Philippine Daily Inquirer

Gov’t underspend­ing continues

Budget deficit falls short of P167.1-B target for first 4 months

- By Ben O. de Vera @bendeveraI­NQ

The government continued to underspend during the first four months of the year, resulting in a below-program budget deficit of P115.9 billion as of April.

Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III said on Wednesday that the end-April deficit was P51.2-billion lower than the P167.1-billion program, but P85.7-billion higher than the P30.2-billion deficit in the first four months of last year.

From January to April, expenditur­es jumped 31 percent to P1.04 trillion from P798.4 billion a year ago, while tax and nontax revenues climbed 21 percent to P927.3 billion from a year ago’s P768.3 billion.

Dominguez said that the end-April revenues were 7-percent higher than target.

The finance chief earlier attributed the above-target performanc­e of the Bureaus of In- ternal Revenue and of Customs, the country’s two biggest revenue agencies, to the gains from the Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion (TRAIN) Act.

Republic Act No. 10963 or the TRAIN law since Jan. 1 this year jacked up or slapped new excise taxes on cigarettes, oil, sugary drinks and vehicles, among other goods, to compensate for the restructur­ed personal income tax regime that raised the tax-exempt cap to an annual salary of P250,000.

The programmed revenue haul for the first four months was P905.9 billion, while expenditur­es should have reached P1.07 trillion.

As such, the government was unable to spend all of the amount allocated for public goods and services during the January-to-April period.

Economic managers had said that there would no longer be underspend­ing during the Duterte administra­tion even as they narrowed it to 3 percent of programmed government spending last year from doubledigi­t figures in previous years.

In April alone, the government posted a budget surplus of P46.3 billion, National Treasurer Rosalia V. de Leon said.

The government historical­ly posts a fiscal surplus during the month of April as revenues outpace disburseme­nts following the income tax filing deadline.

Last month’s surplus, however, was lower than the P52.8 billion posted in April last year and below the P52-billion target.

For Dominguez, “we’re having a good start in the first trimester of the year but are ever vigilant of developmen­ts in the oil and capital markets abroad that may negatively affect the Philippine economy.”

The government had programmed a P523.7-billion budget deficit for 2018, with expenditur­es expected to reach P3.37 trillion while generating total revenues of P2.85 trillion.

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