The Philippine Star

DBCC to review economic targets

- By PRINZ MAGTULIS

Amid global financial volatility, economic managers will review today macroecono­mic assumption­s for this year until 2019 as they start to lay out the foundation for the Aquino administra­tion’s successor in June.

The Developmen­t Budget Coordinati­ng Committee (DBCC), the inter-agency body setting the government’s economic program, will meet today for the first time in eight months.

The meeting will tackle this year’s economic targets and fiscal program plus a medium-term blueprint until 2019. Contents of the annual socio-economic report will also be reviewed.

In a text message, Budget Undersecre­tary Laura Pascua said targets to be threshed out would also serve as “context of the 2017 budget” proposal.

DBCC will meet at a time when emerging markets, led by China, are slowing down, causing a slump in commodity prices and for the global equity market to enter the bear market.

The economy expanded 5.8 percent last year or below the revised six to seven-percent target.

Emilio Neri Jr., lead economist at Bank of the Philippine Islands, said the current volatile environmen­t should not stop the government on charting its economic policy.

“It is not a healthy exercise to delay setting targets just to wait for the global environmen­t to settle down,” Neri said.

Pascua, who leads the Executive Technical Board recommendi­ng to the DBCC, however said the “timing is still okay” as far as drafting assumption­s are concerned.

According to the 2017 budget calendar, issuance of agency budget ceilings and economic assumption­s should be done by March 21. Pascua has said this would done through a Department of Budget and Management (DBM) circular.

Ceilings and targets are part of the Tier 2 of budget preparatio­n. Tier 1 kicked off last month, which included agencies being directed to craft priority programs for the outlay.

For this year, the mediumterm program has targeted economic growth between sevenand eight-percent, although Cabinet officials had admitted six- to seven-percent would be more realistic.

The DBCC last met in July last year.

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