The Philippine Star

Gov’t overspent on infra in 2017

- By MARY GRACE PADIN

Driven by the Duterte administra­tion’s massive infrastruc­ture program, the government spent P568.8 billion for infrastruc­ture projects in 2017, exceeding the target for the year by 3.5 percent, the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) reported yesterday.

In a press briefing, Budget Secretary Benjamin Diokno said the government’s infrastruc­ture disburseme­nts last year were 15 percent higher than the P493 billion spent on infrastruc­ture and other capital outlays in 2016.

For December 2017 alone, capital outlays rose 23 percent to P82.3 billion from the same month the previous year.

“The upward trend in capital outlays is proof of the rollout of the Duterte administra­tion’s ambitious infrastruc­ture program,” Diokno said.

In a separate statement, the DBM attributed the increase in infrastruc­ture spending last year to the implementa­tion of road projects under the Department of Public Works and Highways, the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s (AFP) Modernizat­ion Program, and other capital outlay projects, such as the repair and rehabilita­tion of school facilities.

The agency also cited the regular submission of progress billings from contractor­s, a faster and simplified approval process for plans and programs, strict implementa­tion of project planning, monitoring and scheduling.

Infrastruc­ture and capital outlays form part of the government’s total expenditur­es, which grew 11 percent to P2.82 trillion last year from P2.55 trillion in 2016.

This was, however, three percent lower than the P2.91 trillion disburseme­nt program for last year.

Despite the decline, Diokno said disburseme­nts in 2017 improved remarkably, with underspend­ing trimmed as compared to previous years.

Underspend­ing was recorded at 3.6 percent in 2016, 12.8 percent in 2015 and 13.3 percent in 2014, according to DBM data.

“This is a remarkable feat given the size of our budget and issues of underspend­ing in the past,” Diokno said.

Aside from infrastruc­ture, personnel services, subsidies, allocation­s and capital transfers to local government units (LGUs) also drove the growth in government disburseme­nts last year, according to the DBM.

Personnel services rose 12 percent to P808.4 billion from the previous year, mainly due to the creation and filing of positions at the Department of Education and state universiti­es and colleges, the Department of Health, and the Philippine National Police.

Subsidies to government­owned and -controlled corporatio­ns (GOCCs) also rose to P131.1 billion, mainly as support for housing programs, irrigation projects and health insurance, while allocation­s and capital transfer to LGUs amounted to P530.1 billion.

“Moving forward, we expect further improvemen­t in government spending as the bureaucrac­y shifts to annual cash-based budgeting starting fiscal year 2019,” Diokno said.

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