Title: The%20Philippines%20and%20Aid%20Conditionality
1The Philippines and Aid Conditionality
- Regional Workshop on CSOs and Aid Effectiveness
- Hanoi, Vietnam
- October 9-12, 2007
2Outline
- Brief overview of conditionalities
- The Philippine experience Accumulating
conditionalities, deepening underdevelopment - ODA profile
- Macroeconomic conditionalities trade and
investment (WB, IMF, ADB, Japan) - Sectoral conditionalities Health sector (WB,
ADB, IMF) - The (implicit) debt service conditionality
- Some key points
- Suggested areas for CSO action
3What are conditionalities?
- The application of specific, predetermined
requirements that directly or indirectly enter
into donor decisions to approve or continue to
finance a loan or grant. - Donors using financial pressure to leverage
actions they believe would not otherwise have
been taken - By purpose policy conditionalities, outcome
conditionalities, process conditionalities and
fiduciary conditionalities
4Aid not always helpful
- Donors exploit recipient country weaknesses
- Scarce capital and foreign exchange in backward
countries (hence importance of ODA) - Lucrative opportunities for corrupt domestic
government officials - ODAs most severe and far-reaching effects stem
from conditionalities, especially policy
conditionalities - ODA important part donor of foreign policy tools
donors wield in their self-interest - Conditionalities a particularly direct way of
leveraging desired outcomes in recipient countries
5The Philippines and ODA
- Total ODA commitments US13.2 billion (2001) ?
US9.5 billion (2006) - Equivalent to 8 of GDP, 45 of gross
international reserves - 2006 Japan (US4.7 billion or 49 of the total),
ADB (US1.8 billion or 19), WB (US1.5 billion
or 16) - 2001-2006 Infrastructure (67) vs. social reform
development (7) - Source of basic data NEDA 15TH ODA Portfolio
Review (July 2007) - Outstanding ODA loans US21.6 billion or 40 of
foreign debt stock (2005) - US1.2 billion in external debt service to JBIC
(US495 M), WB (US360 M), ADB (US295 M) (2008)
- out of total US3.9 billion in central
government external debt service
6Macroeconomic policy conditionalities
- The Philippines has a long history of ODA
conditionalities (in 1980 was only months away
from being the World Banks (WB) first structural
adjustment loan (SAL) recipient) - which are an accumulation of free market
policies of globalization, and have caused
severe damage to the economy, lives and
livelihoods.
7- The WBs and the ADBs biggest loans have had
free market policy conditionalities attached to
them since at least the 1980s. - These have required changes in overall
macroeconomic and sectoral policy frameworks, as
well as gone into very specific implementation
details. - The WB has a Country Assistance Strategy (CAS)
and in 2006 gave a US250 million Development
Policy Loan (DPL) that was acknowledgement of
past government successes and incentive for
maintained good performance fiscal austerity,
new taxes, power privatization
8The IMFs last loan to the Philippines had 110
conditionalities which it called structural
reform measures (a US1.4 billion stand-by
arrangement from 1998-2000)
Philippines is now among Southeast Asias most
open economies with the lowest tariffs and
least restrictions on foreign investment, next
only to Singapore Since the 1980s, share in GDP
of trade has doubled and of foreign investment
quadrupled
9Macroeconomic policy conditionalities
- Yet the Philippines is more backward than ever
- De-industrialization and underdevelopment
shrinking share of manufacturing in economy
(lower than in 1960s), and more and more
foreign-dominated - Backward agriculture at historically low levels,
rising agricultural trade deficits since
mid-1990s, and record dependence on imported food
10- Record joblessness for over six years
- Average 11 unemployment
- 12 million jobless or underemployed Filipinos
- 9-10 million economic refugees (i.e., overseas
Filipino workers) - Severe poverty at lowest income levels, disguised
by sharpening inequality - 69 million Filipinos (80 of population) struggle
to survive on P96 (US2) or less a day - 46 million Filipinos hungry everyday (by dietary
needs) - Note Japan ODA being used as leverage to seal a
Japan-Philippines free trade agreement?
11Health sector privatization
- WB and ADB funding for health sector programs,
resulting in or otherwise supporting
privatization through - Health Sector Reform Agenda (HSRA), 1999
- FourMula One for Health (F1), 2005
12Neglect of public health
1990-910.74
19970.58
20080.31
13Deteriorating public health services
- Rising proportion of Filipinos dying without
medical attention - 74 attended by trained health professional
(1975) ? 67 (2002) - Declining coverage of fully-immunized children
- 69.4 coverage (1993) ? 59.9 (2003)
- Budget cuts in programs for poorest
- Subsidies to indigent patients, public hospitals
14The debt service conditionality
- Rising foreign debt payments
- Debt stock 17 billion (1980)
- 130 billion paid in debt service since 1980
- Debt stock 60 billion (2006)
15Some key points from Philippine experience
- Affirms adverse effect of conditionalities aid
has contributed to poverty, inequality
underdevelopment - Severe and accumulating damage to economy and to
peoples lives and livelihoods - worst for the most vulnerable sectors (peasants,
labor, informal workers, women, children,
migrants) - on top of the problems with tied aid
- Also strengthens or creates specific interest
groups, and weakens others. After 2 ½ decades of
globalization - Created a domestic corps of neoliberal
technocrats, consolidation and strengthening of
domestic business elites aligned with foreign
capital, diminished national industrial
capitalists
16Some key points from Philippine experience
- Conditionalities increasingly internalized by
the government - Recipient governments sharing donor priorities
and concerns - Resulting policy framework appealing to donors
and foreign investors national development
strategies virtually indistinguishable from what
donors want - Conditionalities look less externally imposed
- While prior compliance, performance benchmarks,
etc. persist - Donor pressure is also applied on the basis of
the sum of all ODA and not just case-to-case
17Some key points from Philippine experience
- Long-standing engagement of CSOs on
conditionality issue - Maximizing strength and reach at grassroots and
among wider public - Solid constituency built
- ODA to the Philippines has been unmindful of the
(un)democratic or human rights record of
recipient governments - Wittingly or unwittingly, supports even those
which have worked to co-opt or suppress CSOs
18Some suggested areas for CSO action on
conditionality
- Reforms in delivery and management are important,
but removing the undue direct and indirect donor
influence on national policies through ODA is
crucial - Central demand Remove all explicit and
especially free market conditionalities in ODA - Single biggest barrier to aid effectiveness ODA
not just developmentally ineffective but actively
counter-productive - Without meaningful reductions, danger of Paris
Declaration becoming merely diversionary - Removal may not automatically result in
development but will at least remove a key
adverse influence on domestic policies - Oppose donor-proposed mechanisms that further
increase their individual and collective leverage
over recipient country policies esp. WB-,
IMF-centered - ex. Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSP),
Country Assistance Strategies (CAS),
Highly-Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) initiative
19Some suggested areas for CSO action on
conditionality
- Demand debt cancellation
- Where continued debt servicing is the most
pervasive, albeit merely implicit, conditionality - Increased allocations for social services (e.g.,
health, education, water sanitation) for
countries with greater absolute poverty - Not just increase CSO voice but also build
capacity and strengthen role - Making governments more transparent and
accountable - Creating domestic policy and political conditions
to overcome backwardness
20Some suggested areas for CSO action on
conditionality
- However link of ODA to self-interested donor
foreign policy is basic constraint in current aid
system ? Need to de-link ODA from donor foreign
policy - How to remove or minimize undue donor discretion
in where ODA goes? - How to ensure not just increasing recipient
government discretion but also CSO participation? - ? Towards claiming the development process and
building societies that genuinely serve the
peoples interests and welfare
21 Maraming salamat!
22Reality Long-term decline
Decliningmanufacturing
Decliningagriculture
23Agricultural neglect
- Food insecurity and dependence on foreign sources
of food - Domestic food production has fallen 27
- 1,509 kg/person/year (1979-1981) ? 1,100 kg
(2000-02) - i.e., cereals, fruits, vegetables, root crops,
sugar, spices, dairy products, meat, fish and
other aquatic products - Comparing the period 1991-1995 with 2001-2003,
increase in annual import volumes of - Rice by ten-fold (increased by 916)
- Corn five-fold (427)
- Vegetables tripled (215)
- Root crops quintupled (305)
- Sugar and other sweeteners doubled (100)
- Pork thirty-four-fold (3,300)
- Poultry twenty-fold (1,900)
- Beef almost tripled (169)
- Fish by more than 49
24Reality Long-term decline
Declininginvestment
Decliningsavings
25Reality Long-term decline
Rising unemployment
- Historic unemployment
- 2001-2006 worst ever 6-year period of
unemployment (11.3) and underemployment (18.7) - 11.6 M looking for work (4.1 M jobless, 7.5 M
underemployed) - Majority of jobs recently created are low-quality
low-earning - e.g., unpaid family work, household help,
wholesale/retail trade - Unprecedented economic refugees
- 9-10 M overseas Filipinos in 192 countries
- 3,400 leave the country everyday
26A weakening economy
- Govt neglects national industry agriculture,
and instead - focuses on sectors profitable for a few but of
low development impact - Low employment generation, low capital
accumulation, technological non-development,
disconnected from the domestic economy - Narrow or otherwise unsustainable sources of
growth - Overseas worker remittances
- Wholesale/retail trade, real estate
- Export enclaves (manufacturing, BPOs)
- Mineral resource plunder
- In 2007 Elections
27Shrinking govt budget
199020.7
199720.3
200816.8
28Govt neglect of health
- Out of 192 countries worldwide, the Philippines
ranks among the worst - 174th 3.4 Total expenditure on health as of
GDP - 153rd 39.8 General government expenditure
on health as of total expenditure on health - 156th 6.3 General government expenditure on
health as of total government expenditure - Note using definition allowing for cross-country
comparisons - 39th 60.2 Private expenditure on health as
of total expenditure on health