PHL, ADB ink $500-M loan to aid poor amid pandemic

MANILA – The Philippines has accessed a fresh USD500-million financing package from the Asian Development Bank (ADB) to help support the country’s immediate budgetary requirements to address the coronavirus crisis with the signing of a loan agreement for the Expanded Social Assistance Project (ESAP). 
 
This budget-support loan under the ESAP is part of the Philippine government’s external financing program for 2020, with USD450 million of the fund proposed for accelerated disbursement by next month, the Department of Finance (DOF) said.  
  
“This budget-support loan will not only help bridge our funding gap for our Covid-19 response but will also strengthen our social protection program as we restart our economy and help people get back on their feet amid the pandemic,” DOF Secretary Carlos Dominguez III said in a statement Wednesday.
 
Dominguez and ADB Country Director for the Philippines Kelly Bird signed the loan agreement on Monday.  
 
The ESAP, which builds on a decade of ADB’s support for social protection programs in the Philippines, aims to assist the government in the continued implementation of its conditional cash transfer initiative dubbed the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program (4Ps). 
 
The USD500-million loan aims to continue funding education and health grants to eligible 4Ps household-beneficiaries for a period of four years starting 2020.
 
In approving the ESAP loan, ADB vice president Ahmed Saeed said: “The 4Ps program provides vulnerable households with an income supplement to help their children become educated, stay healthy, and leave poverty for good. Our evidence shows that this is working. The 4Ps program has helped 1.5 million people escape poverty since it began in 2008. Through this project loan and technical assistance support, ADB is helping the Philippines expand these gains.”
 
On top of the loan,  the ADB said it will also provide a USD3.1-million technical assistance grant  to "help improve the family and youth development sessions, update the list of eligible poor households, provide a package of livelihood and other support to help up to 3,000 households graduate out of poverty, support information technology (IT) reforms to automate compliance verification and grievance redress, and prepare for the integration of the 4Ps database with the government’s national ID system." 
 
The ESAP loan, which covers a maturity period of 29 years inclusive of an eight-year grace period, brings to USD2.6 billion the total financing package extended by the ADB so far to the Philippines for its programs to address the Covid-19 crisis.  
 
On June 4, the Philippines and ADB signed an agreement for a USD400-million loan for the Support to Capital Market Generated Infrastructure Financing, Subprogram 1 (SCMGIF1) that aims to assist the government’s efforts to strengthen domestic capital markets as the country recovers from the economic fallout triggered by the Covid-19 pandemic.
 
Last April 28, USD200-million loan accord was signed between the Philippines and ADB on the additional financing for the government’s efforts to provide unconditional emergency cash assistance to poor and vulnerable households hit the hardest by the work stoppages following the imposition of strict quarantine measures to contain the Covid-19 outbreak. 
 
This loan accord is the second additional financing provided by the ADB under the Social Protection Support Project (SPSP), which also supports the 4Ps. 
 
On April 23, the ADB and the Philippines signed a loan agreement that would let the Duterte administration access up to USD1.5 billion in budgetary support from the Bank to augment funds for its Covid-19 response efforts. 
 
The USD1.5-billion credit facility for the Covid-19 Active Response and Expenditure Support (CARES) program is the largest budget support ever extended to the Philippines by the ADB. 
 
The ADB was among the first multilateral development institutions to provide assistance to the Philippines’ Covid-19 response with its delivery of a USD3-million grant for the government’s purchase of medical supplies for its frontline health workers, and another emergency grant of USD5 million to leverage private-sector donations for a food distribution program that has benefited 55,000 poor households in Metro Manila and neighboring areas. (PR)
 
 
 

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