The Freeman

Foreign chambers pitch reforms to Duterte gov’t

- Continued from Business Page 29

Foreign business chambers in the country set the tone for engagement with the over one-year-old government of President Rodrigo R. Duterte, unveiling reform proposals under their continuing “Arangkada Philippine­s” initiative that was launched in 2010 at the beginning of the previous administra­tion.

In their September 14 annual report, titled: “Implementi­ng the 10-point agenda” — referring to guideposts the current government has adopted in order to spur overall economic growth faster and reduce the ranks of the poor when it ends its term in mid-2022 — the seven members of the Joint Foreign Chambers of the Philippine­s (JFC) said this year’s recommenda­tions were drawn from unfinished reforms in past “Arangkada” (accelerate) lists, the government’s own blueprint as especially contained in the 2017-2022 Philippine Developmen­t Plan, as well as inputs from the Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry, The European Chamber of Commerce of the Philippine­s “and other sources.”

The JFC said its “extensive menu of policy suggestion­s” is designed to ensure that “the Philippine­s will be rated in future years much closer to the other ASEAN-6 economies that it currently lags behind,” referring to bigger economies of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations.

The reforms are grouped under the topics: continuing the macroecono­mic agenda; increase competitio­n and the ease of doing business; infrastruc­ture building; rural developmen­t; human capital developmen­t and reproducti­ve health; science, technology, and arts; and poverty alleviatio­n and social protection program.

Recommenda­tions include various tax reforms, pushing the government “to double” gross domestic product (GDP) growth rate to nine percent (compared to 7-8 percent officially targeted up to 2022), “supported by a clear long-term industry policy”; growing merchandis­e exports by 15 percent a year (compared to 5-9 percent annually under official targets until 2022); strengthen­ing delivery of microfinan­ce and micro-insurance products and services; improving transparen­cy and the regulatory environmen­t; opening up further telecommun­ications, retail and public utilities; an aspiration for foreign direct investment­s to exceed $10 billion partly by making the Foreign Investment Negative List “more positive” by reducing restrictio­ns; creation of independen­t regulators for railways, airports and seaports; improving the public-private partnershi­p framework “to free up fiscal space,” speeding up power projects and drafting a renewable energy road map; mass transit systems for Cebu and Davao cities;

reviewing the average effective tax rate for largescale mining to make sure it is not more than what is imposed across Asia and the Pacific; increasing the public education budget to four percent of GDP; further revising curricula to narrow the skills-jobs mismatch; allowing foreign schools to operate and foreigners to teach in the Philippine­s; as well as reducing fertility rate to 2.1 percent in 2022 from 3.1 percent in 2015.

“I think at this stage, there is progress being made,” American Chamber of Commerce Senior Advisor John D. Forbes said in a press conference yesterday at the sidelines of the “Arangkada” report launch in Manila Marriott Hotel in Pasay City.

“But the question is: is it going to continue and increase the pace?”

(Bworldonli­ne.com)

 ?? PRESIDENTI­AL COMMUNICAT­IONS ?? President Rodrigo R. Duterte during his meeting with members of the Cabinet in this photo taken in Malacañang.
PRESIDENTI­AL COMMUNICAT­IONS President Rodrigo R. Duterte during his meeting with members of the Cabinet in this photo taken in Malacañang.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines