The Philippine Star

Imprudent

- ALEX MAGNO

Before he was so unceremoni­ously gagged, Economic Planning Secretary Ernesto Pernia was making an important point about the possible effects of federalism on the fiscal space.

Pernia might have been impolitic when he fretted publicly that a quick shift to federalism could “wreak havoc” on the infrastruc­ture program. But Pernia was hired as an economist, not as propagandi­st. By speaking as an economist, he shows he is worth his pay.

The havoc he speaks of very likely relates to the financing of the infrastruc­ture program.

The ambitious Build, Build, Build program is made possible by the tremendous amount of work put in to achieve fiscal consolidat­ion. We can build only because we can afford it. We can afford it only because tax reform produced a reliable revenue flow for national government. That reliable revenue flow allows us to borrow with confidence, knowing that public spending can be regulated with a single valve made possible by the unitary government format.

As we know, the infra program is only partly funded through budget appropriat­ions. A large part of the capital outlay is sourced from official developmen­t assistance (ODA) and foreign currency denominate­d bonds.

The borrowing is sustainabl­e only because we pay lower rates for them based on our sovereign credit ratings. We worked hard for those ratings by exercising discipline in spending and revenue-generation. When some doubt arises regarding our sovereign capacity to maintain that discipline, the interest rates we pay for financing our economic investment­s program will shoot up.

Should confidence in our ability to exercise fiscal discipline collapse, interest rates on our borrowing could become unsustaina­ble. In which case, we could court a financing crisis.

Sen. Bam Aquino made an ignorant claim that government has so much money that the taxes on fuel should be withdrawn. The fact is national government has operated on a chronic budget deficit since we gained independen­ce. We needed to borrow to cover that recurring deficit. Today we need to borrow wisely so that growth created by economic investment­s constantly outstrip the cost of borrowed money.

We need to borrow because the consequenc­es of not doing so are graver. If government does not make economic investment­s, the domestic economy will stagnate. Poverty will spiral. Misery will multiply. Political instabilit­y will ensue.

The effort to maintain fiscal discipline often puts the economic managers at odds with the politician­s.

Politician­s, by their nature, think of appeasemen­t first and sustainabi­lity last. They are inclined to give away public funds through every form of subsidy and doleout program to keep their constituen­ts happy even if this means sacrificin­g longer-term economic sustainabi­lity.

It is easy for grandstand­ing politician­s to advocate free tuition, free health care programs, and subsidies for fuel and power. Yesterday, for instance, Sen. Sherwin Gatchalian proposed using the Malampaya Fund to reduce power rates by 70 centavos per kilowatt-hour.

That is an insane idea. The Malampaya Fund, generated from royalties on the finite natural gas extracted by Pilipinas Shell, is intended to fund programs that will ensure our energy security. If we deplete it now, with generating capacity in peril of falling short of rising demand, we will torpedo our own economic viability.

The economic managers, for their part, constantly risk unpopulari­ty by advocating policies that will ensure sustainabi­lity. It is their task to save our economy from the disastrous populist policies politician­s prefer.

Backlog

We have a serious infrastruc­ture backlog. It keeps costs high. Our people bear those high costs eventually.

The infrastruc­ture deficit inhibits our economy from being competitiv­e. This is why we have the smallest share of investment flows among the ASEAN economies. If we do not address the infrastruc­ture deficit today, our neighborin­g economies will leave us behind.

Vietnam, for instance, consumes seven times more steel per capita than we do. That says everything.

Since 1986, we invested only a little more than two percent of GDP in infra. Our neighbors spent over five percent. Because of that, our ports and airports simply deteriorat­ed. Our roads became congested. The cost of moving people and goods across the archipelag­o rose, making everything more expensive for our consumers.

Over the next years, we expect to bring up our economic investment­s to seven percent of GDP. That is just to close the infra gap with our neighbors.

One of the reasons we underinves­ted in improving our economic capacity is the debt crisis we endured three decades ago and the startlingl­y low tax effort that burdened government finances. Now we have worked down our debt service ratio and improved our tax effort.

Another reason for the underinves­tment is the Local Government Code. This forced the national government to yield a significan­t part of the revenues collected to local government units. This enabled local government­s to somehow increase spending on “micro-infra” like bus stops and basketball courts. But it limited national government’s ability to invest in strategic infra such as modern airports and expressway­s. This brings us back to Pernia’s concerns. The Bangsamoro Organic Law, for instance, includes a “block grant” of P50 billion to the proposed regional entity and a fixed share of the revenue collected. If we do that for all the 16 “estados” proposed in the federalism arrangemen­t, which is all it is about really, then the national government will never have enough to invest in strategic infra.

In which case, we fall back into the quagmire we are now trying to climb out of. We will be doomed to a stagnant economy with an ancient infrastruc­ture base, back to being the Sick Man of Asia.

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