The Philippine Star

The country is gearing up for more investment­s

- FROM WASHINGTON, D.C. AMBASSADOR B. ROMUALDEZ babeseyevi­ew@gmail.com

As I have repeatedly said on several occasions, the unpreceden­ted interest in the Philippine­s has grown exponentia­lly, particular­ly from the Western world, ever since Ferdinand Marcos Jr. became president. The President’s interactio­ns with leaders through state and official visits have put the Philippine­s on the radar screen, consequent­ly giving revitalize­d interest in the country as a smart investment destinatio­n. We also cannot deny the fact that the President’s courageous pushback on Chinese aggression in our territoria­l waters has given him high internatio­nal leadership status.

I cannot overemphas­ize that all the trips that have been undertaken by the President are starting to bear fruit. We are seeing tangible results in data coming from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas showing that net foreign direct investment inflows in November 2023 rebounded by 27.8 percent amounting to $1 billion, bringing the 11-month FDI inflows to $7.6 billion.

A report from the Philippine Statistics Authority also disclosed that foreign investment pledges surged 127.2 percent in the fourth quarter of 2023 to P394.45 billion, while 117 projects worth P2.5 trillion between the government and the private sector are now in the pipeline. The unemployme­nt rate also went down to 3.1 percent in December – the lowest level since 2005 – better than the 3.6 percent recorded in November.

Analysts are also optimistic for 2024, among them Fitch Solutions’ unit BMI saying it expects the Philippine economy to grow at a faster rate of 6.2 percent this year, higher than the 5.6 percent in 2023. The Bank of the Philippine Islands meanwhile projects the economy to expand by 6.3 percent.

As noted by our economic team, “the presidenti­al visits have been impactful for the economy, signaling to both local entreprene­urs and foreign investors alike the government’s commitment to fostering a conducive environmen­t for economic prosperity. The Philippine­s has become a premier investment destinatio­n for foreign businesses in Asia.”

Sadly, there are still people looking at things from the old Filipino mentality of “instant gratificat­ion” – expecting instant results, refusing to acknowledg­e that these things don’t just come or happen at the click of a finger.

But I can honestly say from where I am sitting, there is absolutely no doubt there is a renewed interest in the Philippine­s from many American business groups. In fact, the newly reinvigora­ted US-Philippine­s Society is arriving with a big delegation to Manila this week, with new members composed of executives from US companies, especially after reorganizi­ng their board of directors.

Founded in 2012, the US-Philippine­s Society is a private sector initiative that seeks to elevate the profile of the Philippine­s in the United States. Its members are composed of former diplomats and US government officials, and top businessme­n from the US and the Philippine­s. The group has been reinvigora­ted with a lot of new members, with Ambassador John Negroponte as co-chairman for the US side.

Formerly the US Ambassador to the Philippine­s and Permanent Representa­tive to the United Nations, Ambassador Negroponte also served as Deputy Secretary of State and was appointed by president George W. Bush as the first ever Director of National Intelligen­ce.

Businessma­n Jaime Augusto Zobel de Ayala has taken over as co-chairman for the Philippine side, vice Manny Pangilinan who has opted to be a board member instead since he is busy with many other businesses. During the most recent SGV Knowledge Institute Briefing, Jaime Augusto shared his confidence that the Philippine­s will be able to “maintain its position as one of the region’s fastest growing economies this year,” sharing his optimism that “inflation will continue to slow down and catalyze the return of much more robust consumer spending, which has long been the driver of the economy, as well as higher investment­s from both the public and private sectors.”

Earlier this week, a delegation from the Honolulu City Council, the Filipino Chamber of Commerce of Hawaii and the Hawaii Philippine­s Business Economic Council paid a courtesy call on President Marcos and expressed interest in exploring opportunit­ies in trade, tourism and agricultur­e.

But the highlight of all these investment­s is the big business delegation organized by President Joe Biden himself. They will be arriving mid-March led by Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, whom I met with in Washington recently to get a brief on the plans for that extremely important undertakin­g. Secretary Raimondo will be bringing top CEOs who will be looking at the Philippine­s for potential investment­s in many sectors that include innovation economy, connective infrastruc­ture, clean energy transition, critical minerals sector and food security, among others.

A big impediment in attracting foreign investors are the restrictiv­e economic provisions in the Constituti­on which President Marcos correctly described were “not written for a globalized world.” According to the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t’s foreign direct investment regulatory restrictiv­eness index (FDI Index), the Philippine­s in 2020 ranked as the third most restrictiv­e out of 84 countries, with most of the restrictiv­e laws directly enshrined in the 1987 Constituti­on.

I know there has been a lot of controvers­y surroundin­g the issue of economic Charter change, but this is something that cannot be done overnight either. As I repeatedly said, it must be properly debated on, with the pros and cons thoroughly discussed in a transparen­t manner because we will be changing laws that are enshrined in the Constituti­on – so we have to be careful about this. This is something that should not be simply shoved down people’s throats.

There’s an old saying – “patience is a virtue” – and clearly, we should have enough sense and patience to know where we all want our country to go: economic prosperity means economic security.

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