The Philippine Star

Temporary

- ALEX MAGNO

Our GDP grew by 5.5% in the second quarter of this year. While respectabl­e, the growth number fell significan­tly below market expectatio­ns.

Even at 5.5%, the growth of the Philippine economy still paces the region. We still retain the capacity to be a growth engine in a global economy poised for recessiona­ry times.

Those charged with managing our macroecono­mic performanc­e say the setback is only temporary. They are still hopeful our economy could still deliver a 6% annual growth rate by the end of the year. That will be at the lower end of the 6% to 7% growth target earlier set.

The second quarter growth rate is the lowest our economy posted in 17 quarters. It follows the 5.7% posted in the first quarter.

In order to make 6.0% annual growth this year, the economy needs to post 6.4% growth rates in the next two quarters. That should be achievable, considerin­g the factors that pushed down our growth the last two quarters.

The major factor explaining the lower-than-expected second quarter growth number continues to be the residual effects of the delay in the passage of the 2019 national budget. For the first four months of the year, government was spending P1 billion per day below what the original spending program intended. That brought so many unhealthy consequenc­es for the domestic economy.

Our economy was also stymied by the effects of the drought we experience­d in the first half of this year. The drought severely affected agricultur­al output, forcing it to contract in the first half.

Household consumptio­n posted slower growth in the second quarter. Economic planning secretary Ernesto Pernia attributed this to the lower consumer confidence during this period caused by the water crisis.

Then there are the larger factors. The global economy slowed due to several uncertaint­ies, including the US-China trade war and the possible economic chaos that could be caused by Britain’s withdrawal from the European Union. In April, oil prices spiked – although prices have tended to soften over the past few weeks.

Our economy’s greatest weakness continues to be the agricultur­al sector. Total GDP could only grow so much if our agricultur­e is contractin­g. It is a major sector, providing livelihood to a substantia­l portion of the population.

Fortunatel­y, some solutions might be on their way in this sector. The folksy Manny Piñol has been evicted as Agricultur­e Secretary. In his place, the President has appointed an acknowledg­ed expert in agricultur­al modernizat­ion, William Dar.

Unfortunat­ely, the damage has been done. Our agricultur­e will remain stagnant for years until modernizin­g policies take root.

RCEF

Sen. Cynthia Villar wants to know where the P5 billion advanced the Department of Agricultur­e (DA) late last year went. Former secretary Manny Piñol needs to answer her questions satisfacto­rily.

Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez and then Budget Secretary Benjamin Diokno agreed to the allocation to help our agricultur­e officials support our farmers as the country shifted from a protection­ist to a free trade regime in rice moderated by tariffs. This was some sort of advanced funding from the P10 billion Rice Competitiv­eness Enhancemen­t Fund (RCEF) envisioned in the rice tarrificat­ion law and which takes effect only this year.

The advanced funding is supposed to enable the DA to ease the transition to a new rice regime. The new free trade regime in rice will help bring down prices of the prime commodity and ensure adequate supply. But it will require that our farmers improve farm processes through mechanizat­ion and bring down production costs to competitiv­e levels.

Under the provisions of RA 11203 or the Rice Tarrificat­ion Act, the P10 billion RCEF will be distribute­d in the following manner: P5 billion goes to the Philippine Postharves­t Developmen­t and Mechanizat­ion (PhilMech) program for farmers’ machinery and equipment for 1,000 rice-growing areas; P3 billion goes to the Philippine Rice Research Institute (PhilRice) for free seeds that will boost yields; P1 billion goes to the LBP and DBP for a credit facility with minimal interest rates and collateral requiremen­ts; and P1 billion goes to the Agricultur­al Training Institute (ATI) of the TESDA for skills programs on farm mechanizat­ion and modern farming techniques.

Note here that the law directs the funding support to programs that will promote the modernizat­ion of our rice production, long trapped in ancient subsistenc­e models. The money is not intended for palay price supports, which is an indolent and ultimately useless subsidy that does not contribute to modernizat­ion.

After hewing and hawing a bit, Piñol eventually acknowledg­ed that his department received the P5 billion advanced funding December last year. Of that amount, he says, P1 billion was duly forwarded to the LBP and DBP for the credit facility for rice farmers to help them mechanize their production.

That leaves P4 billion unexplaine­d. In the best possibilit­y, the fund is stored somewhere. There is little evidence that DA undertook the modernizat­ion programs envisioned by RA 11203 while Piñol was there, constantly whining about increased rice imports. In the worst possibilit­y, the money was misspent.

At the very least, Piñol should clear the accounts before he takes up his new assignment as Mindanao Developmen­t Authority chief. That should give the rest of the policymaki­ng establishm­ent some sense about the state of preparedne­ss of our rice sector.

Dar, in his first press conference, committed to frontload the release of RCEF money in his first 100 days at the post. That is indeed urgent. We need dramatic modernizat­ion to keep our farms competitiv­e.

Hopefully the money is still there.

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