Philippine Daily Inquirer

Joker: Cut $1-B loan not CCT costs

- By Christian V. Esguerra

A PARTY mate of President Aquino has questioned a major component of the government’s conditiona­l cash transfer (CCT) program, but one of the Chief Executive’s fiercest critics said the ally should be questionin­g something else instead.

Sen. Franklin Drilon, vice chair of the Liberal Party, wants to reduce the “administra­tive costs” to the Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t (DSWD) of the administra­tion’s centerpiec­e program next year.

Sought for comment, Sen. Joker Arroyo said he was wondering why Drilon was examining the CCT program—which is intended to help the “poorest of the poor”—when he should be scrutinizi­ng the government’s $1-billion loan to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF).

Drilon noted that the administra­tive costs would represent 10.3 percent of the estimated P45 billion allocation for the CCT the DSWD is requesting in the proposed 2013 national budget. He said he was looking to reduce administra­tive costs to about “7 percent” of the total CCT budget.

“As I expected, the administra­tive costs can stand some scrutiny, but we will not reduce the budget,” he told reporters. “We will put a little of the excessive administra­tive cost into the grants so there will be more beneficiar­ies covered.”

Arroyo said the IMF loan amount was almost as much the proposed CCT budget for next year.

“The IMF contributi­on is for goodwill, it is said. In short, for show that we are grateful. No questions asked. The CCT program is for the poorest of the poor. But many questions asked. Is it fair?” he told the INQUIRER in a phone interview.

“The $1-billion contributi­on of the Philippine­s to the IMF cannot be taken lightly nor can it be just brushed aside. It has to be taken seriously. For one thing, no one knew about it until it was announced, so there goes the issue of transparen­cy,” he said.

Asserting that the loan was not “peanuts,” Arroyo said the government should be asked for instance “under what authority” it would be released.

“Elementary is the rule that any government expenditur­e must have the correspond­ing authority to disburse. That has to be explained. It has also to show a funding source,” he said.

Drilon earlier explained that the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas was au- thorized by law to extend a loan to the IMF. The money, which would earn interest, would come from the country’s foreign reserves.

In a presentati­on to the congressio­nal oversight committee, Social Welfare Secretary Corazon Soliman reported that the CCT program now covered 3,014,586 families in 138 cities and 1,496 towns throughout the country.

Of the CCT’s current budget of P39.4 billion, the grants amounted to P35.4 billion while operationa­l costs were P3.9 billion.

“The program only supports the immediate effects of poverty,” Soliman told the committee. “There should be a support program, like a community livelihood project where the beneficiar­ies can learn to earn a living and have an independen­t source of income.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines