Manila Bulletin

Dominguez vows to fast-track big-ticket infra projects

- By CHINO S. LEYCO

Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III said that the government is continuous­ly upgrading its institutio­nal

processes on approving and executing big-ticket infrastruc­ture projects to hasten the implementa­tion of its ambitious “Build, Build, Build” program consisting of 75 flagship projects with a combined public investment of $170 billion over the next five years.

Dominguez said the measures that the government has undertaken to speed up project implementa­tion include advancing right-of-way acquisitio­n and land resettleme­nt prior to the loan signing for the financing of infrastruc­ture projects and the designatio­n of the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) as the procuremen­t agent.

The government has also frontloade­d budget allocation­s for its counterpar­t funding commitment­s and establishe­d project monitoring offices to closely observe the completion of projects.

“In the Philippine­s, the infrastruc­ture program is at the core of our strategy for rapid and inclusive growth,” Dominguez told his fellow finance ministers in ASEAN, investors, financial advisors and project developers gathered at the 8th World Bank-Singapore Infrastruc­ture Finance Summit.

He said that complement­ary to this “Build, Build, Build” program is the Duterte administra­tion’s Comprehens­ive Tax Reform Program (CTRP) to raise the Philippine­s’ tax effort over the regional average and provide a steady revenue stream for the government’s unpreceden­ted infra buildup.

The “Build, Build, Build” program and CTRP are designed to help the government grow the domestic economy by 7 percent or more into the medium term and pull down poverty incidence to just 14 percent by the time President Duterte leaves office in 2022, Dominguez said.

To further fast-track the implementa­tion of projects, the Department of Finance (DOF), along with the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority (NEDA), is now finalizing the guidelines for the implementa­tion of a “3-in-1” process in which the approval of the NEDA Board, the Forward Obligation­al Authority of the DBM and Special Presidenti­al Authority are issued all at once rather than in span of several weeks or months as was previously done.

The traditiona­l Public-Private Partnershi­p (PPP) method, which was “simply too tedious, too complex and prone to unnecessar­y delays” was also modified to a “hybrid PPP” model so that the government now implements the projects using a combinatio­n of its own budget, the massive inflows of Official Developmen­t Assistance (ODA) and funds raised from bond floats at investment-grade rates to speed up project execution, reduce completion risks and deliver the economic benefits to the people as soon as possible, Dominguez said.

“We continue to improve the institutio­nal processes regarding project approval and execution. It is our desire the see the strategic projects completed at the shortest possible time in order to immediatel­y realize their economic value and lessen unnecessar­y financing costs,” Dominguez said at the forum.

The government’s “Build, Build, Build” program,” Dominguez said “benefits from expanded ODA flows from our friends in the region such as China and Japan” as well as from “a revived interest in infrastruc­ture investment­s among multilater­al institutio­ns such as the Asian Developmen­t Bank (ADB), World Bank (WB) and Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank (AIIB).”

“These institutio­ns have evolved a keen sense of the importance of infrastruc­turebased interventi­on to assist in economic emergence,” Dominguez said. “We have combined loans and grants to arrive at economical­ly astute and technicall­y superior designs for the projects we intend to undertake.”

Given that infrastruc­ture investment­s have the highest multiplier effects, Dominguez said the Duterte administra­tion is undertakin­g its 75 strategic infra projects to sustain the growth momentum, create jobs and attract investment­s. Of these projects, 23 are “shovel-ready” and the rest are expected to pass the approval processes within the year, he said.

“Over the next five years, we expect to invest about US$170 billion (about 18.5 trillion) in providing better infrastruc­ture projects for our economy and our people. Our foremost considerat­ion is improving transport facilities that will make movement of goods and people more efficient. We are building several railway lines, a subway system for the Manila area, and new roads that will serve as growth corridors for key areas of the country,” Dominguez said.

It was only in 2017, under the leadership of President Duterte that public spending on infrastruc­ture under the “Build, Build, Build” program rose to 5.4 percent of GDP, and this year to 6.3 percent, which is 25.4 percent of the national budget.

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