Building destruction? Foreign creditors gain more from Duterte’s infra plan
by Arnold Padilla
#PeoplesSONA2017 / One of the
anticipated highlights of President Rodrigo Duterte’s second State of
the Nation Address (SONA) is his grand infrastructure plan dubbed Build!
Build! Build!. There are concerns that it would result in a heavy debt
burden. The issue is valid. After all, the price tag of what economic
managers call as the “boldest infrastructure program” ever is a whopping
Php8 to 9 trillion.
Economic managers, however, assure the public that they have
everything figured out. The plan is that government appropriations, not
debt, will mainly fund the so-called “golden age of infrastructure”. The
Finance department’s tax reform package aims to raise Php157 billion in
additional revenues a year; the version passed by the House could
generate Php130 billion.
At Php8 to 9 trillion, the annual cost of building infrastructure
from 2017 to 2022 would be Php1.6 to 1.8 trillion. Clearly, the
additional revenues from the tax package will not be enough even as it
bleeds the poor dry.In reality, the infrastructure program would be mostly debt-funded. But again, the public is being told that a debt crisis will not rear its ugly head. In fact, the Budget department expects that by the end of President Duterte’s term, the debt-to-GDP ratio would even fall to 38.1% from 40.6% in 2016.
Such optimism hinges on the economy not only sustaining its expansion
but posting even more rapid growth. To outpace debt, the gross domestic
product (GDP) must grow by 6.5 to 7.5% this year and 7-8% between 2018
and 2022.
It is tough to be as upbeat as administration officials given the
structural weaknesses of the economy and amid a global crisis. For this
year, debt watchers and creditors put Philippine GDP growth at 6.4 to
6.8% – below the range being hoped for by the economic managers. That’s
the most bullish the projections could get.
Whatever rate the GDP grows by, the budget deficit is sure to
increase as government ramps up infrastructure spending. The plan is to
let the budget shortfall climb to 3% of GDP as infrastructure spending
reaches as high as 7.4% of GDP.
While a bigger deficit means greater borrowing, there is supposedly
no need to be anxious as the Budget department claims they will borrow
in a fiscally sustainable way. Eighty percent of the deficit would be
funded by domestic debt and only 20% foreign. Such borrowing mix lessens
foreign exchange risks that could cause public debt to balloon.
Japanese and Chinese loansBut a review of what the Duterte administration has identified as its flagship infrastructure projects tells a different story. To be sure, the flagships – numbering 75 as of June – are just a fraction of the more than 4,000 infrastructure projects that government plans to do. They nonetheless represent the largest ones in terms of cost and are the top priorities for implementation.
Of the 75 flagship projects listed by the National Economic and
Development Authority (NEDA), 48 will be funded by foreign debt or
official development assistance (ODA). Only 14 will be bankrolled
through the national budget or General Appropriations Act (GAA). Just
two projects are planned to be implemented via public-private
partnership (PPP) while 11 have yet to be identified which mode to use.
As of June, only 53 out of the 75 flagships have estimated costs
totaling PhpPhp1.58 trillion. Of the 53, 41 are ODA-funded projects
worth Php1.40 trillion. The remaining Php181 billion would be funded
through the GAA. In other words, almost 89% of the total cost of
projects with already determined amounts will be paid for by foreign
debt.
Just nine of the 41 ODA-funded flagship projects have identified
donors/creditors, based on NEDA’s June list. These are Japan with three
projects worth Php226.89 billion; China, three projects (Php164.55
billion); South Korea, two projects (Php14.06 billion); and World Bank,
one project (Php4.79 billion).
The Japanese and Chinese are backing the Duterte administration’s
largest mega-projects, an indication of how the two economic behemoths
see “development cooperation” as one of the key arenas of their
competition in the region. Japan is funding the Php211.46-billion PNR
North 2 (Malolos-Clark Airport-Clark Green City Rail); Php9.99-billion
Cavite Industrial Area Flood Management Project; and the Php5.44-billion
Malitubog-Maridagao Irrigation Project, Phase II.
Meanwhile, China is bankrolling the Php151-billion PNR Long-haul
(Calamba-Bicol); Php10.86-billion New Centennial Water Source – Kaliwa
Dam Project; and Php2.70-billion Chico River Pump Irrigation Project.
Although not yet identified in the latest NEDA list, Japanese and
Chinese loans are also being linked to other big-ticket rail projects.
These include the Php134-billion PNR South Commuter Line (Tutuban-Los
Baños); the Php230-billion Manila Metro Line 9 (Mega Manila Subway
Project – Phase 1); as well as the Mindanao Rail Project, of which the
first phase (Tagum-Davao-Digos) costing Php35.26 billion will be funded
via the GAA.
Gains beyond interests
Over-reliance on debt is obviously problematic but by itself tapping
concessional loans to build much needed infrastructure is not a wrong
policy. Sadly, ODA is shaped not by genuine development cooperation but
by the narrow agenda of lending governments and the corporate interests
they represent. Thus, potential economic and social development gains
for a borrowing country are greatly weighed down by bloated costs of
ODA-funded infrastructure.
Big infrastructure lenders like Japan and China profit not only from
the interests accruing from their loans to build rails and roads. The
larger gains they make are from the conditionalities they tie to these
loans such as requiring the Philippines to exclusively source from
Japanese and Chinese firms the goods and services needed to build the
rails and roads.
Lenders dictate the technology, design and construction of the
infrastructure to accommodate their own suppliers and infrastructure
firms. As such, Japanese and Chinese contractors are also favorably
positioned to corner operation and maintenance contracts once the rail
systems and other infrastructure are privatized under the Duterte
administration’s hybrid PPP scheme.
Lastly, creditors also favor the development of infrastructure in
areas where they have business interests. This explains the
concentration of Japan-funded infrastructure in Central and Southern
Luzon where export zones with Japanese investments are concentrated.
China’s interest in building infrastructure in Mindanao is tied to its
plantation and mining interests in the region.
All these make the cost of infrastructure development in the
Philippines more expensive and the debt burden onerous. Tied loans for
infrastructure development create commercial opportunities for Japanese
and Chinese companies that are otherwise not available to them. In
China’s case, infrastructure lending in poor countries is even used to
create employment for their own workforce at the expense of local labor.
At a time of prolonged global recession and slowdown in profit rates
of the industrial economies, these opportunities become even more
important. Alas, these opportunities only arise by undermining the
debtor’s own development needs.IBON Foundation, Inc. is an independent development institution established in 1978 that provides research, education, publications, information work and advocacy support on socioeconomic issues.
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