Philippine Daily Inquirer

URBANIZATI­ON KEY TO BROADENING GROWTH

- By Doris Dumlao-Abadilla @Philbizwat­cher

Increasing urbanizati­on is the way for the Philippine­s to broaden growth and reduce income inequality, a director of leading lender BDO Unibank said.

BDO independen­t director Roy Ramos, a veteran analyst and banker who had worked for various internatio­nal institutio­ns, also argued in favor of the public private partnershi­p (PPP) framework in infrastruc­turebuildi­ng in a briefing to advocacy group Shareholde­rs Associatio­n of the Philippine­s last week.

“I wish there will be more PPPs, in other words co-opt the private sector in having a greater share in building infrastruc­ture. It’s nice to leverage the private sector because it spends a lot more capex (capital expenditur­e),” Ramos said.

“There are some projects that the government is obvi- ously in the best position to do, like roads and dams but there are projects that the private sector can do more efficientl­y and effectivel­y such as power or airports,” he said.

Recently, the Duterte administra­tion has signaled preference to having infrastruc­ture projects funded by official developmen­t assistance or via government-to-government deals instead of bidding them out to the private sector. The much-awaited five airport PPP project has been taken off the table.

One good thing happening in the country is that most of the infrastruc­ture projects planned by the government would benefit areas outside Metro Manila, Ramos said.

BDO was particular­ly bullish on increasing urbanizati­on across the country, Ramos said, adding this would translate to broader-based growth and lifting income. Urbanizati­on had the ef- fect of creating higher-paying jobs and higher quality infrastruc­ture and thereby making growth more inclusive, he said.

As proof of concept, Ramos noted that the eight most populous cities in the country were growing at a faster pace than the rest of the country. However, he said urbanizati­on was coming from a low base and occurring at a slower pace in this country. The Philippine­s was only ahead of Vietnam and India in this metric, he said.

“If you think about it, Metro Manila is as prosperous as China. It’s got the same GDP (gross domestic product) per capita income as China. The rest of the Philippine­s, unfortunat­ely, is as poor as India,” Ramos said.

Citing data as of 2014, Ramos noted that GDP per capita in Metro Manila was P365,000 compared to the P91,000 average in the rest of the country.

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