This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. VII, No. 5, March 4-10, 2007
RP’s Fiscal Situation: Filipinos Bear Brunt
of VAT, Other Reforms
Last year’s lower deficit was achieved by
drastically cutting critical spending, especially on social services, and by
charging higher regressive taxes on the people.
By Sonny
Africa
President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo recently said
before members of the diplomatic corps that “through the painful but necessary
battles to raise new revenue, crack down on tax cheats and prosecute corrupt
officials, we are now finally a nation ready to do right by our poorest
citizens.” And indeed, the Arroyo administration’s major economic effort in 2006
was to rein in mounting public fiscal deficits.
At first glance, it seems to have succeeded. The
full-year 2006 deficit was only P62.2 billion ($1.2 billion based on the year’s
average exchange rate of $1:P52.05), a 57% decline from the P146.8 billion
($2.67 billion based on 2005’s average exchange rate of $1:P55.05) recorded last
year and substantially lower than the official projected ceiling of P125
billion. These have gone far in reducing the public sector borrowing requirement
to 1.8% of gross domestic product in the first nine months of the year.
However, the achievements on the fiscal front
are less signs of a strengthening economy than indications of how economic
burdens are placed on those already least able to bear them: the lower deficit
was achieved by drastically cutting critical spending, especially on social
services, and by charging higher regressive taxes.
Taxes increase, social services spending falls
For 2006, government collected P978.7 billion in
tax and non-tax revenues, readily surpassing the target. This was due to
additional revenues from the administration’s centerpiece reformed value-added
tax (VAT) law which was implemented in February 2006. The reformed VAT increased
the VAT rate from 10% to 12%, temporarily increased the corporate income tax
rate from 32% to 35% and removed VAT exemptions on oil and electricity, among
other provisions. It is expected to be a significant contributor to government’s
goal of achieving a balanced budget by 2008.
Based on data from the Department of Finance (DoF),
the VAT generated P76.9 billion in net revenues in 2006, exceeding the target of
P75.8 billion, largely from consumers’ pockets. The reformed VAT also boosted
total VAT collections to P268.7 billion in 2006, a 71.5% increase from P156.7
billion in 2005.
The largest part of VAT collections came from
collections by the Bureau of Customs, which collected a total of P55.2 billion
for the whole year, while the Bureau of Internal Revenue collected a total of
P21.6 billion, ahead of its target by P1.2 billion.
But as tax revenues have increased, government
has been cutting back further on social services budgets that are not only
already grossly insufficient to begin with but have been declining in real terms
since 1997. Real public spending on education fell to P1,331 per Filipino in the
recently-approved 2007 budget after reaching a high of P1,503 in 2002. Health
spending is down to just P111.78 per Filipino.
It should be noted that the declining
allocations for these vital services is happening amid long-standing gross
neglect. The Department of Education (DepEd) admits that there is a lack of
20,517 teachers (assuming a ratio of 45 students to one teacher), 45,775
classrooms (assuming 45 students to a classroom), 3.2 million seats and 67
million textbooks in school year 2006-07.
The burden of health spending is also
increasingly borne by Filipinos who can least afford its high costs.
Government’s share in total health expenditures has drastically fallen under
Arroyo, with possibly the steepest drop in such a short period of time. Health
accounts show that national and local government’s share in total health
expenditure was 40.6% in 2000 but fell to just 30.3% in 2004. Filipinos are
forced to make up the difference from private sources, primarily out-of-pocket
spending.
Repayment to creditors
All these fiscally repressive measures have
aimed to ensure repayments to creditors as well as to assure foreign investors
that foreign exchange is available for their globally-integrated commercial,
financial and pseudo-manufacturing operations. In 2006 government paid around
P854.4 billion in total public debt service, which is equivalent to P9,935 per
Filipino, or seven times combined spending on education and health. In nominal
terms, this is a 211% increase from debt service levels in 2001. The Arroyo
administration has not only brought the country to its worst ever fiscal crisis,
it is making the most public debt payments and is the most indebted government
in Philippine history.
As it is, the government borrowed P592.4 billion
in the first 11 months of 2006, or slightly less than in the same period the
previous year. Over four-fifths of this borrowing went straight back to
creditors through debt servicing. Although government has tried to repay as much
debt as it could, total national government debt still increased marginally to
P3.914 trillion in October 2006 from P3.888 trillion in the same period in
2005. These pre-payments give the
impression that the debt situation is improving, and to restore government
creditworthiness so it can continue to borrow. But since these do not address
the fundamental roots of the debt problem (economic backwardness, trade and
investment liberalization, bureaucratic waste and corruption), the debt crisis
cannot but eventually repeat itself. The government in early January 2007
already borrowed $1 billion from the international capital market and aims to
borrow at least $1.47 billion more in official development assistance from the
World Bank, Asian Development Bank and the Japan Bank for International
Cooperation. Some P260 billion is also going to be borrowed domestically in
2007. Behind the fiscal
squeeze The International Monetary
Fund (IMF) and the World Bank (WB) have visibly supported the Arroyo
administration’s fiscal squeeze. Aside from the IMF-WB issuing favourable
country assessments, the Bank in December approved the immediate single tranche
disbursement of a $250-million policy loan, its first in almost a decade,
because the associated fiscal conditionalities were already met. So even as
government plays up the repayment of its remaining $220-million debt to the IMF
and its exit from the Fund’s post-program monitoring arrangement, it also
affirms its compliance with the Bank’s policy conditions. In any case, the economy’s
financial backwardness and reliance on external sources of financing means that
it remains on a tight leash with government economic policy-makers effectively
compelled by blackmail not just through multilateral lenders but also through
financial blackmail by commercial banks and through global capital markets. Hence, the financial
sacrifices the Arroyo government asks Filipinos to make cannot be justified as
short-term pain for long-term gain since the fiscal squeeze is precisely aimed
at furthering the administration’s bankrupt neoliberal agenda. More than
anything else the Arroyo government’s fiscal efforts have been focused on
assuring debtors of repayments regardless of their impact on the general public.
However, even the
sustainability of this approach is in doubt. The expenditure cuts have been
severe and the taxes burdensome. At the same time, there remain persistent
problems in revenue administration such as high tax evasion and persistently
over-generous incentives for foreign investors. Bureaucratic corruption also
continues to bleed government resources. IBON Features / Posted by Bulatlat © 2007 Bulatlat
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IBON Features
Posted by Bulatlat