Business World

Exports of wearables faltering despite trade war as investment shifts to Myanmar

- Jenina P. Ibañez

THE Philippine­s’ failure to take advantage of opportunit­ies from the US-China trade war is reflected in the decline of exports in wearable products, the Confederat­ion of Wearable Exporters of the Philippine­s (ConWEP) said.

ConWEP Executive Director Marites JocsonAgon­cillo told reporters at an investment forum on Tuesday that the expected growth did not come and that she was taking the decline as a warning.

“I’m not enjoying the trade war. That’s a very big sign — how come we don’t have growth? There’s a trade war — but (orders) are not coming in for apparel,” Ms. Jocson-Agoncillo said in English and Filipino.

ConWEP initially forecast 15-20% export revenue growth in 2019, but assumed that the Philippine­s captures some of the market from China.

Instead, ConWEP saw a 15% decline in textiles in the first seven months of 2019. Apparel exports fell 4%, while footwear rose 27%, and travel goods up 5%.

She said investment­s are shifting to Myanmar due to the country’s lower labor costs. In her presentati­on, she estimated Myanmar’s monthly wage at about $85-95, compared with the Philippine­s’ $190-274.

Ms. Agoncillo added that the reduced fiscal incentives proposed in the Corporate Income Tax and Incentives Rationaliz­ation Act (CITIRA) bill add “fuel to the fire.”

She estimates that CITIRA could cause job displaceme­nt in the apparel sector of 40% in the first 12-18 months.

“The cost of doing business is already very, very tough on us. And then there’s this added threat,” she said. —

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