2006/06/27
RP debt service totals P721.7 B, study shows
RG
The Visayan Daily Star
The Philippines is allocating P721.7 billion in debt service, with P340 billion going to the interest and P381 billion meant to pay for the principal amortization. This means an allocation of P1.98 billion per day which is equivalent to the building of 7,920 classrooms or 250 kilometers of roads per day.
This was the
result of a study done by the Ateneo Macroeconomic Forum Model as presented by
Dr. Cielito Habito, director of the Ateneo de Manila University Center for
Economic Research and Development and former director-general of the National
Economic and Development Authority, in a university forum on "The Millennium
Development Goals and the National Debt" yesterday, at the Luce Auditorium of
Silliman University.
"We are getting deeper in debt," Habito said, even as he credited the present
administration with the improvement of its tax administration capability,
including the expanded coverage of the value-added tax as well as the promotion
of small and medium enterprises and development initiatives.
Habito added that while the country may have a strong peso, there are winners
and losers. "The government is both a winner and a loser because the debt
service bill declines, while the customs revenues drop, respectively," he said.
Nevertheless, despite this gloomy scenario, Habito said the Philippines is still
blessed as a nation because it has rich natural resources, it has resilient
people, and global trends provide rich opportunities at home and abroad.
"The Philippines will be the shining light of Asia and the world. Poverty need
not be inevitable. No one is so poor as to have nothing to share; no one is so
rich as to need nothing from another," he said.
Prof. Leonor Briones, professor of the National College of Public Administration
and Governance of U.P. Diliman, former national treasurer and chairperson of the
Silliman University Board of Trustees, said in the same forum that SU is a major
player in the campaign for the eight Millennium Development Goals.
The MDG has 14 targets to be achieved in 2015 by 190 signatory countries of the
United Nations, including the Philippines.
In an evaluation report submitted to the Social Watch Philippines, SU was cited
as an outstanding example of academe as a local core energy in MDG advocacy.
"One-third of the financial resources of the national government go to debt
servicing," Briones said as a consequence of the heavy borrowing done during
martial law and other heavy burdens inherited by the present government. Briones
also said the so-called illegitimate debts of the country have been legitimized
as former President Cory Aquino reorganized these debts, converting them into
bonds.
"We are now the ones paying for these bonds," Briones said, adding that a strong
peso is not necessarily a strong economy.
The eight MDG goals are to eradicate extreme poverty and hunger; achieve
universal primary education; promote gender equality and empower women; reduce
child mortality; improve maternal health; combat HIV/AIDS, malaria, and other
diseases; ensure environmental sustainability; and, develop a global partnership
for development.
See the news at:
http://www.visayandailystar.com/2006/June/27/negor4.htm
About
Philippines
About Social Watch
in
Philippines
Publications by Social Watch Focal Point in Philippines
See news about
Philippines
FAIR USE NOTICE: This page contains copyrighted material the use of which has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. Social Watch, which is mentioned in the report, distributes this material without profit for research and educational purposes. We believe this constitutes a fair use of any such copyrighted material. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond fair use, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.
|