Salceda wants envoy to explain why Singapore has exclusive rights to Taylor Swift concert 


At a glance

  • Singapore's apparent "exclusivity deal" with Taylor Swift has rubbed Albay 2nd district Rep. Joey Salceda the wrong way.


Taylor Swift 1989 album photo from her official Facebook.jpgTaylor Swift  

 

 

 

 

 

 

Singapore's apparent "exclusivity deal" with Taylor Swift has rubbed Albay 2nd district Rep. Joey Salceda the wrong way. 

So what did the veteran congressman do? 

He asked the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) to send a note verbale to the Singaporean Embassy to request an explanation for the alleged exclusivity terms in the grant given by the Singapore Tourism Board (STB) and the Ministry of Culture, Community and Youth (MCCY) to AEG Presents. 

AEG is the production company that presented the concert of international pop star Swift. 

Salceda said that the alleged terms, which supposedly prevented AEG from bringing the concert to other Southeast Asian countries like the Philippines, if true, “isn’t what good neighbors do". 

“Some $3 million in grants were allegedly given by the Singapore government to AEG to host the concert in Singapore. The catch was that they do not host it elsewhere in the region,” Salceda said. 

The allegation was made public by Thailand Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin, who said that the grant was offered on the condition that there be no other stops in the Southeast Asian leg of Swift’s concert tour. 

“I give it to them that the policy worked. Regional demand for Singaporean hotels and airlines was up 30 percent over the period. I estimate that the exclusivity term caused an increase in industry revenues by $60 million. So, the grant produced 30 times more in economic activity.

“But it was at the expense of neighboring countries, which could not attract their own foreign concert goers, and whose fans had to go to Singapore. I doubt the exclusivity terms were on the grant contract itself,” Salceda said. 

“I don’t think we should just let things like this pass. We should still officially register our opposition. It also runs contrary to the principle of consensus-based relations and solidarity on which the ASEAN was founded," noted the House Committee on Ways and Means chairman. 

“So, I think the DFA should send a note verbale to our counterparts in Singapore. Our countries are good friends. That’s why actions like that hurt,” he added. 

The Philippines is a founding member of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).