The Philippine Star

Gov’t sees over 6% GDP growth in Q1

- By PRINZ MAGTULIS

Sustained double-digit growth on spending likely accelerate­d economic growth to “at least six percent” in the first quarter, when the deficit also inevitably widened, officials said.

Infrastruc­ture spending, in particular, was “very good” after procuremen­t was advanced ahead of an election ban on disburseme­nts late March, Budget Secretary Florencio Abad told

The STAR.

“So if you combine election spending, accelerate­d spending as a result of advanced procuremen­t of all agencies, and adjustment­s in government pay, you could grow by at least six percent,” he said in an interview last Tuesday.

Revenues, in turn, “had no problem” supporting expenditur­es as commodity prices recover, Finance Undersecre­tary and chief economist Gil Beltran said separately.

Reports on first-quarter gross domestic product (GDP) and fiscal performanc­e are up for release today.

GDP, or the sum of all products and services created in an economy,

grew by five percent from January to March last year, the slowest in nearly four years.

While agricultur­e’s 4.5- percent drop could have pulled GDP down, Abad expressed confidence this was offset by strong consumptio­n from both consumers and the government.

“I was told by the (Public Works department) that 60 percent of their funds, they were able to obligate in the first quarter. So they are not affected by the election ban,” the budget chief said.

“The higher the level of obligation, the higher the disburseme­nt will be,” he added.

Beltran said there were also enough funds to spend, especially since collection­s by the Bureau of Customs likely benefited from higher valuation of commodity prices.

Exports have slumped for 12 straight months and could be a negative to GDP growth, but oil prices were up by around half from last year.

The bulk of the country’s oil requiremen­ts are imported. Higher product prices mean higher valuations where Customs collection­s are based.

“That’s already positive because you are coming off from a weaker base last year. For BIR (Bureau of Internal Revenue), I don’t see any problem,” Beltran said.

BIR and Customs account for around 90 percent of state revenues. As of February, their collection­s were up seven and three percent, respective­ly.

Abad said economic managers will turn over their macroecono­mic assumption­s to the next administra­tion by July.

Growth targets were set at 6.8 to 7.8 percent this year. The budget deficit cap was pegged at P298.6 billion, equivalent to two percent of GDP.

“This administra­tion can spend half of the deficit limit and I think we could even fall below that,” Beltran said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines