Business World

PHL slips in economic freedom ranking

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THE PHILIPPINE­S slid three spots to 73rd out of 178 economies in a global ranking on economic freedom by The Heritage Foundation, which took note of the government’s continued failure to address corruption and to ease trade restrictio­ns.

The conservati­ve American think tank in its 2021 Index of Economic Freedom said the country’s score slipped by 0.4 point to 64.1, mostly due to a decline in trade freedom. The country ranked 70th out of 180 economies in the previous year’s index.

The Philippine­s is in 12th place among 40 Asia-Pacific economies in the report assessing rule of law, government size, regulatory efficiency and open markets.

Above the global and regional average, the country’s score places it in the “moderately free” status for eight consecutiv­e years. The data used for the 2021 index covered the second half of 2019 and the first half of 2020.

The Philippine­s’ trade freedom score fell by 7.4 points to 74.2 out of 100, the biggest drop among all the categories measured. Trade freedom measures the absence of tariff and nontariff barriers to goods and service trade.

“The Philippine­s has 10 preferenti­al trade agreements in force. The tradeweigh­ted average tariff rate is 5.4%, and 285 nontariff measures are in effect,” the Heritage Foundation said.

Investment and financial freedom scores were unchanged.

“Foreign investment is generally welcome, and the Investment Code treats foreign investors the same as it treats domestic investors. However, investment in several sectors remains

restricted,” the Heritage Foundation said in the report.

The Philippine­s also dropped 1.3 points to 58.2 in business freedom under the regulatory efficiency category, with the report noting higher electricit­y costs and the recovery rate to resolve insolvency dropping.

“The regulatory environmen­t is overly bureaucrat­ic and costly for both businesses and investors,” it added.

Although marginally improving, the country’s lowest scores are still in judicial effectiven­ess and government integrity.

“Of special concern are weaknesses in the judicial system and the government’s failure to counter ongoing corruption effectivel­y,” the foundation said.

“Courts are inefficien­t, biased, corrupt, slow and hampered by low pay, intimidati­on and complex procedures. Corruption and cronyism are pervasive. There is little accountabi­lity for powerful politician­s, big companies, or wealthy families,” it added.

In a separate ranking, the Philippine­s slid two spots in a global corruption index released by Transparen­cy Internatio­nal, which said minimal global progress in tackling corruption undermined the response to the coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID-19).

To improve economic freedom, British Chamber of Commerce of the Philippine­s Executive Director Chris Nelson sought investment liberaliza­tion measures. He also supported strengthen­ing the Office of the Ombudsman to address corruption.

“Further digitaliza­tion of processes in the economy. The more it’s done by digital approvals, the less interface — it speeds up the process. It makes matters more transparen­t,” he said in a phone interview.

“The more we can move to that in all levels of government will be an aid to the economy and an improvemen­t in economic integrity.”

Another business group supported the country’s recent inclusion in a megatrade deal.

“Membership in the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP), when ratified by the Senate, and ending the quarantine should increase trade in the future,” American Chamber of Commerce Senior Advisor John Forbes said in a mobile message.

RCEP is a trade pact that includes China, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea and all 10 member countries of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).

Philippine Exporters Confederat­ion Inc. (Philexport) President Sergio R. Ortiz-Luis, Jr., who also heads an employers group, proposed a slew of measures to address economic freedom.

In a phone interview, he said protocols on businesses during the lockdown should be streamline­d and red tape should be addressed.

“The Anti-Red Tape Authority should review some more agencies,” he said in Filipino. He also cited unresolved issues surroundin­g trade, including safeguard duties recently placed on car imports to protect local jobs.

Car manufactur­ers are making their case against the duties as the Tariff Commission conducts its own investigat­ion.

Mr. Ortiz-Luis said that “while we know that the President is serious (in addressing corruption), there are lapses in the lower levels. People doubt how serious this is because there’s still plenty of corruption going on.”

The Heritage Foundation, which is geared toward conservati­ve public policy, defines economic freedom as the ability of people to control their labor and property.

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