Philippine Daily Inquirer

HE TURNED LONGTIME ‘SICK MAN OF ASIA’ INTO RESURGENT ECONOMY

- By Daxim L. Lucas and Roy Stephen C. Canivel @Team_Inquirer

From “the sick man of Asia” to one of the fastest-growing economies in the region.

This sums up the economic legacy of the late President Benigno Aquino III, whose administra­tion’s steering of the economy from 2010 to 2016 was admired by the business community.

Building on the painful tax reforms initiated by his predecesso­r, Aquino oversaw six consecutiv­e years of growth as Chief Executive, including two years of above 7-percent economic expansion—something not seen locally since the early 1970s.

With growth peaking at 7.2 percent by the midpoint of his presidency in 2013, the Philippine­s had the second-fastest gross domestic product (GDP) growth rate in Asia after China.

Principled leadership

Not long after that, the Philippine­s attained the coveted investment grade rating from all internatio­nal debt watchers for the first time in the country’s history. This meant that the Philippine government’s creditors were confident enough about the stability of its finances that they were willing to lend money at lower interest rates, in stark contrast to double-digit rates that were common for “junk bond”-rated debt paper issued by other countries.

It is a benefit that eventually trickled down to the the rest of the private sector and continues to be enjoyed by the country today at the height of the coronaviru­s pandemic, when foreign loans have become critical to finance the government’s COVID-19 response.

Paying tribute to Aquino on Thursday, his finance secretary, Cesar Purisima, said the late President “was a uniquely singular figure in recent political history.”

“His principled leadership consistent­ly put people over politics, prudence over populism, refusing to let expedient electoral games get in the way of his sacred responsibi­lity to the Filipino people,” Purisima said in a Facebook post.

He said the Aquino administra­tion helped steer the country to fiscal sustainabi­lity, which helped raise tax and nontax revenues that now proved necessary to finance the prolonged fight against the pandemic.

“A key pillar of President Aquino’s enduring legacy is fiscal sustainabi­lity, having reduced debt as a percentage of gross domestic product to historic lows of 44.8 percent by 2015 and having weaned the country off foreign debt, with external financing also at their lowest share in the (debt mix) at 34.8 percent. The Philippine­s’ historic first-ever investment grade in 2013 was also the direct result of his leadership,” Purisima said in a statement Thursday.

Top contributi­ons

“The internatio­nal community saw how the Philippine­s walked the talk on fiscal consolidat­ion and granted us 24 positive credit ratings actions—the most in history—and made us the world’s most upgraded [country] back then,” he said.

Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III, who had always acknowledg­ed the reforms put in place by the preceding administra­tions, told reporters that among Aquino’s top contributi­ons to strong prepandemi­c growth included two tax laws that laid the foundation for the Duterte administra­tion own comprehens­ive tax reform program.

“Timta (Tax Incentives Management and Transparen­cy Act) forced disclosure and subsequent analysis of the amount of revenue foregone due to fiscal incentives granted to registered companies. This resulted in the formulatio­n and enactment of CREATE (Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprise­s),” said Dominguez, who also served in the Cabinet of Aquino’s mother, Corazon Aquino.

Business groups also remembered the economic growth the country enjoyed under Aquino’s term. As the Management Associatio­n of the Philippine­s put it: “In creating his place in history, each leader can only hope he leaves something better than what he found. The Philippine­s which President Aquino left behind was indeed a better place.”

The Makati Business Club (MBC) said Aquino improved the lives of Filipinos by “combining propeople social policies—modernizin­g education, expanding cash transfers, for example—with relatively clean government.”

“That meant taxes went to public services and infra, while foreign and local businesses were excited to make job-creating investment­s. History will judge him well,” MBC said.

Benedicto V. Yujuico, president of the country’s biggest business group, the Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry (PCCI), cited Aquino’s remarkable achievemen­ts in growing the economy.

“On the back of his high-profile campaign to weed out corruption and the excellent performanc­e of the GDP, the inflow of foreign direct investment (FDIs) steadily improved, rising by 60 percent when he stepped down from office,” PCCI said in its statement, adding that “the legacy of President Aquino should live on.”

Private think tank Action for Economic Reforms (AER) said in a statement that Aquino was “most instrument­al in passing hard but critical reforms whose impacts are still being felt today,” including the landmark sin tax reform law of 2012, which it said created the momentum for sustained tax rate increases through the years.

“Aside from reducing smoking prevalence, this law created fiscal space, boosting revenues and leading to rapid economic growth until the pandemic hit,” AER said.

“To be sure, controvers­ial and unpopular actions hounded his term, such as the Mamasapano incident and the Napoles scandal. Nonetheles­s, these controvers­ies do not undermine P-Noy’s standing as a reformist,” it said.

Slow pace

Throughout his presidency, Aquino was criticized for the slow implementa­tion of his flagship economic program dubbed public-private partnershi­p.

Its acronym, “PPP,” was sometimes jokingly referred to by businessme­n as having really stood for “Puro PowerPoint” and nothing more, referring to the many projects that moved slowly through the government’s bureaucrat­ic maze.

Unveiled in late 2010, progress in the PPP program was slow and many big-ticket infrastruc­ture projects didn’t break ground until the latter part of his term—too late to reverse the tide of the 2016 elections.

However, the fact that the current administra­tion could borrow so much from overseas during the current crisis is a testament to the soundness of its predecesso­r’s policy of aggressive­ly paying down and refinancin­g the country’s debt to give it “fiscal space” when the urgent need arose.

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