* This is my article in BusinessWorld last week.
BWorld 133, Dissecting Dutertenomics' overspending plan, June 01, 2017
Among the important characteristics of the user-pay
principle is that only those who use the service or facility will pay for its
construction and maintenance while the rest of the population -- who won’t use
them -- will be spared of such cost. This characteristic is embedded in the
public-private partnership (PPP) mode of construction, procurement, and
maintenance of big infrastructure projects.
In contrast, projects that are funded through the annual
general appropriations act (GAA) and official development assistance (ODA) are
under all-taxpayers-pay principle. More specifically, GAA are paid by current
taxpayers while ODA are to be paid by future taxpayers.
Last month, the government through the Department of Transportation
(DoTr) and Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines (CAAP) has terminated
the PPP mode of Development, Operations and Maintenance for five regional
airport projects -- New Bohol [Panglao], Davao, Iloilo, Laguindingan and
Bacolod-Silay. These five projects are projected to have a total cost of P108
billion.
There are other projects that suffered from policy
reversals from PPP to ODA-funding, like the Kaliwa Dam project in Quezon, and
the PNR South Railway project.
Since late 2016, the Duterte administration has announced
that it will avoid PPP modes whenever possible and shift to government funding
via GAA or ODA or a mixture of both. The reason given is that it will be faster
and cheaper to build via government funding. This will cover mostly the
P8-trillion infrastructure programs then auction off the operation and
maintenance (O&M) contracts to the private sector.
Recall that in my previous piece, the DOTr said during
the BusinessWorld Economic Forum last May 19 that these four big projects will
all be ODA-funded:
1. PNR North Railway (Manila-Clark), Q4 2017 -- Q4 2021,
P255B.
2. PNR South Railway (Manila-Bicol), Q3 2018 -- 2021,
P270B.
3. Mega-Manila subway (Phase 1, QC-Taguig), Q4 2019 --
2024, P225B.
4. Edsa-Central Corridor Bus Rapid Transit BRT, Q1 2019
-- Q1 2021, P38B.
Now the basic question -- is it true that GAA or
ODA-funded are more efficient, faster, and cheaper to build, than PPP-funded
projects?
In the same BusinessWorld Economic Forum last May 19, one
of the speakers was Oliver Tan, Chief Financial Officer of Megawide
Construction Corp. He showed two tables comparing the construction of two
airports in the Visayas, the New Iloilo and expanded Mactan-Cebu airports (see
table).
Mactan Cebu airport terminal -- whose awarding was
delayed for 18 months but will still be completed on time -- is almost five
times the size of the New Iloilo airport and yet construction time is almost half
that of the latter. The Cebu airport serves 17 international destinations, 27
domestic destinations, by 20 partner airlines. When this new terminal is
finished middle of 2018, passengers are projected to enjoy these benefits:
check in time will be reduced from 10.5 minutes to 6.85 minutes; getting
luggage from 11 to 6.5 minutes; while retail outlets will rise from 17 to 28
and dining options from 17 to 31.
From this example alone, it is NOT true that burdening
all taxpayers with government-implemented infra projects is more beneficial to
the public.
There are inherent problems and risks to the public if
GAA- and ODA-funding become the dominant mode in building important
infrastructure projects.
One, a government administration is short term, limited to
only six years term and thus, it has little political or corporate brand to
build and protect, it can worry less of what the people would say after its
term has ended especially if the project is later discovered to be of inferior
quality and tainted with corruption. In contrast, a corporation has a brand to
protect and it would not risk this brand that has been built for decades to be
tainted with corruption and wastes.
Two, ODA funding normally have tight strings attached,
like a China-ODA would mean only Chinese contractors, suppliers, managers, and
even workers would do the work. Local firms would be relegated to O&M and
their purchase of equipment and supplies might be constrained by the project
specifications so that they will be forced to source these from China again.
Three, there are recently finished and ongoing PPP
projects that are yielding positive results, like the Mactan-Cebu Airport
terminal building, NAIA Expressway, Tarlac-Pangasinan-La Union Expressway
(TPLEx), school buildings, and automated fare collection system for the trains.
These gains cannot simply be dismissed as inferior to government-promised
better infra, especially under the environment of bad governance culture in the
country.
Four, the user-pay principle means that a tollway or an
airport in northern Luzon will be paid only by those who frequently use those
facilities. So the people and taxpayers in southern Luzon, Visayas, and
Mindanao who seldom or do not use these facilities will be spared of servicing
the cost of construction and O&M.
The shift from PPP to GAA and ODA funding of the
build-build-build plan of Dutertenomics does not bode well for Filipinos.
Bienvenido S. Oplas, Jr. is the head of Minimal
Government Thinkers and a Fellow of SEANET, both members of Economic Freedom
Network (EFN) Asia.
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See also:
BWorld 131, Why the FiT-All is a burden to consumers, May 18, 2017
BWorld 132, Global commodity prices, trade and growth, May 27, 2017 BWorld 133, Dissecting Dutertenomics' overspending plan, June 01, 2017
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