The Philippine Star

Recto pitches Maharlika fund to Australian­s

- By LOUISE MAUREEN SIMEON

Finance Secretary Ralph Recto encouraged Australian businesses to invest in the country’s first sovereign wealth fund, noting that the Philippine­s has pro-business policies in place.

In his first official internatio­nal engagement as finance chief, Recto pitched the Maharlika Investment Fund (MIF) before 100 Australian business and investment leaders, as well as government officials.

“Australian investors seeking to broaden their portfolios into rapidly expanding markets such as the Philippine­s should explore potential ventures within the MIF,” Recto said.

“It provides an opportunit­y for private-sector engagement in financing our bigticket infrastruc­ture projects,” he said.

Recto is in Australia as part of the Philippine delegation to the ASEAN-Australia special summit.

He said there are investment opportunit­ies, particular­ly in telecommun­ications, transporta­tion, banking, mining and energy sectors, given the enactment of several economic liberaliza­tion laws.

For one, the amendments to the Retail Trade Liberaliza­tion Act lowered the minimum paid-up capital requiremen­t for foreign corporatio­ns from $2.5 million to $500,000.

The changes in the Public Service Act also allowed 100 percent foreign ownership in public services while the Foreign Investment­s Act improved the country’s openness to foreign direct investment­s (FDIs) and liberalize­d the practice of profession­s.

“We are currently refining the country’s fiscal incentives system to further tailor fit incentives and attract internatio­nal enterprise­s to invest in strategica­lly important projects,” Recto said.

“These measures broaden investment opportunit­ies and synergy between local and internatio­nal companies, especially in cutting-edge technologi­es and green investment­s,” he said.

Complement­ing the medium-term fiscal framework, the DOF also put in place the Growth-Enhancing Actions and Resolution­s (GEARs) plan to expand economic growth.

A key aspect of the strategy is welcoming investors with open arms to achieve investment­s-led growth through improvemen­ts in the regulatory regime, reduction in the cost of doing business and addressing constraint­s.

Recto added that the enactment of the Public-Private Partnershi­p Code is a testament to the administra­tion’s commitment to fostering stronger collaborat­ion with the private sector.

“We have taken great care to ensure the economic returns on our major projects, choose the most highly concession­al financing available and diversify our sources of project funding,” Recto said.

Australia was the Philippine­s’ 13th biggest trading partner with total trade valued at $4.1 billion in 2023, up 20.6 percent from 2022.

Australia also stands as the 16th largest contributo­r of net FDIs, totaling $5.7 million as of end-November 2023.

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