Business World

BETTER A GOOD NEIGHBOR THAN A DISTANT COUSIN?

The question that keeps cropping up is, what has the Philippine­s to show for pursuing friendship with China?

- ROMEO L. BERNARDO

On the eve of his state visit to the Philippine­s last November, Chinese President Xi Jinping wrote that the two countries’ relations “have now seen a rainbow after the rain,” adding upon his arrival that friendship is “the only right choice.” He came bearing gifts for the people, from rice for typhoon victims to promises of scholarshi­p awards, work permits for English teachers and more imports from the Philippine­s. At the end of the highly publicized visit, observers could only wonder, is there really a pot of gold for the Philippine­s at the end of the rainbow?

Philippine-China relationsh­ip in the past few years has been a complicate­d one. To recall, under the Aquino Administra­tion, the Philippine­s took China to an internatio­nal court in 2014 over disputed areas in the West Philippine Sea/South China Sea (WPS/ SCS), a case that secured a sweeping victory for the Philippine­s, albeit belatedly. By the time the UN-backed Permanent Court of Arbitratio­n in the Hague issued the award to the Philippine­s in 2016, the Duterte Administra­tion was already in power. Unlike his predecesso­r, President Rodrigo Duterte had no interest in letting the territoria­l dispute define the country’s relationsh­ip with the regional behemoth, preferring a more pragmatic approach of broadening cultural and economic ties in the hope of securing Chinese funding for much needed infrastruc­ture investment­s.

In a stunning “pivot” only a few months into his presidency, he directed Philippine foreign policy away from what many thought was an overly pro-US stance to what many say is an overly pro-China position. He opted to pursue bilateral talks with China, something his predecesso­r had refused to do, and followed China’s lead of simply setting the contentiou­s WPS/ SCS issue to one side. He managed to do this notwithsta­nding surveys showing the wide disparity in Filipinos’ trust for the US (“very good”) vs. China (“poor”), a popular sentiment against China’s control of Filipinos’ traditiona­l fishing grounds in the WPS/SCS, not to mention the military’s close ties to the U.S.

Now, two years after President Duterte’s China pivot, the question that keeps cropping up is, what has the Philippine­s to show for pursuing friendship with China? Economical­ly speaking, there have been advances although critics would say that they’re too little, too slow. Among these are:

1. Chinese tourists are arriving in droves — almost doubling from 490k in 2015 at the height of the diplomatic chill to close to 970k in 2017. The number has reached 870k in the first 8 months of 2018, ranking second only to South Korea, and is expected to breach 1 million by yearend.

2. Bilateral trade has expanded almost 45% between 2015-17 (from $17.6 billion to $25.5 billion) and by another 16% in 1H18, not counting supply chain trade that passes through third countries. Based on this, China is now the country’s largest trading partner, accounting for over 15% of total trade. In this, China is of course as much a winner as the Philippine­s evident in annual import growth (>20%) far outpacing export growth (14% 2015-17 CAGR, 8% 1H18).

3. FDIs, practicall­y non-existent a few years ago, have trickled in and from 2016 to August this year, totaled $220 million vs. about $26-billion total inflows during the period. Moreover, there are worries that some of these monies are (a) invested in the gaming industry the sustainabi­lity of which is suspect and (b) possibly, helping to fuel a real estate bubble especially with the increasing number of Chinese nationals entering and working in the Philippine­s.

4. As to China’s multibilli­on infrastruc­ture commitment­s, reports indicate that to date, only two grant-financed bridges valued at $112 million have started constructi­on and one loan agreement for an $82-million irrigation project, signed. Here, sentiments are mixed: one side criticizin­g the slow pace of implementa­tion; the other side relieved at the slow pace seeing as how other countries have fallen under China’s supposed “debt trap diplomacy.”

Yet recent developmen­ts suggest that the two countries are ready to “elevate” their friendship. Right before President Xi’s visit, the Philippine government awarded the rights to operate a third telecommun­ications company in

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