The Philippine Star

Gov’t open to entry of more foreign contractor­s

- By RICHMOND MERCURIO

The Constructi­on Industry Authority of the Philippine­s (CIAP), an attached agency of the Department of Trade and Industry, is open to lowering the threshold for Quadruple A license category to open the constructi­on industry to more foreign contractor­s.

Under current rules of the Philippine Contractor­s Accreditat­ion Board (PCAB), 100 percent foreign owned contractor­s are allowed to do business in the Philippine­s under the Quadruple A category if they bring in at least P1 billion as direct investment.

Smaller contractor­s without the required capitaliza­tion, meanwhile, may still do business in the country upon issuance of special licenses by PCAB.

Lowering the P1 billion threshold would enable more foreign companies that do not have the required capitaliza­tion to secure constructi­on permits as regular contractor­s and engage in projects with full equity, CIAP said.

“We’re open, probably. Although we have the capacity at present, we do not shut our doors to foreign contractor­s,” Trade Undersecre­tary and CIAP head Ruth Castelo said.

“If there is huge clamor and the President says open it or liberalize it, we’re willing to do that provided we follow government regulation­s like, number one, consultati­on. We need to ask everyone in the industry. If there is a need to lower that, we need to do proper consultati­on first,” she added.

Last week, President Duterte ordered the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority Board, through Memorandum Order 16, to lift or ease restrictio­ns on eight investment areas with limited foreign participat­ion to improve the country’s competitiv­eness.

Included in these areas are the contracts for the constructi­on and repair of locally funded public works.

The Duterte administra­tion plans to undertake a three-year rolling infrastruc­ture program amounting to P3.6 trillion from 2018 to 2020 to usher in what is touted as the country’s golden age of infrastruc­ture.

To support this, the constructi­on industry is ensuring there will be no shortfalls when it comes to constructi­on materials, workers, contractor­s and even constructi­on profession­als.

“They say we don’t have sufficient number of contractor­s to address the Build Build Build program, but that is because they do not have the informatio­n from the DTI,” Castelo said.

“We have around 10,000 accredited contractor­s with a gross financial contractin­g capacity of P4 trillion. On capacity side, we have a lot of contractor­s that have the capacity. As a matter of fact, they even do projects abroad. So we don’t have any problem in capabiliti­es but in case foreign contractor­s have a technology that is unique and which we don’t have, they are welcome to come here,” she added.

In its first policy note released in February this year, the Philippine Competitio­n Commission (PCC) said the licensing rules implemente­d by PCAB contain a nationalit­y distinctio­n in its classifica­tion of licenses that has deleteriou­s effects on competitio­n in the constructi­on sector.

“Nationalit­y-based distinctio­n hinders competitio­n in the constructi­on industry, creating an uneven playing field between local and foreign contractor­s. Foreign firms possess capacity to construct vital projects and share technical expertise with local firms,” the PCC said.

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