BusinessMirror

SEIPI seeks meeting with Palace on rationaliz­ation of incentives

- By Andrea E. San Juan

THE Semiconduc­tor and Electronic­s Industries in the Philippine­s Foundation Inc. (SEIPI) said it is hoping to meet with the Office of the President (OP) to address the issue on incentives rationaliz­ation to help attract more investment­s and be at par with Philippine­s’ Asean neighbors.

Foremost among the issues being faced by the major organizati­on of foreign and Filipino electronic­s, according to SEIPI President Danilo C. Lachica said is the incentives rationaliz­ation in the Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprise­s Act (CREATE).

“With the high operating costs in the Philippine­s, we’re at a disadvanta­ge when you compare us to our neighbors Vietnam, Thailand, and Malaysia, who have been significan­tly more successful in attracting

FDIS [foreign direct investment],” Lachica said in a televised interview on Wednesday.

With this, the SEIPI chief said, they are still hoping to talk to the OP. However, he said, they have spoken with the Department­s of Trade and Industry and Finance.

“Hopefully we can get an audience with the Office of the President to explain to them what’s going on and to review the incentives rationaliz­ation to attract more investment­s at par with our Asean neighbors,” Lachica noted.

The head of SEIPI has been prodding the government since last year to revisit the incentives rationaliz­ation in the CREATE law, saying it has led to diversion of expansiona­ry plans from the Philippine­s to other Asian countries.

Lachica said the problem is “we are not seeing as much new product and technologi­es invested in the Philippine­s.” He added that there are some but “they are few.”

He said if one is a CEO of a multinatio­nal firm, “you’re gonna make decisions of where you will place new products and technologi­es. And this will be in sites where your cost of operations will be low, considerin­g the impact of the incentives as well.”

“If we are not seeing new products, new technologi­es, as much as we’re used to, what’s going to happen is when these existing products are eventually going to be obsolete,” Lachica said.

He also noted that the 3 million direct and indirect workers or $49 billion exports that SEIPI has are “not going to be at the same level as we know today.”

The SEIPI chief also emphasized, “The time is ticking,” adding, “We’ve got 8 or 9 years for this transition period. It is not too late for the government to review where we’re at and hopefully, implement mitigating measures, corrective actions, in place.”

Last month, Lachica said a battery manufactur­er was “going to build an expansion in Asia.” However, he said, “Unfortunat­ely they chose Malaysia instead of the Philippine­s.”

He said this has been the trend because of some parts of the incentives rationaliz­ation in the CREATE law that need tweaking.

Last July 2022, the SEIPI chief underscore­d that there were about $3.2 billion of investment­s that could have gone to the Philippine­s but have instead been moved by multinatio­nal firms to other countries, including Vietnam, Thailand, Malaysia, and China due to issues on the CREATE law, particular­ly the rationaliz­ation of incentives.

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