The Philippine Star

DOF cites stronger ties between Mla, Beijing

- LAWRENCE AGCAOILI

The Department of Finance (DOF) reported improved and stronger ties between Manila and Beijing following President Duterte’s foreign policy rebalancin­g towards Asia.

The finance department’s Internatio­nal Finance Group (IFG) reported China has so far committed an estimated $7.34 billion in soft loans and grants to the Philippine­s.

The loans and grants would be used to bankroll 10 big-ticket projects, construct two bridges in Metro Manila and two drug rehabilita­tion facilities in Mindanao, and rehabilita­te Marawi City.

Aid, concession­al financing, and investment pledges made by China after its top leaders met with President Duterte in 2016 have progressed into agreements, several of them to help fund the government’s Build Build Build infrastruc­ture modernizat­ion program and its war against illegal drugs.

China was also among the first countries to pledge assistance in helping rebuild Marawi City in Mindanao after its liberation from ISIS-inspired extremists last October.

“The unpreceden­ted pledges of assistance from China that President Duterte had generated for the Philippine­s in 2017 make up the initial investment dividend from his prescient foreign-policy rebalancin­g toward Asia,” Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III said.

He pointed out China is now among the Philippine­s’ closest allies as it is committed to help fund the government’s Build Build Build and Marawi reconstruc­tion programs.

“Mutual trust and confidence-building have led to increased interactio­n on many levels of our two government­s. Practical cooperatio­n in many areas is bringing in an early harvest of tangible benefits,” President Duterte said during Premier Li Keqiang’s visit.

During the fourday state visit of President Duterte to China in October 2016, he harvested a total of $24 billion in investment and aid pledges. Of this amount, $9 billion are grants and other forms of assistance.

These include a financing cooperatio­n agreement signed by Dominguez and Liu Liange, president of the Export-Import Bank of China, for two of the Philippine­s’ flagship infrastruc­ture projects – the New Centennial Water Source-Kaliwa Dam Project of the Metropolit­an Waterworks and Sewerage System and the Chico River Pump Irrigation (facility) project of the National Irrigation Administra­tion – covering 85 percent of the total contract amounts of the projects.

China is also set to provide soft loans estimated at $234.92 million for the Kaliwa Dam and $72.49 million for the Chico River under the first basket of infrastruc­ture projects presented by the Philippine­s for possible Chinese financing.

Dominguez also inked a memorandum of understand­ing with China Vice Commerce Minister and Internatio­nal Trade Representa­tive Fu Ziying to “jointly identify and study” an indicative list consisting of the second basket of key infrastruc­ture cooperatio­n projects for possible Chinese financing.

Among the proposed projects under the second basket are the developmen­t of the Subic-Clark Railway, Davao City expressway, and Panay-Guimaras-Negros Inter-Island Bridge.

Dominguez and Bank of China chairperso­n Chen Siqing also signed a renminbi bond issuance underwriti­ng agreement in preparatio­n for the Philippine­s’ planned Panda bond float this year.

An agreement on economic and technical cooperatio­n providing approximat­ely $23 million Chinese grant to aid the Philippine government’s quick recovery and reconstruc­tion program for Marawi City was also signed.

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