The Philippine Star

Uninformed

- ALEX MAGNO

Out of the blue, LP Senator Franklin Drilon appears and blurts out the strange claim that the administra­tion’s centerpiec­e infrastruc­ture program is a dismal failure.

The claim directly clashes with every fact on the ground. Because of this, only one media outlet known for its severe anti-Duterte skew gave the claim any prominence. The others politely gave Drilon enough room to quietly maneuver away from his patently uninformed outburst.

Drilon must have missed the report on our third quarter growth performanc­e released days before.

In the first half of the year, the economy grew by only 5.5% – mainly because of the delay in the enactment of the 2019 national budget and the suspension of new public works projects during the election period. In the third quarter, GDP growth rebounded to 6.2% due largely to the uptick in public spending.

The delay in the enactment of the 2019 national budget is due principall­y to the follies of politician­s in the legislativ­e branch. The year was saved mainly by the “catch-up” spending plan put in place by the country’s economic managers – precisely the ones Drilon chooses to demean by making his cynical conclusion.

The infrastruc­ture program is the main driver of our economic expansion. Public economic investment­s, as we know, has the highest multiplier effects. It generates the domestic economic activity that allowed us to defy the global slowdown. It will enable us to escape recession as we did in 2008, when the global financial meltdown shrunk several economies.

The infrastruc­ture program is a mix of strategic infrastruc­ture projects and smaller public works projects numbering in the thousands. It includes the Metro Manila subway project, our largest and costliest public works undertakin­g to date. Literally thousands of projects upgrading roads, building new ones, erecting bridges and improving ports and airports have been completed or initiated.

Since the start of the Duterte administra­tion, about P1 trillion has been spent in modernizin­g our infrastruc­ture backbone. We have increased the share of infra investment­s to well over 5% of GDP – double the historical average of the last three decades. Next year and up to the end of the Duterte administra­tion, economic managers are expecting to bring up the share of infra investment­s to 7% of GDP.

The quality of our infra is 20 years behind what our regional neighbors built for their people. That is because they invested 5% of their GDP in infra while we struggled with the effects of our debt crisis. This is the final reason why we have fallen behind our neighbors.

About a third of the strategic projects earlier identified have been initiated. Some projects have been rethought because they cost too much and confront engineerin­g challenges. Among such, the ambitious inter-island bridge projects.

Those projects have been replaced with new ones designed to be more economic. From 75 strategic projects, the Build, Build, Build program now lists about 100 flagship projects.

Each major project has to undergo economic impact assessment by the NEDA. Each requires a financing package to be put together. Each financing package involving ODAs will need to be negotiated with our developmen­t partners.

Our major developmen­t partners are Japan, China, South Korea, the ADB and the AIIB. Every financing proposal will go through their respective bureaucrac­ies for vetting. Some large projects require preparator­y technical studies for which grant support will have to be negotiated.

A lot of work has to be put in before a major project even breaks ground. Much of that work has been done by the NEDA, the DOF, the DOTC and the DPWH. Public Works Secretary Mark Villar has done a splendid job getting the budget-supported projects going as quickly as possible. Many projects that hibernated in the bureaucrac­y for a decade or more have been done.

In addition to government-initiated projects, the private sector participat­es in modernizin­g our logistics backbone through various PPP arrangemen­ts. Most notable among these are the elevated connector road and the awesome Bulacan airport project undertaken by San Miguel. Next month, ground will be broken for the Bulacan airport.

There are, to be sure, many bottleneck­s for something as ambitious as the Build, Build, Build program. There are limits to what our existing bureaucrac­y can undertake, even if they work around the clock. There are limits imposed by the requiremen­ts of fiscal discipline to how much we can borrow. We are running short of engineers and skilled manpower to help in complex projects.

Despite all those, the infra program has definitely gathered steam. It is felt throughout the archipelag­o. The growth of our constructi­on sector is running at twice our GDP growth rate.

The infra program and its multiplier effects benefitted millions of Filipinos. It created new jobs, opened numerous investment opportunit­ies and improved property values everywhere. It is responsibl­e for keeping our economy a growth leader the decrease in investment inflows and value of exports notwithsta­nding.

How Drilon, stalwart of the do-nothing Aquino III administra­tion, could arrive at the conclusion this program is a dismal failure is puzzling. It can only be a measure of the cynical posturing of an incompeten­t opposition.

BCDA president and presidenti­al adviser on the flagship projects Vince Dizon, the most relentless of Duterte’s men, appeared before the Senate to educate the senators on the progress of the infra program.

In the face of the compelling rundown of the projects underway, Drilon shifted tack. He questioned how the infra investment­s made at Clark New City will earn their keep. This was something the wily senator never asked of his pet project: the costly Iloilo Convention Center.

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