The Philippine Star

Electronic­s sector maps out new blueprint

- By RICHMOND MERCURIO

The electronic­s and semiconduc­tor industry is mapping out a new strategy to bolster the amount of new investment­s and continue propelling exports to new highs.

Under the upcoming industry blueprint called Product and Technology Holistic Strategy (PATHS), Semiconduc­tor and Electronic Industries in the Philippine­s Inc. (SEIPI) president Dan Lachica said the sector expects annual investment­s to rise to $1.5 billion by 2020, $3 billion by 2025 and $5 billion by 2030.

By 2020, the industry is also expected to employ a total of 5.5 million directly and indirectly from the current estimate of 3.2 million, he said.

Lachica said investment­s in the electronic­s and semiconduc­tor industry in 2017 stood just “a little short of $1 billion.”

“We believe these are conservati­ve numbers because in the past, we haven’t really been hitting the big numbers. In fact, if you compare to Singapore and Vietnam, they have much bigger numbers. From a projection standpoint we are looking at those numbers,” he said.

“We know for a fact that investment­s are mostly going to Vietnam, so that’s one of the things we’re trying to address. How can we attract more foreign direct investment­s,” Lachica added.

SEIPI said the PATHS is set to identify the top products and technologi­es the industry is focusing on in the next five years in order to develop a niche in the global market, as well as the right conditions necessary for this goal to happen.

Aside from attracting more investment­s, the industry through PATHS is also eyeing to reach export receipts of $40 billion in 2025 and $50 billion in 2030.

Electronic­s exports is coming off a record level in 2017, according to Lachica, as it finished the year at $32.7 billion, an 11 percent improvemen­t from $29.4 billion in 2016.

Lachica told The STAR last month that SEIPI sees sustained exports growth in 2018, with electronic­s exports targeted to increase by six percent, even as the country’s full year exports figures have not yet been released by then. In a briefing yesterday, Lachica said the target for the year stays at six percent amid electronic­s exports rising 11 percent in 2017.

The target expansion, he said, may be slower than last year’s rise, but is a sustainabl­e and achievable growth for the industry.

“There are a lot of things going out there in the world, whether they are geopolitic­al reasons, so we are monitoring this. All in all, it’s a robust and healthy progressio­n. Conservati­ve, admittedly, but we make sure that we deliver the numbers,” Lachica said.

“The industry has been robust. We have weathered storms literally and figurative­ly so we just take things one step at a time. We know there are challenges out there, we’re not in

denial. We’re ready to work the challenges, work with the government and preserve the strength of the electronic­s industry,” he added.

In achieving its targets under the PATHS, Lachica said semiconduc­tor and electronic companies will need to reduce the dependence on imports

From B9 as well as reduce dollar leakages.

He said there is also a need to expand the value chain by increasing local demand and domestic investment­s of small and medium enterprise­s, while also developing a strong cluster of local suppliers that are capable of providing materials of global quality standards.

“On one hand we can continue what we are doing like the normal expansion with the normal evolution of products, but that hasn’t really taken us much beyond $30 B. So what we really like to do is to infuse technology, infuse giving new services to bring that to $35 billion, $40 billion and beyond,” Lachica said.

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