Gov’t debt bloated to record high P14.51T in Nov 2023
By Ian Nicolas P. Cigaral @ipcigaral The government’s outstanding debt sustained its ascent to a new record high in November 2023 amid rising borrowing costs and high inflation that bloated the Marcos administration’s expenditures.
The state’s total debt burden got heavier by P27.92 billion month-on-month to P14.51 trillion in November 2023, the Bureau of the Treasury reported on Wednesday.Year-to-date, obligations piled up by 8.12 percent or P1.09 trillion. Documents from the budget department showed the Marcos administration expects the total debt load to have ended 2023 at P14.62 trillion.
In a statement, the Treasury said much of the increase in outstanding liabilities in November was due to “net issuance of domestic securities”—meaning that the government borrowed more onshore than it paid during the month.
Data showed local borrowings, which accounted for 69.09 percent of the entire pile, inched up by 1.23 percent or P122.07 billion to P10.02 trillion.
In November, the state borrowed P171.09 billion onshore through its regular sale of debt securities like T-bonds and T-bills, and repaid the P45.14 billion it owed to local creditors. But the Treasury said a stronger peso tempered the value of foreign currency-denominated domestic securities, which partially offset the increase in local borrowings by P3.87 billion.
Michael Ricafort, chief economist at Rizal Commercial Banking Corp., said local obligations rose as rising interest rates made debt servicing more costly for the government. This, while stubbornly high inflation called for more spending on programs meant to help the poor, thereby widening the budget deficit.
Since the beginning of 2023, figures showed domestic debts had accumulated by P816.02 billion.
Meanwhile, external borrowings sagged by 2.06 percent or P94.15 billion month-on-month to P4.48 trillion as of end-November. The Treasury said foreign debts fattened by P273.84 billion year-to-date.
External liabilities fell after the government settled P1.08 billion more than it borrowed offshore, while the peso’s appreciation against the US dollar cut foreign debts by P109.37 billion.
“Continued budget deficits, though narrower from year ago levels, could still lead to additional borrowings,” Ricafort said in an emailed commentary. INQ
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