As some big-ticket projects took a backseat to COVID-19 response, public infrastructure spending fell by more than a fifth to P681.1 billion in 2020.
The Department of Budget and Management’s (DBM) latest report on Friday showed disbursements on infrastructure and other capital outlays last year declined 22.8 percent from P881.7 billion in 2019.
But actual infrastructure expenditures exceeded by 11.8 percent the 2020 program worth P609.3 billion, which had been downscaled when the government realigned budget items—many of them projects of the departments of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) and of Transportation (DOTr)—into the war chest to fight COVID-19 under the Bayanihan to Heal as One Act or Bayanihan 1.
It did not help that construction works were stopped at the height of the longest and most stringent COVID-19 lockdown in the region that restricted the movement of people and nonessential goods, hence delaying some projects’ implementation.
Improving pace
In December alone, infrastructure spending declined by 25.6 percent year-on-year but climbed 228.5 percent month-on-month to P132.3 billion.
The DBM said the year-on-year slump last December narrowed compared to November’s 50.2 percent and October’s 30.6 percent, “indicative of the improving pace of project implementation and the gradual recovery of the infrastructure sector in general.”
In the fourth quarter of 2020, disbursements on public infrastructure were down 32.7 percent year-on-year to P229.6 billion, which was 28.7-percent bigger than the P178.3-billion program for the three-month period due to “additional cash requirements of the DPWH for settlement of accounts payables for completed or partially completed infrastructure projects,” the DBM said.
Including the infrastructure components of equity injected and subsidies given away to state-run corporations plus transfers to local governments, the DBM said total national government-funded infrastructure last year reached P869.5 billion, surpassing the P785.5-billion program by 10.7 percent but 17.2-percent lower than the P1.05 trillion spent in 2019.
As a share of GDP, overall infrastructure spending in 2020 was equivalent to 4.8 percent—higher than the target of 4.2 percent but below 2019’s 5.4 percent.
For 2021, the government plans to implement P1.17 trillion worth of infrastructure projects, equivalent to 5.9 percent of GDP.
But as of mid-February, the DBM released P3.45 trillion or 76.5 percent out of the P4.51-trillion national budget, a slower pace than the 77.4 percent released a year ago, the latest allotment releases DBM data also released on Friday showed.—Ben O. de Vera
Article and Photo originally posted by Inquirer last March 13, 2021 5:22am and written by Ben O. de Vera.
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