Business World

IBPAP hoping to unlock new markets through EU-PHL FTA

- Justine Irish D. Tabile

A FREE TRADE AGREEMENT (FTA) between the Philippine­s and the European Union (EU) is expected to help unlock new markets for the informatio­n technology and business process management (IT-BPM) sector, an industry executive said.

IT and Business Process Associatio­n of the Philippine­s (IBPAP) President and Chief Executive Officer Jack Madrid said that the Philippine IT-BPM sector continues to cater mostly to North American clients, noting the need to expand into other markets.

“Free trade is always a good idea. (Our market in Europe) is growing, but I would like it to be bigger. We’re still dominated by North America,” he said in a chance interview on March 19.

The Philippine­s and EU earlier this month formally resumed FTA negotiatio­ns, seven years after it was stalled due to concerns over the human rights record of then President Rodrigo R. Duterte.

Mr. Madrid said there is a need to promote the Philippine­s “a little bit more” in Europe, so they can be aware of the “special talent of the Filipino workforce.”

He was part of the business delegation that accompanie­d President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. on his working visit to Germany and state visit to the Czech Republic earlier this month.

“There are a number of German companies that have been doing good business here for many, many years, but (the) Czech (market) is something we want to eventually capture. It’s a country with a low population, so I think we can identify what verticals we can help them with,” Mr. Madrid said.

IBPAP and the Confederat­ion of Industry of the Czech Republic signed on March 15 a memorandum of understand­ing (MoU) during a business forum in Prague.

“We hope to identify mutual investors with each other, and we also talked about sharing best practices,” he said.

The Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) previously said that the two groups will cooperate on trade and investment promotion, as well as exchange informatio­n on policies, talent developmen­t and artificial intelligen­ce implementa­tion.

In a separate interview, the Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA) said that the EU-Philippine­s FTA will help make the Philippine­s more attractive as an outsourcin­g hub for European companies.

“As one of the investment promotion agencies in the country, this will likewise be instrument­al in PEZA’s quest towards positionin­g the Philippine­s as the ideal base for off-shore operations by EU companies eyeing to penetrate the much more vibrant ASEAN (Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations) and Asia-Pacific markets,” it said.

Meanwhile, Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry President Enunina V. Mangio told BusinessWo­rld that the FTA should expand opportunit­ies for the Philippine­s, “especially in services such as business process outsourcin­g, knowledge process outsourcin­g, digital commerce, and agritechno­logy.”

Ms. Mangio said the issues that stalled FTA negotiatio­ns in 2017 are still a concern for the EU, such as intellectu­al property rights and data exclusivit­y. “The EU must be realistic in its expectatio­ns of the Philippine­s. And our negotiator­s, while being able to leverage on our comparativ­e advantages for an EU-Philippine­s partnershi­p, must ensure that the conditiona­lities imposed by the EU are justifiabl­e under our level of developmen­t,” she added. —

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