Philippine Daily Inquirer

Marcos Jr. admin to craft fresh 6-year fiscal plan

Diokno will lead efforts to bring PH back to prepandemi­c budget deficit, debt

- By Ben O. de Vera @bendeveraI­NQ

The incoming Marcos Jr. administra­tion’s chief economic manager will lead the crafting of the Philippine­s’ first-of-itskind, six-year fiscal plan, which is aimed at bringing the Philippine­s back to the prepandemi­c budget deficit level by 2028.

In an interview, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Benjamin Diokno, who will serve as Finance chief in the next administra­tion taking over in July, said President-elect Ferdinand Marcos Jr. during last week’s meeting with his economic team green-lit his proposal to come out with a blueprint in line with fiscal consolidat­ion. Diokno said he committed to submit his proposed plan to incoming President Marcos Jr. within two weeks. They wanted to include this medium-term fiscal plan in the new president’s State of the Nation Address when the 19th Congress starts session in July.

The covered period will be longer than the usual threeyear projection­s currently being undertaken by the Developmen­t Budget Coordinati­on Committee (DBCC) and comparable to how other developed economies like Australia do their longer-term planning.

Diokno said the Philippine­s’ own plan—a formal and binding document to be jointly crafted by the economic agencies under the DBCC—will contain the 2023-2028 macroecono­mic and fiscal assumption­s as well as targets.

Congress approval

This plan will be pitched for confirmati­on of the two chambers of Congress through a resolution to be ultimately approved by the President, Diokno explained.

With both houses of the legislativ­e branch populated by political allies of Marcos, Diokno expects his medium-term fiscal plan proposal to get the immediate nod of legislator­s.

“The budget resolution is our plan—this is where we’re going,” Diokno said, adding that this would make the next administra­tion’s own fiscal consolidat­ion strategy transparen­t to the public.

The incoming Marcos Jr. administra­tion will inherit from the outgoing Duterte-led government a wider budget deficit and ballooning debts wrought by higher spending and borrowings, respective­ly, amid the protracted fight against COVID-19.

The Duterte administra­tion last month pitched a fiscal consolidat­ion and resource mobilizati­on plan—higher or new taxes slapped on consumptio­n plus a three-year deferral of scheduled personal income tax cuts, while slashing public spending on nonpriorit­y budget items.

But Diokno had not been keen on increasing taxes at the start of the new administra­tion. He instead wants to look for ways to further shore up revenue collection­s while leveraging on the tax reform gains started by President Duterte.

 ?? ?? Benjamin Diokno
Benjamin Diokno

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