This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 50, January 29-February 4, 2006
Lower Budget Deficit
Not an Achievement – Ibon
Government's announcement that
it has recorded a budget deficit for 2005 that is well below preliminary
estimates may seem a significant achievement. But it actually fails to address
the root problem of huge public debt which brings about the deficit. BY
IBON FOUNDATION Government's announcement
that it has recorded a budget deficit for 2005 that is well below preliminary
estimates may seem a significant achievement. But it actually fails to address
the root problem of huge public debt which brings about the deficit, according
to independent think-tank Ibon Foundation. Last year's national
government (NG) budget deficit was P146.5 billion, substantially less than the
P187.1 billion recorded in 2004 and the original deficit program of P180 billion
for 2005. Government attributed the
lower deficit to a combination of higher revenues and lower expenses. Revenues
in 2005 grew 13.7% from the previous year while expenses rose by only 6.2% over
the same period. But according to Ibon
research head Sonny Africa, 85% of government revenues in 2005 went to debt
service payments for principal and interest. This means that government still
had to keep on borrowing in order to pay its current expenses. According to the
Bureau of Treasury the total outstanding debt of the NG by September 2005 was
P4.02 trillion or a 5.5% increase from the end-2004 level of P3.8 trillion. Hence, government's main
objective in reducing the deficit is still to be able to continue paying all
public debt and maintaining the country's creditworthiness. In order to do this,
it has levied higher taxes and fees while sacrificing social services for the
people. The most notorious of
government's new revenue measures is the restructured value-added tax (R-VAT)
which was implemented in November 2005. It is expected to raise P97-P105 billion
in additional revenues in 2006 by removing exemptions on sectors such as
electricity and petroleum, and raising the VAT rate to 12% starting in February.
This is widely seen to result in higher prices of basic commodities and
services, and a bigger burden for most Filipinos. Other measures included the
"sin tax" law which raised P15 billion more in taxes in 2005; Napocor's
electricity rate adjustment in April last year which raised P112 billion; and
higher government fees and charges which raised an additional P16.8 billion. Meanwhile, government's
austerity program has taken a serious toll on state spending on social services,
on which most of the poor rely. Real spending on health in 2005, for instance,
fell 18% from 2001 levels, and spending on education by 5% over the same period.
But total payments for debt service nearly doubted between 2004 and 2005. This means that government
spending per person on health fell from P164.46 in 2001 to P119.89 in 2005 and
on education from P1,491.72 to P1,285.06. But public spending on total debt
payments per person skyrocketed from P3,496.05 in 2001 to P6,332.53 last year. Thus, government has passed
on the cost of servicing the high public debt to the people. But the debt is
bloated by onerous and illegitimate debts, and the government has failed to
address this issue. The most notorious case is the Bataan Nuclear Power Plant,
which has cost the people $1.8 billion in interest payments alone since 1991.
But despite the patent illegitimacy of the foreign debts contracted for the BNPP,
government has still committed to pay them. Instead of proclaiming this
as an achievement, government should instead examine its debt portfolio and
policy. According to Africa, "With the debt service burden eating up a bulk of
government resources, it is doubly worrisome that the administration is pursuing
the R-VAT and other anti-people revenue raising measures imposed by the
International Monetary Fund to ensure debt payments." Posted by Bulatlat © 2006 Bulatlat
■
Alipato Publications Permission is granted to reprint or redistribute this article, provided its author/s and Bulatlat are properly credited and notified.
Posted by Bulatlat