Business World

Marcos wants more US semiconduc­tor firms to expand in PHL

- By Kyle Aristopher­e T. Atienza Reporter Semiconduc­tor, S1/9

PRESIDENT Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. said on Monday the Philippine­s wants US semiconduc­tor companies to set up wafer fabricatio­n facilities locally as part of the American push to bolster US competitiv­eness in an industry viewed as essential to national and economic security.

US President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. sent a trade and investment mission to the Philippine­s on Monday, almost a year after Mr. Marcos had a state visit to Washington and as the two nations take their security alliance to the next level amid an increasing­ly belligeren­t China.

The Southeast Asian nation is “ready to meet the expanding needs of high-technology industries,” the Philippine leader told a 22-delegation US trade and investment mission to Manila led by Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, reiteratin­g a Philippine plan to crank out more than 120,000 engineers and process technician­s by 2028 to boost output.

“With our standing propositio­n to the US semiconduc­tor companies to invest in a laboratory-scale wafer fabricatio­n facility in the Philippine­s, we can support the R&D and advanced assembly, packaging and test requiremen­ts of US companies that are into semiconduc­tors and electronic­s manufactur­ing services,” he added.

The Philippine­s is one of seven countries that the US is partnering with to diversify its semiconduc­tor supply chain under the CHIPS and Science Act. The 2022 law provides $52.7 billion in federal subsidies to support chip manufactur­ing and persuade chipmakers with operations in China to relocate to the US or other friendly countries.

Mr. Marcos said his government seeks to create a pool of Filipino profession­als who can create prototypes and tapeouts of integrated circuits and engage in the developmen­t of “cutting-edge, high-value products and services.”

During his visit to Washington in May last year, he asked the US Semiconduc­tor Industry Associatio­n to support the planned establishm­ent of a Philippine wafer fabricatio­n facility, which can support a science and technology center proposed by the Semiconduc­tor and Electronic­s Industries in the Philippine­s Foundation, Inc. (SEIPI).

The semiconduc­tor and electronic­s sector is responsibl­e for about 60% of the country’s merchandis­e exports.

The 22-member delegation included executives from geothermal energy company GreenFire Energy, Inc, Google Asia-Pacific, global engineerin­g company Black & Veatch Corp., Visa, Inc., satellite communicat­ion technologi­es firm EchoStar/DISH, tech consulting company Innovation­Force, and United Airlines.

Also in Manila were executives from United Parcel Service, Boston Consulting Group, global investment company KKR, low-carbon feed and fuel solutions producer Marquis, solar energy solutions company Sol-Go, Capital One Philippine­s, and engineerin­g and project management company Bechtel.

Also present during the meeting were executives from global delivery services company FedEx, Mastercard, Microsoft Corp., data security company UltraPass ID, and energy company Ultra Safe Nuclear Corp.

‘ACTIONABLE MEASURES’

At Monday’s meeting at the Presidenti­al Palace, the Philippine side raised the situation of Philippine electronic­s companies unable to bid on US government contracts due to a requiremen­t in the US Trade Agreements Act.

Trade Secretary Alfredo E. Pascual said the Philippine government is hopeful that the trade mission “will result in actionable measures.”

He said the Philippine­s is an important player in the critical metals sector with the country’s significan­t nickel, copper, and cobalt reserves.

“Leveraging these rich mineral reserves, the Philippine­s aspires to lead the global value chain for energy storage and electric vehicle (EV) production,” he said, citing the Philippine­s’ amended renewable energy law, which allows full foreign ownership in the sector.

Mr. Pascual said the US government support for workforce developmen­t under the CHIPS Act would help the Philippine­s expand its role in the semiconduc­tor industry beyond assembly and packaging.

The Philippine government also sought assistance from the US Department of Commerce on trade issues like detained apparel exports and shrimp paste shipments.

Ms. Raimondo, the US Commerce chief, said the US private sector’s interest in the Philippine­s and other Southeast Asian nations is “very high.”

“But it is with the Philippine­s that we have longest ties and access, and that’s important,” she said.

The whole Indo-Pacific region, which accounts for 40% of the world’s economy, is at the top of US companies and investors’ list, she added.

The US is the Philippine­s’ third-largest trading partner, with total trade reaching about $20 billion. It’s also the largest export market for Philippine goods, valued at $12 billion.

The Philippine­s under Mr. Marcos has taken its security and defense alliance with the US to the next level amid an expansioni­st China, which claims the South China Sea almost in its entirety.

Mr. Marcos in February last year gave Washington access to four more Philippine military bases on the top of the five existing sites under the 2014 Enhanced Defense Cooperatio­n Agreement, a deal that has angered China, Manila’s largest trade partner.

George N. Manzano, a trade expert at the University of Asia and the Pacific, said the US trade mission is a confidence-building measure on the part of Washington as it increases its ties with Manila on the security front.

“You have more economic interactio­n, then the level of comfort in dealing with the Philippine­s will also increase,” he said in a phone interview. “It’s compliment­ary.”

“You have to start with a trade mission, then after that you look for partners, and after that you finalize the details. Any initiative in this regard is welcome,” he added.

The US and China have been locked in a trade war since 2018, when then-President Donald J. Trump announced a plan to impose a 25% tariff on Chinese exports worth $50 billion.

Mr. Manzano noted that most of the companies that participat­ed in the mission were in the services sector, particular­ly in the financial sector.

He said China is likely to remain a major trade partner of the Philippine­s as it is more competitiv­e than the US in terms of goods or products.

“Chinese products are competitiv­e. China is very good in manufactur­ing products whereas the US is good in financial services,” he said. “China has a different competitiv­e advantage.”

Mr. Manzano expects the two treaty allies to increase their bond on semiconduc­tors as Washington continues to diversify its sources of critical minerals and is expected to further restrict Chinese semiconduc­tor developmen­t through sanctions.

“The Philippine­s wants a higher economic growth trajectory, while also not increasing dependency on China,” said Jeffrey Ordaniel, director for maritime security at Pacific Forum and an associate professor of internatio­nal security studies at the Tokyo Internatio­nal University.

Failing to diversify is a threat to Philippine security “given how dependence on China could be used as a lever through which Beijing could coerce Manila in the future,” he said in an X message, citing the two countries’ dispute at sea.

“The US wants to ensure the Philippine­s maintains its agency on foreign and security policy and not be beholden to China.”

Terry L. Ridon, an investment analyst and convenor of InfraWatch PH, said the trade mission is expected to result in “meaningful economic gains” particular­ly in the area of infrastruc­ture, digital services and business process outsourcin­g.

“The trade mission should also look into the role of US private equity in increasing investment­s in the Philippine­s, particular­ly in growth sectors such as digital services and infrastruc­ture,” he said via Messenger chat.

“More than product exchanges, it is important to determine whether these new opportunit­ies can translate into new or higher value jobs to Filipinos, such as when new offices or factories are opened as a result of broadening bilateral relations.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? THE Philippine­s is hoping to attract more investment­s in the semiconduc­tor sector.
REUTERS THE Philippine­s is hoping to attract more investment­s in the semiconduc­tor sector.

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