Beijing-based AIIB exploring $300-M loan for PH

By Kris Crismundo

March 3, 2021, 6:44 pm

<p><strong>MANILA FORUM.</strong> Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank president (AIIB) Jin Liqun (top right) graces the first Manila Forum of the Association of Philippines-China Understanding (APCU) held online on Wednesday (March 3, 2021). Jin said AIIB is exploring a USD300 million worth of loans for the Philippines’ Covid-19 response. <em>(Screengrab)</em></p>

MANILA FORUM. Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank president (AIIB) Jin Liqun (top right) graces the first Manila Forum of the Association of Philippines-China Understanding (APCU) held online on Wednesday (March 3, 2021). Jin said AIIB is exploring a USD300 million worth of loans for the Philippines’ Covid-19 response. (Screengrab)

MANILA – Beijing-based multilateral development bank Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) is exploring USD300 million worth of loans for the Philippines, AIIB president Jin Liqun said Wednesday.

At the virtual Manila Forum of the Association of Philippines-China Understanding (APCU), Jin said the new loan will fund the Philippine government’s Covid-19 immunization program.

He added that aside from financing the acquisition of the Covid-19 vaccines, the loan will be used for programs to mitigate the adverse impact of the global health and economic crisis.

AIIB approved last year a loan of USD750 million to the Philippines, which is co-financed by the Asian Development Bank, Jin said.

He added that this budgetary support funded the increasing Covid-19 testing capacity in the Philippines, supporting vulnerable sectors including agriculture and poor households through conditional cash transfers and emergency assistance, and wage subsidies.

“In general, AIIB’s Covid19 assistance was meant for vulnerable countries, vulnerable businesses, and vulnerable people. That is why we are also mindful of our borrowers’ financial health and vulnerability to debt. We protect the welfare and financial sustainability of our members,” the AIIB executive said.

Commenting on the debt trap issue, Jin said borrowing money from external sources is not necessarily the source of debt problems of a country.

“It’s not the borrowing that created the debt problems. It’s the use of the proceeds of the debt, it’s the use of the borrowed money that matters, that makes or breaks,” he said. (PNA)


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