Philippine Daily Inquirer

46 ECOZONE APPLICATIO­NS PILE UP IN MALACAÑANG

- By Roy Stephen C. Canivel @roycanivel_INQ

A nearly year-long backlog in pending economic zones is still in the Office of the President, leaving a pile of new ecozones worth least P30 billion lacking the required nod to start developmen­t, a delay that may push some investors to transfer their investment­s elsewhere, the Philippine Economic Zone Authority (Peza) said.

In spite of aggressive efforts to invite investment­s from abroad to set up shop here, Peza Director General Charito Plaza said that Malacañang had been slow in proclaimin­g new economic zones to give space for locators, calling it her “frustratio­n.”

According to Peza data provided to media, there are 46 new economic zones currently waiting for presidenti­al approval. Of this, six ecozones were carried over from the previous Aquino administra­tion.

Upon adding the individual project costs in the list, it showed that projects worth at least P30.6 billion are still up in the air. Some of the pending ecozones in the list did not state the project cost.

Thirty-two of the backlog account for informatio­n technology parks and centers, which would house IT-Business Process Management (IT-BPM) firms—an industry that has already struggled from slower growth in new investment pledges in the first five months of the year.

The remaining applicatio­ns are for 11 manufactur­ing ecozones, a medical tourism center, an agro-industrial ecozone and a tourism ecozone.

Without a presidenti­al proclamati­on, the developmen­t of these new economic zones could not begin, which may be a problem for locators that need the additional space.

“My frustratio­n is that [President Duterte] is so aggressive in inviting investors, that’s why there are always business forums in his state

visits. Peza, for example, received the entire investment pledges in the state visit in the Middle East, but the problem of the [ investors] is they want to put up their industries already because they are registered with Peza, but they cannot because the proclamati­on [of the new ecozones] has not yet been re- leased,” she said.

Plaza was referring to the $925 million worth of pledges brought home from Duterte’s state visits to Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Qatar last April.

Moreover, the long delay may be a problem especially given that more than half of the growth that Peza has been enjoying in the past five months has been due to the pledges to develop new economic zones.

From January to May, new investment­s registered under Peza increased 98.14 percent to P107.75 billion from P54.38 billion in the same period last year. Out of the current growth growth figure, P67 billion was attributed to new economic zone developmen­t.

“We are telling [the investors] to hold on because their principal offices are asking how many more months do they have to wait. If this wouldn’t be rushed, they are now thinking of transferri­ng to economic zones in other countries,” she said in a mix of English and Filipino.

“Weare not the only economic zone [authority] in the world. We are not the only one that give incentives,” she added.

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