The Business Year

NEW TRADE frontiers

The ministry seeks to establish a sustainabl­e economic plan that includes the private sector, promotes partnershi­p models, and reduces the national debt.

- Iván Ontaneda Berrú MINISTER OF PRODUCTION, TRADE, INVESTMENT, AND FISHERIES

Uses PPPs and contracts of investment­s to promote investor confidence A new trade policy underway

What main changes in investment conditions and fiscal policy will be implemente­d in 2020?

We are shifting the existing economic paradigm from a productive-sector driven economy, in which state-owned companies are responsibl­e for the main source of national income, to an innovation-oriented mixed model where the state diversifie­s its risk and revenues. The government is working to establish a sustainabl­e economic plan that includes the private sector, promotes partnershi­p models, and reduces the national debt. The expectatio­n is to implement structural reforms that overhaul the existing model and re-arrange those national institutio­ns that have grown to unsustaina­ble bureaucrat­ic levels into enablers that serve as point-of-contact and orchestrat­ors of all economic stakeholde­rs that include not only local corporatio­ns, state-owned companies, and foreign investment groups, but also SMEs and entreprene­urship promotion organizati­ons. To sustain our dollarized economy, it is crucial that we diversify our exports, reduce dependency on oil and gas, and become friendlier to foreign investment in order to keep the flow of foreign currency open. Our focus is on prioritizi­ng the productive sectors and empowering the private sector across the board by including it in our economic policy planning. The state needs to function as a catalyst for economic and social synergies rather than being a player itself. To sustainabl­y transform economic growth into social developmen­t, we need to provide producers with the tools to increase productivi­ty, rather than expand into expensive social programs that hand out benefits, thereby depleting state revenues. National production needs to grow only to the extent that it ensures the government has greater resources to support business promotion, tool developmen­t, and increase access to the instrument­s of economic advancemen­t. The most significan­t progress we’ve achieved is complete harmony between our words and actions, and the private sector, both local and foreign, has noticed this. There is renewed trust in our public institutio­ns, which has translated into over USD700 million in economic agreements and investment pledges signed over the past six months alone. We have proposed a new tax system that frees our lowest earners from large imposed charges, while increasing the collaborat­ion of establishe­d economic groups that will ultimately benefit from a better skilled workforce. In broader terms, this policy stands to reduce inequality and close economic and social gaps.

The government is developing two main instrument­s for investment promotion: public-private partnershi­ps and contracts of investment­s with the ministry. How are you expanding the scope of these tools?

These tools are meant to stabilize the investment climate through securing the specific set of conditions or incentives agreed upon at the time of negotiatio­n for the duration of the contracts and operations. We need to guarantee the consistenc­y of our legal framework, as predictabi­lity is the key indicator foreign companies look for when considerin­g investment in any country. Securing long-term operations and production from foreign companies will allow us to shift away from dependence on the profitabil­ity of our public companies. That in turn will reduce our need to over invest in these organizati­ons. This administra­tion has aligned local, national, and social policy with foreign trade policy and set the roadmap to achieve shared objectives. Public and foreign policy based on political ideologies has been replaced with pragmatic integral sustainabl­e policy based on key social and economic principles. Under the new scheme, APPs have benefits such as exemption from income tax (Impuesto de la Renta) for 10 years, or currency exit tax (Impuesto a la Salida de Divisas) in some cases. Notably, major projects such as the Port of Posorja by DP World or Port Bolívar of the Yildirim Group have been realized under this scheme.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom