said the government planned to review the proposed 2017 national budget, even as he stressed there would be no reenacted budget in the next six years.

He said the annual budget of the Duterte administra­tion would prioritize higher public expenditur­es on vital infrastruc­ture, equivalent to 5 to 7 percent of the gross domestic product.

“The Duterte administra­tion will not spend money for spending’s sake. The economy is deficient in all types of infrastruc­ture—highways and bridges, ports and airports,” Diokno said.

He also vowed to end under-spending on public goods and services, which tempered the country’s growth potentials in the past two to three years.

“First of all, I will put a lot of effort in budget preparatio­n. I know that under-spending is partly due to poor budget preparatio­n. Many programs and projects are included in the annual budget, yet they are not ready to implement. Some department­s ask for a budget that they are unable to implement: they bite more than what they can chew,” Diokno said.

Noting that underspend­ing is due to the “ineptness or incompeten­ce” of some department chiefs, Diokno said he would ask secretarie­s and undersecre­taries to undergo retraining, while a program to boost project monitoring would also be strengthen­ed.

He said he would also do away with the practice of allowing fiscal planners to “play around with the slacks in the budget” to finance projects not authorized by Congress, in a controvers­ial practice by the past administra­tion that became known as the Disburseme­nt Accelerati­on Program, or DAP. The Supreme Court in 2014 ruled DAP was unconstitu­tional.

“This practice has to stop. President Duterte’s 2017 to 2022 budgets will be compliant with the Supreme Court decision on the DAP,” Diokno said.

Moving forward, he said the annual budgets to be proposed by the Duterte administra­tion would prioritize the following: higher infrastruc­ture spending of 5-7 percent of the GDP; investment in human resources (education, healthcare and nutrition) in order to develop a dynamic and nimble work force; agricultur­e modernizat­ion and rural developmen­t in order to make growth inclusive; raising rural incomes; and making food available and affordable.

Diokno, however, said the new administra­tion would follow the Aquino government’s move in adopting the General Appropriat­ions Act (GAA) as release document. The DBM adopted the GAA as a release document in 2014, scrapping the special allotment release order system.

“This is not novel. I did this 16 years ago when I adopted the ‘what-yousee-is-what-you-get’ budget execution system. However, this was forgotten by [former President Gloria] Arroyo during her entire term and [President] Aquino during his first [few] years in office,” Diokno said.

Diokno also said that on his watch, the DBM will “revisit” the bottomup budgeting (BUB) scheme, another program introduced by the Aquino administra­tion that allows local government­s as well as civil society and community groups to pitch the priority poverty-reduction projects to be bankrolled by the annual national budget.

Also, the Duterte administra­tion “will revisit the CCT (conditiona­l cash transfer) program with the intention of minimizing the leakages (giving benefits to those undeservin­g and not giving benefits to the deserving) and minimizing the administra­tive costs,” Diokno said, referring to the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program or “4Ps.”

“We will adopt economic measures so that a bigger part of the budget will be used for projects that will truly benefit the Filipino people,” he said.

During his first tenure as budget chief, Diokno initiated reforms that included strengthen­ing of the public expenditur­e management system. He also imposed a moratorium on the creation of new state universiti­es and colleges, and pushed for the abolition of several agencies.

And to improve strategic budget planning, he initiated a joint public-private sector consultati­ve group called the Budget Dialogue Group.

Among his specializa­tions is public economics focusing on governance, tax reform and policies, expenditur­e analysis. He has also given policy advise on transition­al economies in Southeast Asia. In resource management, he specialize­d on public policy concerning oil and water resources.

He served as budget undersecre­tary to President Corazon Aquino until March 1991, during which he was involved in the creation of the 1986 Tax Reform Program that significan­tly improved collection. He was also involved in drafting the Local Government Code of 1991.

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