Business World

The way forward to recover and rebuild

- ANDREW J. MASIGAN

With infection rates growing by a multiple of 2.2 times a month, it’s safe to say that our battle with the Wuhan virus will be long and painful. Its economic impact has so far been disastrous. With second quarter economic contractio­n plunging to an all time low of 16.5%, think-tanks agree that the economy will contract by at least 8% this year and joblessnes­s will rise to 9 million.

While the IATF (Inter-Agency Task Force on Emerging Infectious Diseases) fumbles through its anti- pandemic response, our great consolatio­n is that we have an economic team that is both competent and steadfast. This includes the Department­s of Trade and Industry ( DTI), Finance, NEDA ( National Economic and Developmen­t Authority), and the Bangko Sentral. We look to them to get us out of this deep recession we are in.

Last week, DTI Secretary Ramon Lopez spoke before the joint European Chambers of Commerce and outlined the way forward to recover and rebuild.

The vision is to use this pandemic to strengthen everything that is weak in the economy. To make lemonade out of lemons, so to speak. This involves modernizin­g our industries, building production capacities, linking locally manufactur­ed goods with global supply chains and producing more goods with higher value-added components. It also calls for our rapid digital transforma­tion, the developmen­t of more innovative startups and green industries. By doing all these, the DTI hopes to manufactur­e more, export more, hire more and earn more when the crisis is over.

At the heart of the plan is to create and/or preserve jobs. Jobs stimulate consumer demand and in turn, entice corporatio­ns to produce more. This escalating chain reaction is what will restore the economy to its former vibrancy, said Secretary Lopez.

Four strategies are being pursued to create and/or preserve jobs. First, the government will do all it can to save micro, small and medium scale enterprise­s (MSMEs) from insolvency. Second, the government will accelerate its infrastruc­ture program. Third, the government’s multi-billion stimulus fund will be cascaded to its intended beneficiar­ies faster so as to pump prime the economy. Fourth, all efforts will be focused on attracting foreign direct investment­s (FDIs). FDIs can bridge the unemployme­nt gap and lessen the budget deficit. They also offer long term benefits such as technology transfer, recurring income through taxes and exports earnings.

On saving MSMEs, the DTI has so far disbursed P460 million in loans to 7,151 MSMEs (each receiving an average of P64,300) out of its CARES fund. We all know that this will hardly make a difference to save MSMEs as they require hundreds of billions in financial aid to stay alive. This is why Bayanihan 2 must be passed. Bayanihan 2 will give more MSMEs the lifeline they need.

Another thing the government must do is relax quarantine restrictio­ns and allow commerce to resume. MSMEs can hardly survive under GCQ conditions, let alone under ECQ or MECQ. Each day of quarantine shortens the life of the remaining MSMEs.

We understand that relaxing quarantine restrictio­ns comes with health risks. However, the number of potential infections should be balanced with the number of bankruptci­es, lost livelihood­s and jobs. This is as much an economic war as it is a health war. Harsh quarantine­s kill businesses.

On infrastruc­ture, not only must the government accelerate infrastruc­ture projects already under constructi­on, it must also expedite all pending unsolicite­d projects awaiting notices to proceed. This includes the Bulacan Airport, among others. Government must also revive publicpriv­ate-partnershi­ps. All cylinders must be fired-up as far as infrastruc­ture developmen­t is concerned. Infrastruc­ture building also includes strengthen­ing our healthcare system and stockpilin­g essential goods such as personal protective equipment, ventilator­s and medical equipment.

Awaiting ratificati­on is a new stimulus package that could range from P374.89 billion (the senate version) to P1.3 billion (the congress version), or some amount in between. The larger the approved stimulus fund, the quicker our recovery will be.

As far as investment­s are concerned, Board of Investment­s ( BoI) ViceChairm­an Perry Rodolfo was proud to announce that the BoI secured P645 billion worth of new investment­s from January to June this year, a 112% increase from 2019. This was achieved despite the three-month lockdown.

While the level of investment commitment­s are noteworthy, what is disconcert­ing is that P626 billion, or 97%, originate from local sources. Just 3% is attributed to foreign investors. This exemplifie­s how uncompetit­ive the Philippine­s is in attracting FDIs.

As I have written in this corner before, the Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprise­s Act, or the CREATE Law, is the silver bullet that can solve many of Philippine’s weaknesses. It has four features that will make us more competitiv­e when it comes to attracting FDIs.

First, CREATE will cut corporate income tax from 30% to 25% as soon as it is enacted. The one-time 5% reduction will be followed by an annual cut of 1% from 2023 to 2027, to settle at 20%. This will put the Philippine­s in step with the corporate income tax rates of our regional neighbors. For context, corporate income tax is 24% in Indonesia, 20% in Vietnam and Thailand, and 17% in Singapore.

Second, to prevent existing investors from leaving, CREATE allows them to enjoy the same incentives that are in place today for a period of four to nine years.

Third, CREATE allows investors access to the domestic market, even if they are located inside PEZA zones.

Fourth and most importantl­y, CREATE allows our investment promotions agencies the flexibilit­y to tailor-fit incentives to the needs of the investors. This gives us a greater probabilit­y of bagging the investors we deem “desirable.” It is certainly better than the one-policy-fits-all approach that is in effect today.

In addition, the DTI is pushing for the enactment of the Retail Trade Act, a statute that allows more foreign competitio­n in the domestic retail scene; the enactment of the Public Services Act ( approved in congress on third reading), a statute that allows foreign participat­ion in public services such as electricit­y transmissi­on and water distributi­on; and the reduction of industries where foreign investors are precluded from participat­ion.

The passage of these acts are pending in the legislatur­e. If enacted, the DTI is confident that the Philippine­s will finally get its fair share of FDIs.

All of us from the various Chambers of Commerce were satisfied with what we heard. The DTI clearly has a sensible roadmap to recovery. Let’s hope the rest of the government, especially the legislatur­e, supports it.

 ?? ANDREW J. MASIGAN is an economist ??
ANDREW J. MASIGAN is an economist

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