ICTSI

By Beatriz Marie D. Cruz, Reporter

THE GOVERNMENT of Philippine President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. should expand its funding sources and manage spending to meet economic growth targets this year, according to lawmakers.

This was after analysts said the dry spell brought by El Ni帽o could temper growth this year.

鈥淲e need to strike a balance between鈥 [what is] realistic and [what is] aspirational,鈥 Marikina City Rep. Stella Luz A. Quimbo told聽大象传媒聽on the sidelines of a House of Representatives hearing last week.

Ms. Quimbo, who is also a senior vice chairperson of the House Committee on Appropriations, noted that growth slowed last year due to a huge contraction in state spending in the second quarter.

Government spending slowed to 4.3% amid red-hot inflation and rising interest rates.

Albay Rep. and House Committee on Ways and Means Chairman Jose Ma. Clemente S. Salceda brushed off calls to revise growth targets but cited the need to manage government spending.

鈥淲e saw that (slow government spending) coming,鈥 he said in a Viber message. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why the House initiated a policy of broadening the sources of funding for unprogrammed allocations in the 2024 General Appropriations Act.鈥

Congressmen in November approved on third and final reading a bill that would allow the government to tap excess funds of government-owned and -controlled corporations (GOCC) in funding unprogrammed budgets.

Finance Secretary Ralph G. Recto said last week the government might have to adjust its fiscal targets for the year to be 鈥渕ore realistic.鈥

Economic managers are targeting 6.5% to 7.5% GDP growth this year under the Development Budget Coordination Committee鈥檚 (DBCC) latest macroeconomic assumptions.

It also projects a growth target of as much as 8% in 2028 under its medium-term fiscal and growth goals.聽Philippine economic growth slowed to 5.6% last year, falling short of the state鈥檚 6-7% goal.

Mr. Recto said DBCC鈥檚 entire medium-term fiscal framework is under review.聽鈥淭he fiscal plan was made when (Mr. Marcos) became president in 2022,鈥 he told reporters. 鈥淭here was no war in the Middle East, the Ukraine war had just begun. Thereafter, prices of food and oil rose.鈥

Former Finance Secretary Margarito B. Teves in an interview last week said the government should revisit its economic growth targets 鈥渢o have more conservative assumptions.鈥

鈥淲e have to really go back to the assumptions that brought about the target of the government,鈥 Mr. Teves separately told聽BusinessWorld聽on the sidelines of the hearing.

Raul V. Fabella, a retired professor from the University of the Philippines School of Economics, said the government might miss its fiscal goals this year due to El Ni帽o.

鈥淲e might not meet the target because of the many issues,鈥 he told reporters last week. 鈥淲e have El Nino, floods in Mindanao, a dry spell in Negros, etc.鈥

The economy shrank by 0.5% in 1998, when the country experienced the worst El Ni帽o dry spell in history.

Economic managers expect that the National Government鈥檚 budget deficit to hit P1.39 trillion this year, or 5.1% of GDP.

Under its fiscal framework, revenues are expected to account for 15% to 16% of GDP, while expenditures will be about 20%.

鈥淥verall, especially in view of the prospect of lower Fed rates, I think this year will be better for growth,鈥 Mr. Salceda said.