The Philippine Star

DOF warns of ‘disastrous’ consequenc­es of pension hike

The Department of Finance warned yesterday of “disastrous” consequenc­es once populist measures on the two-year land conversion moratorium and Social Security System (SSS) pension increase without contributi­on hike are pursued.

- By PRINZ MAGTULIS

“We need to invest big in (infrastruc­ture), human capital and social protection... Hence the need to generate a lot more funds to bankroll these pro-poor and pro-growth programs,” Finance spokespers­on Paola Alvarez said in a statement.

“The government certainly cannot do so if the President’s economic team were to support populist proposals willy-nilly just to earn political pogi points for the Duterte administra­tion,” she said.

Revenues, in particular, will take a hit as taxpayers may be forced to fund the increase by P2,000 in SSS pension without correspond­ing adjustment in members’ contributi­ons.

Meanwhile, Alvarez said preventing the developmen­t of farm lands for better use, “would undermine the growth momentum.”

The statement came after militant group Bayan Muna criticized the economic managers for allegedly feeding President Duterte wrong informatio­n on the SSS plan, which was part of Duterte’s campaign promise.

They remarked these were the same officials that opposed the proposed land conversion moratorium for two years by Agrarian Reform Secretary Rafael Mariano, himself a leftist leader prior to entering the Cabinet.

The government’s economic team groups the DOF, the Department of Budget and Management and the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority.

Alvarez said all policy recommenda­tions to Malacañang are studied carefully.

“(These) are anchored on sustaining high growth and enabling all sectors across all regions to benefit from it in the form of more jobs, higher incomes and better living standards,” she said.

Citing the government’s 10-point socioecono­mic agenda, Alvarez said big-ticket projects nationwide would need “more, not less, funds” which will not be attained with the two proposed measures.

Without more revenues, the Duterte administra­tion could end up doing a “disservice” to the public, she said.

The contentiou­s SSS pension increase traces its roots back to the veto of former president Benigno Aquino III, who suffered a political fallout for asking for a contributi­on increase in exchange.

Duterte, during his campaign, promised to pursue the measure, only to backtrack later on upon the advice of his economic managers. Budget Secretary Benjamin Diokno had said candidate Duterte is “different” from President Duterte.

Meanwhile, Vice President Leni Robredo earlier opposed the moratorium on land conversion as this could hamper the government’s housing program.

“To pander to short-term populist initiative­s will be a disservice to the President and the overwhelmi­ng majority of Filipinos who have given him the electoral mandate to effect real change,” Alvarez said.

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