OP budget proposal
gets Senate nod, Chiz says questions to be addressed in plenary
By Office of Senator Chiz
Escudero
September 3, 2013
PASAY CITY – The senate
committee on finance approved the proposed P2.8 Billion 2014 budget of
the Office of the President (OP) and recommended the same for plenary
deliberations.
Senator Francis Escudero,
chairman of the finance committee said OP’s budget proposal, presented
by Exceutive Secretary Paquito Ochoa, Jr. breezed through the
committee because no other member attended the hearing and no issues
were raised when the executive office presented its budget proposal.
The senator also said that
traditionally, the OP and the Office of the Vice President,
respectively are given due courtesies with respect to their budgets.
“There was no reason to
stall the approval for plenary of the OP budget. Congress regularly
gives courtesies to the office of the OP during budget deliberations.
If there are any issues in their respective administrations and
offices, these are directed to the departments and not to the office
proper itself.”
Escudero said even the lump
sum amounts associated with the OP and which has been critiqued as of
late belong to the special purpose funds which lie on the Department
of Budget and Management’s (DBM) responsibility to defend.
“Even the social fund is not
in the president’s budget. The DBM will defend the special purpose
funds to include calamity fund, contingency fund, and feasibility
studies fund; all the lump sums that are being questioned by the
public and the media or even the lawmakers fall under the DBM. They
will address these issues during the plenary come November” he
explained.
The senator however said
that even though the president’s social fund does not go through
congress, it is still subject to Commission on Audit’s (COA) rules and
regulations and guidelines.
“It was Congress that
appropriated and allocated money for the social fund of the president
when we passed the PAGCOR Charter and the other revenue-generating
laws and how it will be divided and sub-divided into the various
agencies of the government. COA, as the central examiner of all
government funds, has its rules and regulations to govern even the
president’s social fund.”
The budget proposal of OP is
broken down as follows:
•
Personal Services - 641.132 million
• Maintenance and other operating expenses (MOOE) - 1.998.435 billion
• Capital outlay - 183.400 million
The OP budget for 2014 is 3%
higher than its 2013 budget which was P2.73 billion.