The Philippine Star

US: Corruption in Phl remains among barriers to trade

- By RICHMOND MERCURIO

Corruption continues to be a major headache for the United States when it comes to doing trade with the Philippine­s, a new report by the Office of the US Trade Representa­tive (USTR) shows.

In its 2018 National Trade Estimate Report of Foreign Trade Barriers, the USTR said corruption remains a “pervasive” issue in the Philippine­s, which the US intends to continue urging the country to address. “National and local government agencies, particular­ly Bureau of Customs, are beset with various corruption issues,” the US agency said.

Similar to its 2017 report, the USTR again highlighte­d the concern expressed

by both foreign and domestic investors about “the propensity of Philippine courts and regulators to stray beyond matters of legal interpreta­tion into policymaki­ng, as well as the lack of transparen­cy in judicial and regulatory processes.”

“Investors have also raised concerns about courts being influenced by bribery and improperly issuing temporary restrainin­g orders to impede legitimate commerce,” the USTR said.

“Reports of corruption and irregulari­ties in customs processing persist, including undue and costly delays, irregulari­ties in the valuation process, 100-percent inspection and testing of some products, and customs officials seeking the payment of unrecorded facilitati­on fees,” the agency added.

Under President Donald Trump’s leadership, the USTR said it would build upon enforcemen­t efforts and break down foreign trade barriers for American exporters.

The report classifies foreign trade barriers into 10 different categories, which cover government-imposed measures and policies that restrict, prevent, or impede the internatio­nal exchange of goods and services.

In terms of technical barriers to trade, the US continues to press the Philippine government to remove unjustifie­d requiremen­ts that treat frozen meat differentl­y from fresh meat.

The US also seeks to ensure that the Department of Agricultur­e’s requiremen­t that importers should obtain a sanitary and phytosanit­ary permit prior to shipment of any agricultur­al product and to transmit the permit to the exporter, will not hamper trade.

For intellectu­al property rights protection, the report said US rights holders have expressed concerns about the continued availabili­ty of pirated and counterfei­t goods in the Philippine­s, the Department of Justice’s slow investigat­ion of IPR-related cases, and judicial inexperien­ce in handling IPR enforcemen­t cases, both civil and criminal.

The USTR also cited the significan­t restrictio­ns on foreign investment in the country as a barrier to investment.

But the USTR recognized the government’s efforts through Memorandum Order No. 16 issued by President Duterte in November 2017 directing the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority and member agencies to “take immediate steps to lift or ease existing restrictio­ns on foreign participat­ion” in certain investment areas, including certain profession­al services, constructi­on, retail trade enterprise­s and domestic market enterprise­s.

The USTR also deepens its focus on barriers to digital trade, which is seen as a critical element of US competitiv­eness and a key source of innovation and growth.

“The Philippine­s requires government agencies to procure cloud computing services from the Government Cloud, a cloud infrastruc­ture set up by the Department of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology. These restrictio­ns could prevent Philippine government agencies from accessing best-in-class cloud services,” the report said.

“In 2017, the Land Franchisin­g and Regulatory Board prohibited service providers from activating new drivers on their platforms and making those drivers available to provide trips. Other regulation­s have put maximum limits on dynamic pricing and minimum limits on driver hours. Together, these restrictio­ns limit the value that these services are able to provide to consumers, and undermine the competitiv­eness of these services vis-a-vis local alternativ­es,” it added.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines