The Philippine Star

Balisacan urged to review Duterte’s infra projects

- By RICHMOND MERCURIO

Infrastruc­ture-oriented think tank Infrawatch PH has urged incoming socioecono­mic planning secretary Arsenio Balisacan to review ongoing and indicative infrastruc­ture projects under the Duterte administra­tion, which could include cancelatio­n of controvers­ial deals.

In a statement, Infrawatch PH convenor Terry Ridon said Balisacan, as the new NEDA chief, should prioritize which infrastruc­ture projects to continue, suspend, cancel or transform into public-private partnershi­ps in order to effectivel­y manage the country’s climbing debt load.

Ridon said managing the massive spending on infrastruc­ture projects is critical to ensuring that social programs for housing and cash aid would continue under the incoming administra­tion.

“By putting brakes on foreign loans to fund our infrastruc­ture ambitions, government will be able to look to the private sector to develop viable infrastruc­ture projects,” he said.

“This will provide government breathing space to reduce the country’s debt below the current 63.5 percent of our gross domestic product,” Ridon said.

Ridon warned that if the incoming administra­tion continues with the current government’s infrastruc­ture trajectory of massive spending on the back of foreign loans, there might not be enough cash left to build houses, schools and health centers and to distribute cash aid during crises.

He said social programs should be the core agenda of the new administra­tion, given that the vast majority of its mandate comes from the marginaliz­ed socioecono­mic classes.

“We have reached this point no thanks to the outgoing administra­tion’s infrastruc­ture ambitions, not even half of which had in fact been completed or are ongoing. But this will certainly result in serious belt-tightening under the new administra­tion on social programs aimed at directly benefiting the public, such as housing and cash aid,” he said.

According to Ridon, canceling controvers­ial infrastruc­ture deals undertaken under the current administra­tion would be an immediate source of fiscal space in infrastruc­ture projects.

“The new government should outrightly cancel infrastruc­ture deals that had been subjected to a negative report by the Commission on Audit, such as the Kaliwa Dam project, in which the audit commission said that there appeared to have been a simulated bid by Chinese contractor­s. These types of activities should have no place under a new government,” he said.

Ridon said projects that employ foreign laborers should also be canceled, as this deprives the country’s great mass of constructi­on workers of employment.

“An infrastruc­ture deal like the recently inaugurate­d China-funded bridges should not be allowed in the new government, as nearly half of the project workforce were Chinese workers. How can we stimulate a post-COVID economy if foreign workers compete with our own workers?” he said.

Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) Undersecre­tary

and Build Build Build chief implemente­r Emil Sadain, in a recent statement, said implementa­tion of largescale infrastruc­ture projects properly reviewed by the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority-Investment Coordinati­on Committee (NEDA-ICC) board deserves continuity to ensure economic progress and recovery from the pandemic.

Sadain said the much-needed flagship infrastruc­ture projects to bridge the infrastruc­ture gap in the country would be the key drivers if not the main driver of the country’s economic recovery.

He said projects have already been rolled out and the incoming administra­tion just need to push it and continue towards building a strong economy.

According to the DPWH, the current administra­tion is expected to complete at least 19 big-ticket flagship infrastruc­ture projects until the end of President Duterte’s term this June 30, with 12 more for completion by the end of December.

The agency said at least 35 ongoing projects are scheduled for completion in 2023, while 10 projects under detailed engineerin­g design stage are expected to start civil works next year and onwards.

It further said that 20 projects are undergoing review and evaluation of the NEDAICC, while five are under project preparatio­n.

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