August 28, 2023 | 12:04 am
Introspective By
Romeo L. Bernardo
I take no delight in having been
right and was unsurprised when the disappointing second quarter gross domestic
product (Q2 GDP) annual growth number of 4.3% (from 6.1% in Q1) came out.
Together with a few other private macro watchers like Anton Periquet (Chairman
and CEO of AB Capital) and Philippine Institute for Development Studies (PIDS)
Senior Fellow Margarita Debuque-Gonzales, we forecast a less optimistic growth
of around 5% for this year, and over the medium term.
At a public forum in the UP School of
Economics last week, honorable Professor Philip Medalla, unshackled by public
office, was also less sanguine. Analysts who earlier were more optimistic
hurriedly adjusted their forecast downwards by as much as one percentage point.
But not government.
Planning Secretary Arsi Balisacan —
recently awarded Most Distinguished Alumnus by the UP Alumni Association (UPAA)
— in a related lecture reaffirmed that their 6-7% is still achievable this
year. Attributing the underperformance largely to government underspending,
especially on capital outlays, he said that the government economic team — made
up of himself, Finance Secretary Ben Diokno, and Department of Budget and
Management Secretary Amenah Pangandaman — committed to do catch up spending for
the second half.
I am vigorously rooting for the
government to succeed in this.
I am also somewhat skeptical that
this can be done speedily given the structural nature of the bottlenecks in
government’s execution capacity. This impediment was underscored in a question
that UPAA Lifetime Achievement awardee, engineer Rene Santiago, posed to
Secretary Balisacan, noting the very low absorptive capacity of the Department
of Transportation (at around 30% of disbursements) and the Department of Public
Works and Highways (at 50%-60%). With inputs from him, Christine Tang and I
identified the roadblocks for both (official development assistance/general
appropriations act) ODA/GAA-financed and private-public partnership (PPP)
projects which I excerpted in my column last April, “Infrastructure Anyone?” (https://www.bworldonline.com/opinion/2023/04/30/519979/infrastructure-anyone/).
These include: 1.) right of way
delays; 2.) lack of a national inter-modal framework to serve as a basis for
identifying, selecting, and prioritizing projects that will yield the highest
economic returns for our archipelagic country; 3.) non-implementation of
contracted user fees and charges; 4.) the problem that is the Department of
Transportation and Communications (despite its having a very qualified and
competent head, Secretary Jimmy Bautista); and, 5.) third-party challenges that
hold up progress, from project preparation to award, especially for PPP.
While I would like to be optimistic
that these can be overcome, it may be Panglossian to believe so, at least in
the short run. Of course, government can choose to prioritize spending
magnitude over quality, which may boost growth for 2023, but at high cost
beyond.
THE MEDIUM TERM
Like Anton Periquet and Maggie Gonzales, we are
also not optimistic that the Development Budget Coordination Committee’s
forecast GDP growth of 6.5% to 8% for the balance of the administration’s term
is likely, for several reasons.
First, there is the still depressed
global growth due to several factors including the persistence of recession
risks in the US, the war in Europe, and China’s reeling from a real estate
bust, its poor COVID management, and the trade tensions with the US and its
allies.
Then, consider that pre-pandemic, we
were already at the peak of the credit cycle, largely due to long-running
benign inflation and being “forever QE,” thus having both low interest rates
and abundant capital (and with no way to go but to slow down).
Third, there are the adverse effects
of COVID scarring, especially on the labor force (e.g., resistance to going
back to the office, jobs mismatches) and a learning crisis.
Fourth, we have constrained fiscal
resources and headroom, with public debt-to-GDP now at 60% from 40%
pre-pandemic, and a highly elevated deficit-to-GDP of 7.3% in 2022, targeted to
be pruned to 6.1% this year, and a primary budget deficit of 5.6% last year,
targeted to go down to 3.6% this year.
Then there is the still high inflation
as the continuing Ukraine-Russia war and the emerging El Niño phenomenon have
an impact on food markets (e.g., India and Vietnam restricting rice exports),
aggravating the decades-long hopelessly dysfunctional Department of Agriculture
and Department of Agrarian Reform coupled with political resistance to
agricultural imports from impacted sectors and rent seekers.
All this, together with still ongoing
US Fed monetary tightening and the resulting elevated global and domestic
interest rates, have a consequent negative impact on private investments and
consumption. An emerging sustained “twin deficit scenario” (fiscal and foreign
exchange) flagged by Prof. Medalla, also implies a likely wider interest rate
premium on Philippine loans and securities.
Then there is the absence of any
obvious new growth drivers to complement two old reliables, OFW remittances and
BPO (business process outsourcing) earnings, whose future growth is challenged
by an already high base compared to decades ago. Generative AI also poses a
medium-term threat to BPO, especially for routine work, unless we can rapidly
upskill our workers.
Finally, despite highly acclaimed
roadshows by President Marcos Jr. and his economic team and prominent business
leaders, there has been so far limited conversion to foreign direct investments
— thanks to a miserable NAIA airport matched by a bureaucracy stuck in neutral.
(Overheard from a foreign investor and tourist: “I won’t ever go back — spent
more time at the airport than the beach.”)
Anton Periquet is even forecasting
medium term growth of 4.5%, “a return to GMA era trajectory where foreign
investment was absent and fiscal constraints prevailed.”
IMPACT ON FISCAL SUSTAINABILITY
A low medium term growth scenario, say of under 5%,
has implications on fiscal sustainability. This can fuel a downward spiral of
low revenues, high budget deficits, high interest rates, low public capex
spending, thus even lower GDP, and potentially an expansive public debt-to-GDP
ratio that makes us vulnerable to risks from financial shocks. Prof. Medalla
even flagged the risk of a “perfect storm if perception of the Philippine
government as a borrower were to go back to what it used to be.” This is well
analyzed in a PIDS paper by Margarita Debuque-Gonzales, Justine Diokno-Sicat,
et al (https://www.pids.gov.ph/publication/discussion-papers/fiscal-effects-of-the-covid-19-pandemic-assessing-public-debt-sustainability-in-the-philippines).
Thankfully, Secretary Diokno and his
team are well aware of this, and are thus pushing for reforms that can tame
spending and raise revenues, including: 1.) the reform of military pensions;
2.) tax measures such as new taxes on the digital economy and on junk food
(though unpopular and regressive), and further reform of VAT to limit leakages;
3.) the privatization of government assets and operations, notably the big
ticket Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp. (better known as Pagcor); and, 4.)
expenditure reforms including revisiting the expensive and flawed “free tuition
in SUCs” (RA 10931), and streamlining of government bureaucracy.
These are all highly political. With
resolve, strategic and skillful management leveraging of the President’s high
approval rating, and with closer coordination with legislators via LEDAC (the
Legislative-Executive Development Advisory Council), they are achievable. A
column I wrote last month elaborates on some of these actions for the next 365
days. (https://www.bworldonline.com/opinion/2023/07/25/535716/marcos-2-0-year-2-to-dos/)
Romeo L. Bernardo is principal
Philippine adviser to GlobalSource Partners (globalsourcepartners.com). He
serves as a board director in leading companies in banking and financial
services, energy, food and beverage, real estate, and others. He has had a
20-year run in the public sector, including stints in the Department of Finance
(Undersecretary), the IMF, World Bank, and the ADB.
romeo.lopez.bernardo@gmail.com
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