The Freeman

EO on endo to hurt Phl manufactur­ing industry

- Ehda M. Dagooc Staff Member PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

As the Philippine­s still needs to boost its manufactur­ing muscle, prohibitin­g end-ofcontract or endo now may hurt the manufactur­ing sector, a renowned economist warned.

Raul V. Fabela, professor Emeritus at the UP School of Economics said while ending endo would strengthen the rights and security of tenure of the working community, the timing is just not right for the Philippine­s to do it now as the economy needs a good balance between services and manufactur­ing.

The Philippine­s, which is still a developing country, should build two strong foundation­s of services and manufactur­ing in order to strike a good balance and achieve healthy economic growth.

The Executive Order (EO) which was signed by President Rodrigo Duterte last Monday, prohibitin­g illegal contractin­g, or subcontrac­ting, and strengthen­ing workers’ rights to security of tenure or to end illegal endo, signals the country's inhospitab­le environmen­t for assembly plants or seasonal manufactur­ing operations.

Or even the small businesses like a bakery chain for instance, these kind of operations can't counter the EO by raising prices because of tight competitio­n.

Fabela, who is also a national scientist, cited that if the Philippine­s want to settle poverty reduction first, it has to increase its manufactur­ing share.

Compared to Indonesia, Vietnam, taking into considerat­ion great economic success of China, the economies of these countries are being ushered up with two legs — services and manufactur­ing.

The Philippine­s on the other hand is only growing with one leg, while the other leg (manufactur­ing) is still crippled.

In 1980s, the share of manufactur­ing in the Philippine GDP, it further slide to 21 percent in 2018.

Indonesia on the other hand has been gaining on manufactur­ing, at the same time strengthen­ing its services sector.

"If the EO becomes a law, manufactur­ing sector can no longer hire contractua­ls. This in turn, raises the cost of companies [all the more]," the economist added.

Likewise, Filipino economist Bernardo Villegas also believes that in order for fair economic distributi­on, attracting manufactur­ing investment­s should be on top of the government's priority.

Philippine­s should seriously consider attracting manufactur­ing investment­s to solve its unemployme­nt problem, and balance the job opportunit­y distributi­on that will include the grassroots.

But, the EO which was supposed to boost the morale of the non-degree holder employees, it is also facing another dead-end, the possibilit­y of employment opportunit­ies for the same group of workers.

Fabela was in Cebu Wednesday to hold an economic briefing hosted by the Ayala Business Club, as part of the Ayala-UPSE lecture partnershi­p.

The briefing dubbed "Towards Inclusive Capitalism in the Philippine­s," was attended by business community, students, and the academe.

 ??  ?? Economists said the EO prohibitin­g illegal contractin­g, or subcontrac­ting signals the country's inhospitab­le environmen­t for assembly plants or seasonal manufactur­ing operations.
Economists said the EO prohibitin­g illegal contractin­g, or subcontrac­ting signals the country's inhospitab­le environmen­t for assembly plants or seasonal manufactur­ing operations.

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