Filipino business groups want full opening of public services


Filipino business leaders have joined the clamor of foreign firms for the full lifting of foreign equity restriction in public services sector, particularly transportation, telecommunication and power generation.

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Major Filipino business groups - Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Philippine Exporters Confederation, Employers Confederation of the Philippines, Supply Chain Management Association of the Philippines, and Export Development Council – issued a joint statement strongly supporting the full investment liberalization of public services outside of natural monopolies.

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The groups issued the call as the Senate deliberates the amendment to the Public Services Act (PSA).

“We strongly oppose moves to return transportation and telecommunication, as well as power generation back to the definition of Public Utilities, wherein these sectors will continue or revert to the 60-40 Filipino-foreign ownership requirements under the 1987 Constitution,” the groups said.

On transport and telecom, they stressed that the full liberalization of these sectors has been affirmed by the results from many consultations among exporters, manufacturers, SMEs and other business stakeholders who all had strongly clamored for this reform.

On power generation, the business leaders said they widely welcomed the Electric Power Industry Reform Act’s (EPIRA) provision to open the sector to local and 100 percent foreign private investors, helping to meet the critical power need of our growing economy and support our growing economy, especially the fuel-intensive manufacturing industries.

In fact, they pointed out that it was economic czar Socio-Economic Planning Secretary Karl Kendrick Chua, who said during the recent Manufacturing Investment Summit last August 27, 2021 that if the country has to move up in status from middle to high-income country, there is a need to focus on the manufacturing sector. “The PSA Amendments are a manifestation of that focus,” the joint statement added.

“The groups said that removing the 60-40 foreign equity restriction would facilitate the entry of foreign direct investment (FDI) in the country, which FDIs have been lagging other ASEAN countries.

“There has never been a time when we need more foreign direct investments such as now as we work towards the common objectives of recovery and sustainable progress,” the joint statement added.

The groups further cited four factors to production that are preventing the Philippines from developing the much-needed supply chains and from maximizing the potentials of domestic industries. These are high inter-island shipping rates, expensive and unreliable internet connection, unreliable power supply, and inadequacy of infrastructure.

In addition, the groups noted of the need for urgent and massive upgrade to speed up and improve telecommunications system. “We get daily experiences on service interruptions, technical glitches, and lack of internet that in this period and age can make or break a business, disrupt the online delivery of government services (E-BOSS, digital payments), and e-learning. Every second the Philippines is offline because of the inability of our current providers to keep us connected is a second that the Philippines is closed for business,” the statement added.

Nonetheless, the business groups also recognized the security and foreign influence concerns of Congress in crafting the law but said “this is not irremediable.”

They urged Congress to undertake safeguard measures and strengthen governmental institutions to ensure that sovereign interests shall be upheld.

“We urge the Senate to be bold in this particular policy decision. We have seen how timely and appropriate policy decisions elsewhere have led to significant positive results and these are inspirations that we can learn from and adopt,” the statement concluded.