Credit Financing for Local Development: The Subnational Debt in the Philippines
Alvina, Niño Raymond B. | June 2019
Abstract
Local government units (LGUs) in the Philippines are authorized to borrow or incur debts to finance development, but with certain limitations provided by the Local Government Code of 1991. The main controlling statutory requirement is for provinces, cities, municipalities, and villages not to exceed 20% of their annual regular income going into debt servicing.
The range of purposes for which local governments are allowed to borrow are tied up with their expenditure responsibilities, and this varies according to the type and level of LGU, and their capacity to access financing. These commonly include capital investment projects, socioeconomic enterprises, and self-liquidating and income-generating projects.
This paper describes the experiences of the Philippines after close to three decades of fiscal decentralization in the country, presents trends and patterns of local debt management practices, highlights the roles of national government agencies and regulatory policies, and proposes emerging ideas and recommendations on how to improve debt management as an important pillar in local finance and decentralization.
Citation
Alvina, Niño Raymond B.. 2019. Credit Financing for Local Development: The Subnational Debt in the Philippines. © Asian Development Bank Institute. http://hdl.handle.net/11540/10434.Keywords
Regional Development Finance
Public Scrutiny of City Finances
Non-Bank Financial Institutions
Local Government Finance
Government Financial Institutions
Foreign and Domestic Financing
Financial Risk Management
Assessing Corporate Governance
Good Governance
Governance Approach
Urban Development Finance
Trade Finance
Small Business Finance
Rural Finance
Roundtable on International Trade and Finance
Regional Development Finance
Finance
Public Finance
Governance
National Budget
Budgetary Policy
Educational Budget
Public Financial Management
Financial System
Financial Statistics
Public Accounting
Business Financing
Subsidies
Social Equity
Economic Equity
Project Risks
Project Impact
Public Administration
Corporations
Taxation
Public Debt
Local Government
Debt Management
Corporate debt
Taxation
Public Accounting
National Budget
Municipal Bonds
Local Government
Local Taxes
International Monetary Relations
International Financial Market
International Banking
Central Banks
Business Financing
Financial Aspects
Taxation
Public Debt
Local Government
Pension Funds
Mutual Funds
Social Equity
Financial Aspects
Fiscal Policy
Small Business
Investment Requirements
Banks
|Taxing power
Tax administration and procedure
Tax policy
Effect of taxation on labor supply
Decentralization in government
Community power
Corporate divestment
Civil government
Delegation of powers
Equality
Neighborhood government
Subnational governments
Delivery of government services
Local taxation
Options
Government
Local government
Taxation
Grants
Loans
Use tax
Taxing power
State of taxation
Tax-sales
Tax revenue estimating
Tax planning
Spendings tax
Special assessments
Tax administration and procedure
Sales tax
Real property and taxation
Progressive taxation
Effect of taxation on land use
Effect of taxation on labor supply
Intergovernmental tax relations
Local taxation
Options
Government
Local government
Taxation
Employee pension trusts
Investment management
Investments
Multiemployer pension plans
Keogh plans
Individual retirement accounts
Pension plans
Employee pension trusts
Pension trusts
Accounts
Savings
Inheritance and transfer tax
Trusts and trustees
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