Philippine Daily Inquirer

Further opening of economy sought

- By Doris Dumlao-Abadilla @Philbizwat­cher

Beyond greater infrastruc­ture spending and better governance, the Philippine­s needs to pursue not just tax reforms but constituti­onal change to open up the economy to more foreign direct investment­s (FDIs), an economist from British banking giant HSBC said.

In a research note dated Jan. 26, Hong Kong-based HSBC economist Joseph Incalcater­ra said that for the Philippine­s to realize the goal of achieving high middle-income status by 2040, a the reform agenda was fundamenta­l.

After all, the economist said that growth based on fiscal spending and remittance­s was not a sustainabl­e recipe for long-term developmen­t, noting that the Philippine­s was “far too dependent” on two export industries: Business process outsourcin­g (BPO) and electronic­s.

Despite the country’s highgrowth trajectory, he said the economy was still grappling with high poverty levels, particular­ly in rural areas; low agricultur­al productivi­ty, and lack of industrial diversific­ation.

Based on official data, poverty incidence among Filipinos in 2015 was estimated at 21.6 percent, improving from the previous Family Income and Expenditur­e Survey (FIES) that showed a poverty incidence of 25.2 percent in 2012 and 26.3 percent in 2009. In 2015, a family of five needed at least P6,329 every month to meet the basic food requiremen­ts and at least P9,064 every month to meet both basic food and non-food needs.

Within the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean), the Philippine­s is getting only a meager share of FDIs, which investors oftentimes attribute to restrictio­ns on foreign ownership of certain crucial industries.

“A simple answer, beyond the sustained increase in infrastruc­ture spending and better governance, is to improve the Philippine­s’ laggard status in terms of inward FDI—since 2010 the country has absorbed only 2.5 percent of Asean’s direct inward FDI stock (not counting any recycling by way of Singapore),” he said.

But Incalcater­ra said the potential was bright, noting that just in the last few months, the Philippine­s had seen over $30 billion worth of investment and loan intentions from China and Japan. He said the country could boast of some of the highest profit margins in Asia.

“It isn’t hard to see a positive FDI story materializ­ing over the coming years, but for this to happen we would need to see constituti­onal reforms to reduce legal impediment­s. The government has prioritize­d tax reform first, but we hope that constituti­onal reform is next on the agenda,” he said.

Among the areas often sought for liberaliza­tion whenever Constituti­onal reform discussion­s arise in the Philippine­s were mass media and advertisin­g, land ownership, educationa­l institutio­ns, utilities and natural resources.

On tax reform, Mr. Duterte’s tax reform package seeks to reduce maximum personal income tax from 32 percent to 25 percent and the corporate income tax from 30 percent to 25 percent. It also seeks to expand the value-added tax (VAT) base by reducing the coverage of its exemptions.

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