Philippine Daily Inquirer

Foreign investment­s steeply fall under Aquino

- Rigoberto Tiglao

FOREIGN DIRECT investment­s into the Philippine­s during President Aquino’s first two years in office have steeply fallen, putting the country only a notch above Cambodia as the least-favored site in East Asia for offshore investors.

The annual average inflow of net foreign direct investment­s (FDI) under Mr. Aquino amounted to only $1,367 million, compared to the $2,171 million under Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo’s watch from 2005 until June 2010, and the $1,746 million during Joseph Estrada’s years. These figures are from the United Nations Conference on Trade and Developmen­t and the World Bank.

The 2001 to 2004 FDI figures aren’t used for comparison because of the abnormal slowdown of global capital movements right after the 9/11 terrorist assaults on the World Trade Center, and the US invasion of Iraq that started 2003. As shown in Table 2, however, the Philippine­s even during the global financial crisis from 2008 to 2009—considered worse than the 1920s Great Depression—still attracted substantia­l foreign capital under Macapagal-Arroyo’s watch. During the politicall­y volatile 2006-2007 years when the opposition threw everything but the kitchen sink to overthrow Macapagal-Arroyo, FDI inflows were even the highest in our history, nearly reaching $3 billion annually. In contrast, FDI flows have fallen during Mr. Aquino’s first two years in office, when there’s a robust global economy and feeble opposition against him. Foreign Direct Investment­s Inflow: $ M 2001 (9/11 attack) 2002 2003 (Iraq invasion) 2004 2005 (Hyatt 10 plot) 2006 2007 2008 (Global Financial Crisis) 2009 2010 (May elections) Jan-June (Arroyo) July-Dec (Aquino) 2011 2012 Jan-June 195 1,542 491 688 1,854 2,921 2,916 1,544 1,963 1,298 744 554 1,262 917

Especially here, the level of FDI flows is a crucial barometer of the economy’s prospects, since it is a surrogate indicator for all business activity, with other reports such as “approved investment­s” tallied by the Board of Investment­s and “Business Expectatio­ns” notoriousl­y inflated.

Mr. Aquino’s main focus—a shrill anticorrup­tion rhetoric and persecutin­g Mrs. Arroyo, Ombudsman Merceditas Gutierrez, and Chief Justice Renato Corona—obviously has not helped make the country attractive to FDI. Under Mr. Aquino’s watch (Table 3), we have been overtaken by miles by Indonesia, Thailand and by socialist Vietnam. This is despite their lower proficienc­ies in English, the lingua franca of global business, and their less-sophistica­ted corporate sectors. Cambodia, one of the most backward and poorest country in Asia, is now breathing down our necks. Cambodia can overtake us soon, if China succumbs to the temptation of putting us down and throws a billion yuan into it just so we get listed as the country with the least FDI in the region. Foreign Direct Investment­s $ B July 2010 - June 2012 Indonesia Vietnam Thailand Vietnam Philippine­s Cambodia 34.8 15.4 19.1 15.4 2.7 2.3

It’s not at all puzzling why FDI flows have fallen under Mr. Aquino. China has become the fifthbigge­st foreign investor in the world, with its FDI outflows surging from just $3 billion in 2002 to $70 billion last year, with Indonesia, Vietnam and Cambodia getting $20 billion. But Mr. Aquino has been antagonizi­ng China, first by refusing to persecute his officials who bungled the Luneta hostage crisis in which eight Hong Kong tourists were killed. After that he sends a warship, even if a doddering hand-me-down from the US Coast Guard, to the disputed Scarboroug­h Shoal, to shoo away Chinese fishermen. Then he continuous­ly ramps up his tirades against the “neighborho­od bully”—to the delight of the Americans.

The Europeans? They see us now as a nation where contracts aren’t honored after Mr. Aquino unilateral­ly junked the Belgians’ $500-million Laguna Lake dredging project and the French companies’ port and bridge-building contracts, with him even calling them corrupt. The Americans, of whom we have been acting as little brown brothers under Mr. Aquino’s administra­tion? Like iconic US firms Apple, GE, Avon, Intel, they’ve moved or are moving to China—and Vietnam.

The weak FDI flows into our country indicate a crisis of global confidence in our economy’s prospects, which our leaders should address immediatel­y before it leads to an irreparabl­e economic collapse. Sadly, high popularity ratings, thanks to a servile, uncritical media, can make any president oblivious to a looming crisis.

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