Philippine Daily Inquirer

WHY should you be wary of the dragon bearing gifts?

- RANDY DAVID

Following President Duterte’s state visit to China in October 2016, 27 deals have been signed with Chinese state entities and business corporatio­ns covering around US$9 billion in loans and US$15 billion in investment­s. The President proudly touts these achievemen­ts as having been made possible by the reversal of the previous administra­tion’s unfriendly attitude toward China.

These loans and investment­s are intended to jump-start the Duterte administra­tion’s ambitious infrastruc­ture program and to build production facilities aimed at promoting inclusive developmen­t. Apart from the large sums of money being committed by China, very little is known of their terms and conditions, and the local parties involved in these foreignass­isted projects and investment­s.

That much can be gleaned from a recent study done by Kenneth Cardenas, a former sociology instructor at the University of the Philippine­s and currently a PhD student at York University in Canada. Published by the Philippine Center for Investigat­ive Journalism, Cardenas’ study may be accessed at http://pcij.org/stories/dutertes-china-deals-dissected/

The study raises issues and questions that are reminiscen­t of the debates about foreign aid in the 1970s and 1980s, when the chief villain was Western imperialis­m and its associated institutio­ns—the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank. The classic work in this field remains Teresa Hayter’s “Aid as Imperialis­m,” a slim volume that ironically bears much of the influence of Maoist thinking of that era.

There were also a number of well documented studies about Japanese economic aid during that period. Many of these were done by Japanese scholars who could not bear the thought of Japan ensuring its continued prosperity by exploiting the needs of poor countries in the guise of providing them aid. The conclusion­s they drew are instructiv­e for our time: Japanese aid had been mostly in aid of Japanese business.

In study after study, it was shownthat projects funded with outright grants or concession­al loans were found to be greatly overpriced. They came with Japanese project con- sultants who were paid astronomic­al fees. The projects chosen matched not so much the priorities of the country being aided as the needs of Japanese companies to generate more business abroad. They tapped local partners or proxies that had the political clout to push projects through the corrupt-ridden labyrinths of Third World bureaucrac­ies. Some projects were completed, many others were not. But it didn’t really matter so long as the recipient government assumed the obligation to pay. Can Chinese aid be any different? Deborah Brautigam, a scholar based at the American University in Washington D.C., has been a close observer of China’s aid activities in Africa. Her book, “The Dragon’s Gift” (Oxford University Press, 2011), is the most comprehens­ive account of the nature and consequenc­es of Chinese aid. It would be well for our profession­al civil servants at the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority to glean some lessons from this book before they approve any of the deals with China, particular­ly those that ultimately have to be paid with our people’s money.

Brautigam’s book might shed some light on the incredible problems that the Philippine­s has found itself embroiled in with regard to China-funded projects like Northrail and the NBN-ZTE, both contracted during the China-friendly administra­tion of President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo.

Both projects have been canceled—with no railway and broadband network in sight—but they have left a trail of huge debts that continue to bleed the nation’s coffers. We might remember the cases that were filed and the political scandals that attended both projects. But only a few may know how much money has been paid to the China National Machinery and Equipment Corporatio­n Group, which was supposed to supply the railway system that would link Metro Manila to Central and Northern Luzon, and the China Eximbank that provided the bulk of the financing.

At the signing on Dec. 30, 2003, for Northrail’s Phase 1, the original contract price agreed was US$503 million. Of this amount, $400 million was to be borne by the Chinese company, and $21.5 million by the Philippine counterpar­t through a loan from the Developmen­t Bank of the Philippine­s. Six years later, the Chinese raised the project cost to $593.88 million, and the Philippine government did not object.

When the project was canceled in 2012, the Philippine government filed for arbitratio­n. A Commission on Audit report released in 2013 showed that as of December 2011, we had paid the Chinese company a total of $210.48 million for work supposedly accomplish­ed. The COA claims that based on actual work done, there was an overpaymen­t of $129 million. We assume that the past administra­tion refused to pay more until a ruling on this case is issued.

It appears, however, that the present administra­tion may be taking a different route. Last May 7, at the sidelines of the Asian Developmen­t Bank meeting in Japan, Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez was asked about Northrail and the case the Philippine government had submitted for arbitratio­n. Business Mirror quotes him as saying that the arbitratio­n was not just a “managerial headache” but also a “huge” financial burden.

“I signed this huge check for an idiot thing that never gets done. I tell you, myhands bleed when I do that. And there’s some more to pay so [lets end it]. What’s past is past, everybody made a mistake here, let’s move ahead. I think that’s the right way to go.”

The past is indeed past, but that doesn't mean we can’t learn from it.

———— public.lives@gmail.com

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