The Philippine Star

Marcos Jr. urged to duplicate Duterte’s economic strategy

- By eLijah FeLice rosaLes

Presidenti­al frontrunne­r Ferdinand Marcos Jr. may have to duplicate the economic policies that his administra­tion will inherit from President Duterte to survive the twin trouble of a bloating deficit and rising debt.

In interviews with The STAR, economists said Marcos could just adopt most of the economic measures of the Duterte administra­tion for policy continuity, especially on infrastruc­ture buildup.

They pointed out that the Marcos campaign failed to disclose specific policies it will undertake, so it may be best to just emulate what the outgoing administra­tion is doing.

Ateneo Center for Economic Research and Developmen­t associate director Ser Percival Peña-Reyes said the next administra­tion should balance equity and efficiency in crafting its economic policies. He warned that the twin problem of a widening deficit and spiking debt would haunt the economy for the next few years.

“The Marcos administra­tion cannot drasticall­y change the course of the economy in its six-year term. It would be best for Marcos to just continue what Duterte has done,” Peña-Reyes said.

Marcos, who is leading the presidenti­al race based on partial and unofficial counts, will inherit a fiscal space that may require him to raise taxes and cut spending.

The budget deficit widened by 22 percent to a record P1.67 trillion last year from P1.37 trillion in 2020, as the government had to increase its expenditur­es to finance its pandemic response.

The deficit, when measured against gross domestic product (GDP), elevated to 8.6 percent from 7.6 percent, and is only projected to revert to pre-pandemic level of 5.1 percent in 2024.

Similarly, the outstandin­g debt of the Philippine­s has spiraled to an all-time high of P12.68 trillion as of March. In 2021 the debt-to-GDP swelled to a 16year high of 60.5 percent, exceeding the internatio­nal standard of 60 percent observed by credit monitors and multilater­al lenders.

Ateneo de Manila University economics professor Leonardo Lanzona, however, warned the next administra­tion to think twice before consolidat­ing its finances just to survive the fiscal dilemma. He said the government should target the billionair­e class if it decides to increase taxes to raise additional revenues.

In an analysis, Oxfam said the Philippine­s could generate $6.3 billion annually by imposing a tax of two percent on wealth above $5 million, three percent on wealth beyond $50 million, and five percent on wealth over $1 billion.

Lanzona said Marcos should expect his political capital, where he banked on his majority win, to crumble if he chooses to tax the working class in his fiscal consolidat­ion.

“We cannot sustain the current deficits, and at some point the government needs to make some trade-offs. I’m afraid they will take the side of the firms instead of the workers. In which case, we should expect more instabilit­y,” he said.

On policy continuity, both Peña-Reyes and Lanzona said the next administra­tion should tweak the direction of the Build Build Build program initiated by the outgoing presidency. Peña-Reyes said new projects should focus on the demands of the new normal.

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