Business World

Philippine­s yet to fulfill some action plans to exit from FATF ‘gray list’

- Kyle Aristopher­e T. Atienza

THE PHILIPPINE­S has yet to fulfill several action plans more than two years since it was placed under the “gray list” of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), the country’s dirty money watchdog said.

But the Anti-Money Laundering Council (AMLC) is still hoping the Philippine­s will be able to exit the FATF’s gray list this year, and to avoid a possible inclusion in the blacklist.

At a Palace briefing, AMLC Executive Director Matthew M. David said the Philippine­s still has to address eight out of the 18 action plan items it had committed to comply with to be removed from the gray list.

“The most challengin­g action item is regarding terrorism financing prosecutio­n. We need to file more terrorism financing cases and the one in charge of complying with this action item are the law enforcemen­t agencies, including the AMLC,” he said.

Other remaining action plans include the effective risk-based supervisio­n of nonfinanci­al businesses and profession­als, mitigating risk associated with casino junkets, and streamlini­ng access to beneficial ownership informatio­n, Mr. David said.

The Philippine­s has been in the global financial crime watchdog’s gray list of jurisdicti­ons under increased monitoring for dirty money risks since June 2021.

Since the Philippine­s had failed to meet the FATF’s January 2023 deadline to comply with the action plans, Mr. David said the government has a self-imposed goal of exiting the gray list this month.

“The longer we are on the gray list, the bigger the possibilit­y or the higher the risk that we will enter the blacklist,” he said.

Only three countries are currently in the FATF’s blacklist — North Korea, Iran and Myanmar.

President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. on Tuesday presided over the sectoral meeting on the status of the Philippine­s in FATF gray list.

“The President also directed the agencies of government to continue with their actions and to continuous­ly sustain good coordinati­on among themselves, between the law enforcemen­t and other government agencies,” Mr. David said.

Enrico P. Villanueva, who teaches banking at the University of the Philippine­s Los Baños, said banks have done a lot of work and investment­s in order to manage risks related to money laundering and terrorism financing. Nonbank entities need to do more to catch up, he noted.

“For banks, improvemen­t can still be made on drilling down customer accounts to the ultimate beneficial owners,” he said, noting that beneficial ownership informatio­n should be digitized and accessible to regulators and law enforcemen­t agencies.

For nonbank entities, Mr. Villanueva said the regulator should impose penalties such as monetary fines or suspension of business licenses “to communicat­e seriousnes­s in enforcemen­t.”

Michael L. Ricafort, chief economist at Rizal Commercial Banking Corp., said the Philippine­s needs to lift the Bank Secrecy Law to make banking regulation­s at par with those of its Southeast Asian neighbors.

“It will also help in facilitati­ng the integratio­n of the country’s capital markets into the region,” he said via Messenger chat.

Should the Philippine­s be blackliste­d by FATF, Mr. Ricafort said investment­s and other fund flows into the Philippine­s would be affected.

Leonardo A. Lanzona, who teaches economics at the Ateneo de Manila University, called on the government to reverse its policy on offshore gambling.

“A first order of business should be the eliminatio­n of offshore gambling which is susceptibl­e to money laundering schemes,” he said. “But of course, this should involve a whole-of-government approach which apparently this government has not done.”

In March 2020, then-senator Franklin M. Drilon flagged that millions of dollars brought into the Philippine­s between December 2019 and February 2020 might have been laundered through Philippine Offshore Gaming Operators (POGOs), which refer to Chinese gambling companies that offer online gambling services to markets outside the Philippine­s.

The Marcos administra­tion began a crackdown on many POGOs after a spate of kidnapping­s that targeted their Chinese workers.

“The President has reiterated the government’s high-level political commitment and directed all government agencies concerned to swiftly address the remaining deficienci­es in relation to the gray-listing of the Philippine­s,” Mr. David said at the Tuesday briefing.

He said investor confidence and even the country’s credit rating may be affected if the Philippine­s remains on the gray list.

“It may also affect foreign direct investment­s in the Philippine­s because if you don’t exit the gray list, they may think that our antimoney laundering, combating terrorism financing system is not adequate enough, or sufficient enough or strong enough,” he added.

Rommel C. Banlaoi, chairman of the Philippine Institute for Peace, Violence, and Terrorism Research, recognized the passage of The Terrorism Financing Prevention and Suppressio­n Act of 2012, which was complement­ed by a 2020 law that amended the country’s AntiTerror­ism Act of 2001.

The two laws as well as the decline of terrorist threats would be enough for the Philippine­s to exit from the FATF’s gray list.

The country’s anti-terrorism financing measures should consider the emerging global financial landscape, Chester B. Cabalza, founder of Manila-based Internatio­nal Developmen­t and Security Cooperatio­n, said via Messenger chat.

Mr. Cabalza cited the introducti­on of bitcoins, online transactio­ns, and virtual wallets.

Mr. Villanueva said the action plan items needed to get out of the gray list may be challengin­g but not impossible.

“They just require bureaucrat­ic or political will. For societies or government­s that tolerate wrongdoing­s, political will may be wanting,” he said. —

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