The Philippine Star

Phl now a net borrower

- By LAWRENCE AGCAOILI

The Philippine­s has become a net borrower as of 2016, ending a 13-year streak of net lending to the rest of the world, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said in a report released over the weekend.

Based on the 2016 Philippine flow of funds, the BSP said the saving-investment deficit in the general government and household sectors outweighed the surplus in the financial and non-financial corporatio­ns sectors.

As a result, the domestic economy’s net borrowing from the rest of the world amounted to P53.4 billion in 2016, revers- ing its net fund provision of P333 billion in 2015.

“The domestic economy becomes a net borrower, financed by the rest of the world largely through loans, equity and investment fund shares,” the BSP said.

This means the Philippine­s is borrowing more than what it saves or lends out. The country became a net lender to the rest of the world in 2003 with P20 billion.

The central bank said the general government sector continued to be a net borrower with its financing requiremen­ts jumping 61 percent to P261.6 billion in 2016 from P162.5 billion.

The government’s net borrowing swelled 29.4 percent to P503.3 billion from P388.8 billion due to robust spending on infrastruc­ture and capital outlays.

Currency and deposits of the general government recorded an outflow of P88.5 billion in 2016 following the national government’s withdrawal of its deposits with the BSP as part of cash operations.

Net incurrence of liabilitie­s was in the form of loans at P75.5 billion and debt securities at P21 billion. Loans increased by 11.2 percent to P75.5 billion because of

the national issued promissory notes to fund its subscripti­on to the capital stocks of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) as well as the availment of program and project loans from Asian Developmen­t Bank (ADB), Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency (JICA), and Internatio­nal Bank for Reconstruc­tion and Developmen­t (IBRD).

On the other hand, debt securities plunged 57.3 percent to P21 billion in 2016 from P49.2 billion in 2015 due to the subdued demand for government securities as well as the national government’s redemption of outstandin­g US dollar and Euro bonds.

In addition, foreign debt in the form of global bonds and concession­al loans from internatio­nal organizati­ons fell 21.4 percent in line with the government’s longterm debt strategy of reducing foreign currency-denominate­d borrowings and meeting its funding requiremen­ts mainly through the issuance of debt securities in the domestic capital market.

Likewise, the household sector reversed to a net borrower in 2016 with P52.9 billion from P50 billion in 2015, ending its net lending position that started in 2000. The sector’s sustained build-up of capital resulted in a substantia­l increase in its loan borrowings aggregatin­g P379.3 billion from P221.6 billion.

Meanwhile, the financial and non-financial corporatio­ns sectors sustained their net lender position at P214.7 billion and P46.5 billion, respective­ly.

The financial sector’s net acquisitio­n of assets were dominated by loans with P1.43 trillion and currency and deposits with P574.2 billion, while those of the non-financial corporatio­ns sector were largely in the form of accounts receivable­s with P601.6 billion and currency placements with P305.8 billion.

Savings of all sectors in the domestic economy went up 9.7 percent to P3.46 trillion in 2016 from P3.15 trillion in 2015 despite the headwinds and uncertaint­ies in the external front.

On the other hand, the real investment of the domestic economy jumped 24.4 percent to P3.52 trillion from P2.83 trillion as capital accumulati­on expanded by almost a quarter.

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