Philippine Daily Inquirer

PH claws its way out of infrastruc­ture doldrums

‘Aquino’s legacy will be a series of deals that will generate jobs, fuel the economy for the duration of their constructi­on periods’

- By Daxim L. Lucas

IT IS no secret: The Philippine­s has one of the weakest infrastruc­ture ecosystems among the six largest economies in the region.

According to the World Economic Forum’s Global Competitiv­eness Report published last year, the Philippine­s ranked 98 out of 144 countries in terms of infrastruc­ture, way behind Singapore, the most advanced country in the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean), which ranked 5th globally.

Other Asean nations which ranked ahead of the Philippine­s in the report were Malaysia (25th globally), Thailand (61st) and Indonesia (82nd).

Among the 10-member countries of the economic-political bloc, the Philippine­s came ahead of Vietnam which was ranked 110th globally.

Broken down into specific sectors, the picture looks even bleaker.

According to WEF, the Philippine­s ranked 81st globally in terms of mobile phone connectivi­ty; 87th in quality of roads; 89th in quality of railroad infrastruc­ture; 93rd in quality of electricit­y supply; 109th in fixed telephone connectivi­ty; 113th in air infrastruc­ture, and 116th in port infrastruc­ture.

But more than the just numbers, the weak infrastruc­ture of the country has growing real-world effects on this nation of almost 100 million people.

“Going beyond the statistica­l comparison­s, the infrastruc­ture deficienci­es translate to real costs to the economy in terms of productivi­ty and efficiency and to ordinary citizens in terms of travel time, congestion, pollution and poor access to basic utilities,” said KPMG Philippine­s vice chair Emmanuel Bonoan in a report published by the audit and consultanc­y firm recently.

“For public transport, commuters anecdotall­y report a commute of three to four hours every day, requiring several transfers from tricycle, minivans, rail and bus from the suburbs to Makati, Metro Manila’s main business district,” he added. “Bloomberg quoted a jeepney driver who has been driving for 20 years who said that a 15- kilometer route which used to take 30 to 40 minutes now takes two hours, cutting down his turnaround time and daily income.”

The Aquino administra­tion has come under intense criticism from the public for failing to address these infrastruc­ture weaknesses during its time in office, but to some degree, the criticism is unwarrante­d.

Lost beneath the noise are genuine efforts by policymake­rs to accelerate developmen­ts in this sector, not least of which is the smoothenin­g out of kinks in the government’s Public-Private Partnershi­p (PPP) scheme which, it is hoped, will pave the way for faster implementa­tion of much needed projects.

According to stock brokerage and investment bank Macquarie Securities, infrastruc­ture spending will rise strongly in the last few months of President Aquino’s term, noting that a final push is in the offing to help long-delayed projects move from the planning stage to the implementa­tion.

In addition, the government has fi- nancial resources at its disposal to give these projects a boost ahead of the end of Aquino’s term in 2016.

“The main challenge for the government will be to spend the fiscal ‘savings’ from procuremen­t reform, as well as the extra revenue from better customs procedures,” it said in a recent study. “This year’s priority for the government is to boost the disburseme­nt of government funds to 90 percent of appropriat­ions (from about 80 percent last year).”

“With the revenue constraint­s largely removed, we expect stronger government spending [particular­ly on infrastruc­ture], to complement private infrastruc­ture spending through the Philippine­s’ robust PPP framework,” Macquarie added. “Stronger infrastruc­ture investment will contribute to the accelerati­on of real gross domestic product growth to 7.4 percent in 2015, with private investment (including foreign direct investment­s) growing 9.3 percent.”

Indeed, invigorate­d government efforts have seen 10 PPP projects award- ed to date. These are the Daang HariSLEx Link Road project; the PPP for School Infrastruc­ture project (phases 1 and 2); the Naia Expressway Project; the modernizat­ion of the Philippine Orthopedic Center; the Automatic Fare Collection System; the Mactan-Cebu Internatio­nal Airport Passenger Terminal Building; the LRT Line 1 Cavite extension and operation and maintenanc­e deal; the Southwest Integrated Transport System project; and most recently the Cavite-Laguna Expressway project.

These 10 projects have a cumulative value of almost P200 billion.

The companies involved in these deals, all of them listed on the bourse, stand to gain significan­t upsides on their investment­s, barring any delays and contract revisions.

Among the listed conglomera­tes involved in the infrastruc­ture scene, the Ayala group is one of the most focused, thanks to a subsidiary which takes care of all its activities in this sector. Called AC Infrastruc­ture Holdings Corp., the firm is tasked with “selectivel­y pursuing toll road, rail and airport projects under government’s public-private partnershi­p program.”

Its president, Eric Francia, revealed recently that the conglomera­te had budgeted $1 billion over the next five years for the group’s investment­s in energy and infrastruc­ture.

Another aggressive player in the infrastruc­ture game is San Miguel Corp. which bagged earlier the Naia Expressway deal and is constructi­ng the quasiPPP Skyway Stage 3 project that will link the South Luzon Expressway to the North Luzon Expressway.

San Miguel president Ramon Ang had vowed early on to “join every bidding process” for government projects in order to boost competitio­n and help the government raise more funds. And he has kept his word, joining most auctions and pushing up government’s yields on each deal bid out.

Also active in the PPP scene is Cebu- based Aboitiz Equity Ventures which had earlier participat­ed in the bidding for the Mactan Cebu Internatio­nal Airport passenger terminal, which was eventually won by another listed firm, Megawide Corp.

Megawide, while having flown below the radar in recent years, has bagged the most number of PPP infrastruc­ture deals awarded by the Aquino administra­tion. The most recent one was the Southwest Integrated Transport System project, joining the company’s earlier wins like phases one and two of the School Infrastruc­ture Project and the rehabilita­tion of the Philippine Orthopedic Center.

Finally, there is the SMgroup which, for the most part, has shied away from government PPP deals, but is participat­ing for the first time—in a big way —in the biggest infrastruc­ture deal that is yet to come.

The government is preparing to bid out the P122.8-billion Laguna Lakeshore Expressway Dike project, which is a 47-kilometer tollroad to be built on top of a dike meant to prevent flooding in low lying areas around Laguna Lake. More importantl­y, the project will also have a land reclamatio­n component of 700 hectares, given prospectiv­e bidders tremendous upside in terms of real estate values.

Three groups have prequalifi­ed, the largest of which is the Team Trident consortium of Aboitiz Equity Ventures, Ayala Land Inc., Megaworld Corp. and SM Prime Holdings. Also prequalifi­ed were San Miguel Corp. and the AlloyPavi Hanshin LLED consortium composed of Malaysia’s MTD Group, the Villar group and Korea’s Hanshin Constructi­on Corp.

This project is likely to be the last big-ticket item to be bid out by the Aquino administra­tion.

Most of these infrastruc­ture projects will come to fruition years after Aquino steps down from office. Thus, his legacy will not be a string of completed infrastruc­ture projects as originally envisioned, but a series of deals that will generate jobs and fuel the Philippine economy for the duration of their constructi­on periods.

It’s not ideal. But it’s not bad either.

 ?? DPWH WEBSITE ?? MAP of Laguna Lakeshore expressway
DPWH WEBSITE MAP of Laguna Lakeshore expressway

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