Philippine Daily Inquirer

Some views in ‘Fiscal balancing act’ ill-informed

- —LANI C. VILLANUEVA, public informatio­n unit head, Department of Budget and Management

WE TAKE exception to the INQUIRER’s June 13 editorial titled “Fiscal balancing act,” which claimed that: “[W]ith bureaucrat­ic red tape stalling meaningful private-sector participat­ion in the public-private partnershi­p program, the government failed to take up the spending slack” and the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) “would not, could not, and did not push the money out the other end fast enough.”

Consider the facts: In the first month of each of the past six years, the DBM was able to release nearly 86 percent of line agency budgets—a remarkable improvemen­t from 79.8 percent in 2011 to a high of almost 92 percent in 2013. The shift to the GAARD (General Appropriat­ions Act-as-Release Document) regime—a policy which did away with the time-consuming and graft-prone Saros (special allotment release orders) and treats the GAA as the release document—made this possible. This change not only made funds directly and immediatel­y available to line agencies; it also enforced proper check and balance and transparen­cy of fund releases.

Was public spending an issue with the public-private partnershi­p (PPP) projects and was there ever such issue involving the DBM under this administra­tion? That’s not the case.

As of May 31 this year, 12 PPP projects have been awarded; five are expected to be completed within this administra­tion’s term; 15 other projects are in various stages of procuremen­t, while another 15 are under developmen­t. In comparison, during the previous three administra­tions, only six PPP projects were awarded. Our PPP initiative­s have thus been hailed as one of the bestperfor­ming in the region, with Partnershi­ps UK praising the administra­tion’s PPP Center as the “Best Central/Regional Government PPP Promoter” during the 2014 Partnershi­p Awards.

Onthe other hand, allocation for infrastruc­ture and other capital outlays as a percentage of GDP was at its highest (averaging 3 percent) in 20112016. The two previous administra­tions’ combined outlays reached 1.6 percent only. Besides, spending since 2011 showed an upward trajectory with an average growth of 11.8 percent.

The editorial also erred in claiming that the DBM “had great difficulty pushing government money out to where it was needed,” because that was exactly what the national government sought to do and accomplish­ed by crafting a national budget that allocated more resources to priority programs that helped reduce poverty and create more jobs.

The fact is, no administra­tion since 1986 has given as much resources to social and economic services as this administra­tion. Social services grew by an average of 16.8 percent from 2011 to 2014, a great improvemen­t from the 10.3 percent and 7 percent growth during the Estrada and Arroyo administra­tions, respective­ly.

The combined share of economic and social services under the Aquino administra­tion is 60.1 percent, significan­tly higher than Estrada’s 56.5 percent and Arroyo’s 51.4 percent. And the average share of economic and social services in the GDP reached 4.2 percent and 5.9 percent, respective­ly, from 2011 to 2014, which is higher compared to the 3.9-percent and 4.9-percent average for the two sectors from 2001 to 2010.

The problem has not been with the releases of allotments, which is the responsibi­lity of the DBM, but in the obligation of budgets, the disburseme­nt of cash, and the timely reporting of physical and financial accomplish­ments, which the implementi­ng agencies are principall­y tasked to do. This is where the challenge is.

The DBM has sought to address this institutio­nal weakness by strengthen­ing the planning capacities of the line agencies, linking plans to budgets, and introducin­g reforms in procuremen­t and budget execution, such as GAARD, early procuremen­t process, creation of full-time delivery units in agencies to monitor and troublesho­ot project implementa­tion. As a result of these reforms, implementi­ng agencies have generally shown marked improvemen­ts in budget obligation, execution and disburseme­nts these past three years, particular­ly in the area of infrastruc­ture spending. In the first quarter of this year, this improvemen­t contribute­d significan­tly to the 6.9-percent GDP growth, the highest in Asia.

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