The Philippine Star

Competitio­n Act boosts bid for free trade deal with EU

- By RICHMOND S. MERCURIO

The Philippine­s got a muchneeded boost in its bid to forge a free trade agreement (FTA) with the European Union (EU) due to the recent passing of the Philippine Competitio­n Act, an EU official said.

In an interview yesterday, EU competitio­ns expert Tiina Pitkanen said the country made great strides with President Aquino’s signing into law the landmark Philippine Competitio­n Act last July.

“Our view is, this is a big achievemen­t. And this is one of the issues we want the Philippine­s to achieve before we can start this (FTA) negotiatio­n. And that hurdle has already been crossed so we wish all the luck for the future competitio­n authority and for the implementa­tion of this act. But yes, I think we are there, that we can finalize our discussion on this part of the FTA,” Pitkanen said.

She added the EU is satisfied with the content of the Philippine Competitio­n Act and sees no need for any provisions to be revised or further strengthen­ed.

The Philippine­s and the EU are exploring a possible FTA with the former already showing readiness to commit to an ambitious bilateral deal.

The Philippine­s and the EU are currently in the scoping phase for the FTA, a requiremen­t needed to continue discussion­s to define the parameters of the bilateral deal.

The EU has been closely looking at the economic reforms being undertaken by the Philippine­s, among which is the passage of the competitio­n law.

Republic Act 10667 or the Philippine Competitio­n Act seeks to promote free and fair competitio­n in trade, industry and all commercial economic activities.

“What we usually do in any FTA, we negotiate wider principles, then we would normally list the type of anti-competitiv­e abusive practices that we want our respective laws addressed. And then usually, we negotiate provisions on due process, procedural fairness so that the competitio­n law should be applied in a transparen­t manner to all enterprise­s, public or private,” Pitkanen said.

The Philippine­s in December last year has been granted beneficiar­y status to the EU GSP+, a scheme which allows duty-free entry of 6,274 products to the bloc for 10 years.

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