Citizen participation
is key to government’s Bottom-Up Budgeting program - Roxas
By Angelica Katheryn Carballo
MANILA, PHILIPPINES - Department of Interior and Local
Government Secretary Manuel Roxas III announced on Wednesday that the promise
of the President Benigno ‘Noynoy” Aquino III of a more transparent and
participative government will be realized through the Bottom-Up Budgeting (BUB)
process that is already being implemented in pilot municipalities in the
Philippines.
Speaking in front of around 250 non-government organizations during the 5th Congress and 20th year anniversary of the Caucus of Development NGO Networks (CODE NGO) held at the Ateneo de Manila University, Roxas said that citizen-government partnership should be encouraged through constructive engagement.
“For a government to be successful, we should harness the power
of the people and encourage partnership with the citizenry,” Roxas said.
By Angelica Katheryn Carballo
President Benigno
Simeon Aquino III
|
Speaking in front of around 250 non-government organizations during the 5th Congress and 20th year anniversary of the Caucus of Development NGO Networks (CODE NGO) held at the Ateneo de Manila University, Roxas said that citizen-government partnership should be encouraged through constructive engagement.
DILG Secretary Manuel
Roxas III(Photo by JC)
|
He said the BUB will help in making the budget work “where work
needs to be done”.
The BUB process is the localization of anti-poverty initiatives
through active and meaningful citizen’s participation in the planning of the government
budget.
The first phase of the BUB identified 600 municipalities and
cities where civil society organizations collaborated with government agencies
and local government units to craft the 2013 national budget.
This process ensures that government funds will work in areas
that are really needed to boost poverty reduction and development projects and
activities.
“We have limited funds, so we want to make sure that these will
go to projects that match the actual needs of the citizens” Roxas added.
Roxas also said that the Aquino government is very receptive and
even encourages constructive engagement and even challenged the NGOs to ‘test
the limits of engagement in the government’.
“Sabi nga, malapit na tayo sa kusina, andito na tayo sa kusina,
ano na ang gagawin natin?” Roxas asked the participants.
“We challenge you to speak up, don’t be frightened, ngayong
andito na tayo sa kusina, wala namang masisira, wala namang mababasag,” the
DILG secretary said, saying that the government needs all the inputs it can get
from the CSOs in order to ‘cook good and nutritious food in the kitchen’.
Roxas also announced that the second phase of the BUB process
will involve more than 1,200 municipalities and cities, which is almost double
the number of the municipalities and cities involved in the initial phase.
In October 2012, CODE-NGO forged a memorandum of agreement with
DILG, then headed by the late Secretary Jesse Robredo, together with
Transparency and Accountability Network Inc. (TAN) and Task-Force Participatory
Local Governance which aims to pursue effective mobilization of CSOs as
strategic partners of DILG in promoting responsible and accountable governance.
“By working together, civil society and government would be able
to come up with solutions and mechanisms to make sure that taxpayers’ money is
spent wisely and effectively,” CODE-NGO Executive Director Donato Macasaet said
in a statement.
Eric Galvin, Attache to the European Union and representatives
of CODE NGO signed the partnership agreement on Citizen’s Participation in
Monitoring LGU performance and Development Planning on Poverty Reduction
(Citizen’s MLPD-PR). National Anti-Poverty Commission lead convener Joel
Rocamora also witnessed the signing of the agreement.
The partnership will undertake and support appropriate Local
Anti-Poverty Planning (LAPP) and budgeting in 24 poor municipalities in the
Philippines towards improving the LGU governance and service delivery
particularly in agriculture and health.