* This is my third article in Asia Times, published last December 5, 2018.
See also:
Asia Times 1, The fast rising price of ‘Dutertenomics’, September 12, 2018
Asia Times 2, Storm Mangkhut and PH inflation, January 21, 2019
Beijing has stalled in delivering $24 billion in promised
aid and investment to Manila. Considering the terms and conditions of the
funding that may not be such a bad thing
When Chinese President Xi Jinping made a landmark visit
to the Philippines last month, many expected the leader to make good on a
previous reported pledge to deliver as much as US$24 billion in aid and
investment on his host.
Despite a slew of new signed agreements, Xi’s visit
failed to clarify China’s commitment to Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s
expansionary economic agenda, including his much ballyhooed “Build, Build,
Build” infrastructure-building scheme.
Until now, despite Duterte’s bullish pronouncements,
China is not a big donor to the Philippines in terms of foreign aid and
official development assistance (ODA). Indeed, as of June, China has only one
outstanding loan project in the Philippines, namely the Chico river pump
irrigation project worth US$62.1 million.
As a percentage of total ODA received by the Philippines
as of June 2018, China accounted for a mere .8% of the estimated US$13 billion
received, according to National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA)
statistics.
Japan, on the other hand, accounted for 40.3% of the
total, while the World Bank and Asian Development Bank extended 20.6% and 17.7%
respectively. China also trails Australia, South Korea, the European Union and
France in total ODA given.
When Duterte visited China in October 2016, his
administration boasted of a coming aid and investment bonanza, proof of his
trip’s self-professed “success.”
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte (L) and Chinese
President Xi Jinping shake hands after a signing ceremony in Beijing on October
20, 2016. Photo: AFP/Pool
The US$24 billion sum was supposed to be delivered in 13
cooperation, financial assistance and investment pledges, with US$15 bill in
business to business contracts and US$9 billion in ODA, US$7 billion of which
were to be tied loans and US$2 billion in concessional loans.
The proposed projects included a US$3 billion memorandum
of understanding (MoU) commitment with the MVP Global Infrastructure Group and
Tianjin Suli Cable to produce high-end cables in the Philippines.
Another vague MoU with MVP Global Infrastructure and
China’s Railway Engineering Group vowed to spend US$2.5 billion in
infrastructure. Another memorandum with the Green Energy Development
Corporation and PowerChina Guizhou aimed to build a US$1 billion power plant.
In March 2017, China’s Vice Premier Wang Yang visited
Davao City, Duterte’s hometown, to reaffirm Beijing’s commitment to building
and co-financing a southern railway projected to cost around US$4 billion on
the southern island.
In November 2017, China Prime Minister Li Keqiang visited
Manila and vowed to fund two projects, namely the Chico river pump irrigation
project for US$62.1 million at 2% interest over a 20 year repayment period, and
the so-called New Centennial Water Source Project, or Kaliwa Dam, for US$374
million.
When President Xi visited Manila last month, he and
Duterte formalized and signed 29 additional agreements, including a MoU
cooperation agreement on China’s US$1 trillion Belt and Road Initiative (BRI)
and joint oil and gas development in the contested South China Sea.
Yet nearly all of China’s ODA and investment promises to
Duterte remain unfunded. And many of the proposed deals, if ever actualized,
are on less-than-generous terms. The interest rates on the proposed projects
range between 2-3% per annum, versus only 0.25-0.75% interest for Japanese ODA
funded projects.
Moreover, the terms of the 29 new agreements agreed to
when Xi visited Duterte have not been publicly disclosed, raising criticism
about the lack of transparency surrounding the deals.
The NEDA approved last year the first phase of the
China-backed Mindanao rail project for US$726 million. Construction was
targeted to start in the third quarter of 2018, though so far for unclear
reasons no ground has been broken.
China’s ODA projects in the Philippines have been hounded
by controversy in the past.
For instance, a China-backed North Rail Project was terminated
under a previous administration before the loan was closed after the Supreme
Court has that it was a commercial deal and not a government-to-government one
that should have undergone competitive bidding.
The Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo administration was hounded by
irregularities in a US$329 million government national broadband project with
China’s ZTE Corporation. That project was cancelled in 2007 due to corruption
allegations, including alleged kickbacks paid to the first family.
China’s ODA funneled through the Export-Import Bank of
China prescribes that no less than 50% of total procurement for concessional
loans should be done through Chinese contractors, often making them more costly
compared to using local contractors.
The Kaliwa Dam project, which aims to supply an
additional 600 million liters per day of drinking water for Metro Manila and
surrounding provinces and augment the 4,000 million liters from the existing
Angat Dam, will be much more costly to build under China’s proposed terms than
Japan’s competing offer.
A Japanese firm, Global Utility Development Corporation
(GUDC), previously submitted an unsolicited proposal for the project as part of
an Integrated Public-Private Partnership (PPP) scheme.
That proposed deal would have seen the Japanese company
finance all of the construction, operation and maintenance, and thus would not
have entailed any foreign borrowing from Manila.
Philippines-Kaliwa Dam Site-China Site of the proposed
China-backed Kaliwa dam. Photo: Facebook
China’s proposed funding agreed during Xi’s visit for the
same though revised project will be done under a so-called hybrid PPP, with
construction led by China contractors and operation and maintenance done by a
local firm.
Eighty-five percent of the construction costs, unlike
under the self-funded Japanese proposal, will come from ODA and thus be
shouldered by Filipino taxpayers.
The cost of the China-backed project, including a
proposed waste water treatment, will be US$640 million, compared to Japan’s more
modest and less environmentally impactful US$410 million proposal. It will also
take five years to build compared to Japan’s faster four year plan.
Meanwhile, there are ongoing negotiations for more China
ODA, including funding for a long haul North-South Railway Project and the
Bases Conversion and Development Authority’s Subic-Clark Railway project.
While Duterte aims to “build, build, build” the country
to a “golden age of infrastructure,” it’s not clear China is the best or most
reliable source for financing that vision.
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See also:
Asia Times 1, The fast rising price of ‘Dutertenomics’, September 12, 2018
Asia Times 2, Storm Mangkhut and PH inflation, January 21, 2019
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