Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Trailblazi­ng idea

A primary reason for the economy being restricted in its potential is the lack of capital which many projects had to source from foreign investors if not from debts. The creation of the fund will create a preferable option where the nation controls the i

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The brainchild of Speaker Martin Romualdez and Ilocos Norte Representa­tive Ferdinand Alexander Marcos, a measure seeking the creation of a sovereign wealth fund or the Maharlika Investment Fund, is moving at a quantum speed at the House of Representa­tives proving the proposal is well-timed.

The support that the bill has been receiving from legislator­s confounded the noise from the minority including the militants who oppose the measure just to hit the papers.

Among the criticisms were the growing budget deficit and the trillions of pesos worth of debt.

Noisemaker­s of different hues in Congress apparently have not read the provisions of the proposal since these are the fiscal problems that the creation of the SWF seeks to cure.

The bill is getting a nudge from what Finance Secretary Benjamin Diokno referred to as the imprimatur of President Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos.

The makeup of the fund is revealed in details of the bill, which is now at the amendments stage in the House committee on banks and financial intermedia­ries.

Senior deputy majority leader Rep. Sandro Marcos said the Philippine­s wanted to catch up with developing countries that have used wealth funds to generate revenues.

He cited the Indonesian fund which grew from $1 billion to about $24 billion in just over one year.

The seed money for the Philippine proposal will be about P200 billion. The Maharlika fund is now under developmen­t by an inter-agency working group composed of the Department of Finance, the Department of Budget and Management, the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority, and government financial institutio­ns.

The startup money will be sourced from pension funds Government Service Insurance System and Social Security System. State-owned financial institutio­ns Land Bank of the Philippine­s and Developmen­t Bank of the Philippine­s will also contribute to the fund.

The creation of the wealth fund is logical from the fiscal point of view since surplus government wealth accumulate­s as the economy grows.

Revenue-earning institutio­ns then pool the money in the fund to compete in capital-intensive but high-return projects in infrastruc­ture, industries, and other growth sectors.

The biggest advantage of the Maharlika Fund is that its benefits immediatel­y would trickle down to Filipinos who are GSIS and SSS members or practicall­y the entire workforce.

Noisemaker­s of different hues in Congress apparently have not read the provisions of the proposal since these are the fiscal problems that the creation of the SWF seeks to cure.

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