Rechannel intel funds to “ayuda”

Share this information:

INSTEAD of using billions of pesos for anti-insurgency campaigns, they should just be used for public welfare or “ayuda” while the people are in the middle of another hard lockdown.

Referring to the National Expenditure Program for 2022, Senate Minority Leader Franklin Drilon said the prevailing predicament is more than enough reason to increase funding for the social services sector in the to-be-submitted NEP for 2022 and a re-appropriation of security sector funds to pandemic response such as the provision for the “ayuda” or social amelioration program.

In a statement, Drilon said the continuing COVID-19 pandemic, growing budget deficit and skyrocketing national debt should make the government reconsider its defense spending for 2022, including the allocation for its heavily-criticized anti-insurgency funds.

Starting 2018, Drilon pointed out that the social services sector has suffered a negative growth – from a 3-percent growth in 2017 to -2.4 in 2018, -0.3 in 2019, -1.1 in 2020.

It slightly increased by only 0.5 percent in 2021. In contrast, except in 2019 when it decreased by -1 percent, the share of the defense sector is on an upward trend. It increased by 0.2 percent in 2018, 0.4 percent in 2020 and 0.2 percent in 2021, when the country is still reeling from the impact of the pandemic.

Drilon expressed dismay at the negative growth in the social services sector budget while the share of the defense sector has continuously increased throughout the Duterte administration.

It cannot be the norm again next year, if we want to fast-track our economic recovery and lift our people out of poverty, hunger and unemployment,” Drilon said.

Because of our limited resources, the government needs to downsize its defense spending for next year in favor of the much-needed ayuda and other social and health services,” he stressed.

Drilon observed that even if the national budget kept growing over the years, the percent share of social services to the national budget didn’t grow along with it and has in fact suffered decreases.

Drilon said the extraordinarily large funds that will be allotted to the security sector in 2022 should instead be redirected or given to social services sectors like health, education and labor.

He cited, for instance, the budget for its anti-insurgency fund of P19.2 billion. The budget for the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-ELCAC) which are reported could increase anywhere between P30 billion to P40 billion, he added.

While NTF-ELCAC has been assured of funds, there’s no sign that the government will include “ayuda” in its 2022 proposed national budget. There is no allocation for “ayuda” in the 2021 General Appropriations Act. The government therefore was forced to scrimp and get “ayuda” funding from other worthy projects.

Amid the controversies involving NTF-ELCAC, especially the red-tagging done by its officials, it can be recalled that several senators, including Drilon, had previously called for the defunding of NTF-ELCAC in 2022.

He also urged for an additional budget for the Department of Labor and Employment to address unemployment and the Department of Education to strengthen our education system, plus a substantial amount of funds for vaccine procurement, cash aid for poor households, workers, PUV drivers, and students struggling with distance learning, and support for MSMEs in next year’s budget..

“I hope the Department of Budget and Management has allocated funds for ayuda and vaccine procurement in the to-be-submitted National Expenditure Program (NEP). The 2022 budget should not be a repeat of the 2021 budget where there’s no sufficient fund for pandemic response and recovery programs including ayuda and vaccine-procurement,” he quipped.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.