The Philippine Star

Japan trade minister lauds Phl efforts to lure investment­s

- By RICHMOND MERCURIO

The Philippine government’s efforts to draw in foreign investors and make sure the country’s business environmen­t is conducive have received high marks from the Japanese trade and economic minister, his local counterpar­t said.

During his recent visit to Japan, Trade Secretary Ramon Lopez said he met with Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry Hiroshige Seko to discuss various cooperatio­n in multilater­al trade agreements, industrial cooperatio­n and the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP).

“We agreed on the tangible and intangible gains of the recently concluded visits of President Duterte to Japan and Prime Minister Abe to the Philippine­s and expressed appreciati­on for the warm and generous hospitalit­ies extended during said reciprocal visits by both heads of state,” Lopez said.

“Minister Seko also reported that the support of the Philippine government has been successful in luring more Japanese businesses into the country, citing among others DTI’s CARS program and the Comprehens­ive National Industrial­ization Strategy,” he added.

Since Abe’s visit to the Philippine­s in January, the DTI said there have been five Japanese trade and investment missions to the country.

Lopez said the agency is confident the Philippine­s is getting a growing and larger share of the small and medium Japanese enterprise­s migrating to other countries.

Meanwhile, Lopez said his Japanese counterpar­t also called for a “high quality RCEP” discussion­s during their meeting, especially in the face of the rising tide of worldwide protection­ism and bilaterali­sm.

“He ( Seko) mentioned that RCEP’s success should not be dictated by the speed of negotiatio­ns but by the clear cut definition and collective agreement of rules as RCEP clearly will define and shape the future of free trade,” Lopez said.

“He also said that talks should concentrat­e not only on market access and trade in goods but high quality and ambitions on trade policy negotiatio­ns, global value chain production, e-commerce, anti-piracy, logistics and distributi­on and SME developmen­t,” the trade chief added.

RCEP is a free trade deal between the 10-member Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and Australia, China, India, Japan, New Zealand, and South Korea. The DTI is hoping to conclude negotiatio­ns of the RCEP this year in time with the country’s hosting of the 2017 ASEAN Summit.

“We assured the minister that the Philippine­s would continue to work with ASEAN member states in leading and bringing a high- quality RCEP to a successful conclusion by the end of ASEAN’s golden year,” Lopez said.

“Like Japan, the Philipines still sets it sights on a modern and comprehens­ive RCEP agreement that is commercial­ly meaningful to Philippine businesses, especially the micro, small and medium enterprise­s. We said that its conclusion should not compromise the quality and level of ambition of the three pillars which forms the fundamenta­l basis of RCEP- market access, rules, and technical cooperatio­n,” he added.

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