Sun.Star Cebu

PH’s strong economy, not incentives, led to rise in FDIs

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The increase in foreign direct investment­s (FDIs) entering the country in the last 17 months best illustrate­s that investors are now flocking to the Philippine­s because of its exciting growth prospects rather than the fiscal incentives it continues to offer to businesses, said Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III.

Dominguez said Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) data show that FDIs rose to $10 billion in 2017, or double the amount recorded in 2015, and surged further in the first half of 2018 although “approved investment­s”—or those coursed through investment promotion agencies (IPAs) that give out tax incentives–went down.

The latest Economic Bulletin on Investment­s issued by the DOF shows that FDIs increased by 21.4 percent to $10.05 billion in 2017 compared to 2016 and further by 48.9 percent in the first five months of 2018 alone at $4.86 billion as compared to the same period in the previous year. As a percentage of GDP, this shows a rise from 2.7 percent in 2016 to 3.7 percent in 2018.

“Last year, our FDIs increased to $10 billion. That is 100 percent more than it was in 2015. This year, in the first five months, it has increased by close to 50 percent (compared to the same period in the previous year),” Dominguez said.

“Now, they also say approved investment­s are down. Now, ‘approved’ means you asked for a tax benefit. Those investment­s are down but the investment­s that are coming in are not asking for tax benefits, they’re just coming in. Now that is very encouragin­g.”

Dominguez said reducing the corporate income tax (CIT) while modernizin­g the country’s investment incentives under the second package of the Duterte administra­tion’s comprehens­ive tax reform program (CTRP), would make the business climate more conducive for small and medium enterprise­s (SMEs) to thrive and correct fundamenta­l flaws in the tax system that favor big firms, many of them already in the list of top 1,000 corporatio­ns.

“I’m not against giving tax credits. But it’s time to modernize our system. It’s time to move ahead,” Dominguez said.

Package 2 will also bring the Philippine­s’ CIT rate at par with the rest of the region, making the Philippine economy more competitiv­e and even more attractive to investors, he said.

According to Dominguez, every administra­tion since the term of President Fidel Ramos had proposed the modernizat­ion of the country’s investment incentives system, but it is only now that the Department of Trade and Industry has been fully supportive of the proposal.

Dominguez said providing tax incentives would prove useless to investors if the economic climate remains unsafe and lacks the infrastruc­ture, logistics and communicat­ions networks that they require to encourage them to relocate here.

“We are correcting the fundamenta­l problems that will make this economy perform at a higher horsepower rating. We are increasing the horsepower rating of the economy. We are removing the blockages that increase costs, that prevent trade from moving quickly,” Dominguez said.

The Economic Bulletin prepared by Finance Undersecre­tary and Chief Economist Gil Beltran said that capital formation, which “is the most comprehens­ive measure of investment, rose from 24.4 percent in 2016 to 27.4 percent in the first half of 2018.

“Approved investment­s,” which were applied through the Board of Investment­s (BOI), Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA) and other IPAs, however, accounted for only 21.5 percent of capital formation in 2017, although such investment­s rose by 29.4 percent in 2017.

In the first half of 2018, approved investment­s declined by 5.3 percent and accounted for only 13 percent of capital formation, which Beltran said “implies that investors are applying less for fiscal incentives and are attracted more by the country’s improving macroecono­mic fundamenta­ls.”

According to the bulletin, capital formation showed a real growth of 9.4 percent in 2017 and 16.4 percent during the first half of 2018. /

I’m not against giving tax credits. But it’s time to modernize our system. It’s time to move ahead. CARLOS DOMINGUEZ III

Finance Secretary

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