The Impact of International Monetary Fund (IMF) Structural Adjustment Policies (SAP) on the Philippines

This paper investigated the impact of IMF structural adjustment policies (SAPs) on the Philippine economic performance. The study utilized critical analysis approach to evaluate secondary data from government statistics, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), World Bank, IMF and articles from online...

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Main Author: Ferdinand T. Abocejo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Center for Policy, Research and Development Studies 2014-06-01
Series:Recoletos Multidisciplinary Research Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://rmrj.usjr.edu.ph/rmrj/index.php/RMRJ/article/view/48
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spelling doaj-b5da012046894cdaaa92d6230bb7c28e2021-06-01T05:38:05ZengCenter for Policy, Research and Development StudiesRecoletos Multidisciplinary Research Journal2423-13982408-37552014-06-0121https://doi.org/10.32871/rmrj1402.01.03The Impact of International Monetary Fund (IMF) Structural Adjustment Policies (SAP) on the PhilippinesFerdinand T. Abocejo0Cebu Normal UniversityThis paper investigated the impact of IMF structural adjustment policies (SAPs) on the Philippine economic performance. The study utilized critical analysis approach to evaluate secondary data from government statistics, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), World Bank, IMF and articles from online refereed journals. Analyses were focused on IMF prescribed SAP loan conditionalities pertaining to liberalization, export-oriented economic efficiency, privatization of estate owned assets, reducing government expenditures, and streamlining the bureaucracy. Findings revealed that trade liberalization implemented through stripping off restrictions of more than 900 items and reduction in nominal tariff protection fell short from the onset of global recession. Apparently, aggregate exports contracted instead of expanding while imports disproportionately increased when importers took advantage of the liberalized regime. This resulted to severe erosion of the Philippine industries which were left unable to compete in the open market. Government revenues, generated from the SAP driven privatization policy were redirected for debt servicing rather than being invested on productive programs and projects for economic development. This privatization policy even created local monopolies in the country’s capital market. Reduction in government expenditures through tightening of government budget, cuts in government subsidies and freezing the filling up of government vacant positions, failed to significantly impact on poverty alleviations and underpinned the much needed resources for basic health, education and social services delivery programs. In conclusion, the adherence by the Philippines to IMF loan conditionalities did not significantly benefit the country as manifested by the country’s sluggish economic development. The Philippines should never go back to the IMF loan portfolio, it should find other resources to propel growth and development away from IMF borrowing. Prudently however, it may continue to avail the Fund’s technical assistance program on monetary and international banking expertise without incurring external debt obligations from the Fund.https://rmrj.usjr.edu.ph/rmrj/index.php/RMRJ/article/view/48structural adjustment policies (saps)international monetary fund (imf)economic growth and developmentloan conditionalities
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ferdinand T. Abocejo
spellingShingle Ferdinand T. Abocejo
The Impact of International Monetary Fund (IMF) Structural Adjustment Policies (SAP) on the Philippines
Recoletos Multidisciplinary Research Journal
structural adjustment policies (saps)
international monetary fund (imf)
economic growth and development
loan conditionalities
author_facet Ferdinand T. Abocejo
author_sort Ferdinand T. Abocejo
title The Impact of International Monetary Fund (IMF) Structural Adjustment Policies (SAP) on the Philippines
title_short The Impact of International Monetary Fund (IMF) Structural Adjustment Policies (SAP) on the Philippines
title_full The Impact of International Monetary Fund (IMF) Structural Adjustment Policies (SAP) on the Philippines
title_fullStr The Impact of International Monetary Fund (IMF) Structural Adjustment Policies (SAP) on the Philippines
title_full_unstemmed The Impact of International Monetary Fund (IMF) Structural Adjustment Policies (SAP) on the Philippines
title_sort impact of international monetary fund (imf) structural adjustment policies (sap) on the philippines
publisher Center for Policy, Research and Development Studies
series Recoletos Multidisciplinary Research Journal
issn 2423-1398
2408-3755
publishDate 2014-06-01
description This paper investigated the impact of IMF structural adjustment policies (SAPs) on the Philippine economic performance. The study utilized critical analysis approach to evaluate secondary data from government statistics, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), World Bank, IMF and articles from online refereed journals. Analyses were focused on IMF prescribed SAP loan conditionalities pertaining to liberalization, export-oriented economic efficiency, privatization of estate owned assets, reducing government expenditures, and streamlining the bureaucracy. Findings revealed that trade liberalization implemented through stripping off restrictions of more than 900 items and reduction in nominal tariff protection fell short from the onset of global recession. Apparently, aggregate exports contracted instead of expanding while imports disproportionately increased when importers took advantage of the liberalized regime. This resulted to severe erosion of the Philippine industries which were left unable to compete in the open market. Government revenues, generated from the SAP driven privatization policy were redirected for debt servicing rather than being invested on productive programs and projects for economic development. This privatization policy even created local monopolies in the country’s capital market. Reduction in government expenditures through tightening of government budget, cuts in government subsidies and freezing the filling up of government vacant positions, failed to significantly impact on poverty alleviations and underpinned the much needed resources for basic health, education and social services delivery programs. In conclusion, the adherence by the Philippines to IMF loan conditionalities did not significantly benefit the country as manifested by the country’s sluggish economic development. The Philippines should never go back to the IMF loan portfolio, it should find other resources to propel growth and development away from IMF borrowing. Prudently however, it may continue to avail the Fund’s technical assistance program on monetary and international banking expertise without incurring external debt obligations from the Fund.
topic structural adjustment policies (saps)
international monetary fund (imf)
economic growth and development
loan conditionalities
url https://rmrj.usjr.edu.ph/rmrj/index.php/RMRJ/article/view/48
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