Business World

PHL secures $4B in German pledges

- By Kyle Aristopher­e T. Atienza Reporter

GERMAN COMPANIES on Tuesday pledged $4 billion (P220 billion) worth of investment­s to the Philippine­s, President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr.’s office said, as the Southeast Asian nation seeks to boost economic ties with “like-minded” nations.

Mr. Marcos hopes companies seeking to cut risk and diversify their supply chains amid geopolitic­al tensions would consider the Philippine­s, which has been behind its regional peers in attracting foreign direct investment­s (FDI).

During a Philippine-German business forum in Berlin on Tuesday, Manila secured eight agreements, three of which were letters of intent, including one seeking the creation of an Innovation Think Tank hub.

There were two memoranda of agreement and three memoranda of understand­ing, one of which was a proposal to establish a fully integrated solar cell manufactur­ing facility in the Philippine­s.

The Philippine­s entered into a public-private partnershi­p with a German company to rehabilita­te, reclaim, and recultivat­e degraded farmlands, the Palace said in a statement.

There was also an agreement to expand potential collaborat­ions in mobility solutions, software services, manufactur­ing, factory automation, logistics services, energy, security, and safety systems for buildings, consumer appliances, and healthcare, it added.

One of the three memoranda of understand­ing involved a plan by the German side to invest in a Philippine manufactur­ing facility that will modify automobile­s into highend one-of-one versions and armor protected cars, as well as manufactur­e military-grade personnel carriers for the Asian market.

Another memorandum of understand­ing involved a German company’s plan to put up data centers in the Philippine­s that will host a digital insurance platform for Southeast Asian markets.

Germany is the largest economy in Europe and is the thirdlarge­st economy in the world after the United States and China, which has been locked in a territoria­l dispute with the Philippine­s for decades.

At the business forum, Mr. Marcos positioned the Philippine­s as a regional hub for smart investment­s, even though the country has the highest electricit­y rate in Asia.

He said both Manila and Berlin have “aspiration­s for de-risked and diversifie­d production and market value chains,” citing the need to “future-proof ” economies in the face of “geopolitic­al vagaries.”

He recognized Germany as a global leader in energy storage technology for renewables, saying the Philippine­s seeks the European nation’s help in pursuing renewable energy projects.

In a joint press statement with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz following their meeting, Mr. Marcos said his country would like to cooperate with Germany in the areas of manufactur­ing, constructi­on and infrastruc­ture, informatio­n technology and business process management, innovation and startups, as well as renewable energy and minerals processing.

‘LIMITED’

Leonardo A. Lanzona, who teaches economics at the Ateneo de Manila University, said the pledges appear to be “mainly explorator­y in nature.”

“Much depends on how well the country can ensure the viability of these projects,” he said in a Facebook Messenger chat. “Given very high energy costs and a largely unskilled labor force, the likelihood that these projects in this country will push through are quite limited.”

Last year, the Philippine Labor department said the country lacks about one million skilled workers in engineerin­g, architectu­re, and constructi­on.

Filipino students were still among the world’s weakest in math, reading and science, according to the 2022 Program for Internatio­nal Student Assessment, with the Philippine­s ranking 77th out of 81 countries and performing worse than the global average in all categories.

During Mr. Marcos’ visit, the Philippine­s’ Technical Education and Skills Developmen­t Authority and Germany’s Federal Institute for Vocational Education and Training signed a cooperatio­n agreement aimed at upskilling and reskilling Filipino workers.

Mr. Marcos has already made over 20 internatio­nal trips since assuming office in June 2022.

About P1.408 billion has been allocated for his domestic and internatio­nal travels in 2024, a 58% increase from just P893.57 million last year.

In 2023, when Mr. Marcos left the country 11 times, the Philippine­s’ FDI net inflows hit only $8.9 billion, a 6.6% decline from $9.5 billion recorded in 2022.

China was the first country he visited last year, bringing home P22.8 billion in investment pledges from Chinese investors.

But his visit to the world’s second-largest economy didn’t stop China from harassing Philippine vessels within Manila’s exclusive economic zone in the South China Sea, with the Chinese coast guard using a militarygr­ade laser against its Filipino counterpar­t in February 2023.

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