No images? Click here FREE MEDS AND MORE A drugstore on Laong Laan Road in Sampaloc, Manila, sets up its own version of a “community pantry” on Friday to hand out free face masks, vitamins and other nonprescription medicines to people in need. —MARIANNE BERMUDEZ NewsNat’l ID listup starts with crashThe first day of the online registration for the national ID system on Friday saw an unexpected surge in applicants, causing its dedicated website to crash. Apologizing for the glitch, the Philippine Statistics Authority said it was trying to fix the problem and would announce on its Facebook page when the website launching the Philippine Identification System (PhilSys) can resume its operation. —Story by Ben O. De Vera Read more: newsinfo.inquirer.net RegionsCebu City mayor wants ‘fair share’CEBU CITY—Cebu City Mayor Edgardo Labella has asked the national government for a “fair share” of COVID-19 vaccines from the 500,000 doses of CoronaVac that arrived on April 22 and the expected 150,000 doses of Sputnik V, after the inoculation of senior citizens was stopped as the city ran out of shots on April 23. Only 5,000 of the 28,000 seniors who had registered have been given their first dose of the vaccine. —Story by Nestle Semilla Read more: newsinfo.inquirer.net Newsletter / Join usHas this been forwarded by a friend? Subscribe now to the Philippine Daily Inquirer Newsletter and get your latest news and important updates on COVID-19. Banner StoryPH foreign borrowings for virus fight hit P887BBy Ben O. de Vera The Philippines has more than enough funds to vaccinate 70 percent of its population with the $18.4-billion (about P887 billion) loans for pandemic response measures it had obtained at concessional interest rates from foreign sources, according to the Department of Finance (DOF). Finance Undersecretary Mark Dennis Joven told a press briefing on Friday that as of April 28, the Philippines obtained $16.26 billion in external borrowings for budgetary support, or money that had been injected into the budget to fund COVID-19 response. These include funds to purchase medical equipment and to upgrade facilities, as well as for the dole outs to poor families whenever the country or parts of it reverts to the most stringent lockdowns aimed at containing the coronavirus. Another $2.14 billion in project loans had been secured by the Philippines since last year to finance specific projects, such as building quarantine and testing facilities, as well as granting financial aid to specific sectors. According to estimates as of Friday by the Asian Development Bank (ADB), $30.32 billion (about P1.46 trillion), equivalent to 8.24 percent of the 2019 gross domestic product (GDP), had been allocated for policy measures which the government had put in place since the start of the pandemic to deal with the resulting health and socioeconomic crises. If the government were to distribute this amount for pandemic support to all Filipinos, each one would receive $280.47 or over P13,500. Joven said “most” of the earlier borrowings had already been disbursed in order to offset the weak tax collection resulting from the pandemic-induced recession, which shed millions of jobs and shuttered thousands of businesses. The DOF official pointed out that debt had long been a part of budget financing across different administrations and even in other countries. “This forms part of efficient governance,” he said. Joven said that of the foreign funding for budgetary support, $6.93 billion came from ADB, the World Bank, and Asian Infrastructure and Investment Bank (AIIB) based in Beijing. Out of the total borrowings to date, Joven said $1.2 billion (about P58 billion) in loans from the three multilateral lenders would be used to procure COVID-19 vaccines as well as the nationwide mass inoculation rollout. Joven said $600 million to $700 million out of these loans were already contracted or booked to pay for vaccines. While some supply contracts have yet to be signed, the government already locked in the doses, he said. Some of the vaccines made by Sinovac, AstraZeneca, Moderna and Pfizer which would be arriving were being financed by these loans, he added. But Joven said only $100 million had been drawn or released for payments to signed contracts. Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III this week said about 143 million vaccine doses were expected to arrive within the year—enough to vaccinate 70 million Filipinos, or the entire adult population, to achieve herd immunity by yearend and allow a safe reopening of the economy. Enough to pay for shots He said P82.5 billion, including the P58 billion in loans from ADB, World Bank and AIIB, would be enough to pay for the shots. According to Joven, Filipinos may have two choices: “Vaccinating people to lessen [COVID-19] deaths, or not borrowing money and not vaccinating people, which will result in more deaths.” “I don’t know with you, but I don’t want to be in a situation like some other countries where deaths and infection rates have spiraled so bad, that it would be harder for the economy to recover,” he said. “I think it’s practical to address the problem now, immediately, so that economic recovery will be faster after,” he added. The government also obtained $1.32 billion in loans from France, Japan and South Korea, Joven said. No strings attached The Philippines also raised about $8 billion from commercial borrowings abroad through the sale of debt paper or bonds denominated in US dollars, euros and yen to mostly foreign investors. During the past two months, the Philippines sold euro-denominated global bonds and yen-denominated samurai bonds at low rates. Both were met with robust demand, one of the benefits from the country’s investment-grade credit ratings which kept commercial borrowing rates low despite the pandemic. The DOF’s website showed the Philippines also received three grants, with no strings attached, for COVID-19 response from ADB and Japan totaling $26.74 million as of early April. Joven noted that all the foreign borrowings had low interest rates of less than 1 percent per annum and lengthier terms to repay, reaching 12 to 20 years. As the pandemic raged, the Philippines and many other countries had turned to ramping up their sovereign borrowings to fill their financing gap in the protracted fight against COVID-19, Joven said. During the longest and most stringent COVID-19 lockdown in the region, the country’s GDP shrank by a record 9.6 percent—the worst decline since the end of World War II. When the economy recovers from its pandemic scars, and reverts to positive growth, Joven said the Philippines could well repay these loans. “We purposely chose multilateral funders. Why? Because the rates they offer are very concessional ... [They provide a] long tenor of payment so we can ‘chop-chop’ our amortization over very long periods of time. In some cases, it may go beyond decades or two decades,” Joven said. In the case of the multilateral loans, he said these had a three-year grace period such that debt repayment would start in the fourth year. “By that time [of loan maturity], we expect the economy to have recovered already and the world to have moved away from this pandemic situation.Going back to normal, it would really not be a big problem to pay for all these debts,” Joven said. Read more: newsinfo.inquirer.net EditorialLabor Day in a pandemicThis year, for workers everywhere, Labor Day is being marked as an occasion of uncertainty, of fear, of loss, and of grief. In the Philippines and as with many other countries in the world including wealthier ones, workers are grieving the loss of jobs due to the wide lockdowns caused by the pandemic. If they still managed to hold on to their employment, workers have had to cope with reduced wages due to staggered workdays and shortened hours. For every 'work-from-home' employee spending hours before a computer screen, there is a worker laid off from gainful employment and seeking any means of livelihood possible. For every displaced employee pivoting to entrepreneurship or home-based businesses, there are families that have had to resort to joining the long queues at the community pantries for free food. Or else borrowing from relatives, neighbors, and usurious lenders to bridge the gap between their earnings and needs. Read full story: opinion.inquirer.net |
Friday, April 30, 2021
PH foreign borrowings for virus fight hit P887B. Inquirer Newsletter May 01, 2021
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