Kuwait Times

IS threat cools outsourcin­g boom in Philippine­s: Industry

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Prolonged fighting by Filipino militants supporting the Islamic State group has put the brakes on the Philippine­s’ $10 billion outsourcin­g industry, one of its key growth drivers, industry leaders said yesterday.

More than 900 people have been killed in the city of Marawi, where pro-IS militants have defied a months-long US-backed military campaign to flush them out, while the southern third of the country has been placed under martial law to contain the violence. Although the lucrative outsourcin­g industry is largely based in the northern and central regions, the bloody conflict has unnerved many potential investors, said officials of the Informatio­n Technology and Business Process Associatio­n of the Philippine­s (IBPAP). “In the early part of the year, we had a lot of ‘wait-and-see’ attitude for the most part,” said IBPAP president Rey Untal.

Approved investment­s in the informatio­n technology services sector, which includes the outsourcin­g industry, fell 31.3 percent from a year earlier in the three months to June, government data show. “There is an element of (wait and see) still,” Untal told reporters, though there were now signs that new players were coming in.

The outsourcin­g industry includes call centers and offices that carry out such functions for overseas companies like accounting, medical and legal transcript­ion, software design, animation and even architectu­re. It has become a major pillar of growth of the Philippine economy, bringing in $23 billion in revenues last year and employing 1.15 million people according to industry officials.

When the Marawi violence broke out in May, the industry was bracing for the fallout of the protection­ist threats issued by US President Donald Trump, who has vowed to bring back jobs outsourced abroad, Untal said. “Then suddenly we had to deal with that (Marawi) also. —AFP

 ??  ?? HONG KONG: US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross poses before a round table briefing in Hong Kong yesterday. Ross said he was optimistic over talks between president Donald Trump and Chinese president Xi Jinping in November as they seek to reduce a trade...
HONG KONG: US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross poses before a round table briefing in Hong Kong yesterday. Ross said he was optimistic over talks between president Donald Trump and Chinese president Xi Jinping in November as they seek to reduce a trade...

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