Business World

Underspend­ing, poor implementa­tion hounded ADB-backed project in PHL

- Laforga Beatrice M.

AN AGRARIAN reform project aimed at reducing poverty in rural areas in the Philippine­s was deemed “less than successful” due to underspend­ing and poor implementa­tion, the Asian Developmen­t Bank (ADB) said.

In an assessment report, the multilater­al lender said the Agrarian Reform Communitie­s Project II was unable to address delays and policy roadblocks, and “less than efficient” in using the funds.

“The project completion report rated the project less than effective although it was not possible to assess the project outcome targets due to the lack of reliable data,” the ADB said.

While the ADB-backed project was aligned with the government’s mediumterm plan, it noted this was not aligned with the cost-sharing policy of local government units (LGUs) for rural infrastruc­ture.

The target to implement 537 sub-projects across 19 provinces was too ambitious according to the ADB, since LGUs were only able to shoulder 10-20% of the total cost. This is far from the 50% share required of LGUs under the revised cost-sharing policy with the National Government.

Issues over the increase in equity requiremen­t were not sufficient­ly addressed and heavily affected the outcome of the project.

The ADB also cited the “incomplete and inconsiste­nt guidelines” for the LGUs to gain access to the performanc­e-based grant system.

Underspend­ing and inefficien­t use of funds also hounded the project’s implementa­tion.

The $208.4-million project was implemente­d from 2009 to 2017. The ADB lent $70 million for the project, the OPEC Fund for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (OFID) granted $30 million while the remaining $108 million were sourced from the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR, $52.4 million) and through equity by LGUs ($56 million).

However, only 57% or $118.7 million were actually spent: $21.8 million or 31.1% of ADB’s loan; $12.8 million or 18.3% of OFID loan; while the government released $64.75 million, or 60% of its estimated share.

“The project spent 70% of its approved budget on rural infrastruc­ture and delivered only 40% of FMRs (farm-to-market roads) and rehabilita­ted 38% of irrigation schemes,” the ADB said.

The ADB noted there was 33% overspendi­ng on project implementa­tion and management, as well as implementa­tion delays.

The project’s developmen­t impact was likewise rated as “less than satisfacto­ry” even after 161 agrarian reform communitie­s directly benefited versus the target of 152 communitie­s, since capacity-building for local organizati­ons fell short.

The target to expand crop gross margins and yield positive returns for businesses was “partially achieved,” but the project failed to provide improved land titles to 22,000 agrarian reform beneficiar­ies since only 10.3% received their titles.

Around 770 kilometers of farm-to-market roads were constructe­d and 4,649 hectares of small-scale irrigation­s were establishe­d, making up 40% and 38% of the targets, respective­ly.

The ADB recommende­d better collaborat­ion among state offices in implementi­ng projects, especially during the design and planning phase.

“Where LGUs are key to a project, a thorough assessment of technical, administra­tive, and financial capacity should be completed in advance,” the ADB said.

BusinessWo­rld sought DAR for comment on Thursday but did not get a response by the paper’s deadline.

The ADB has set a $3.9-billion lending program for the Philippine­s this year, slightly lower than the $4.24 billion it lent to the country in 2020. —

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