Philippine Daily Inquirer

HOUSE, DBM STICK TO THEIR GUNS

- By Leila B. Salaverria and Vince F. Nonato @Team_Inquirer

A reenacted budget for 2019 became a very real possibilit­y on Tuesday as Malacañang and the House of Representa­tives hardened their positions in a standoff over spending reform.

Worried about the consequenc­es of a reenacted budget, opposition Senators Franklin Drilon and Risa Hontiveros appealed to the congressme­n to resume their deliberati­ons on the P3.76-trillion proposed budget for 2019.

But Albay Rep. Edcel Lagman said Malacañang must step back precisely to avoid those consequenc­es.

Projects will be derailed

In a statement, Lagman said the Duterte administra­tion’s ambitious infrastruc­ture project would be “derailed” because new projects could not be implemente­d pending reenactmen­t of the old budget.

He said appropriat­ions for capital outlay—expenditur­es for new assets—also could not be repeated if these had already been completed.

Lagman said “no administra­tion would welcome a reenacted budget” because it would effectivel­y be a “rebuke of the President,” whose budget proposal was contained in the National Expenditur­e Program submitted by the budget department.

Drilon, the Senate minority leader, did not relish the idea of reenacting the P3.77-trillion budget for this year, saying it would make President Duterte look “weak,” because he could not get his budget proposal approved by the House despite having the support of a supermajor­ity there.

Detrimenta­l to BARMM

Having a reenacted budget, he said, would “prejudice” every citizen and be “detrimenta­l to the economy and the implementa­tion of crucial laws such as the Bangsamoro Organic Law.”

Other programs would be sidetracke­d as well, he added.

“If the government operates under a reenacted budget, then there can be no new programs and projects in 2019 to help pump-prime the economy because there will be no capital outlay,” Drilon said.

Hontiveros said the concerns of the congressme­n about the cash-based budget system the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) wanted to implement in 2019 could be tackled without delaying the approval of appropriat­ions measure.

“Let us use the budget process to address the strategic issues of procuremen­t and the general competency of the bureaucrac­y in terms of planning and execution in order to design good policies for efficient delivery,” she said.

Hontiveros warned that a reenacted budget would give the executive branch the chance to abuse public funds.

She noted that a reenacted budget was a fixture during the time of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, during which officials played fast and loose with the people’s money.

President’s pork barrel

Once this year’s budget is reenacted, the executive could realign funds that it could use at its own discretion, Hontiveros warned.

“Lest we forget, the 2019 midterm elections are just around the corner. With a reenacted budget, the government creates so-called savings from the reallocate­d funds for projects already completed last year to buy political support,” she explained.

“In such a scenario,” she added, “the reenacted budget becomes the President’s pork barrel.”

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