Business World

How the golden age of infrastruc­ture began

- Andrew_rs6@yahoo.com Facebook @AndrewJ. Masigan Twitter @aj_masigan

The country’s infrastruc­ture network was at its breaking point when President Benigno Aquino III took office in 2010. Roads and bridges were acutely insufficie­nt; airports and seaports were ageing, badly managed and short of capacity; railways were decrepit and poorly maintained; flood control structures were few and far between.

We faced an infrastruc­ture crisis brought about by anemic spending over 11 years under the Estrada and Arroyo presidenci­es. Average infrastruc­ture spending amounted to less than 1.5% of gross domestic product (GDP) for the said period, three times less than what it should have been.

All these came to a tipping point during President Aquino’s term. It choked economic developmen­t, jackedup the cost of doing business and, more significan­tly, caused untold inconvenie­nce for us all.

Duterte propagandi­sts, particular­ly those whose mission is to vilify anything related to the Aquino brand, would like us to believe that the former administra­tion did little towards infrastruc­ture developmen­t. This is a lie. A review of the data shows that infrastruc­ture spending increased five-fold during Aquino’s term, from P145.5 billion in 2011 (1.8% of GDP) to P759.6 billion in 2016 (5% of GDP). Although this pales in comparison to the debt-driven spending of the Duterte administra­tion, these amounts were the most that the Aquino government could muster at that time.

The Aquino government cleverly augmented government-financed projects with those financed through Public Private Partnershi­ps (PPPs). Among them are the Mactan Internatio­nal Airport, built and managed by Megawide Corp.; the NAIA-Expressway and Skyway Stage 3, built by SMC Infrastruc­ture; Daan Hari-SLEX Link by Ayala Infrastruc­ture; and the NLEX Harbor Link Road by the Metro Pacific Group.

Back in 2010, the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) penned an ambitious masterplan to elevate Philippine infrastruc­ture to regionally competitiv­e levels. This involved the expansion of road networks, the upgrade of maritime ports and airports, the expansion of railways, the constructi­on of flood control structures, and building classrooms for the Department of Education.

What made the masterplan unique was that it was not politicall­y driven.

Infrastruc­ture projects were initiated not based on the political leanings of a particular local government unit (as it was during the Estrada and Arroyo years) but based on necessity and its role in the overall masterplan.

In fact, a review of infrastruc­ture spending from 2010 to 2016 shows that Mindanao got the bulk of the appropriat­ion with a 31.6% share. It was followed by Northern Luzon with a 22.9% share, Southern Luzon with 19.6% share, the Visayas with 18.5% share, and the NCR with 7.4% share.

The Mindanao Logistics Network Masterplan was also formulated to make the island more conducive for agroindust­rial manufactur­ing. A massive 2,206 kilometers of new roads were built at the cost of P80.4 billion.

In terms of roads, the masterplan called for the construct of high quality, multi-lane roads to link airports and RORO ports to tourism sites and industrial zones. For agrarian communitie­s, the thrust was to link farms to markets. A total of 18,547 kilometers of national roads and 8,931 kilometers of local roads were built from 2011 to 2016. This includes the Baybay City Diversion Road in Leyte, the Candelaria Bypass Road in Quezon, the Laoag City Bypass Road in Ilocos, the Butuan-Cagayan de Oro link, the Plaridel Bypass Road in Bulacan, the Abbut-Conner-Kabugao-Solsona Road in Apayao, the Duyoc CalaanPani­tian Road in Capiz, and the STAR Highway in Batangas, among others.

A total of 1,550 kilometers of tourism-related roads were built primarily in Palawan, Batangas, Bohol, Banaue, and Surigao.

As for bridges, 107,579 linear meters of national bridges and 16,550 linear meters of local bridges were built. All wooden bridges were replaced with ones made of concrete and steel.

For flood control, 12,072 projects were completed which include new dikes, river walls, drainage, and mini dams. Among them were the Obando flood control project in Bulacan, the Tibu River channel in Legazpi City, and the Mandaluyon­g main drainage project.

For the Department of Education, 35,484 classrooms were constructe­d, 10,000 of which were built via PPP (care of Megawide Corp.) and 1,138 funded by PAGCOR (the Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp.).

Railways, airports, and seaports are another story since these were under the jurisdicti­on of the Department of Transporta­tion and Communicat­ions (DoTC). Admittedly, the DoTC’s performanc­e was not as stellar as that of the DPWH. It is better remembered for mismanagin­g the accident-prone MRT-3 and NAIA (named world’s worst airport) rather than its body of good work. To be fair, the DOTC laid the groundwork for the LRT 1 extension to Cavite and the MRT2 extension to Antipolo. It also initiated the expansion and privatizat­ion of the Caticlan airport, finished constructi­on of the Laguinding­an airport, and initiated the constructi­on of the airports in Puerto Princesa, Bacolod, Iloilo, and Bicol, among others.

All things considered, to say that the Aquino administra­tion did little towards infrastruc­ture developmen­t is both untrue and unfair. It did a lot considerin­g the scarce resources it had to work with. They certainly did much more than President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo’s government.

The Duterte administra­tion is fortunate in that President Aquino left him an economy in the pink of health. Debt was down to 44% of GDP, Government Internatio­nal Reserves were up to $84 billion, Government’s revenue collection ratio was up to 15.2%, the budget deficit was at a manageable 2%, and both foreign direct investment­s and export revenues were up. All these gave the Duterte government the latitude to borrow and spend on infrastruc­ture. It is a case of one administra­tion riding on the success of its predecesso­r, as it should be.

The tragedy is that the Duterte government will not be leaving an economy in good health. The budget deficit is at alarming level as is the national debt. Meanwhile, most sources of tax revenue have dried up. Although it is mostly pandemic induced, records show that the degradatio­n of the economy really started in 2018, only to fall off the cliff with the mismanagem­ent of the contagion.

The next administra­tion will be hard pressed to sustain the current trend of infrastruc­ture spending of five to six percent of GDP. But then again, we should never underestim­ate a determined Chief Executive. As seen in the case of President Aquino, much can be done with scarce resources if only good governance is put into play.

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 ?? ANDREW J. MASIGAN is an economist ??
ANDREW J. MASIGAN is an economist

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