Gov’t 2022 debt down on peso appreciation, economic recovery

By Joann Villanueva

February 2, 2023, 8:08 pm

<p><strong>DROP IN LIABILITIES.</strong> The national government's total liabilities went down in December 2022 compared to the previous month's level due in part to the peso appreciation and the continued robust growth of the domestic economy. Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. chief economist Michael Ricafort said Thursday (Feb. 2, 2023) he expects the sustained growth of the domestic economy and the impact of tax and other fiscal reform measures to be of advantage to the improvement in the share of debt to economic growth. <em>(PNA file photo)</em></p>

DROP IN LIABILITIES. The national government's total liabilities went down in December 2022 compared to the previous month's level due in part to the peso appreciation and the continued robust growth of the domestic economy. Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. chief economist Michael Ricafort said Thursday (Feb. 2, 2023) he expects the sustained growth of the domestic economy and the impact of tax and other fiscal reform measures to be of advantage to the improvement in the share of debt to economic growth. (PNA file photo)

MANILA – The continued recovery of the domestic economy, along with the strengthening of the Philippine peso against the US dollar, helped reduce the peso value of the national government’s (NG) total liabilities by end-2022 to PHP13.42 trillion compared to the previous month’s.  
 
The Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) said Thursday the full-year NG debt went down by PHP225.31 billion, or 1.7 percent, from PHP13.64 trillion by end-November last year, also due to the net redemption of domestic government securities (GS).
 
However, NG debt grew by 14.4 percent, or PHP1.69 trillion, compared to PHP11.73 trillion in end-2021.
 
Of the total, domestic debt accounted for 68.62 percent of the total debt last year amounting to PHP9.21 trillion.
 
Domestic debt declined by 2.3 percent, or PHP219.58 billion, compared to PHP9.43 trillion as of end-November last year. 
 
The BTr attributed the decline to the net redemption of PHP217.95 billion worth of GS and the peso appreciation, which reduced by PHP1.63 billion the peso value of foreign currency-denominated liabilities.
 
Foreign debt accounted for 31.38 percent of NG liabilities amounting to PHP4.21 trillion as of end-2022, lower by PHP5.73 billion from the end-November 2022 level.
 
It has increased by PHP652.34 billion since the start of 2022, it said.
 
The BTr said currency adjustments due to the appreciation of the peso against the dollar reduced the foreign debt by PHP58.34 billion.
 
It said the improvement of the level of NG debt last December and the continued robust growth of the domestic economy resulted in the decline of the country’s debt-to-GDP level.
 
The country’s gross domestic product (GDP) expanded by 7.2 percent in the last quarter of 2022 and by 7.6 percent for the full year.
 
The share of NG liabilities to domestic output went down to 60.9 percent as of end-2022 from 63.7 percent at the end of the third quarter last year and is lower than the 61.8 percent target in the government’s medium-term fiscal framework.
 
“This reflects the consistent drive to bolster debt sustainability through prudent cash and debt management backed by resurgent economic growth,” the BTr said.
 
Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. chief economist Michael Ricafort said he expects the sustained growth of the domestic economy and the impact of tax and other fiscal reform measures to be of advantage to the improvement in the share of debt to economic growth.
 
“More disciplined government spending would help further reduce/improve the debt-to-GDP ratio to below the 60 percent international threshold to help sustain the country’s favorable credit ratings at 1-3 notches above the minimum investment grade,” he said in a report on Thursday.
 
Ricafort said government debt is expected to further increase in the coming months in line with the government’s plan to issue new peso-denominated Retail Treasury Bonds (RTBs) and new US dollar-denominated RTBs as part of the program to raise necessary financing for various government programs and projects.
 
He said the government thus needs to “further intensify tax revenue collections based on existing tax laws, come up with new taxes/tax reform measures, increase tax rates, among others, to further boost structural sources of government revenues.”
 
It can also adopt more disciplined spending through fiscal reform measures, such as right-sizing the government and anti-corruption/anti-leakage/anti-wastage measures, he added.
 
“All of which would help further narrow/improve the budget deficit and, in turn, slow the growth/increment in the national government’s outstanding debt, as well as better prepare for eventual payment of the large debt/borrowings incurred during the pandemic as they fall due in the future,” Ricafort said. (PNA)
 

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