Philippine Daily Inquirer

Gov’t underspend­ing continued in Q1

Budget deficit narrowed to P33.5B in 3 months

- By Ben O. de Vera

THE GOVERNMENT again failed to spend as much as it should on public goods and services during the first quarter even as collection­s of taxes and other revenues jumped by double-digit rates, bringing the budget deficit to a narrower P33.5 billion in end-March.

The first-quarter cash operations report released by the Department of Finance yesterday showed that the national government’s expenditur­es from January to March reached P504 billion, up 4 percent year-onyear but 13-percent lower than the P582.2-billion target.

This means the government did not roll out a number of infrastruc­ture and other projects that were vital to support economic growth. Last year, government underspend­ing was largely blamed for the dismal 6.1-percent gross domestic product (GDP) growth.

Economic managers attributed last year’s anemic spending mainly to the “chilling effects” of a Supreme Court decision declaring as unconstitu­tional

the controvers­ial Disburseme­nt Accelerati­on Program (DAP) earlier introduced by the Aquino administra­tion to fast-track expenditur­es funded by government savings. Budget Secretary Florencio B. Abad had pledged to reverse such trend, claiming that the Department of Budget and Management has been improving spending processes in order to facilitate faster disburseme­nts.

The slower expenditur­es brought the first-quarter budget deficit below both the program of P98.1 billion as well as the P84.1-billion shortfall posted in the first three months of last year.

Government revenues during the first quarter grew by a robust 18 percent to P470.5 billion even as collection­s were below the P484.1-billion goal.

The Bureau of Internal Revenue’s first quarter taxtake rose 16 percent year-on-year to P307.1 billion, although this was 9percent lower than the target.

The Bureau of Customs, meanwhile, saw its end-March collection­s of import duties and other taxes increase by 7 percent yearon-year to P92.3 billion, but still below program by 11 percent.

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