PORK BARREL:
Sirain NI NOYNOY ng todo si GMA , Kung si GMA ay merong
P488B pork barrel during her nine-year term – or an average of PhP54B per year
si Aquino naman noong 2010 ang pork barrel P68 billion.
***Ngayong 2012, ang pork barrel ni Aquino ay P101.5
billion.
*** Sa loob ng dalawang taon, ang pork barrel ni Aquino ay
P169.5B – or P84.75B pork barrel per year on the average.
*** Kung magnanakaw si Arroyo at P45B pork barrel per year –
ano na lang si Aquino at P84.5B per year – an 87.77% increase in the pork barrel.
***All that money – unaudited pa talaga.
***AQUINO PORK BARREL 2013
***2.006 TRILLION NATIONAL BUDGET APPROVED!
317 BILLION PESOS- Only the President is allowed by the
Constitution to tap the P317 billion in the undisclosed, hidden and vague SPF, whichever
way he may see fit, Even the release of the P24.89 billion in pork barrel funds
of the senators and congressmen was placed under the discretion of the
President in the Special Purpose Fund.
-------------------------------------------
##### PHILIPPINE DEBT:
***Sa panahon ni GMA nabayaran niya ang utang sa IMF.
***NOYNOY term- PHILIPPINES DEBT BOTH LOCAL AND FOREIGN
UNDER 2 YEARS AQUINO ADMINISTRATION.....
As of July 2012, the outstanding debt of the national
government, according to the Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) stood at ₱5.16
trillion, of which ₱3.12 trillion (61%) come from domestic creditors and the
rest, ₱2.04 trillion (39%) from foreign lenders. When Noynoy Aquino assumed
office in June 2010, that debt was pegged at ₱4.58 trillion (₱2.59 trillion,
domestic; ₱1.99 trillion, foreign). Since taking over, the NOYNOY
administration has added more than ₱580 billion to the debt burden, or an
average of more than ₱23 billion a month (July 2010 to July 2012). During the
ARROYO administration, the outstanding debt of the national government was
growing by a monthly average of ₱21 billion (January 2001 to June 2010).
*The government lost P101.816 billion to graft and
corruption in 2011, according to a report released by the Commission on Audit.
*Based on computations by state auditors, the biggest
problem was “under-assessment or under-collection” where government lost
P20.813 billion based on 157 cases of irregularities recorded.
*Profligacy or reckless spending came a close second,
accounting for P18.654 billion. The report listed 1,642 cases of “unauthorized,
irregular or unnecessary expenses.”
*Questionable government supply contracts including those
without public bidding or not in accordance with the provisions of RA No. 9184,
or the Government Procurement Reform Act, was at third spot, costing the public
P15.163 billion last year. COA recorded 692 contracts that fell under this
category.
########*CCT’S MISSING P3.77B AMONG P102B IN PECUNIARY
LOSSES — COA
ANOMALIES IN PRESIDENT NOYNOY 2011 CCT
***DOUBLE ENTRIES OF BENEFICIARIES, UNQUALIFIED GRANTEES***
I. Deficiencies in the screening process of beneficiaries
and unliquidated fund transfers, were among the findings of the Commission on
Audit (CoA) in its review of the flagship conditional cash transfer (CCT)
program or the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program (4Ps) of President Aquino
which was
funded with P23 billion out of last year’s budget. The
Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) under Secretary Corazon
Soliman administers the CCT, the funding for which next year will be doubled to
P40 billion.
II. The CoA report are fund transfers worth P6.6 billion to
the Land Bank of the Philippines (Landbank) for the payment of CCT remained
unliquidated “due to the failure of the management (DSWD) to compel the
Landbank to submit the required liquidation reports, resulting in the
accumulation of idle funds in the bank.
III. The unliquidated balances are fund transfers with no
actual beneficiaries and some grantees whose names are entered twice in the
payroll.
IV. Also noted were Bank Reconciliation Statements (BRSs)
which were not regularly and timely prepared and submitted that rendered
doubtful the reliability of the cash in bank, LCCA accounts (various 4Ps OTC)
totalling P6.4 billion and Cash in Bank, FCSA (foreign donations) amounting to
P35.5 million.
V. The CoA also noted double entries of names of 3,146
grantees in 250 payrolls covering the payment period May 25, 2010, which
further led to accumulation of idle funds in the Landbank worth P19.5 million
for over the counter (OTC) payments and P516,300.00 for cash card payments.
VI. The 4Ps database of poor beneficiaries lacked
information regarding relationships of grantees and members of his/her
household, especially those with different surnames, as noted in 11 sampled
households, thus, rendering difficult the verification of the regularity of the
payment of educational benefits.
VII. It also noted cash grants totalling P367.6 million were
released to 60,433 sampled beneficiaries despite non-compliance with the
conditionalities required under the Compliance Verification System (CVS).
VIII. The agency failed to implement the system of preparing
liquidation reports per check/payroll and to decentralize management of
disbursements, which rendered difficult and time-consuming the verification and
validation of liquidation reports of the 4Ps disbursements. The existing system
likewise, contributed to delayed recordings and erroneous charging of
liquidation by responsible DSWD officials and employees and delayed submission
of liquidation reports by LBP, Batasan Branch.
IX. The CoA noted in the validation that some of the
beneficiaries were earning income ranging from P200 to P350 a day, which
indicate that they are not the extremely poor who are supposed to be covered by
the program. “While entitlement to the program does not consider the income of
potential beneficiaries, one of the criteria for eligibility is that the
economic conditions of the households should be equal to or below the
provincial poverty threshold,” it said.
X. The audit team could not properly and fully evaluate and
validate this criteria due to lack of information, it added.
#######*MULTI BILLIONpeso anomalies were reported in the
Bureau of Customs where the P26 billion in Customs duty and tax drawbacks given
were found illegal, and the Department of Budget and Management’s (DBM)
transfer or release to local governments of P2.6 billion from the special
account in the general funds (SAGF) were found irregular.
* The Philippine Coast Guard recorded the receipt of Marine
Environment and Protection Equipment and Supplies from the DoTC worth P319
million were without complete documentation.
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