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You are at:Home»Business»NG debt service bill soars in April
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NG debt service bill soars in April

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THE NATIONAL Government’s (NG) debt service bill sharply increased year on year in April as amortization payments more than doubled, the Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) reported.

Data from BTr showed that the debt service bill went up by 73.72% to P280.9 billion in April from P161.7 billion in the same month last year.

Month on month, the debt service bill also rose by 53.2% from P183.36 billion in March.

Debt service refers to the payments made by the government on domestic and foreign borrowings.

In April, amortization payments stood at P234.45 billion, up 148.89% from P94.2 billion in the same month in 2024.

The bulk of debt payments in April were made up of amortization payments, BTr data showed.

Principal payments on domestic debt surged by 208.23% to P169.83 billion in April from P55.1 billion a year ago.

Amortization paid on foreign debt increased by 65.27% to P64.63 billion in April from P39.1 billion in April 2024.

Meanwhile, interest payments slid by 31.19% to P46.45 billion from P67.5 billion a year earlier.

Domestic interest payments went down by 34.37% to P30.47 billion in April from P46.43 billion in the same month last year.

This was composed of P21.3 billion in fixed-rate Treasury bonds, P3.84 billion in Treasury bills (T-bills), and P3.58 billion in retail Treasury bonds and others (P1.76 billion).

Interest payments for foreign borrowings dropped by 24.17% to P15.98 billion in April from P21.07 billion a year prior.

Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said the increase in debt servicing was primarily due to the P140-billion Treasury bond payments in early April.

“However, there would be relatively large NG debt/Treasury bond maturities from August-September 2025 that could be principal payments that need to be paid by then,” Mr. Ricafort said in a Viber Message.

Mr. Ricafort also said the rate cuts from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas and the US Federal Reserve from the latter part of 2024 may have also partly helped in reducing NG interest payments.

YEAR TO DATE
Meanwhile, for the first four months of the year, the NG debt service bill stood at P622.92 billion, a 45.73% decline from P1.15 trillion in the same period last year.

Amortization payments slumped by 62.19% to P335.47 billion in the January-to-April period from P887.24 billion. This accounted for 53.85% of the four-month tally.

Amortization payments on domestic debt fell by 77.42% to P170.4 billion, while external payments increased by 24.61% to P165.07 billion.

Meanwhile, interest payments rose by 10.35% to P287.45 billion in the January-to-April period from P260.49 billion in the same period a year ago.

Interest payments on domestic debt stood at P209.03 billion, 12.8% higher annually from P185.31 billion in 2024.

This was composed of P146.13 billion in fixed-rate Treasury bonds, P43.21 billion in retail Treasury bonds, P16.08 billion in Treasury bills (T-bills), and others (P3.63 billion).

On the other hand, external debt inched up by 4.3% to P78.42 billion in the first four months from P75.18 billion a year ago.

“The maturity of government securities caused the uptick in debt payments for the government, specifically government bonds,” Reinielle Matt M. Erece, an economist at Oikonomia Advisory and Research, Inc., said in a Viber message.

Mr. Erece said he expects debt payments to rise in the coming months.

“The government debt service bill may continue to increase in the next few months as government securities saw high demand mature. In addition, the long-term fiscal consolidation plan of the government can also explain elevated debt payments to try and reduce the country’s debt burden,” he said.

In 2025, the debt service program is set at P2.051 trillion, consisting of P1.203 trillion in principal payments and P848.031 billion in interest payments.

The NG debt stock registered a fresh high of P16.75 trillion as of the end-April. It is projected to hit P17.35 trillion by yearend.

The debt-to-gross domestic product (GDP) ratio rose to 62% as of end-March — the highest in 20 years.

“The country remains firmly on track to reduce the NG debt-to-GDP ratio to below 60% by the end of the President’s term,” the Department of Finance said last week. — A.R.A. Inosante



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