BusinessMirror

GOVT SELLING MINING ASSETS TO RAISE CASH

- By Bernadette D. Nicolas @Bnicolasbm

FINANCE Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III said they are pushing through with the privatizat­ion of government’s mining assets to raise more revenues, but admitted that the state no longer has any more “crown jewels” left to be privatized.

Dominguez said the first one that they are eyeing to privatize is the Basay mine, although he said they still have to deal with several issues before they can push through with its disposal.

“I don’t know yet how much the exact valuation is and how we will bid it out, but that is the first mine we are doing. As you know, when it comes to dispositio­n of mines, it is more complicate­d than just selling a piece of land or an ordinary asset because when you come to mines, number one, there are lots of claims and countercla­ims and challenges to claims. That’s the number one issue. Number two, there are security, physical security issues. And number three, there is a valuation of what you are really selling,” Dominguez told reporters in a recent interview.

Earlier technical studies by the Privatizat­ion and Management Office (PMO) showed the Basay mine in Negros Oriental is estimated to contain at least 105 million tons of copper ore and could generate at least P1 billion.

Land titles, too

APART from the government’s mining assets, Dominguez also said that PMO and the Philippine Deposit Insurance Corporatio­n are also eyeing to privatize 30,000 land titles.

However, Dominguez said it would be an uphill battle to privatize the remaining government assets, including these land titles.

“Yes, we are continuing to privatize whatever assets that we have. But quite frankly, we don’t have any more crown jewels, okay. that has been privatized by previous administra­tions already. And the ones we are left with are really the difficult ones to privatize,” Dominguez said.

“I don’t know if you are aware that PDIC and PMO have in excess of 30,000 land titles that are in the process of being evaluated and being privatized, being sold. And these are really difficult assets. These are not chunky assets anymore, like before you had big assets like banks, etc. So we don’t have those big chunks anymore. It’s really the difficult ones to privatize now,” he added.

As for the privatizat­ion of gaming activities of Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corporatio­n and Philippine Charity Sweepstake­s Office, Dominguez said they are currently in talks with them but no conclusion has been made yet.

In June this year, Environmen­t Secretary Roy A. Cimatu said the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources, through the Mines and Geoscience­s Bureau, is now preparing an inventory of essential mining informatio­n on the government’s idle mining assets.

For this year, the national government expects its budget deficit to reach P1.86 trillion or 9.3 percent of GDP, even higher than the P1.37 trillion or 7.6 percent of GDP in 2020.

In 2019, the budget deficit stood at P660.2 billion or 3.4 percent of GDP.

Meanwhile, the national government’s debt this year is also expected to balloon to P11.73 trillion by the end of this year, up by 19.8 percent from P9.795 trillion in 2020. This is also projected to further swell in 2022 to P13.42 trillion.

As a percentage of GDP, Dominguez earlier said the debt-to-gdp ratio this year is projected to further rise to 59.1 percent and peak next year at 60.8 percent—slightly above the internatio­nally accepted threshold—before gradually tapering off to 60.7 percent and 59.7 percent in 2023 and 2024.

The Department of Finance sees the national government returning to its pre-pandemic debt and budget deficit levels as early as 2024 or by 2025 if the recommende­d fiscal measures are passed early by the next administra­tion and if the economy quickly recovers.

 ?? ROY DOMINGO ?? THE Tenement in Western Bicutan in Taguig City, known for its tribute murals painted on its central courtyard that was turned into a basketball court, pays tribute to Tokyo 2020 Olympics medalists Hidilyn Diaz, Nesthy Petecio, Eumir Marcial and Carlo Paalam. Among its most notable tributes earlier were Lebron James, who visited the place in 2016, and Kobe and Gianna Bryant, who died in 2020.
ROY DOMINGO THE Tenement in Western Bicutan in Taguig City, known for its tribute murals painted on its central courtyard that was turned into a basketball court, pays tribute to Tokyo 2020 Olympics medalists Hidilyn Diaz, Nesthy Petecio, Eumir Marcial and Carlo Paalam. Among its most notable tributes earlier were Lebron James, who visited the place in 2016, and Kobe and Gianna Bryant, who died in 2020.

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