Salceda foresees 'A-level' credit ratings for Philippines before PBBM steps down in 2028 


At a glance

  • Economist-solon Albay 2nd district Rep. Joey Salceda is predicting "A-level ratings" for the Philippines before President Marcos finishes his six-year term in 2028.


FB_IMG_1675831079805.jpgAlbay 2nd district Rep. Joey Salceda (left) and President Ferdinand "Bongbong" Marcos Jr. (Facebook)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Economist-solon Albay 2nd district Rep. Joey Salceda is predicting "A-level" credit ratings for the Philippines before President Marcos finishes his six-year term in 2028. 

Salceda gave this glowing forecast on Monday, Sept. 23 after credit rating agency Moody’s affirmed the Philippines’ investment grade rating of Baa2, as well as its outlook of “stable". 

He credited President Marcos’ "steady hand in fiscal and economic policy” as “what keeps the country’s prospects strong despite a volatile global environment". 

“I think, before the end of PBBM’s term in 2028, the country will be at the A-level ratings,” said Salceda, chairman of the House Committee on Ways and Means. 

“The global environment is challenging. High energy and food prices persist – and overall sentiment is gloomy, especially with China’s slowdown and continuing challenges in Europe,” Salceda said. 

“And yet, the country’s prospects remain strong. This is in large part due to the President’s decisively pro-investment and fiscally responsible policies,” Salceda says. 

“I’m sure we will get an upgrade in rating or outlook from one of the Big Three next year,” Salceda adds, referring to S&P, Moody’s and Fitch. 

Last month, Japan-based Rating and Investment Information, Inc. (R&I) upgraded its rating on the Philippines from the “BBB+” with positive outlook last year, to “A-” 

“What the Japanese credit rating agencies seem to understand better than the Western credit rating agencies is that the Philippines never defaults on its foreign loans, it has an unbroken line of generally fiscally conservative finance ministers, and it holds the limits to fiscal deficit spending almost like a religious tenet," he explained. 

“As our biggest lender, investor, and trading partner, Japan understands this country’s fundamentals better than any other country in the world. And I’m sure the Big Three will follow, especially if growth tracks targets this year,” noted the Bicolano. 

Salceda, an administration backer, said he also expects “improvements in the country’s investment outlook when pro-investment policies like the CREATE MORE Act kick in". 

CREATE MORE is the Marcos administration’s enhancements to the country’s fiscal incentives regime, with doubled tax deductions for power cost, longer incentive time frames, simplified tax and local business requirements, and a lower corporate income tax rate for registered business enterprises.