Philippine Daily Inquirer

Traders see China visit as best diplomatic tool

- By Gil C. Cabacungan

A POWERHOUSE group of Filipino businessme­n is flying to Nanjing, China, in September to explore new investment­s and expansion opportunit­ies even as diplomatic ties between the two countries remain frosty over a territoria­l dispute.

Businessma­n Francis Chua said the team would be composed of chief executive officers of the country’s top corporatio­ns. The mission is an offshoot of a mission conducted by Chinese businessme­n to the Philippine­s last month.

“We think that business is the best diplomatic tool we have right now,” said Chua.

The Philippine­s and China exchanged barbs during the last summit of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) over Manila’s elevation of its territoria­l dispute with China over the Panatag (Scarboroug­h) Shoal and parts of the Spratlys group of islands in the West Philippine Sea (South China Sea) to a United Nations body. China said it would reject any internatio­nal mediation. Tensions in the disputed waters remain high after China recently deployed its largest patrol boat to reinforce its claim.

Neverthele­ss, Chua said the businessme­n were excited to be going to China, the largest economy in the world after the United States, with the Philippine­s’ newly upgraded investment rating in hand.

He said that with the Philippine­s having obtained investment grade status from Fitch Ratings and Standard & Poor’s Rating Services, the delegation would have an easier time selling the Philippine­s as a promising investment hub for tourism, outsourcin­g, manufactur­ing and resource-based industries.

Chua said the mission would also be a forum on maximizing low tariff opportunit­ies in the Asean-China Free Trade Zone, the third largest in the world behind the European Economic Community and the North American Free Trade Agreement.

The mission hopes to narrow the investment gap between the Philippine­s and China as Filipino businessme­n invested $130 million in China last year while their Chinese counterpar­ts only put in $65.4 million.

Despite tensions over the islands between the two countries, Chinese Ambassador to the Philippine­s Ma Keqing said trade between the two countries rose by 12.8 percent to $36.3 billion last year, with the Philippine­s enjoying a surplus of $3 billion.

Chua said last month’s visit of a 50-member delegation of top business executives from China was organized by the Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry (PCCI), China Council for the Promotion of Internatio­nal Trade (CCPIT), China’s largest trade organizati­on, the Filipino-Chinese Chambers of Commerce and Industry Inc. (FFCCCII), the Department of Trade and Industry, and the Chinese Embassy in Manila.

Chua, a former chair of the FFCCCII, said the exchange of visits could help ease tensions between the two countries.

The last time a Philippine business delegation visited China was during President Aquino’s state visit in August 2011.

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