President Ferdinand Marcos Jnr’s administration has approved 123 new projects that will form part of a pipeline of infrastructure worth 9 trillion pesos (US$163 billion) (S$221 billion) it hopes to start or complete in the coming years, the economic planning chief said on Thursday.
Unlike the previous administration, which relied on foreign financing, including from China, Marcos has said he prefers to tap private capital to bankroll his infrastructure ambitions.
Economic Planning Secretary Arsenio Balisacan said the 123 projects comprise mostly of those improving physical connectivity, including long-distance railways near the capital and in central and southern Philippines, and an upgrade of the ageing Manila international airport, the country’s main gateway.
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The list also includes water infrastructure, like irrigation and flood management, and projects in digital connectivity, health, power and energy, agriculture, and others, Balisacan said in a regular news conference.
This brings to 194 the government’s priority infrastructure projects that will see faster permitting processes, 45 of which will be funded by the private sector through public-private partnerships.
Marcos is banking on infrastructure to support his goal of growing the Philippine economy by as much as 8 per cent before his six-year term ends in 2028, and halve the country’s poverty rate to 9 per cent.