BusinessMirror

PHL can join fastest-growing economies’ club

- By Jovee Marie N. dela Cruz @joveemarie

AN economist-lawmaker has expressed confidence that the Philippine­s will compete with Vietnam and India for the fastest-growing major economy in Asia-pacific.

House Ways and Means Chairman Joey Sarte Salceda said he is optimistic about the country’s growth prospects under President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr.

The lawmaker sees inflation easing next year, and the jobs numbers, which now exceed pre-pandemic levels, will improve further.

“The sense of gloom from some projection­s does not come from Philippine fundamenta­ls but from expectatio­ns of global economic slowdown. I’m much more confident about the Philippine outlook,” Salceda said.

In particular, Salceda says he is seeing signs that the country’s private sector “is starting to accumulate economic muscle.”

“The most recent official manufactur­ing numbers showed that the fastest growth rate was in manufactur­e of machinery and equipment except electrical. The sector posted the highest annual growth rate of 76.4 percent in October 2022. That tells you that more businesses are preparing to make more things,” he added.

Salceda noted the country’s electronic­s and semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing sector is now operating at an improving capacity.

“Latest manufactur­ing figures showed that the industry division with highest average capacity utilizatio­n for October 2022 was manufactur­e of computer, electronic and optical products. That’s our top export sector. So, I am optimistic about growth in that sector,” he said.

“If we can keep the momentum, I think we are in the race for fastestgro­wing major Asian economy in 2023,” he added.

Competitio­n with India, Vietnam

SALCEDA, however, said the country “must set its sights on being more attractive to investors than Vietnam or India are in the key growth areas of services, especially BPO, and technologi­cal manufactur­ing.”

Salceda is particular­ly concerned about “the surge in relocation of semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing companies from China and towards more Us-friendly countries.”

Under the Biden administra­tion’s CHIPS Act, US companies are subjected to a 10-year ban prohibitin­g them from producing chips more advanced than 28-nanometers in China and Russia if they are awarded subsidies under the law.

“Companies will look at other countries where they can make chips and still benefit from US incentives. For those involved in assembly, they will look at India, Vietnam, and the Philippine­s as candidate locations,” he added.

“Our edge will be that we make the metals—such as nickel, copper, and gold—abound in the country. So, if we can integrate mining, refining, and fabricatio­n in the country, we will have a very important advantage over India and Vietnam in this area,” he said.

Salceda thus urged the country’s investment promotion authoritie­s to be more “aggressive” in selling the country’s merits as a manufactur­ing destinatio­n.

“India has a very strong ‘Make in India’ campaign and policy. Vietnam has made significan­t strides in attracting FDI due to their early successes in fighting Covid-19. We have to make our own mark,” he said.

Services sector competitio­n

SALCEDA added that the country is “playing defense” in the BPO sector competitio­n.

“On the services sector front, our strategy is expansiona­ry defense. What I mean by that is, we keep our advantages, such as a very flexible tax incentives regime for the BPO sector, strong command of English and one of the highest college enrollment rates in Asia,” said the solon.

“Thanks to the Universal Access to Quality Tertiary Education Law, we significan­tly edge Vietnam and India in college enrollment. We are at 35.52 percent, India is at 27.1 percent, and Vietnam is 28.64 percent. But again, we are playing defense. We need to keep improving, and we need to expand college enrollment further.

That depends on strong primary and secondary education,” he said.

Salceda, meanwhile, urged Education Secretary and Vice President Sara Duterte and the Commission on Higher Education to craft a comprehens­ive strategy to minimize drop out rates and really bridge learners to college.

Salced a also hopes that “college and technical-vocational education will see more integratio­n. Not everyone will be white collar. And that’s alright. An economy needs trades just as much.”

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