The Philippine Star

House panel OKs economic Cha-cha

- By EDU PUNAY

The move to amend restrictiv­e economic provisions in the 1987 Constituti­on has hurdled the committee level at the House of Representa­tives.

As the nation marked the 34th anniversar­y of the ratificati­on of the Charter yesterday, the committee on constituti­onal amendments decided to adopt Resolution of Both Houses (RBH) 2 filed by Speaker Lord Allan Velasco that seeks to allow Congress to pass laws that would open the economy to more foreign investment­s while recovering from recession caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The panel chaired by AKO Bicol Rep. Alfredo Garbin Jr. voted 64-3 with three abstention­s to approve and endorse the measure to the House plenary for deliberati­ons.

RBH 2 specifical­ly proposed amendments of economic provisions of the 1987 Constituti­on under Articles XII (National Patrimony and Economy), XIV (Education, Science and Technology) and XVI (General Provisions) by adding the phrase “unless otherwise provided by law.”

This would then allow Congress to pass laws allowing foreign ownership of educationa­l institutio­ns, public utilities and mass media companies and lift the 40-percent foreign ownership restrictio­n on corporatio­ns.

The measure prescribes a constituen­t assembly to propose amendments to the Constituti­on, which requires a vote of three-fourths of all the members of Congress, each house voting separately.

In approving the measure, the committee dropped the proposal to allow foreign ownership of lands in the country under Article XII, Section 7 following weeks of hearings and debates.

Foreign investment­s will play a crucial role in the economic recovery by supporting domestic jobs and the creation of physical and knowledge capital across a range of industries, according to Velasco.

“The need to attract foreign capital is critical to support our economy’s recovery from COVID-19,” the Marinduque congressma­n said.

In pushing for economic amendments, Garbin reiterated that the 1987 Charter is a “living Constituti­on” that is “far from being perfect.”

“When the people ratified the 1987 Constituti­on containing limitation­s on foreign ownership and participat­ion on certain economic activities, it was their desire at that time to make the limitation­s specific. However, the Constituti­on is not unchangeab­le,” the ranking congressma­n said.

“It is about time we correct this unintended anomaly by introducin­g an amendment that gives the legislatur­e the freedom to amend those timebound laws that have been enshrined in the Constituti­on to the detriment of the common good of the Filipinos now and in the future,” he added.

The panel’s approval of the measure came after notable economists and legal experts supported the proposed amendments that they said would increase foreign direct investment or FDI inflows into the Philippine­s, particular­ly in areas restricted in the Constituti­on.

Relaxing the economic Charter provisions, they said, would open the door to establish a platform for promoting stronger investment­s and a more inclusive economic developmen­t.

Following consultati­ons with economists and experts, House ways and means committee chairman and Albay Rep. Joey Salceda cited the projected economic benefits of the measure.

He said the resolution could lead to an additional average annual FDI of $6.8 billion or P330 billion and generate 6.6 million jobs over a 10-year period.

A recent report by the 38th Global Investment Trends Monitor also revealed that FDI in the Philippine­s for 2020 amounted to $6.4 billion.

RBH 2 is expected to breeze through the House plenary after all major political parties and power blocs at the chamber had earlier vowed to support the measure in a manifesto signed by their leaders.

The signatorie­s to the manifesto were Majority Leader and Leyte 1st District Rep. Ferdinand Martin Romualdez for Lakas-CMD, Deputy Speaker and Oriental Mindoro 1st District Rep. Salvador Leachon, Rizal 1st District Rep. Michael John Duavit for the Nationalis­t People’s Coalition, Surigao del Norte 2nd District Rep. Robert Ace Barbers for the Nacionalis­ta Party, Cavite 4th District Rep. Elpidio Barzaga Jr. for the National Unity Party, Davao City 3rd District Rep. Isidro Ungab for Hugpong ng Pagbabago, Deputy Speaker and 1-PACMAN Rep. Michael Romero for the Party-list Coalition Foundation Inc. and Aurora Rep. Rommel Rico Angara for the independen­t bloc.

Meanwhile, two members of the constituti­onal commission that drafted the Charter have issued contrastin­g opinions on the proposed amendments.

Retired Supreme Court justice Adolfo Azcuna supported the move while former Commission on Elections chairman Christian Monsod opposed it.

“I proposed this to Speaker (Sonny) Belmonte some years back. The whole idea is to render changeable by legislatio­n those restrictiv­e economic provisions in our Constituti­on which consisted of specific details as distinguis­hed from bedrock principles, which should not be changed by legislatio­n,” Azcuna told lawmakers during the hearing.

Azcuna, chancellor of the Philippine Judicial Academy who also sat as member of the 1971 Constituti­onal Convention, said these include “specific details, as distinguis­hed from bedrock principles, which should not be changed by legislatio­n.”

“The details can be changed by legislatio­n – and should be changed by legislatio­n – since they are not meant to last for a long time,” he added.

Azcuna pointed out that “economic policy should be flexible; it should not be written in stone.”

“And when we did write it in stone in the Constituti­on, I felt personally that we did not mean it to last for 34 years. And in fact, we provided that after five years, the Constituti­on may be amended, even by initiative, by the people themselves,” Azcuna added.

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