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  1. #91

    Default Re: PH is now Asia's strongest-performing economy, says expert


    Quote Originally Posted by jack_bauer View Post
    ^Relax lang bro, kay wala pa ang ending sa 2012.. FDI is just one of the many factors of economic performance..

    ***TAYM SA, bro.. jan 2012 pman diay ni imo link?
    Mao jud na No. 1 Factor bro para ma minus2x ang Poverty .. ang export sector ang mabusog ana ang mga Oligarch ra ...

  2. #92

    Default Re: PH is now Asia's strongest-performing economy, says expert

    Quote Originally Posted by amingb View Post
    Mao jud na No. 1 Factor bro para ma minus2x ang Poverty .. ang export sector ang mabusog ana ang mga Oligarch ra ...
    Bisan pa ug December 2012 pana nga link bro .. mangiwit gihapon ta ... kay ang FDI inflow tua sa lain Asean country ... kay nindot ilaha pang goberno walay noynoying ....

  3. #93

    Default Re: PH is now Asia's strongest-performing economy, says expert

    bro, diay latest data from NEDA as og Aug. 15, 2012... mas promising ang figures diria..


    tan-awa ang surplus/deficit bro, gamay nlang..
    anf foreign financing ng deficit pero mas active ang domestic financing, meaning dako ug pag salig atong local banking sector and local business..

  4. #94

    Default Re: PH is now Asia's strongest-performing economy, says expert

    Quote Originally Posted by monochromatic View Post
    Ngano kaha kung naay good news, naa pud dayon mga mokontra?
    Natural aron mahibawan na kung kanang balita-a tinuod ba jud o dili.

    Atleast naay improvement gamay sa economy sa atong nation. Dle ba mo malipay anah?
    Short-term ra kaayo kag mind-set. The fact is that the Philippines stills at behind over the rest of East and Southeast Asian countries in terms of sustained economic growth and FDI inflows.

  5. #95

    Default Re: PH is now Asia's strongest-performing economy, says expert

    diay long term ug mga mindset ai...

    Confidence | Inquirer Opinion

    At the end of the day, Ayala Land’s move is a strong vote of confidence in the Aquino administration... The previous administration had tried several times to sell the FTI property, but no serious bid was offered. The business climate seems to be really changing for the better since the elections in 2010. Now, if the other big companies can be as optimistic as the Ayala group—and given the slew of positive developments under the present dispensation—perhaps the Philippines will truly shine in the global economic arena.

  6. #96

    Default Re: PH is now Asia's strongest-performing economy, says expert

    Quote Originally Posted by Joseph20102011 View Post
    Natural aron mahibawan na kung kanang balita-a tinuod ba jud o dili.



    Short-term ra kaayo kag mind-set. The fact is that the Philippines stills at behind over the rest of East and Southeast Asian countries in terms of sustained economic growth and FDI inflows.
    bro, aside from FDI unsa may dapat buhaton sa goberno? given the fact nga dili ma tanggal ang protectionist provision sa constitution?

  7. #97

    Default Re: PH is now Asia's strongest-performing economy, says expert

    Quote Originally Posted by jack_bauer View Post
    bro, aside from FDI unsa may dapat buhaton sa goberno? given the fact nga dili ma tanggal ang protectionist provision sa constitution?
    Reduce red tape and no other else. If they choose to retain the protectionist provisions of the 1987 constitution, nothing will happened with this country and the status-quo still rules.

  8. #98

    Default Re: PH is now Asia's strongest-performing economy, says expert

    Quote Originally Posted by Joseph20102011 View Post
    Reduce red tape and no other else. If they choose to retain the protectionist provisions of the 1987 constitution, nothing will happened with this country and the status-quo still rules.
    ngano naa may improvement karon, it goes to show that we can still work with in the limitations of our constitution... slowly but surely.. im sure your aware that China joined WTO much later than the Philippines.. and before sila ni open to global trade ilang gi cguro lig-on na ilang economic fundamentals..

    perhaps we can navigate success through the conservative way...

  9. #99

    Default Re: PH is now Asia's strongest-performing economy, says expert

    Quote Originally Posted by jack_bauer View Post
    ngano naa may improvement karon, it goes to show that we can still work with in the limitations of our constitution... slowly but surely.. im sure your aware that China joined WTO much later than the Philippines.. and before sila ni open to global trade ilang gi cguro lig-on na ilang economic fundamentals..
    WTO's membership by China way back 2001 was just an only confirmation that China is an open economy to the eyes of the rest of the world and way before 2001, China already has a more open economy than ours that is not being constricted by their constitution unlike us and by the way, our membership with WTO didn't gave a high and sustainable economic growth and development to our country as our economic policy makers and lawmakers who wanted to open our economy more for foreign trade and investment was constricted by the protectionist economic provisions of the 1987 constitution.

  10. #100

    Default Re: PH is now Asia's strongest-performing economy, says expert

    By the way, read this article:

    The link between economic growth and FDI inflows
    CROSSROADS (Toward Philippine Economic and Social Progress) By Gerardo P. Sicat (The Philippine Star) Updated August 15, 2012 12:00 AM Comments (0) View comments

    President Benigno Aquino wants more evidence before supporting the Enrile-Belmonte initiative to amend the restrictive economic provisions of the Constitution. In several columns, I have presented the case for these amendments.

    This time I will emphasize mainly country evidence, starting first from the simplest to the more complex. [Space limitations prevent elaboration on the references from the technical economic literature.]

    1. Hong Kong is the best example of a country with very few economic barriers to economic activity. Starting out as a poor territory, but with its seven million people today, its GDP is larger than ours and its per capita GDP is $36,160 or 16 times greater than ours.

    2. Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia, and Indonesia regulate FDIs but this is done by their laws and regulations passed by legislation, not by “constitutional” provisions. They also allow FDIs greater role in their economies than we do.

    3. Singapore, like Hong Kong, is a bastion of liberal economic policies even though the state plays a strong role in a few limited sectors. Its four million people enjoy standards of per capita GDP that is 21 times ours at $42,930.

    4. Thailand started its economic development program initially compared to ours, but today it has achieved a per capita GDP which is twice as ours. Its growth was fueled by open embrace of foreign direct investments in almost all areas of economic activity. Inflows of FDI have strengthened not only its foreign trade but also its domestic economy and benefited many Thai businesses.

    5. Malaysia’s industrialization program started one generation later than ours and welcomed FDIs. Today, Malaysia’s industrialization program is more sophisticated than ours. Its GDP per capita is almost four times ours.

    6. Indonesia’s industrial and economic policies were more restrictive than ours for several decades after independence. In 1987, the government adopted bold liberalization policies necessitated by political and economic crises. Even during its earlier years, some of Indonesia’s resource-based policies admitted more foreign investment participation. Its per capita GDP surpassed ours in the last decade.

    7. South Korea and Taiwan started with the same import substitution policies like us. In the 1960s and 1970s, their policies became market oriented as they opened their country to more FDIs. These FDIs fueled the expansion of these countries’ export booms of the 1970s which enabled them to further integrate their domestic economies with their export sectors.

    8. Vietnam’s recent economic resurgence is due mainly to the inflow of FDIs. The suddenness of the levels of inflows in Vietnam has burdened that country’s absorptive capacity for such change. The changes began exceeding Philippine performance in trade. Some FDIs to Vietnam were reflows of FDIs coming from the Philippines! Vietnam has no economic restrictions in its constitution to detract it from attracting FDIs but has local laws to define their FDI policies.

    9. China was an economic basket case under communism (although Mao consolidated political power over its wide and complex territory). Then, its new leader Deng Hsiao-Peng instituted reforms in the communist system in agriculture and, later, in industry which allowed market forces to dominate economic decisions. As China was opened to FDIs, first the Chinese ethnic investors (Hong Kong and Taiwan) came and then Japanese, US and European. The industrial resurgence of China from the 1980s was fueled by a very liberal and well-directed approach to use FDIs as a means of lifting China out of its long years of economic instability and uncertainty. It has succeeded.

    10. Before the 1990s, India had complicated regulations and policies that discouraged FDIs. Then it undertook macroeconomic reforms followed by liberalizing policies toward FDIs. It is still held back by many traditional restrictions, protection and political hindrances. But India’s steps to open its economy progressively toward FDIs have helped to invigorate its economy and add greater strength to its industrial sector. (India’s problems and solutions remind me a lot about the problems we have in the Philippines!)

    11. Faced with competition from Japan in the US market, many US manufacturing companies migrated to East Asian countries. GE established TV plants in 1968, followed by RCA and Zenith, Fairchild, Texas Instruments, National Semiconductor and Motorola through to 1973. Once these sites were integrated to serve world markets, the US firms upgraded their Asian subsidiaries while introducing new technology and upgrading output toward more complex systems, including design.

    12. Actually, Fairchild, Texas Instruments, Intel, and National Semiconductor came to the Philippines! Although we have retained some of these companies in the electronic sectors, they are all confined to the PEZA-zone and have essentially not fully integrated with many domestic economy firms. Philippine industrial problems are traceable to the restrictive economic provisions of BOI incentives which favor mainly local joint ventures.

    13. The FDI-related auto industry in Mexico used to have sub-scale plants catering only to their domestic market. Once GM made a decision to use Mexico as a production base for exporting car engines, other major foreign car and auto parts companies followed suit. Within five years, 320 domestic suppliers for car parts and accessories had sprung to serve the FDI-related exporters. Local suppliers and foreign investors introduced best practice and technical assistance so that six out of the largest 10 auto parts manufacturers were locally owned.

    14. Does the above remind us more about the success of Thailand compared to the relatively modest Philippine success in auto manufacturing?

    15. The link between FDIs and local firms in Malaysia in the machine tool industry are illustrative. At first, FDIs sub-contracted their simple needs to local firms, such as machining and stamping. Soon, such procurement relations moved on to precision tooling and parts fabrication. Of the nine Malaysian companies that were studied, seven firm owners were former FDI employees where they learned their production niche; and 10 percent of workers employed in the domestic firms were similarly former employees of FDIs.

    16. In South Korea and Taiwan, many domestic owners of electronic and other industries bought up the manufacturing operations were their former FDI firms as the FDIs decided to move up to the marketing and distribution end of the these industries. The process started first with sub-contracting to the local firms, the to manufacturing operations. Hence the ownership of FDIs changed hands to domestic entrepreneurs.

    (From this point on, the examples become more complex and only summarizations are made.).

    17. “Spillovers” is the terms used to describe these progressive activities that FDIs bring to domestic firms, institutions and factors. Spillovers are high and desirable because they raise total domestic output and improve technical and competitive abilities of domestic factors.

    18. FDIs have large impact on economic growth when host countries are in the same development stage. When countries with unique host country factors inhibit the inflow of FDIs or distort their contributions, the outcomes on growth are less definitive.

    19. An example of the uniquely different conditions that hamper such outcomes is the presence of the restrictive economic provisions in the Philippine Constitution that block salutary gains arising from FDIs.

    20. In general, who gains from reforms? When economic liberalization reforms became the issue in Taiwan, South Korea and Turkey, the biggest opposition was domestic industry. When the reforms took their effects, the biggest winners were the business interests then who were afraid to adopt the reforms.

    My email is: gpsicat@gmail.com. Vi it this site for more information, feedback and commentary: UP School of Economics

    The link between economic growth and FDI inflows - CROSSROADS (Toward Philippine Economic and Social Progress) By Gerardo P. Sicat - The Philippine Star » News » Business

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