Beijing has agreed to study Manila’s proposal to implement through hybrid or cofinancing arrangements with multilateral institutions the big-ticket Philippine projects that had been submitted to China for possible funding.
Finance Secretary Carlos D. Dominguez III, who led a top-level government delegation to Beijing last week, said China Commerce Minister Gao Hucheng had welcomed his proposal to consider cofinancing the projects with other multilateral lending institutions such as the Asian Development Bank, the World Bank, and the China-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank.
He said Gao had informed the Philippine delegation in their talks during the January 23 and 24 mission that Beijing would want “to clarify the operating procedures” in executing such arrangements and determine if this would lead to a more efficient and smooth implementation of the project.
According to Dominguez, ranking Chinese officials have agreed with the delegation on the urgency of implementing projects that Manila has proposed to China for possible financing.
They also agreed on the importance of “openness and transparency” in the ongoing talks on the memoranda of understanding [MOUs] that were sealed last year during President Duterte’s China visit, as well as in the implementation stage of the projects that China would eventually underwrite.
The Manila delegation submitted a total of 40 large and small infrastructure projects to China for possible financing and assistance in conducting feasibility studies during the January 23 and 24 mission.
Of the 40 projects, 15 were proposed for loan financing, while another 25 were submitted for feasibility -study support.
Three of these large-scale projects are worth a combined $3.4 billion.
These are the Chico River Pump Irrigation Project in the provinces of Cagayan and Kalinga, with an estimated total project cost of $53.6 million; the New Centennial Water Source-Kaliwa Dam Project in Quezon, $374.03 million; and the South Line of the North-South Railway running from Manila to Legaspi City in Bicol, $3.01 billion.
Nine other projects, which aim to interconnect the country’s three main island-groups, boost tourism and construct a flood-control system in Mindanao and ensure its stable power supply were presented by the Philippine team to Gao for feasibility study support.
Dominguez said the other projects on the list are relatively small in scale, and are easier to implement, such as the construction of bridges across the Pasig River to ease traffic congestion in Metro Manila.
He said that during the Philippine delegation’s meeting with China’s Commerce Ministry officials, led by Gao, both parties agreed to regularly hold bilateral meetings to ensure that the projects approved for Chinese financing “are aligned with the priorities of both countries.”
Dominguez, who described the meetings with Chinese officials as “very positive”, said the Philippine mission was a “productive first step toward achieving the desire of [Philippine President Duterte and Chinese President Xi Jinping]” in further reinforcing ties between the two countries.”
He said the generous assistance offered by China to the Philippines is among the concrete results of the President’s foreign-policy rebalancing toward accelerated integration with the Asean and its major Asian trading partners China, Japan and South Korea.
Amid global uncertainty over a possible overhaul of US trade policies under the new presidency of Donald J. Trump, it was a “very smart” move by Duterte to recalibrate the Philippines’s foreign policy early on and reorient the economy toward greater integration with its Asian neighbors, Dominguez said.
“It makes more sense for us to be closer to our Asian neighbors than to our
distant friends,” he said.
The meetings between the Philippine delegation and top-ranking Chinese officials covered discussions on the progress of government-to-government agreements signed between the two countries; the proposed priority infrastructure projects for financing and feasibility studies; the chairmanship of the Philippines this year of the Asean; and possible Chinese private sector investments in the Philippines.
Trade Secretary Ramon M. Lopez said last year that President Duterte’s state visit yielded $24 billion worth of aid and investment pledges from China comprising soft loans totaling $9 billion and other economic deals amounting to about $15 billion.
Earlier, Dominguez said the Duterte administration is exploring hybrid financing arrangements that will combine development aid and loans in raising more funds for its big-ticket infrastructure projects while keeping down borrowing costs.