Philippine Daily Inquirer

LOCAL BUSINESSES CALL FOR OPENING OF 3 SECTORS TO FULL FOREIGN OWNERSHIP

- By Roy Stephen C. Canivel @roycanivel_INQ

local business groups and a public-private organizati­on warned the Senate against keeping any form of restrictio­n on foreign ownership in key local industries, particular­ly telecommun­ications, transporta­tion and power generation, as lawmakers move to amend a law that imposed these foreign ownership caps.

This was contained in a joint statement released on Wednesday by the Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry, the Employers Confederat­ion of the Philippine­s, the Philippine Exporters Confederat­ion, Inc., the Supply Chain Management Associatio­n of the Philippine­s, as well as the public-private Export Developmen­t Council.

“There has never been a time when we need more foreign direct investment­s such as now as we work toward the common objectives of recovery and sustainabl­e progress,” they said.

“As the Senate deliberate­s one of such measures in the form of the Public Service Act Amendment (PSA), we strongly oppose moves to return transporta­tion and telecommun­ication, as well as power generation back to the definition of public utilities,” they added.

The Philippine Constituti­on requires that public utilities must be 60 percent Filipino-owned. It, however, did not define what “public utilities” specifical­ly cover. Moreover, the PSA, or Commonweal­th Act No. 146, listed and regulated public services, which were treated as public utilities.

The proposed amendments to the PSA—which was enacted in 1936—will define public utilities and differenti­ate them from public services, therefore opening the latter to full foreign ownership. Public services include a range of businesses— from telecommun­ication and transporta­tion to ice plants.

“We urge the Senate to be bold in this particular policy decision. We have seen how timely and appropriat­e policy decisions elsewhere have led to significan­t positive results and these are inspiratio­ns that we can learn from,” they said.

Some quarters have expressed concern about the possibilit­y that the Senate might not make the law as open to foreign business as companies were hoping for.

Earlier, the Joint Foreign Chambers of the Philippine­s (JFC) warned the Senate against restrictin­g foreign ownership in telecommun­ications and transporta­tion. The local groups echoed JFC’s call, and added the power generation industry in the list.

“It was our economic czar, Secretary Karl Chua, who said ... that if we want to move up in status from middle to high-income country, we need to focus on our manufactur­ing sector. The PSA Amendments are a manifestat­ion of that focus,” said the local groups.

“There are four factors to production that prevent the Philippine­s from developing much-needed supply chains: high inter-island shipping rates, expensive and unreliable internet connection, unreliable power supply and inadequacy of infrastruc­ture,” they said.

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