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I have been studying the budget every year since 2013, and even more closely since the pandemic in 2020.
And this budget that just passed the bicameral conference committee of both houses of Congress (bicam) is one of the worst budgets I have ever seen. There are some budget items worth celebrating: an initial fund for animal welfare programs pushed by Senator Grace Poe, a small but severely slashed fund for green infrastructure for local governments. There are also some good investments going into the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao’s state universities and colleges (SUCs).
But we cannot be content planting small trees as the forest burns to the ground. In this budget, the bad outweighs the good by orders of magnitude.
Let us call on President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. to bring back the budget bill to the bicam and pressure Congress to restore good executive and civil society proposals by cutting out the unconscionable congressional pork in ayuda and public works.
Why will this bicam budget harm you and your loved ones, dear reader, if the President signs this budget?
At the macro level: the 2025 bicam version is a budget that kills. It will rob us of our dignity as it forces us to grovel for scraps of congressional pork when we’re supposed to receive it automatically as programs. It will widen the gap between the rich and the poor. It will institutionalize corruption, patronage, vote-buying. It’s terrible use of our taxpayer money.
This budget also reflects Congress’s refusal to do what the President asked them to do in his State of the Nation Address and pronouncements: address the learning and malnutrition crises, bridge the digital divide, protect our kids, promote universal health care, make bike lanes permanent, prioritize public transport, cut poverty and inequality, achieve sustainable development goals, protect the West Philippine Sea.
More specifically:
1. It will kill patients.
2. It will worsen the learning crisis and widen the learning divide.
3. It will worsen traffic, the epidemic of road crash death and injury, while delaying many public transport projects.
4. It will put disaster prone communities at greater risk.
5. It systematizes vote buying and corruption during an election year, all while making people dependent on pork for elections
What a terrible message this sends to voters as we enter the 2025 midterm season.
This is an administration that breaks its campaign promises.
This is especially heartbreaking to those of us who are survivors of recent typhoons and disasters, and have been exhausted doing relief and recovery work in our communities.
It’s been quite a few years that I’ve been taking a temperature on civil society movements.
And across partisan and ideological and class divides: people are very, very angry.
It’s not too late to change this. Let’s all channel our energies to call on the President to return the budget bill to the bicam and craft a budget that will truly serve our people, not just the interests of the rich and powerful few. – Rappler.com
Kenneth Isaiah Ibasco Abante coordinates the Citizens’ Budget Tracker, a community of volunteers tracking the budget since the COVID-19 pandemic. He served in various leadership roles in the Department of Finance from 2012 to 2016, including chief-of-staff to senior officials and lead technical staff for national budget hearings. He has taught quantitative methods at mid-career master in public administration summer program at the Harvard Kennedy School since 2022. He was named one of The Outstanding Young Men of the Philippines in 2023 for socio-civic and voluntary leadership.