Business World

Economists ask Marcos gov’t to push easing foreign ownership cap while cutting red tape

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THE GOVERNMENT of President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. should push easing foreign ownership restrictio­ns in the 1987 Constituti­on while cutting bureaucrat­ic red tape to attract foreign direct investment­s (FDI), according to economists.

“Removing the specific restrictiv­e provisions in the 1987 Constituti­on is a necessary but not a sufficient condition to encourage more foreign direct investment­s,” Former Finance Secretary Margarito B. Teves told a forum on Wednesday.

“Just kindly try to remove all those restrictiv­e economic provisions which we can specify and put us on par with our colleagues in ASEAN (Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations),” he added.

Mr. Teves said the Philippine­s has one of the most restrictiv­e economies in Southeast Asia, and it doesn’t help that these limits are in the country’s basic law.

“We’re the only country whose restrictiv­e economic provisions embodied in the Constituti­on,” he said. “No other country in Asia... has included these provisions in the Constituti­on.”

FDI net inflows rose by 27.8% to $1.04 billion in November from a year earlier, the central bank said on Monday.

The FDI Regulatory Restrictiv­eness Index, which measures statutory restrictio­ns on FDIs in 22 economic sectors across 69 countries, has not taken into account the country’s liberalize­d public sector, Toby Melissa C. Monsod, an economics professor from the University of the Philippine­s, told the forum.

She said the government should delay Charter change until it reaps the benefits of potential FDIs in sectors opened up by the amended law that took effect in April. The law allows 100% foreign ownership in telecommun­ications, airlines and railways.

“The FDI restrictiv­eness index still does not incorporat­e gains from the Public Sector Act,” she said. “My question is why don’t we see what happens?”

The Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t’s FDI index gauges the restrictiv­eness of a country’s FDI rules by looking at foreign equity restrictio­ns, discrimina­tory screening or approval mechanisms, restrictio­ns on key foreign personnel and operationa­l restrictio­ns.

“I played with it,” Ms. Monsod said, referring to the index. “If you put that in, the [Philippine] index goes down by about 5%.”

“Relaxing equity restrictio­ns may not be necessary and at best, its impact will only be one-eighth or one-fourteenth of what could be obtained if we worked on controllin­g corruption or human capital,” she added.

But Rutcher Lacaza, a supervisin­g legislativ­e staff officer at the House of Representa­tives Congressio­nal Policy and Budget Research Department, said it’s not enough that Philippine FDIs continue to increase.

“Despite growing FDI inflows, the Philippine­s continues to lag behind our peers in the region,” he said at the forum.

Mr. Teves said the legal challenge to the Public Service Act at the Supreme Court might discourage foreign investors from coming in.

“We want to see a situation where foreign investors would be encouraged really to come in rather than have that element of uncertaint­y or doubt that the Supreme Court might or might not support Congress for its act,” he told BusinessWo­rld on the sidelines of the forum.

Raul V. Fabella, a retired professor at the University of the Philippine­s School of Economics, said any economic gains from existing laws outweigh the Philippine­s’ tight investment climate.

“Even if the gains of the Public Service Act are there, you will still find some reason because power is still not competitiv­e,” he said. “You [should] improve the investment ecology whenever you can, and whenever you can, and one of them is by lifting Article 12.”

The clause mandates the state to protect Filipino enterprise­s against unfair foreign competitio­n and trade practices and limits land ownership to Filipino citizens and corporatio­ns that are at least 60% Filipino-owned.

Mr. Fabella said the Philippine­s’ 22% savings rate is behind Asian peers including China (45%), Singapore (43%), Vietnam (33%) and Thailand (27%).

Lack of savings, an important source of economic growth, makes a country highly dependent on foreign investment­s, which also come with risks. — Beatriz Marie D. Cruz

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