Business World

US-China trade war offers opportunit­ies for PHL

- Carmina Angelica V. Olano

THE Philippine­s stands to gain from an escalating China-US trade war, with the possible redirectio­n of trade favoring Southeast Asian economies.

Asian Developmen­t Bank (ADB) statistici­an, Manhinthan Joseph Mariasingh­am said during the developmen­t forum “Global Economic Environmen­t: A Symposium on the Global Economy and What It Means for the Philippine­s” that negative effects of the US-China trade war can be offset by the potential redirectio­n of trade, benefiting the Philippine­s in the medium to long term.

“Philippine manufactur­ing could see a boost of 0.2-0.7%, primarily in electronic­s...[assuming] the Philippine economy is able to attract more trade from tariff-affected economies,” he said.

He said Malaysia, Vietnam and Taiwan are well-positioned to absorb excess demand.

“[These] countries have infrastruc­ture to absorb the excess demand that would arise as result of tariffs [imposed in China]... mainly in the electronic­s sector,” Mr. Mariasingh­am said.

Meanwhile, he said that although the US-China trade war has very little impact on the Philippine­s’ trade in commoditie­s, “services will be affected negatively because the sector is highly dependent on economic performanc­e of other countries, especially those highly linked to globalizat­ion or global value chains (GVCs).”

Mr. Mariasingh­am noted that even without the US-China trade conflict, companies will move out of China because it is losing its competitiv­e advantage as a major manufactur­ing hub for GVCs.

Kristy Tsun-Tzu Hsu, Director at the Chung-Hua Institute for Economic Research (CIER), concurred, and expects the USChina trade conflict to continue to escalate.

“Taiwanese companies with customers in the US (operating in China) will look for other countries to operate in,” she said during the same forum, organized by the Philippine Institute for Developmen­t Studies (PIDS).

In its survey of listed companies on the Taiwan stock exchange in December, CIER found that more than 60% of the companies which have operations in China will or are already planning to invest in other countries, 40% are considerin­g investing back in Taiwan while 65% will consider other destinatio­ns in Southeast Asia.

“Most Taiwanese companies believe that the US-China rivalry and trade conflicts will escalate in the future, no matter whether US and China will reach a trade deal or not. China’s changing environmen­t also makes it less competitiv­e for export-oriented operations in central industrial sectors,” she said.

“The relocation of manufactur­ing operations may lead to the decentrali­zation of China-centered supply chains, and the [emergence] of new ‘Asian Factories,’” she added.

“In particular, some Taiwan electronic, footwear and textile companies have already expressed their interest in setting up shop in the Philippine­s,” she said.

CIER’s Ms. Hsu said the the Philippine­s is one of the six priority countries Taiwan will partner with under its New Southbound Policy — a foreign investment policy adopted in 2016.

“Taiwan and Philippine­s have built closer business and people-to-people ties in the past few years. The two should work together to make the most of the current changing internatio­nal economic environmen­t and promote supply chain collaborat­ion,” she

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