Business World

NG posts third budget surplus, though smallest year to date

- R. J. N. Ignacio

NATIONAL GOVERNMENT (NG) posted its third budget surplus for this year in May, as revenues outpaced spending, but it was the smallest surfeit so far, according to official data the Bureau of the Treasury released on Tuesday.

The fiscal balance logged a surplus for the second straight month at P2.6 billion in May — smaller than the surfeits of P86.9 billion in April and January’s P44.5 billion — but still turning around from a P32.9-billion deficit a year ago.

May saw revenues grow 22.5% to P317.2 billion from P259 billion a year ago, as collection­s of the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) grew 19.1% to P204.8 billion from P172 billion and those of the Bureau of Customs increased by 10.3% to P58.2 billion from P52.7 billion. Non-tax revenues — consisting mainly of subsidies to cover taxes on government transactio­ns — surged by 61.3% to P51.8 billion from P32.1 billion.

The government spent 7.8% more at P314.7 billion in May from P291.9 billion a year ago, with interest payments falling 6.8% to P19.7 billion from P21.1 billion and “others” — a category that includes infrastruc­ture and other capital outlays — rising nine percent to P291 billion from P270.8 billion with “implementa­tion of the last tranche of salary increase of government personnel, release of mid-year bonus and the execution of new programs” after the approval in mid-April of the P3.662-trillion national budget.

May cut the year-to-date fiscal deficit by 99.4% to P809 million from P138.7 billion in 2018’s first five months, as revenues grew 10.7% to P1.314 trillion from P1.186 trillion, while the government spent 0.8% less at P1.315 trillion from P1.325 trillion. —

 ??  ?? Read the full story by scanning the QR code with your smartphone or by typing the link <bit.ly/May2019Bud­get>
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