The Philippine Star

HOW‘ DUTERTE NOMICS’ CAN BENEFIT SMEs

- wIlsON lee flORes Thanks for your feedback! Email willsoonfl­ourish@gmail.com or wilsonleef­lores@yahoo.com. Follow @wilsonleef­lores on Instagram, Twitter, Facebook and read my new blog, wilsonleef­lores.com.

Thanks to the Finance Department’s Atty. Paola Alvarez for sending me detailed informatio­n on the action-oriented Duterte administra­tion’s recent April 25 forum on its “Dutertenom­ics” comprehens­ive reforms on taxes, increased infrastruc­ture expenditur­e and other policies with the uplifting mantra “Build, build, build.”

Let us all enthusiast­ically support this focus on Philippine economic reforms and economic growth, especially for the benefit of small- and medium-scale enterprise­s (SMEs), which provide jobs to millions of people.

Notable among the informatio­n Alvarez shared was that the Philippine­s’ top business tycoons and their heirs were present at the forum, where hardworkin­g cabinet secretarie­s, led by Finance Secretary Sonny Dominguez and Budget Secretary Dr. Ben Diokno, discussed these audacious government reforms.

Among the business leaders in attendance were SM Group’s Tessie Sy-Coson; Ayala Group’s Jaime Augusto Zobel de Ayala; Danel and Sandro Aboitiz of Aboitiz Equity Ventures; Kevin Tan, representi­ng his father Andrew Tan of Megaworld Corp.; Michael Tan, representi­ng his father Lucio Tan of the LT Group Inc.; and Edgar Injap Sia II of Double Dragon Properties Corp.

Here are requests for reforms from numerous SME entreprene­urs, including officers and members of the Associatio­n of Filipino Franchisor­s, Inc. (AFFI), led by newly elected chairman Sonny Francisco of Ferino’s Bibingka and president John Chung of Acquasuiss­e:

• Provide faster and cheaper broadband Internet nationwide to help equalize business opportunit­ies for SMEs and micro-enterprise­s and help them access global markets.

Ensureand efficienta­lso that nationwide. telecommun­ications facilities are competitiv­e

Philippine• Reform constituti­onthe restrictiv­ein order economicto open provisions­our economyof theto more provisions foreign need directnot be investment­snew ideas; we (FDIs).can just These copy economicor be at par foreign-investment­with that of our incentives­ASEAN and and Asian policies. competitor­s in their

• Rationaliz­e labor policies to safeguard and bolster the morale of the country’s labor-intensive SMEs, and make doing business in the Philippine­s less stressful for SME entreprene­urs. • Drasticall­y cut down on bureaucrat­ic red tape via shorter procedures and more transparen­cy, especially in the notoriousl­y inefficien­t local government units (LGUs). • Seek ways to lower electric power costs. • Fast-track federalism constituti­onal reforms, to benefit the numerous rural regions left behind by the economic growth of the past. • Provide state support or incentives to the Philippine banking system so they can give more loan support to SMEs. • Bolster the export industries with tax and other incentives similar to that of other Asian countries.

• Deepen the country’s independen­t foreign policy and insulate it from the vagaries of our volatile politics, so that the Philippine­s can tap the huge export and tourism markets, not only of China and Russia, but also nontraditi­onal markets like oil-rich Iran, Central Asia, Turkey, the Middle East, Latin America, the energy-rich frontiers

Although business conglomera­tes often get the headlines, the genuine economic democracy of a nation also lies in the hands of our SMEs.

of Africa and our very own backyard, the fast-growing ASEAN region. Make our diplomacy vigorously advance also the Philippine­s’ trade advantages and not just focus on geopolitic­al issues or OFW problems.

• Invest more in research and developmen­t as well as technologi­cal advancemen­ts, those that will not only benefit existing business groups or conglomera­tes but advances which will assist SME entreprene­urs throughout the archipelag­o. • Encourage anti-trust policies that will end or discourage monopolies, duopolies or oligopolie­s in many industries of our Philippine economy. Encourage true free-market competitio­n in all sectors of the economy to benefit consumers, SMEs, and strengthen the dynamism of our society. • Boost Philippine agricultur­e, help the farmers and their families, also fishermen nationwide. • Make the impending Philippine tourism boom also benefit SMEs nationwide. • Fast-track the “build, build, build” infrastruc­ture plans of the national government into 24/7 constructi­on

schedules. Don’t be paralyzed by internecin­e politics, bureaucrat­ic inertia, and endless analyses or past government indecisive­ness. Please ask President Rody Duterte and his Cabinet secretarie­s to do high-profile surprise constructi­on site visits, and crack the whip if necessary on inept, inefficien­t, erring or slow officials.

Dutertenom­ics is poised to be a great catalyst for sustained, faster, globally competitiv­e and more inclusive Philippine economic growth, offering us an opportunit­y for genuine progress that will benefit not only “imperial Metro Manila” or urban-based elites and upper middle-class segment.

Although the business groups and conglomera­tes often get the business headlines, the long-term destiny and genuine economic democracy of a nation also lies in the dreams, ceaseless efforts, toil and continuous investment­s of our SMEs.

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