CEBU CITY Mayor Michael Rama has asked the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) for its concurrence in the city’s plan to preterminate its loan for the South Road Properties (SRP).
Rama wrote to the chief representative of JICA Philippines, through their technical staff Mae Catibog.
“It is in this regard that this Office humbly asks for the JICA’s written concurrence on this proposed prepayment. Your assistance will greatly aid the City of Cebu in realizing its objective of a debt-free City and achieving better services for the constituents of the City,” said Rama in his letter dated October 12.
He said Cebu City generated P8.3 billion as 50 percent downpayment from selling two SRP lots earlier this year.
In 1996, the Cebu City government availed of a loan amounting to Y12.315 billion or around P4.65 billion from JICA to develop the 300-hectare reclamation project.
The loan is payable over 30 years, or up to 2025.
At present, the city’s loan stands at more than P2.3 billion.
Rama said in his letter that Cebu CIty has been appropriating around P500 million every year for payment of the loan’s outstanding balance and interest.
“With the prepayment of the loan, the Cebu City Government will have adequate opportunity to allocate the annual amortization to other basic services urgently needed by the constituency of the
City of Cebu and likewise, save on billions of pesos worth of financial interest,” Rama added.
The executive department has included P2.4 billion for the loan prepayment in the city’s proposed P2.8 billion Supplemental Budget 1 (SB1), which is still pending with the Cebu City Council.
The Council voted against deliberating on the supplemental budget due to a pending case in court questioning the legality of using the P8.3 billion SRP downpayment.
Aside from JICA’s concurrence, the city needs a certification from the Bureau of Local Government Finance (BLGF) that the transaction is within the city’s debt servicing limit, Department of
Finance (DOF) and Land Bank of the Philippines (LBP) concurrence, a justification for the prepayment from the city government and a city council resolution approving the prepayment.