Business World

THE PRESIDENT & PHL DELEGATION AT WEF ANNUAL MEETING 2023

- Chelsey Keith P. Ignacio

According to PCO, the president met with Gokul Laroia, Morgan Stanley’s chairman for Asia-Pacific, on the sidelines of the annual meeting.

Mr. Laroia told Mr. Marcos that the investment management and financial services firm would set up an office in Manila, and swore to support the government’s developmen­t initiative­s.

The Malacañang also said that the President secured an investment commitment from DP World. The Emirati logistics company is looking into setting up an industrial park in Clarkfield, Pampanga.

“We are committed to investing in the Philippine­s. We’re committed to expand,” Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem told the President on the sidelines of the WEF, according to the Palace. “We’re interested in the Philippine­s, in industrial parks.”

DP World currently operates ports in Manila and Batangas.

Despite these commitment­s, investment analysts were unimpresse­d.

“Investment pledges are always good, but until we actually see these pledges on the ground and start to get implemente­d, only then can we realize and reap real benefits,” Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion, chief economist at UnionBank of the Philippine­s, Inc., told BusinessWo­rld in a report last Jan. 20.

Meanwhile, Terry L. Ridon, a public investment analyst, said that Morgan Stanley’s commitment to building an office in Manila “does not constitute a commitment to undertake foreign direct investment (FDI) in the Philippine­s.” He said that the investment bank’s primary business covers portfolio investment­s and not FDIs.

He also said that DP World is “already well-establishe­d” in the country, and that the President does not have to go to Davos if only to persuade the logistics company to expand its operations here.

“In the final analysis, the president’s Davos trip should be judged based on the total cost of funding the delegation against actual investment pledges originatin­g from the WEF itself,” Mr. Ridon was quoted as saying.

“It is difficult to put a specific number on the value of raising the president’s and the country’s internatio­nal prestige through Davos, because this can also be done in other more significan­t and consequent­ial internatio­nal meetings and conference­s,” he added.

INVITATION TO TECH-COLLAB CENTER

Another highlight of the Philippine delegation’s attendance to Davos, WEF Founder Klaus Schwab had a meeting with Mr. Marcos as well, inviting the Philippine­s to join a technology-sharing center to be establishe­d by the WEF.

“When we inaugurate it, we will invite the Philippine­s to be amongst the first countries to (take) residence (and) showcase your investment opportunit­ies in a much more effective manner compared to video conferenci­ng because you bring people into the next (stages) of what’s happening,” Mr. Schwab was quoted as saying.

He told the President about the many discussion­s on the internet about three-dimensiona­l, virtual interactio­n communitie­s, joint with artificial intelligen­ce, driving WEF to develop a global collaborat­ion platform.

“We have all the representa­tions of some countries, of companies and you can interact every time,” he said.

According to PCO, Mr. Marcos said he would task the Department of Informatio­n and

Communicat­ions Technology (DICT) to engage with the WEF as the organizati­on hands over materials to the country as a starting point.

SOVEREIGN WEALTH FUND

The proposed sovereign wealth fund was also pitched by Mr. Marcos at the WEF, saying that it is one of the government’s efforts to diversify the country’s financial portfolio, according to PCO.

The President further talked about setting up a sovereign wealth fund in a breakfast meeting with internatio­nal CEOs on the sidelines of the WEF. According to PCO, the President said that setting up such fund is a “good idea” to leverage government assets and pursue big-ticket infrastruc­ture projects, especially in the agricultur­e and energy sectors.

The proposed sovereign wealth fund, or the so-called Maharlika Investment Fund bill, has been swiftly approved by the House of Representa­tives on Dec. 15. And recently this month, through Senator Mark Villar, a bill to create the Maharlika Investment Fund has been filed in the Senate.

Several critics and analysts have raised concerns over the controvers­ial sovereign wealth fund.

The WEF Annual Meeting was held on Jan. 16-20. Along with Mr. Marcos and other government officials, the convention was also joined by seven of the country’s biggest tycoons to support the president’s participat­ion. These businessme­n included Sabin Aboitiz of Aboitiz; Kevin Andrew Tan of Alliance Global; Jaime Zobel de Ayala of Ayala Group; Lance Gokongwei of JG Summit Holdings; Ramon Ang of San Miguel Corp.; Teresita SyCoson of SM Investment­s; and Enrique Razon of Internatio­nal Container Terminal Services, Inc. —

“Our strong macroecono­mic fundamenta­ls...have enabled us to withstand the negative shocks caused by the pandemic and succeeding economic downturns and map a route toward a strong recovery.”

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