The Philippine Star

Phl is among top favorite of European investors in Asean

- By RICHMOND MERCURIO

The Philippine­s is seen moving into the upper half of the 10- country Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations in terms of being a preferred investment destinatio­n among European companies despite ongoing issues that have saddled their interest in the country.

Even as the Philippine economy continues to post one of the fastest growth rates in the region, EUASEAN Business Council executive director Chris Humphrey said the country is currently “hovering at the middle of table” in the region in terms of investment interest among European firms.

“Vietnam has moved up because of the FTA ( free trade agreement with the European Union). Singapore is always near the top historical­ly. Indonesia will always be a big interest because of the size of the economy,” Humphrey told

The STAR in an interview. Humphrey, however, said the Philippine­s is forecast to move up the ladder in the coming years, particular­ly once its own FTA with the EU is in place.

The Philippine­s and the EU concluded a couple of weeks ago the second round of negotiatio­ns of the EU-Philippine­s FTA which, according to EU Ambassador to the Philippine­s Franz Jessen, “went well.”

The negotiatio­ns aim to conclude a deal that covers a broad range of issues such as eliminatio­n of customs duties and other barriers to trade, services and investment, access to public procuremen­t markets, and additional discipline­s in the area of competitio­n and protection of intellectu­al property rights.

“We see great opportunit­ies here. Once the FTA is in place you’ll see European interest accelerate,” Humphrey said.

Aside from the FTA, the EU-ASEAN Business Council official cited a number of factors seen driving European interest further in the country.

“The increasing­ly liberal trade and investment policies coming up for the Philippine­s coupled with huge growth rates, a young population, and a largely untapped market make the Philippine­s a very attractive place, which means you’re going to be moving up that table of interest very quickly,” he said.

“Looking forward, the Philippine­s will certainly be in the upper half in the region because of these reasons. So I think the Philippine­s is certainly moving up in the ladder,” Humphrey added.

Last week, European Chamber of Commerce of the Philippine­s executive director Florian Gottein said European companies belonging to small and medium category are the only ones eager in entering the Philippine market at present, while multinatio­nal and blue chip firms are putting their investment­s on hold as a result of a series of statements made by President Duterte in recent months against the EU.

The country’s planned revival of the death penalty and the alleged extrajudic­ial killings have also placed the Philippine­s Generalize­d System of Preference­s Plus (GSP+) privileges with the EU at risk.

“The view of the EU on capital punishment is very clear. We do not support of course. To be an EU member you have to abolish capital punishment, it’s something that we have strong views on,” Jessen has said.

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