Quality of infrastructure in the Philippines is second to the last in the ASEAN region. Senior Research Fellow of the
Philippine Institute for Development Studies (PIDS) Dr. Adoracion Navarro disclosed this during the forum "Financing Infrastructure in the Philippines " held at PIDS. "In the Global Competitiveness Report 2012-2013 of the World Economic Forum, the Philippines is ranked 98th among 144 countries in terms of quality of overall infrastructure. Philippine infrastructure is worse than Cambodia’s,” Navarro said. In the ASEAN region, the only country the Philippines overtook was Viet Nam that placed 119th, the ASEAN nation with the poorest quality of infrastructure. Ranked first in the region is Singapore, which is second overall among 144 countries. Malaysia was ranked 29th; Brunei Darussalam, 43th; Thailand, 49th; Cambodia, 72th; and Indonesia; 92th. Lao PDR and Myanmar are not included in the ranking. The Philippines got the lowest rank in terms of quality of port infrastructure and air transport infrastructure. This is clearly worse than Cambodia’s 69th and 75th ranking in port and air transport infrastructure, respectively. Navarro attributes this poor turnout to underinvestment in infrastructure. In 2012, only 11 percent of the total appropriated budget for infrastructure was spent–a scenario that has not changed since 2010. Navarro said the decreasing reliance on official development assistance (ODA) loans also contributed to the low quality of Philippine infrastructure.