(Published in the ECCP Business Review, 2011)
SEEING NO FURTHER than the end of their noses can’t be said
of Filipino businessmen now pressing the government to expand business
relations with Europe, the world’s wealthiest market that has quietly evolved
into the Philippines’ most important business partner in the 21st
century.
A growing call among Filipino businessmen for trade talks
with Europe seems to be driving home the point that Europe matters to the
Philippines in a big way. This welcome focus comes five years after the
European Union (EU), the 27 nation common market that is essentially today's
Europe, became the Philippines’ largest export destination, displacing the
USA.
Europe is unquestionably vital to the Philippines.
It’s this country’s largest export market (over 20 percent
of total exports); its largest foreign investor; its third largest trading
partner and its fifth largest import source. As world leader in the sustainable
or “green” movement, Europe has both the experience and technologies such as
“smart grids” that can assist the Philippines do more with what it has while
protecting the environment.
The EU is the Philippines ’ only major trading
partner that has had a consistently negative balance of trade with the Philippines
over the past few years, which is both heartening and surprising.
In 2009, Philippine exports to the EU came to $8.4 billion
as against imports of $3.7 billion for a positive trade balance of $4.7
billion. Last year, Philippine exports to the EU amounted to $7.9 billion with
imports at $5.4 billion.
Largest FDIs source
The EU was the largest source of FDIs into the Philippines
from 1990 to 2001. In 2006, the EU became the Philippines ’ largest single
investor, and accounted for 28 percent of all FDIs compared to 18 percent from
the USA
and four percent from Japan .
The Philippines, however, retains an unwelcome tag as a not
so favorable FDI destination due to perceptions about corruption, bureaucratic
red tape, an unpredictable policy and legal climate, deficient physical
infrastructure and inadequate human capital.
These drawbacks led to a further loss of FDI in 2010: net
FDIs fell to $1.71 billion from $1.96 billion in 2009. Worse, the low FDI helped
weaken Philippine competitiveness.
The International Finance Corporation (IFC), private sector
arm of the World Bank, believes more infrastructure spending and not redundant
tax perks should be prioritized if the Philippines is to secure more FDIs.
It said the Philippines
should focus on what investors really need: better infrastructure.
In 2008, the European Commission in the Philippines
proffered ways by which the Philippines
could take fuller advantage of trade and investment opportunities in the EU.
This list, which appears appropriate to this day, includes:
- Strengthen investments, especially domestic investments, in physical infrastructure (transport and energy, among others) and in human infrastructure (education and health).
- Improve the business climate through actions that uphold the rule of law, are predictable and transparent.
- Maintain and strengthen fiscal and monetary stability by setting a calm macroeconomic framework, improving government revenues and spending revenues wisely.
- Address poverty, create jobs and provide for basic human needs such as health and education.
A track record of
partnership and cooperation
Europe also matters because of its decades-long track record
of providing Official Development Assistance (ODA) that has helped hasten
Philippine development in many areas.
EU ODA to developing countries such as the Philippines
reached a historical high of $79 billion in 2010, making the EU the largest
donor in the world. From 2004 to 2010, the EU provided 57 percent of net ODA to
developing countries.
Despite the global financial crisis, 18 EU Member States
increased their aid volumes in 2010 while the EU has announced its
determination to maintain its collective ODA commitments in the years ahead.
The Philippines
has historically benefited from the EU’s largesse. The EU began providing
cooperation funding totaling $89.5 million from 2007 to 2010 through the
European Commission (EC) to strengthen health services, support the peace
process in Mindanao and provide trade-related technical assistance. This
brought the EU’s total cooperation funding for the Philippines since these
programs began in 1976 to over $1.5 billion.
From 1976, EC cooperation funding has focused on combating
poverty and raising standards of living of the poorest groups. Since 2005, this
funding has been expanded to include social services and sustainable
development.
EU funds coursed through the EC is, however only one part of
total EU cooperation with the Philippines .
From 1992 to 2004, the EC, the European Investment Bank and EU Member States
together lent $1.9 billion in ODA. This made the EU the Philippines ’
fourth largest ODA source.
As defined by the government, an ODA is a loan or a grant
administered to promote sustainable social and economic development in the Philippines . An
ODA must be contracted with a foreign government with whom the Philippines has
diplomatic, trade relations or bilateral agreements, or which is a member of
the United Nations, their agencies and international or multilateral lending
institutions.
Time to Act
The government has recently shown a renewed interest in
building increased trade with the EU. It is using a study conducted by the
Universal Access to Competitiveness and Trade (U-Act), a think tank affiliated
with the Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry (PCCI ),
as a guide during a consultation process that is expected to lead to
negotiations for a Free Trade Agreement (FTA) between the Philippines and the
EU.
“EU might no longer be interested in engaging the Philippines if
one country has already signed with them with the same market as ours,” he pointed
out.
ASEAN-EU FTA talks, however, have been in limbo since May
2009. Consequently, some ASEAN countries such as Indonesia , Singapore , Thailand and Vietnam decided
to begin bilateral talks with the EU on their own.
The study, entitled “Merits to Philippine Business of Having
a Bilateral Philippines-EU Free Trade Agreement (FTA),” noted that pursuing a
bilateral track with the EU would be beneficial to Philippine business.
It said the Philippine business “. . . cannot continue
losing out on trade and investment opportunities with the EU, especially when
projections indicate substantial Philippine gains from an FTA are forthcoming.”
More exports to
Europe needed
An urgent priority for the Philippines , and one that increased
trade can accomplish, is to arrest the disheartening annual drop in its exports
to the EU. Philippine EU exports have fallen every year since 2003: from $11.6
billion to $7.9 billion in 2010. And this when exports to the EU by the Philippines ’s ASE AN (Association of South East Asian Nations)
competitors are growing some five percent annually.
Hubert d’Aboville, President of the European Chamber of
Commerce of the Philippines (ECCP), believes a renewed focus on Europe could help reverse the downward trend in
Philippine exports.
“This would entail the tough task to expand the product
range from the monoculture of electronics and semiconductors to more manufactured
products, processed food and services . . . more decisive steps have to be made
to increase the visibility of the Philippines in Europe ,”
d’Aboville noted.
Among the long list of products the government believes have
a profitable future in the EU are seafood and marine products (especially
Mindanao tuna); agricultural products such as fresh fruits, bananas and
muscovado sugar; processed fruits such as mangoes, banana chips and pomelos;
coffee products; coconut-based products such as virgin coconut oil; soap and
perfume; handmade paper; natural rubber; oleochemicals; biofuels; jewelry and
furniture.
Services the Philippines
can provide include health and tourism and information and communications
technology (ICT). Skilled labor for the services sector is also needed by Europe .
This list jibes with what the EU has said it needs. Among
these are furnishings, processed foods, fruits, Business Process Outsourcing
(BPO), medical services, tourism, retirement and healthcare.
The EU in 2008 decided to assist Philippine exporters sell
more to it by setting aside a $9.5 million fund to help boost Philippine
exports to the EU. The fund assistance, which will end in 2012, aims to
increase Filipino compliance with the EU Technical Barriers to Trade and
Sanitary and Phytosanitary control requirements.
Europe matters in BPO
Europe matters for many other reasons that are in the
Philippines’ national interest. Europe is not only a market that absorbs over a
fifth of Philippine export products annually; it’s also a huge but largely
untapped market for Philippine service industries such as BPO and information
and communication technology (ICT).
A study conducted by the European IT-Service Center
Foundation (EITSC) discovered that only 1.2 percent of Europe’s share in the
BPO industry went to the Philippines in 2007 and that only 10 percent of local
BPO revenue came from European firm. These figures have not changed much over
the past three years.
EITSC is an initiative of ECCP, the German Development
Cooperation (GTZ) and the Asia-Europe Foundation of the Philippines to bridge
the eSourcing needs of Europe with the IT/BPO capabilities in the Philippines.
Team Europe, which consists of various private and
governmental organizations in the Philippines that promote the Philippines as
the offshoring destination of choice in Europe, believes the country has a
potential to secure a share of the $40 billion European outsourcing market.
To do this, however, means the Philippines must diversify
its clientele, which are mostly U.S. firms. Over 65 percent of local BPOs
service U.S.-based companies.
Team Europe says Europe recognizes the benefits of
offshoring to the Philippines. It’s eying the United Kingdom, the Netherlands,
Scandinavia and German-speaking countries as potential markets for Philippine
BPO firms.
These countries have a range of outsourcing needs that can
be met by Philippine offshoring companies, while several European companies are
looking to expand their offshore business here. Among the better known European
multinationals that now outsource their operations to the Philippines are Siemens,
Ericsson, Deutsche Bank, HSBC, Henkel, Shell and Nestlé.
The UK is expected to outsource $160 billion this year; Germany,
$125 billion; France, $92 billion; Italy, $50 billion and the Nordic countries;
$63 billion.
Team Europe informs European prospects about the
Philippines' capabilities and how they benefit from offshoring to the
Philippines. It leads an industry-wide effort to promote the Philippine
outsourcing industry to Europe.
Focusing more on Europe could further strengthen the
Philippines new-found position as the world’s call center capital. The
Philippines reached this rank in 2010 by dislodging India in number of jobs and
total revenues generated.
There were some 350,000 Filipino call center jobs in 2010
versus 330,000 in India. Philippines call center revenues came to $6.3 billion
as against India’s $5.9 billion in this year.
India, however, still reigns as top honcho in BPO by a huge
margin over the Philippines: $70 billion against $9 billion. This is partly due
to India’s significant presence in the UK, its former colonial master, and the
Philippines’ absence in this huge market.
In order to gain ground in call centers and BPO, Philippine
companies will have to promote themselves as an outsourcing destination since
European companies don’t know much about the Philippines’ BPO potential.
Henry Schumacher, ECCP Vice President for External Affairs,
said Philippine BPOs should aim to penetrate Europe’s markets to gain a truly
global reach.
“The Philippines has successfully invaded the U.S. but
Europe is a huge market. India is everywhere; the Philippines isn’t. We have to
go out and sell the Philippines as a good offshoring and outsourcing
destination,” he noted.
Learning from a Green
Europe
A new and green technology is now well on its way to making
Europe almost totally independent of fossil fuels by 2050. “Smart grid
technologies” will see dramatic reductions in Europe’s greenhouse gas (GhG)
emissions and the almost complete elimination of fossil fuels from its energy
portfolio.
This will be brought about by reducing losses in electricity
distribution networks through automation, and by encouraging consumers to cut
energy use by using “smart meters” that give more accurate and timely
information about power use.
Technologies that will require smart grids include wind and
solar power generation, electric vehicles and heat pumps. Smart grids will also
require the upgrading of transmission systems, distribution automation and
substation automation.
Smart metering systems are to be installed in 80 percent of
EU homes by 2020. Smart metering will make possible time-based tariffs and give
consumers information about their electricity use in real time so they can
promptly save energy.
Over the next 40 years, smart grids will transform European
energy networks, industry and society. In all, smart grids could save the EU
$76 billion every year.
While the Philippines does not have anything similar on its
drawing boards, smart grids are another example of European leadership in the
“green movement” still sweeping the globe.
Among today’s buzzwords that have crept into our
consciousness are sustainable development, sustainable energy, combating
climate change, carbon abatement and green buildings and in these, the EU is
the acknowledged world leader.
“Green” has found fertile ground in the EU and from here is
propagating worldwide. The Philippines
can learn from the experience of the EU in turning itself green.
Energy efficiency and
the EU
Among the plethora of green solutions, the EU sees energy
efficiency as the quickest, cheapest and most direct way to turn threats to the
security of its energy supply into real opportunities. With existing
technologies, the EU believes energy savings of up to 30 percent are now
feasible. The improved application of energy efficiency could also cut some 20
percent of GhG emissions in the EU.
For Europe , this process
began in 2006 when it launched its Energy Efficiency Watch Initiative. This
calls for the promotion of energy efficiency and knowledge sharing of good
policies within the EU. The overall objective is to promote energy efficiency
across the EU by analyzing Member States’ national energy efficiency
strategies, and highlighting good practice energy efficiency policies,
instruments and activities.
Member States are to achieve a nine percent reduction target
in end-use energy consumption by 2016. Their green targets: 20 percent energy
saved; 20 percent energy from renewable energy and 20 percent greenhouse gas
reduction by 2020.
ECCP is taking the lead in assisting the Philippines in
this green transformation. ECCP organized two major and well received “1st
Philippine Energy Efficiency Forum” in July and “The New Energy forum: A
Stakeholders’ Forum” in October.
It will hold another energy efficiency conference this year.
ECCP also launched the nationwide Energy Smart Program during the energy
efficiency forum.
The EU is also paying particular attention to the development
of wind energy in the Philippines ,
which has the potential to become the leading wind energy producer in Asia . A Danish company built the Philippines’ first wind
farm at Bangui, Ilocos Norte in 2005. The EU, by the way, is the world’s top
producer of wind energy.
Wind energy is expected to contribute some 400MW to the
country’s electricity grid within the next three years compared to 33MW today.
This marked growth in wind energy use is being driven by Renewable Energy Law
passed in 2007.
The law is drawing investments into the wind energy sector
and is telling investors there is a good return on investment to be made in
harnessing the wind to produce clean and renewable electricity.
The
Renewable Energy Law promotes the development, utilization and commercialization
of renewable sources of energy such as wind, solar and biomass. It establishes
a framework for the grant of fiscal and non-fiscal incentives to all renewable
energy activities and created the National Renewable Energy Board (NREB).
The
law also establishes a Renewable Energy Trust Fund to finance research,
development, demonstration and promotion of various renewable energy systems.
It seeks to increase the Philippines '
energy security and is a tool in reducing the dangerous impact of climate
change.
The
Renewable Energy Law is the product of 12 years of studies and research by
Philippine, European and other foreign experts in renewable energy sources.
Helping the Philippines fight climate
change
The
climate conference at Copenhagen, Denmark in December 2009, while not too
successful, did open the world’s eyes wider to the accelerated pace of climate
change and its dangers.
Of
particular importance to the Philippines was a report that the faster pace of
global warming has caused the world’s oceans to rise about 1-1/2 inches in the
past 12 years because 2.5 trillion tons of ice in Antarctica and Greenland had
melted far quicker than expected.
Accelerated
sea level rise is one of the most dangerous outcomes of global warming. With
growing portions of flood-prone Manila’s 39 square kilometer area already below
sea level, any sea level rise presents a clear threat to the city and its 1.7
million inhabitants. The extreme peril Manila faces from floods was painfully
driven home in September 2009 when tropical storm “Ondoy” flooded 80 percent of
the city in just a few hours.
Last
year, the World Bank issued a study identifying Manila as one of a number of
Asian cities in grave danger from natural calamities, including flooding,
triggered by climate change. The environmental group Greenpeace, on the other
hand, said a one meter rise in sea level resulting from melting polar ice caps
could put 64 of the Philippines’ 81 provinces at risk of being submerged.
The EU
continues to support the Philippines’ fight against climate change. In late
2010, the EU provided €69 million in development assistance over the next three
years to help the country meet its Millennium Development Goals.
About $17.6
million will go to climate change projects and the Mindanao peace process. This
grant brought to $1.5 billion total EU development aid to the Philippines
during the past 30 years.
“Silver aristocrats”
and “Best agers”
The Retirement and Healthcare Coalition, Inc. (RHC), an
organization consisting of ECCP; the American Chamber of Commerce of the
Philippines; the Korean Chamber of Commerce Philippines and the Japanese
Chamber of Commerce and Industry of the Philippines this April organized the 1st
Philippine Retirement and Healthcare Summit.
The summit sought to promote the Philippines as the
preferred international retirement destination by undertaking a combination of
measures among its stakeholders in government and the private sector.
Europe and its rapidly graying population have been
identified as one of the key markets for the Philippines’ retirement and
healthcare industry. RHC aims to promote and win recognition of the
Philippines’ value as a retirement haven, and as a center of excellence for
medical and managed care services for retirees worldwide.
RHC is promoting the “Long Stay Visitor Program” as a market
entry strategy to gain credibility and trust in the Philippines. The program
offers services along the line of community development, lifestyle and
healthcare.
Caring for retirees, most of whom are seniors in their 60s,
no longer consists of consigning retirees to the tender mercies of uncaring
(and probably abusive) staffs at “nursing homes.” What the RHC wants are fully
integrated retirement villages responsive to the unique needs and wants of retirees
and staffed by carefully trained, English-speaking Filipinos.
There is as yet no existing fully integrated retirement
village in the Philippines
as envisioned by the RHC, whose long-term commitment is to take care of foreign
seniors.
RHC has begun the process of creating consortia to build its
fully integrated retirement village and has begun investment promotion for this
groundbreaking project.
RHC is looking at five promising sites for its retirement
village: Dumaguete; Clark/Subic; Cebu ; Tagaytay/Nasugbu
and Metro Manila. RHC said it carefully selected these locations with respect
to proximity to medical care, wellness, sports and leisure facilities.
RHC is busily promoting the Philippines as a “long-stay
destination” to Europeans, especially those it describes as “Old Kids” and
“Best agers” (persons 50 years old and up).
Crowning RHC efforts will be establishing true retirement
villages in partnership with private companies. These villages will reflect
RHC’s unique view that retirement is a lifestyle and not real estate. The first
of these European lifestyle retirement villages is expected to be completed in
the next few years.
The Philippines has many of the key ingredients to
successfully attract local and international retirees, which are taken to mean
the “baby boomers” born from 1946 to 1964. Among these pluses are quality
healthcare, good infrastructure, service culture and a low cost of living.
Crucial for the Philippines’ success as an international
retirement destination, however, is developing a retirement and aged care model
appropriate to its values and culture, while providing lifestyle attractions.
RHC believes that community, lifestyle and healthcare are
the three crucial pull factors that, if addressed correctly, should succeed in
drawing tourists, long stay visitors, second homeowners and retirees to the
Philippines.
Growing
agribusinesses with the EU
Nestlé, Inc., a leader in agribusiness and one of Europe’s
leading local corporations, has an agronomy program that teaches Nestlé’s
sustainable farming system to Mindanao coffee farmers. Most of the country’s
coffee farms are located in Mindanao .
For the past 17 years, Nestlé’s Experimental &
Demonstration Farm (NEDF) in Tagum, Davao del Sur provides
technologically-advanced farming tools and methods to coffee farmers to ensure
the quality of coffee beans goes into its coffee brand, Nescafe. Some 10,000
coffee farmers, technicians and agricultural students have undergone training
at NEDF since it opened in 1994.
NEDF is the core of Nestlé’s agronomy program. Its goal is
to reduce the gap between the supply and demand for coffee beans by
spearheading research and training in coffee production.
By equipping coffee farmers with the proper knowledge, these
farmers stand a better chance of being more self-sufficient and competitive.
NEDF has distributed hundreds of thousands or coffee seeds and seedlings, which
have, in turn, generated thousands of jobs across the country.
NEDF's close coordination with the Nestlé R&D Center in
Tours, France ensures that Filipino farmers trained at NEDF have access to the
latest farming technologies, from coffee harvesting to processing methods.
At
NEDF, farmers are trained in the proper way of growing coffee, reinforcing the
importance of good crop management, and are provided with quality and
high-yielding Robusta coffee planting materials.
NEDF
also demonstrates how to go about the post-harvest treatment of the beans and
suggests what equipment to use. NEDF provides 80 percent of all Robusta cuttings
in the Philippines.
In 2003, Nestlé initiated another program that continues to
help farmers further increase their income by encouraging the planting of other
crops alongside coffee. Called the
Coffee-Based Sustainable Farming System, this program encourages farmers to
plant crops alongside coffee to gain additional income.
Nestlé is also establishing satellite buying stations in
areas with large concentrations of coffee farmers. The satellite buying
stations give farmers the option to sell directly to Nestlé without going
through a trader, ensuring farmers a fair market price for their produce.
ECCP and the FTA
Until the signing of the Partnership and Cooperation
Agreement (PCA) last year, bilateral relations between the Philippines and the EU
were guided by the 30-year old ASE AN-European
Community Cooperation Agreement. The age of this vital document, created when
Ferdinand Marcos was still President, was impetus enough for a new trade
agreement.
Present developments, however, also make necessary an
enhanced framework of relations between both sides. This new framework is the
PCA, which provides the legal basis for enhancing bilateral cooperation with
the EU in areas such as trade and investment and development cooperation.
The PCA will benefit the Philippines with the liberalization
of trade in goods and a significant liberalization of services. The Filipino
consumer benefits by having more product choices and can, therefore, derive
more value from his peso.
The Philippines
thus became the second ASEAN country after Indonesia to complete negotiations
for a PCA, which lasted from February 2009 to June 2010.
The Philippines '
interest in an FTA and its signing of the PCA are its clearest signals yet that
Europe matters to it, not only in trade and
business, but also in a range of other national concerns including improving
the environment, renewable energy, healthcare and human rights
An FTA is a legally binding agreement between two or more
countries that seeks to cut or remove obstacles to trade, and permit cross
border movement of goods and services between signatory countries.
A PCA is a pre-requisite deal for the Philippines to
qualify for the FTA. It is expected to enhance trade and investments
cooperation, economic and development cooperation and political cooperation
through policy dialogue and technical assistance. It also illustrates a shared
commitment to democracy and human rights.
ECCP will have a role to play in the negotiations leading to
the FTA.
During the business summit in Indonesia last May, ECCP and five
other European chambers of Commerce in ASE AN
jointly organized the “EU-ASEAN Business Council.”
The organization of the council is historic because it is
the first regional platform among European chambers of commerce in South East Asia . More important, however, is that the
council will also play a role in the establishment of EU FTAs with ASEAN
countries including the Philippines .
D’Aboville said the EU believes an FTA represents a huge
opportunity for every ASE AN member
state and is engaging in a sustained effort to broker FTAs between the EU and
ASEAN.
“The council is, therefore, a vital conduit for expanding
trade between ASEAN and the EU,” he noted.
The council has been identified as one of the seven key
results of the business summit, along with the proposed creation of an ASEAN
Economic Community by 2015 that will be patterned after the EU.
No comments:
Post a Comment