Palace confident next admin to continue new normal economic recovery plan

President Rodrigo Roa Duterte interacts with the national and local officials in attendance as he leads the inauguration of the Tacloban City Bypass Road in Barangay Caibaan, Tacloban City on March 17, 2022.
Presidential photo/Ace Morandante

MANILA, Philippines — Malacañang on Thursday expressed confidence that the next administrations would follow the pandemic recovery plan contained in Executive Order (EO) no. 166 signed by President Rodrigo Duterte this week.

Acting presidential spokesman Martin Andanar clarified that the order, which adopted a ten-point policy agenda to accelerate and sustain economic recovery from the pandemic, is not a COVID-19 exit plan.

"We do not share the view that this is the current administration's exit plan for this forms part of the country's preparation to build resilience under the new normal, which we are certain would be carried on by the succeeding administrations," Andanar said in a statement.

Andanar noted that EO no. 168, which formed the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases in the Philippines (IATF), was signed by the late president Benigno Aquino III in 2014 and was adopted by the Duterte administration. The IATF is the government's pandemic policy-making body.

"Unless Executive Order No.166 is modified or revoked, it would remain effective and operational," Andanar said.

The order, which was signed by Duterte last March 21, enumerated ten principles of the pandemic economic recovery plan namely strengthen healthcare capacity; accelerate and expand the vaccination program; further reopen the economy and expand public transport capacity; resume face-to-face learning; reduce restrictions on domestic travel and standardize local government units' requirements; relax requirements for international travel; accelerate digital transformation through legislative measures; provide for enhanced and flexible emergency measures through legislation; shift the focus of decision-making and government reporting to more useful and empowering metrics; and medium term protection for pandemic resilience.

The policies were intended to sustain economic gains and to minimize the long-term adverse effects of the pandemic, which has so far left more than 58,000 persons dead in the Philippines.

All regions in the Philippines are now at minimal risk as COVID-19 case rates drop but health officials are urging the public and businesses to continue complying with health protocols like frequent hand washing, wearing of face masks, observing physical distance, and proper ventilation.

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