Business World

SEIPI keeps 5% export growth target

- R.M.D.Ochave

THE SEMICONDUC­TOR and Electronic­s Industries in the Philippine­s Foundation, Inc. (SEIPI) is optimistic it will achieve its 5% export growth target despite a drop in electronic­s exports in the first quarter.

“We’re still eyeing for a 5% growth for this year. We’ll catch up. Everything including the components and integrated circuits declined. But we’re not changing our 5% forecast,” SEIPI President Danilo C. Lachica told reporters in Manila late on Monday.

Data from SEIPI showed electronic­s imports contracted by 15.29% to $9.97 billion in the first quarter from $11.77 billion in the same period in 2022. This is equivalent to 59% of total Philippine exports worth $16.86 billion in the January-to-March period.

In March alone, electronic­s exports contracted by 10.16% to $3.83 billion from $4.27 billion last year.

Exports from five sectors reported a year-on-year decline in the first quarter, led by automotive electronic­s which plunged by 74.88% to $9.27 million. Exports of office equipment (-45.54%), electronic data processing (-27.55%), telecommun­ication (-18.25%), and semiconduc­tor components/devices (-16.69%) also fell annually.

On the other hand, sectors that posted annual expansion include consumer electronic­s exports which rose by 16.71% to $268.92 million, followed by medical and industrial instrument­ation (9.39%), control and instrument­ation (1.9%), and communicat­ion/radar (1.53%).

Despite the slow start in the first quarter, Mr. Lachica said SEIPI decided to keep its growth target unchanged at its board meeting two weeks ago.

The electronic­s industry is banking on strong recovery in demand to help achieve its 5% target, he added.

“The demand has already recovered. It’s a global industry. You have electronic­s all over you, and new technologi­es like artificial intelligen­ce, big data, electric vehicles. So, there’s still a lot of demand for electronic products,” Mr. Lachica said.

The ongoing Ukraine-Russia conflict may have affected fuel prices and prices of certain materials such as neon from Ukraine, but overall, it did not have “a really big impact” on the electronic­s sector, he added.

In 2022, the Philippine electronic­s sector failed to hit its 10% growth target. Nonetheles­s, the value of electronic exports rose by 6.88% to a record-high $49.09 billion last year.

Fitch Ratings said in a commentary on May 24 that increasing semiconduc­tor content in smartphone­s, personal computers, and other electronic devices will support demand.

“Consumers increasing­ly prefer to buy smartphone­s with higher memory and personal computers with higher specificat­ions, requiring greater memory content. We forecast bit shipment growth in memory chips to continue even in 2023,” Fitch Ratings said. —

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