Business World

FDI pledges drop 37.9% in first quarter

- By Elijah Joseph C. Tubayan Reporter

APPROVED foreign investment pledges fell to their lowest level in nearly eight years last quarter in the face of external developmen­ts and uncertaint­ies due to planned changes to the corporate income tax and incentives schemes.

Foreign direct invest - ments ( FDI) committed with investment-promotion agencies dropped 37.9% to P14.2 billion in the first three months of the year from the P22.883 billion posted in the same period in 2017, Philippine Statistics Authority ( PSA) data show.

This was the lowest level since the P13.8 billion logged in the second quarter of 2010.

The report counted FDIs registered with the government’s seven premier investment promotion agencies (IPAs), namely: the Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA), Board of Investment­s (BoI), Clark Developmen­t Corp. ( CDC), Subic Bay Metropolit­an Authority (SBMA), Authority of the Freeport Area of Bataan (AFAB), BoI-Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao (BoI-ARMM) and Cagayan Economic Zone Authority (CEZA).

The three months to March saw PEZA contributi­ng the most pledged FDIs at 91.2% with P12.96 billion, down 34.5% year on year. This was followed by the BoI with a 5.6% share at P792.8

million, though 58.2% less than a year ago.

Rounding the rest of the IPAs were CDC’s 2.4% share at P339.8 million (a 59.8% decline), SBMA’s 0.1% at P11.5 million ( down 96.3%) and CEZA’s 0.7% at P104.1 million (up 92.4%).

PEZA said that the decline was largely due to the impact of Republic Act No. 10963, or the Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion ( TRAIN) law which slashed personal income tax rates but added or raised excise taxes on several items and lifted the value added tax exemptions of various sectors, as well as the uncertaint­ies brought by the second package that will slash corporate income tax rates but will remove fiscal incentives deemed redundant.

“TRAIN 2 and the effects of TRAIN 1 have created uncertaint­ies for new investment…” PEZA Director General Charito B. Plaza said in a mobile phone message on Thursday, claiming that tax reform “created fears, worries and directives to investors’ principals to start looking at other countries to transfer.”

“Unstable laws, policies that can be changed in the middle of the game, that can be removed at the pleasure or threats from government is dangerous and will discourage… the investors already here.”

Sought for comment, Security Bank Corp. economist Angelo B. Taningco said that the decline was due to external developmen­ts, but also noted the effect of domestic inflation that averaged 4.1% in the first four months of the year against the central bank’s 2-4% target for the entire 2018.

“I think a potential reason why it was relatively low is… greater foreign investor uncertaint­y arising from heightened financial market volatility, trade war concerns and geopolitic­al tensions,” Mr. Taningco said in an e-mail.

“Another possible explanatio­n is that of rising production costs domestical­ly as Philippine inflation was rising sharply and the peso depreciati­on being strong versus most other Asian currencies.”

Michael L. Ricafort, economist at Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. ( RCBC), shared this view, saying in a separate e-mail: “Approved foreign investment pledges declined amid increased protection­ist measures and risk of trade war by some developed countries, especially in the US…”

Foreign investment commitment­s are different from actual capital inflows tracked by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas for balance of payments purposes. Latest available BSP data showed that net foreign direct investment­s in peso equivalent grew 56.1% to P76.1 billion in the first two months of the year from P48.7 billion in January-February 2017.

Japan was the top source of pledged investment­s in the first quarter, accounting for more than half of that period’s portfolio with P7.9 billion. This was followed by the United Kingdom and the Netherland­s with P1.5 billion and P878.5 million worth of commitment­s, respective­ly.

By industry, manufactur­ing bested other industries as it got 64.1% of the total at P9.1 billion albeit lower by 39.4% from a year ago. Administra­tive and support service activities came in next with a 12.7% share of the total at P1.81 billion, though down 48.7%, while real estate activities came in third with a 12.6% share, declining 47.7% to P1.80 billion.

PEZA’s Ms. Plaza said that although, for manufactur­ers, it “isn’t easy to pull out their huge factory and machines… they can slowly move out by giving to their other branches in other countries the transfer of production and market quota” as well as slowly reducing their work force over time.

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