The Philippine Star

Japan extends P23.5-B loan to Phl

TO FUND CORONAVIRU­S RESPONSE EFFORTS

- By MARY GRACE PADIN

The Philippine­s has secured a loan of 50 billion yen (P23.5 billion) from the Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency (JICA) to augment funds for the government’s coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID-19) response efforts.

Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez, on behalf of the Philippine government, and JICA chief representa­tive Eigo Azukizawa signed the loan agreement for the COVID-19 Crisis Response Emergency Support (CCRESL) yesterday at the DOF’s main office in Manila.

Japanese Ambassador Koji Haneda said the Philippine­s is the first country to receive financing support from this JICA facility.

“The loan we signed today was launched to help developing countries in augmenting their COVID-19 response programs and pump priming their economies. We are proud to say that the Philippine­s is the very first recipient of this highly concession­al loan specifical­ly designed by the government of Japan to address the global COVID-19 crisis,” he said.

Dominguez said the loan would help the government cover its funding requiremen­ts amid a widening budget deficit brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic.

“We cannot understate the importance of this particular emergency support loan. As you may now know, our deficitto-GDP ratio will more than double this year as tax collection­s are down, even as the government spends more to beef up the health care system, provide relief to families, workers and other sectors hardest hit by the pandemic. We also need to fund our economic recovery program,” Dominguez said.

“This facility will help us cover our budget expenditur­es during this very challengin­g time,” he added.

This year, economic managers expect the country’s fiscal deficit to widen to P1.613 trillion or 8.4 percent of gross domestic product, higher than the original deficit-to-GDP ceiling of 3.2 percent set before the pandemic.

According to the DOF, the CCRESL supplement­s the Asian Developmen­t Bank (ADB)’s $1.5-billion loan under the COVID-19 Active Response and Expenditur­e Support (CARES) Program.

To be implemente­d from 2020 to 2021 by the Department of Health (DOH) and the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority (NEDA), the loan will be utilized retroactiv­ely for the government’s COVID-19 response efforts undertaken since April 2020.

It carries a 0.01 percent interest rate per annum, payable in 15 years, inclusive of a four-year grace period.

The DOF said the loan was processed in less than a month, the quickest official developmen­t assistance (ODA) that was ever secured from Japan, in line with the “fast and sure” approach adopted by the two countries since 2017.

“Unlike regular policy based loans, this Y50 billion or P23.5 billion financing support requires no policy conditions prior to disburseme­nt. This will be immediatel­y available for withdrawal the moment the loan is declared effective,” Dominguez said.

For 2020, Finance Undersecre­tary Mark Dennis Joven said the Philippine government is eyeing to tap $8.6 billion (P436.9 billion) in official developmen­t assistance from multilater­al institutio­ns and bilateral partners.

He said the government has already contracted almost $5 billion of this amount.

Joven said Japan has already extended ¥158.46 billion in loans and ¥3.137 billion in grants so far this year.

Since the start of the Duterte administra­tion, total Jap

From B1 anese ODA has reached Y625 billion, comprising almost half of the Philippine­s’ ODA portfolio.

“Fourty-six percent of total Philippine ODA portfolio is Japanese, which is our biggest developmen­t partner,” Joven said.

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