Philippine Daily Inquirer

GOV’T DEBT IN JANUARY-MAY UP 17% TO P 1.77T

- By Ben O. de Vera @bendeveraI­NQ

Government borrowings, mainly from local sources, to finance the budget and the fight against the prolonged pandemic rose by 17 percent yearon-year to P1.77 trillion as of end-May.

The latest Bureau of the Treasury data showed that gross domestic borrowings during the first five months jumped to P1.51 trillion from P1.15 trillion a year ago.

Locally sourced financing raised through the sale of treasury bills and bonds plus the P540-billion short-term loan from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) as of May already matched the government’s total borrowings, including foreign obligation­s, of P1.15 billion in the same period last year.

From January to May, the Treasury raised a net of P120.3 billion through the sale of T-bills, P389 billion from fixedrate T-bonds, and P463.3 billion from retail treasury bonds (RTBs), which were issued last March.

In the meantime, end-May gross external borrowings declined to P253.04 billion from P356.64 billion a year ago, mainly due to bigger government offshore bond issuances last year.

In the first five months of 2020, the Philippine­s sold P166 billion in global bonds—P118.7 billion in US dollar-denominate­d bonds and P67.3 billion in euro bonds. As of May this year, the government’s P146.1-billion commercial fund-raising included P121.9 billion in euro-denominate­d global bonds plus P24.2 billion in yen-denominate­d samurai bonds, which were both settled in April.

The Philippine­s’ end-May external borrowings also included P72.1 billion in program loans and P34.8 billion in project loans released by multilater­al lenders and bilateral developmen­t partners.

The government had programmed to borrow a record P3.1 trillion this year, of which P2.6 trillion will be sourced locally.

In an economic bulletin on Saturday, Finance Undersecre­tary and chief economist Gil Beltran said the Philippine­s’ external debt stock—public and private combined—declined 1.5 percent year-on-year to $97.05 billion in the first quarter.

Last year, the “manageable” 27.2-percent share of external debt to gross domestic product was the lowest in Asean-5, Beltran said.

But Beltran conceded that external debt was recently building up due to “the government’s resource mobilizati­on against the COVID-19 pandemic.”

In March alone, the Philippine­s secured a total of $1.2 billion in loans from the Manila-based Asian Developmen­t Bank, the Beijing-based Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank, and the Washington-based World Bank to finance procuremen­t of COVID-19 vaccines.

Last month, the World Bank extended three loans to the Philippine­s totaling $980 million to prepare Metro Manila from earthquake­s, improve rural farms and fisheries’ productivi­ty, and make the financial sector resilient from shocks.

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