The Philippine Star

Golden age of financing will help roll out more projects

- By NEIL JEROME C. MORALES

Government­s in Southeast Asia, which includes the Philippine­s, should be more proactive in providing infrastruc­ture projects to solve wide income disparity and prevent social unrest, industry experts said in a panel discussion during the World Economic Forum on East Asia held in Makati last week.

They said the time is now for government­s to roll out more infrastruc­ture projects to take advantage of the “golden age of financing” while offering Public-Private Partnershi­ps (PPP) scheme for urban projects that would give businesses adequate returns.

“The ability of the region to take on the challenge of inclusive growth depends on infrastruc­ture programs,” said Stephen P. Groff, vice-president for operations of Manila-based Asian Developmen­t Bank (ADB).

“We have a moral and social imperative here. The more (people) live in these circumstan­ces, the more social unrest can occur,” Groff said during the Accelerati­ng ASEAN Strategic Infrastruc­ture forum.

The Southeast Asian region, which is pursuing an economic integratio­n next year, requires around $60 billion annually until 2020 for its infrastruc­ture needs, data from the ADB showed.

“The government should be doing more infrastruc­ture projects than the private sector,” said Enrique K. Razon Jr., chairman of Internatio­nal Container Terminal Services Inc. (ICTSI) and casino owner Bloomberry Resorts Corp.

“There is a misconcept­ion that every infrastruc­ture project could be done by PPP,” Razon said, adding that while PPP in urban sectors can generate adequate returns, projects like airport runway and railways systems would charge the public high rates to be profitable.

For Don Lam, CEO and co-founder of Vietnam’s VinaCapita­l Group, said government­s should just focus on a few key projects, making sure these are bankable.

“PPP is all about risk sharing. If it seems difficult it is because the discussion of risk sharing is a complicate­d one,” said Michael Whalen, vice- president for Structured Finance of US-based Overseas Private Investment Corp.

So far, the Aquino administra­tion has awarded six PPP projects worth P45.1 billion, including the P17.5-billion Mactan- Cebu Internatio­nal Airport project and the P1.72-billion Automated Fare Collection System. Thirteen more projects worth P367.9 billion are in the pipeline, nine projects of which worth P187 billion are seen to be awarded before 2016.

“With the investment grading rating, the cost of funding is very cheap at the moment,” Razon said.

“We exist in the golden age of financing and the golden age of innovation,” Whalen said.

Groff said billions of funds in the US and Europe are stored in low-yielding treasuries given the undevelope­d capital markets in Southeast Asia.

PPP, the flagship program of the Aquino administra­tion that involves railroad, tollroad and airport ventures was launched in 2010 to address the country’s infrastruc­ture backlog. It has since attracted the attention of top conglomera­tes like San Miguel Corp., Ayala Corp., SM Investment­s Corp., Metro Pacific Investment­s Corp. and JG Summit Holdings Inc.

However, issues like updated feasibilit­y studies and complaints from the private sector have caused delays in the bidding of PPP projects.

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