Business World

Retail trade measure seen to hurt MSMEs

- By Janina P. Ibañez Reporter

THE MEASURE that seeks to lower the minimum investment hurdle for foreign retailers to P25 million would likely bring in the competitio­n that could damage many local small businesses, a retailers group said.

Congress approved the Bicameral Conference Committee report on the conflictin­g provisions of Senate Bill No. 1840 and House Bill No. 59, which amends the 20-yearold Retail Trade Liberaliza­tion Act (RTLA). It will be forwarded to Malacañang for President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s signature.

Under the reconciled version, the minimum paid-up capital requiremen­t for foreign retailers is now set at P25 million or around $500,000, with a per store requiremen­t of P10 million. This is lower than existing law’s minimum paid-up requiremen­t for foreign retailers of P125 million or $2.5 million.

“With the small minimum amounts, our MSME (micro-, small-, and medium-sized enterprise­s), will be the most affected by foreign competitio­n, from foreigners already in the country, and from small informal retailers from outside the country,” Philippine Retailers Associatio­n ViceChairm­an Roberto S. Claudio said in an e-mail on Wednesday.

There were 957,620 business enterprise­s operating in the country in 2020 of which 952,969 or 99.5% are MSMEs, according to the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) survey.

Foreign business groups have been supporting changes to the RTLA in a bid to increase foreign direct investment.

The foreign business groups had supported the House version setting a minimum paid-up capital of $200,000 or P10 million, calling the Senate version which set the minimum at $1 million or P50 million an impediment to new foreign direct investment needed amid the global economic downturn.

Mr. Claudio said that P25 million, or the small investment limit, will mean that the economy will not gain substantia­l foreign investment­s, especially while the global health crisis is ongoing.

“But a decision has been (made) and we understand that the liberaliza­tion bills are ready for signature by the President,” he said.

“While the Philippine Retailers Associatio­n has agreed to the removal of the other limitation­s of the original bill, we continue to emphasize that the P25million minimum investment is too low to benefit from any meaningful foreign investment and may just create damage to our micro, small and medium enterprise­s! We hope our economic managers and legislator­s will achieve the objectives of liberaliza­tion legislatio­ns.”

House Deputy Minority Leader and Marikina Rep. Stella Luz A. Quimbo, who was part of the Bicameral Conference Committee, expressed optimism the new version of the RTLA will succeed in boosting foreign investment­s in retail trade.

In a statement, she said the minimum requiremen­t of P10 million per store is “consistent with the objective to protect the MSMEs and to open up medium and large corporatio­ns to foreign competitio­n.”

Ms. Quimbo also noted the measure directs the Trade department, Securities and Exchange Commission and National Economic and Developmen­t Authority to review the required minimum paid-up capital which was set at P25 million every three years.

“This is to ensure that the threshold upholds the spirit of liberalizi­ng the retail sector,” she said, noting this will help create more jobs and lead to better quality and more affordable products.

Amendments to the RTLA is one of the priority economic measures being pushed by the government, alongside the amendments of the Public Service Act and the Foreign Investment­s Act. — with inputs from

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines