The Philippine Star

Gov’t borrowings down 42%

- By ZINNIA B. DELA PEÑA

Borrowings by the government fell by nearly 42 percent last year, the Department of Finance reported yesterday.

The government borrowed P554.7 billion from January to December 2013, significan­tly lower than the previous year’s P955.15 billion largely due to the decline in maturing debts.

The government borrows from both local and foreign sources to pay maturing obligation­s and plug the deficit in its budget.

Domestic borrowings, incurred mainly from the sale of Treasury bills and bonds, accounted for P520.93 billion or 93.9 percent of total borrowings. The amount represente­d a 34.76-percent decrease from the P798.53 billion borrowed in 2012.

The balance of P33.77 billion came from external sources. This was down 78.44 percent year-on-year as the government relied heavily on domestic debt to help temper substantia­l appreciati­on pressures on the exchange rate.

Foreign borrowings are done through the sale of sovereign bonds in the internatio­nal capital market and by tapping cheap loans, in the form of official developmen­t assistance (ODA), from multilater­al devel- opment institutio­ns.

The biggest sources of ODAs are Asian Developmen­t Bank, the World Bank and Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency.

The government also paid P235.59 billion in maturing liabilitie­s during the period, 49.5 percent lower than what it spent for debt payments in 2012.

The decline in maturing obligation­s was due to the drop in interest rates as well as initiative­s taken by the government to contain debt. Interest rates on the government’s short-term borrowings fell to record lows last year with the benchmark rates for T-bills falling below one percent.

In December alone, the government borrowed P14.45 billion, down 85.89 percent from the same period in 2012. A big chunk of the new debt or P11.65 billion came from the domestic market.

For this year, government borrowings are expected to reach P730 billion, 2.1 percent higher than the original plan of P715.04 billion.

The Aquino administra­tion plans to borrow more from overseas investors to take advantage of cheap loans to fund massive reconstruc­tion and rehabilita­tion efforts for the storm-ravaged Eastern Visayas.

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