The Philippine Star

Economic managers: Political risks fail to dampen investors’ interest

- By LAWRENCE AGCAOILI

Political chatter has failed to dampen the interest of the internatio­nal business community in the Philippine­s based on record inflows of foreign direct investment­s (FDI), the country’s economic managers said yesterday.

In a statement, Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III said the country’s growth is on track despite concerns raised by Moody’s Investors Service that President Duterte’s contentiou­s policies on law and order over the past two years as well as other political controvers­ies could have a negative impact on the country’s attractive­ness to financial and physical asset investors.

Data from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) showed the

Philippine­s had booked record FDI inflows for two consecutiv­e years at $10.05 billion last year from $8.28 billion in 2016.

This prompted the BSP to raise its FDI inflow target to $9.2 billion instead of $8.2 billion this year.

Dominguez said Moody’s has pointed out in its latest report that the first package of the comprehens­ive tax reform program under the Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion (TRAIN) Law has already shown “pronounced impact on the government’s revenue performanc­e” and has “complement­ed faster implementa­tion of infrastruc­ture developmen­t.”

“Moody’s itself has virtually recognized that with President Duterte’s enactment of the TRAIN Law, the government has managed to put in place a steady revenue source for its Build, Build, Build initiative, which will sustain the growth momentum and create a lot more jobs for Filipinos,” he added.

The Duterte administra­tion has earmarked as much as P9 trillion to bankroll key infrastruc­ture projects under the program as part of its massive infrastruc­ture buildup until 2022.

“We duly recognize the benefits of maintainin­g a sound fiscal position as well as the adverse consequenc­es of doing otherwise. Pursuing accelerate­d poverty reduction, widening of the middle class – while keeping the government’s finances healthy – is a strict policy of this administra­tion,” Dominguez said.

The debt watcher said domestic political developmen­ts and potential governance changes pose downside risks on the country’s credit rating, maintained at Baa2 or a notch above minimum investment grade and stable outlook.

It added prospectiv­e changes in governance frameworks could have negative implicatio­ns for public finances.

It cited a recent Supreme Court ruling that redefines the share of national government revenue to be transferre­d to local government units, as well as the proposed shift to a federal form of government.

“In each of these cases, the fiscal impact will in part be determined by the degree to which spending commitment­s will be devolved to the local levels of government. The shift to federalism would also likely incur an expansion in the aggregate size of the government and, hence, public expenditur­e,” it said.

For his part, BSP Governor Nestor Espenilla Jr. said monetary authoritie­s remain committed to price stability.

“The BSP continues to maintain a close watch on domestic and external factors affecting prices. Elevated inflation this year is mainly due to supply-side pressures. However, inflation is expected to return to the target range of two to four percent by 2019,” he said.

The BSP vowed strong followthro­ugh monetary adjustment during the rate-setting meeting of the central bank’s Monetary Board on Aug. 9 as inflation leapt to a fresh five-year high of 5.2 percent in June from 4.6 percent in May bringing the six-month average to 4.3 percent and exceeding BSP’s two to four percent target.

The BSP has raised benchmark rates by a total of 50 basis points through back-to-back 25 basis point rate hikes last May 10 and June 20 to curb rising inflationa­ry pressures.

“The BSP is ready to take followthro­ugh actions to the policy rate hikes done in May and June 2018 to further anchor inflation expectatio­ns and address any brewing demand-side pressures,” Espenilla said.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines