Philippines in strong position for AEC 2015: economist
>> Tuesday, July 28, 2015
BUSINESS AND TRADE
Carlito Dar
BAGUIO CITY
--Philippine industry stakeholders need not worry about the ASEAN Economic
Community (AEC) 2015 as the country’s economy is in good position in terms of
competitiveness.
So said economist
CielitoHabito, USAID Trade-Related Assistance for Development chief, during the
Department of Trade and Industry – led Industry Roadmap and AEC Localization
for Competitiveness: Cordillera Regional Roadshow at Baguio Country Club last week.
Habito said in terms
of income or output, the country’s 2014 GDP (Gross Domestic Product) of 6.1
percent was the fastest in ASEAN and second globally.
Other indicators of
sound Philippine economy, he said, are stable prices even after disasters, better job generation with unemployment down
to six percent and 1.05 million new jobs generated in the past year,
based on October 2014 labor force survey.
Habito said Cordillera is a relatively industrial region
with the industry sector (mainly in the Baguio Economic Zone) contributing half
of the Gross Regional Domestic Product or GRDP.
He noted Cordillera is
strong in agri-business (coffee and vegetable), eco-tourism, education
services, electronics, financial services, health care and wellness,
Information technology and IT enabled services, and mining.
Habito said AEC 2015 is not something to fear as
trade liberalization through Free Trade Area agreements has been ongoing with
99.6 % of all tariff lines already brought down to zero since 2010.
“December 31, 2015 is
not a doomsday but a mere target for 100 percent compliance; no drastic changes
will happen on January 1, 2016”, he said.
With AEC 2015, there
is more complementation, less competition and a wider market.
ASEAN comprises 600 million people and adding up the other
free-trade agreements the Philippines has entered, the market expands to 3.45
billion or around half of the world population.
The challenge now,
Habito said, is bringing in needed safeguard legal/policies and administrative
reforms; public investment on the infrastructure gaps especially in the energy,
transport and ICT sectors, as well as
the strengthening of the sector of health, education and human resource
development particularly on entrepreneurship.
Strengthening and
expanding the role of Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) and strengthening the
country’s climate change and disaster resiliency are also important, Habito
added.
He also outlined the
need of finding the strategic position in cross-border value chain/production
network; shifting business model to inclusive value chains; and the teaming-up
into cluster and unite to gain larger market opportunities.
The bottom line, he
said, is the need for people, the planet (environment) and profit to work harmoniously to help make inclusive
growth and sustainable development a reality.
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