The World Bank’s Board of Executive Directors has approved new financing for the Philippines to help strengthen fiscal resilience, attract higher-quality private investment, and improve workforce skills for better and more productive jobs. The support comes through the new Philippines Growth and Jobs Development Policy Loan, which is aimed at helping the country convert strong economic growth into more inclusive and job-rich development.
The operation focuses on reforms in three key areas. First, it seeks to strengthen fiscal management through revenue and expenditure reforms that can improve domestic resource mobilization and make public spending more efficient. These measures are intended to preserve fiscal space for priority investments in infrastructure and human capital while helping the country better withstand economic shocks.
Second, the program aims to improve the business environment by lowering the cost of doing business, reducing regulatory and compliance burdens, promoting competition, and encouraging both private sector participation and foreign direct investment in key sectors. By making it easier and more attractive for businesses to invest and expand, the reforms are expected to support higher-quality investment and create better-paying job opportunities.
Third, the loan supports reforms to build stronger labor-force capabilities through improvements in education, skills development, and innovation. These measures cover the full skills pipeline, from early childhood development and better basic education outcomes to upgraded technical and vocational education and training, as well as stronger support for the country’s innovation ecosystem. The goal is to ensure workers are better prepared for evolving labor market demands while firms can access the talent they need to grow.
The World Bank said the $800 million financing is structured as a Development Policy Loan, a form of policy-based budget support that helps governments implement policy and institutional reforms. According to the institution, these reforms are intended to crowd in private investment, generate more and better jobs, and help shift the Philippine economy toward more sophisticated and higher-value activities.
This support comes at a time when the Philippines has reached the gross national income per capita threshold for upper-middle-income country status, following years of inclusive GDP growth since 2010 that has enabled the economy to double in size roughly every 13.5 years. However, the country still faces domestic and external pressures that highlight the importance of continued fiscal and structural reforms to sustain higher growth, reduce vulnerability to shocks, and make growth more employment-intensive.
The reform agenda is being implemented by a wide range of government agencies, including the Department of Education, the Department of Finance, the Department of the Interior and Local Government, the Securities and Exchange Commission, and the Technical Education and Skills Development Authority, among others. The new loan also complements the World Bank’s broader work in the Philippines, including investments and advisory support in connectivity, agriculture modernization, digital infrastructure, and financial sector development, alongside efforts by IFC and MIGA to mobilize private capital.







