Philippine Daily Inquirer

Gov’t spending hits P 1.02T, DBM reports

- By Melvin Gascon @melvingasc­onINQ

government has stepped up spending from January to November last year, disbursing more than P1 trillion on infrastruc­ture projects, or an increase of about 18.5 percent from the same period in 2022, the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) said on Sunday.

Citing data from its 2023 disburseme­nt report, the DBM said the government spent P1.02 trillion from P861.8 billion over the same period in 2022, marking a P159.8-billion increase, mainly due to bigger spending by the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH).

Despite questions on corruption at the DPWH, economists consider the spending data good news because of the government’s significan­t underspend­ing in recent years that has weighed on the country’s economic growth.

“Government spending is vital to national growth. Thus, to help buttress robust economic growth, government agencies must continue to execute their programs and projects as authorized in the annual budget and deliver planned results in a timely manner,” Budget Secretary Amenah Pangandama­n said in a statement.

In congressio­nal hearings on the government’s P5.678trillio­n budget for 2024, Pangandama­n defined underspend­ing as “the difference between the programmed disburseme­nts from actual disburseme­nts,” meaning, the government did not implement some projects and programs it proposed.

Underspend­ing

According to the data she presented, a disburseme­nt of P2.5 trillion was programmed for the first semester of 2023. However, actual disburseme­nts amounted only to P2.4 trillion, resulting in P170.5 billion in underutili­zed funds.

Pangandama­n said the Department of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology (DICT) topped the list of agencies that were not using taxpayers’ money as intended.

According to Pangandama­n, the DICT only had a utilizatio­n rate of 5.6 percent, followed by the Department of Migrant Workers, 10 percent; Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t, 11.4 percent; Department of Agrarian Reform, 13.8 percent; Department of Labor and Employment, 14.9 percent; and Department of Tourism, 18.9 percent, among others.

According to the DBM, the larger government spending for 2023 is due to DPWH priority projects mainly for the constructi­on, rehabilita­tion, renovation, repair and improvemen­t of roads and bridges, as well as flood control structures.

But the Marcos administra­tion continues to focus on infrastruc­ture developmen­t, through the Build, Better, More (BBM) program, with about P1.5 trillion allotted in 2024, the DBM chief said.

The 2024 figure is P180-million higher than the P1.330 trillion allotted for infrastruc­ture in the 2023 General Appropriat­ions Act, Pangandama­n said.

The DBM is urging all agencies to spend all the funds allotted to them “efficientl­y and promptly.”

“Every peso in our national budget should be spent effectivel­y for the benefit of our economy and, most importantl­y, the Filipino people,” she said.

Build budget

According to Pangandama­n, the BBM program aims to expand the country’s infrastruc­ture by developing road, rail, mass transport and flood control infrastruc­ture projects to allow for growth in far-flung municipali­ties.

Aside from the DPWH, the Department of Transporta­tion (DOTr) also played a role in the higher government spending, according to Pangandama­n, with the implementa­tion of various rail transport foreign-assisted projects.

According to the DBM chief, this year’s allocation for infrastruc­ture is equivalent to 5.5 percent of the country’s projected gross domestic product for this year, well within the 5 to 6 percent target of the government.

This amount includes the public sector infrastruc­ture budget of the DPWH and the DOTr amounting to P982 billion and P26.6 billion, respective­ly, Pangandama­n said.

 ?? —DBM ?? Amenah Pangandama­n
—DBM Amenah Pangandama­n

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