New scheme in 2014 budget a boon or a bane?
>> Monday, August 5, 2013
BEHIND THE SCENES
Alfred P. Dizon
A new feature of the proposed P2.268-trillion 2014
national budget is viewed with concern as it will allow agencies to proceed
with implementation of their projects on the first day of the year sans
submission of agency budget matrices (ABMs) and request for release
of special allotment release orders (SAROs).
The government’s
rationale on the matter is that bureaucratic red tape that turns away business
sector will be lessened with the scheme.
One of the innovations introduced by
the executive branch to the budget is the budget-as-a-release document. This means
budgets of agencies are considered released to them as soon as the national budget
is enacted.
SAROs and ABMs are documents that
authorize agencies to enter into an obligation or commitment.
An email from the office of Senate
president Franklin M. Drilon to the Northern Philippine Times said on the first
day of the year, the approved national budget will
be enough to authorize allgovernment agencies to obligate their budget without
needing to submit budget matrices, which takes considerable time of about two
months before agencies could actually submit them.
Drilon, who, in the last Congress,
chaired the Senate finance committee that hears the budget said“one or two
months being spent by agencies in preparing these documentary requirements
could have been spent in the actual implementation of important programs such
as the building of classrooms, health centers, or provision of medicines to our
elderly.
“The
new system, once in place, can help cut red tape and ease and speed-up the
processes securing a really early delivery of much-needed programs and services.”
Drilon noted however, that there will
still be minimal items in the budget that will need clearance from proper
authorities which may include, among others, intelligence and lump-sum funds.
“Whenever we would ask agencies to
explain why there are delays in the implementation of their programs, they
would pass the blame to budget department, making it their scapegoat. The DBM
did not release us funds. The SARO is released late,"
Drilon warned agencies: "you will
have no one to blame but yourselves if you still fail to implement your
programs and deliver services to our people in a timely manner come 2014."
He also encouraged agencies to proceed
with the bidding process, short of award, while the budget is still being
deliberated, so that once it is approved, they can already obligate their
budgets.
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