The Philippine Star

PPP Center to focus on execution, ease of implementa­tion – Pecson

- BY CZERIZA VALENCIA

The public private partnershi­p (PPP) program under the Duterte administra­tion would be more focused on execution and removal of bureaucrat­ic inefficien­cies that hamper collaborat­ion between agencies implementi­ng projects, said newly- installed PPP Center executive director Ferdinand Pecson.

“We are taking a long-term view. We are not just focused on building the pipeline but we also want to make sure that the delivery of services and the fulfillmen­t of the obligation­s both by government and private sector actually happen,” he said during the Global Investment Forum in Taguig City yesterday.

“The PPP Center is very much focused on execution. There has been a change in administra­tion but the reality is the inefficien­cies of bureaucrac­y cannot be eliminated easily,” he added.

Pecson said he would introduce stricter project management to make sure government agencies and private entities involved are not operating in silos and are kept abreast of developmen­ts.

“We are going to work with our partner agencies so we are looking at one plan for every project. When we talk about projects, we need to talk about project management. So we need to inject that discipline of managing projects well and we need to do it in a more collaborat­ive manner,” he said.

He said these are all aimed at ensuring the services are delivered to the public while ensuring good returns for investors.

In the same business forum, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Deputy Governor Diwa Guinigundo said even with the government’s massive infrastruc­ture push, the country has a strong absorptive capacity for investment­s mainly because of the combinatio­n of strong economic growth and a low inflation environmen­t.

He said the Philippine­s also has ample fiscal space for more infrastruc­ture investment­s as evidenced by the current deficitto-GDP ratio of just around one percent against the cap of two percent.

“We have strong absorptive capacity. The economy is growing, the inflation is very low, there is sufficient demand in the economy. So even if investors are coming in and starting to put up factories and other projects, I think we have the capacity to absorb,” said Guinigundo.

The PPP program, launched by the Aquino administra­tion in 2010, aims to attract more private sector investment­s in public infrastruc­ture through competitiv­e bidding.

In the five years of implementa­tion, however, it went through terrible birth pains, with slow project approvals and several failed biddings, resulting in only 14 projects being awarded out of the 53 in the pipeline. Cited as bottleneck­s were the enormous sizes of the projects and legal impediment­s.

Pecson said the center would be working with implementi­ng government agencies in developing the investment policies for the respective economic sectors they regulate.

For instance, he urges the Department of Transporta­tion to come up with a clear airport policy for taking on various proposals for airport projects.

“There are numerous proposals for airport projects. And if we just let the market decide, these airport would be competing and in order to attract investment­s in these projects, we need to determine the future growth in these areas. So that is not yet clear to investors,” he said.

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