Philippine Daily Inquirer

EXCRUCIATI­NGLY SLOW ‘AYUDA’

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From saying just last February that the government must exercise “fiscal prudence” and thus cannot be “throwing subsidies at everything in sight,” the country’s economic managers have finally come around to the idea of funding another stimulus package to provide relief to the millions of Filipinos rendered jobless or poor by the raging COVID-19 pandemic, which continues to hammer the economy and strain the public health system. Speaker Lord Allan Velasco revealed last Tuesday that Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III and Budget Secretary Wendel Avisado were now identifyin­g fund sources to bankroll the proposed Bayanihan 3 or the “Bayanihan to Arise as One” bill. The measure, which Velasco and Marikina City Rep. Stella Quimbo filed in November last year, aims to allot another P420 billion to stimulate the country’s recovery from the devastatin­g COVID-19 crisis.

Among the key provisions of the bill pending with the House committee on economic affairs is the allocation of P108 billion for universal basic income of P1,000 per person, with another P108 billion in standby funds; P12 billion in direct funding for assistance to individual­s in crisis situations (AICS) of the Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t; and P3 billion for Medical Assistance for Indigent Patients (MAIP).

For Senate Minority Leader Franklin Drilon, it should be easy for economic managers to look for extra funds, since there are many items in the P4.5-trillion 2021 budget that are “unnecessar­y.” Top among such non-essentials at this time are the P9.5-billion confidenti­al and intelligen­ce funds and the P19.5-billion anti-insurgency funds.

“I don’t understand why they are saying the government has no money for additional aid. May pera basta ilagay lang natin sa tama,” Drilon stressed.

Albay Rep. Joey Salceda, chair of the House committee on ways and means, also reported last week “an understand­ing” on where the funds for additional cash assistance will come from, including increased dividends or capital withdrawal­s from “obese” government-owned and -controlled corporatio­ns, and taxes on “e-sabong” and offshore gaming. The target is to identify at least P140 billion in fund sources.

Indeed, if millions can be spent to dump fresh loads of crushed dolomite on the derided Manila Bay “white sand beach” along Roxas Boulevard, there should be funds to help desperate Filipinos once again displaced from their jobs by the return of the Greater Manila Area to enhanced community quarantine status. The National Economic and Developmen­t Authority estimated that just in the two weeks under the latest lockdown, about 252,000 more Filipinos were left jobless, and 102,000 were pushed below the poverty line in the National Capital Region plus Laguna, Bulacan, Cavite, and Rizal.

Millions more could swell the ranks of the poor without cash aid this year, according to the Philippine Institute for Developmen­t Studies. In a March 1 position paper, it estimated that without cash aid of about P5,000 to P8,000, the poverty rate would rise to 21.8 percent in 2021, equivalent to 23.07 million Filipinos. The crisis has already plunged the Philippine­s into its worst postwar economic recession and escalated the number of jobless Filipinos to the highest level in 15 years.

With the sudden imposition of the ECQ from March 29 to April 11, the government could only manage to give P1,000 each or a maximum of P4,000 for families included among the 22.9 million eligible poor Filipinos. Bad enough that the amount is minuscule, but worse is that the paltry amount—either in cash or in kind depending on the local government unit—is not getting to the intended beneficiar­ies fast enough.

The two-week ECQ has already given way to the less stringent “modified” ECQ on April 12, and yet as of April 10, only a little over P1 billion had been distribute­d to over a million beneficiar­ies from April 7-9, equivalent to a measly 4.8 percent.

Clearly, the government has not learned from the harsh lessons of 2020, when chaos, disarray, and irregulari­ties marked the distributi­on of the ayuda after the ECQ was first imposed. It has been more than a year into the pandemic, and still the government machinery remains plagued with issues such as missing names, fragmented lists, and sheer disorganiz­ation. Health experts have warned that the massing of people in distributi­on centers could turn into supersprea­der events for the COVID-19 infection.

The Department of the Interior and Local Government gave LGUs 15 days to complete the distributi­on if in cash, or at most 30 days if through relief goods. But, only underscori­ng the government’s excruciati­ngly slow response to what is a critical, life-and-death race against hunger among millions of citizens, already there is talk of an extension in the aid deadline, which is the last thing poor and vulnerable Filipinos need at this point.

 ?? —NIÑO JESUS ORBETA ?? IN THE RED Residents await their turn to receive cash assistance under tents pitched outside the Barangay Pinyahan hall in Quezon City on Wednesday. Due to a “slow start,” as the Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t put it, the distributi­on of the emergency subsidy in Metro Manila and four neighborin­g provinces has reached only 1.75 million out of the more than 22.9 million target beneficiar­ies as of Sunday.
—NIÑO JESUS ORBETA IN THE RED Residents await their turn to receive cash assistance under tents pitched outside the Barangay Pinyahan hall in Quezon City on Wednesday. Due to a “slow start,” as the Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t put it, the distributi­on of the emergency subsidy in Metro Manila and four neighborin­g provinces has reached only 1.75 million out of the more than 22.9 million target beneficiar­ies as of Sunday.

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