OPEC Fund Quarterly - 2024 Q3

IN THE FIELD

Exploring new opportunities in the Philippines and Thailand

Stepping up engagement with a region of large needs and huge potential

T he OPEC Fund is stepping up its efforts to re-engage with the Philippines, where it has been 15 years since the institution last approved a loan agreement. Following a series of bilateral meetings,

and rising levels of insecurity, inequality and informality.” The government’s fiscal reform program, articulated around three reform areas, represents a major step forward to enhance efficient and inclusive national and local public service delivery. It aims to, first, improve the efficiency of the national public financial management system through digitalization and, second, foster private sector participation in public service delivery. Decentralization is the third important aspect to boost the delivery of public services at local level together with measures to attract local investments in climate resilience and readiness. The reform also

and the authorities. The region was severely affected by decades of armed conflict. A governing political entity was established in 2019 following a referendum. Home to some four million people, the post-conflict area has the highest poverty rates in the country. During his visit Mr. Belamine met with representatives of the central government, local authorities and ADB colleagues at their headquarters in Manila. The OPEC Fund is considering supporting the reform program with two loans of US$150 million each, with a first consideration by the Governing Board potentially envisaged before the end of 2024. The ADB as a co-financing partner has been requested to provide two US$500 million loans, and the institutions are closely coordinating their steps. Mr. Belamine arrived in the Philippines from Thailand where he had attended a workshop on resettlement for the “Lower East Chao Phraya Irrigation System Improvement – Climate Adaptive Strengthening” project. The operation is part of the multi-billion dollar “Chao Phraya 9 Plans” of comprehensive water management investments to provide flood protection for the country’s most important river basin, which is the source of half its agricultural production and economic life. Floods are the country’s greatest natural hazard in terms of socio-economic impact. According to the European

The Philippines... faces serious challenges in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) on eradicating poverty

including by President Abdulhamid Alkhalifa at

the World Bank/IMF Spring Meetings in Washington, DC, Public Sector Country Manager Driss Belamine visited the Philippines for a fact-finding mission. His goal was to gauge the potential for co-financing a Public Financial Management Reform Program through policy-based loans together with the Asian Development Bank (ADB). The program is a critical fiscal strategy for the government and aims to transform fiscal resources into sound fiscal management and macroeconomic stability, as envisaged in the Philippine Development Plan 2023-2028. Mr. Belamine explains: “Despite a forceful recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic, the Philippines is still in a transition phase, where the country faces serious challenges in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) on eradicating poverty and reducing inequalities. While growth of 6-7 percent in recent years has made the country one of the fastest expanding economies in Asia, these gains have hardly been inclusive. Inadequate public service delivery exposes the poor and underprivileged groups to high

and reducing inequalities.

addresses the needs of the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao in order

Driss Belamine, Country Manager, Public Sector, OPEC Fund

to foster fiscal autonomy and trust between citizens

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