Tuesday, May 27, 2014

...the Manila World Economic Forum impressions

‘It’s great to be here in the Philippines’


By Doris C. Dumlao
Philippine Daily Inquirer


Philippine President Benigno Aquino III delivers his speech at the opening of the two-day World Economic Forum on Asia in May 22, 2014, at the financial district of Makati city east of Manila, Philippines. The Philippines’ successful hosting of the World Economic Forum on East Asia last week opened the world’s eyes to the country’s renaissance amid challenging global and regional developments. AP Photo/Bullit Marquez

(First of two parts)
 
MANILA, Philippines—The Philippines’ successful hosting of the World Economic Forum (WEF) on East Asia last week opened the world’s eyes to the country’s renaissance amid challenging global and regional developments and at the same time raised hopes that Filipino creativity and youth dynamism would be the salvation of a nation weary of boom-bust cycles.
 
President Aquino took advantage of the event to highlight the country’s economic turnaround anchored on governance reforms as well as the nation’s resilience following the devastation caused by Typhoon Yolanda (international name: Haiyan). Aquino was also a diplomatic host and avoided talking about the country’s territorial dispute with China.
 
Territorial disputes were brought to the fore when Vietnam’s Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung—one of the heads of state who attended the WEF summit—gave a fiery speech against China’s territorial aggression during the opening plenary. After the emotional speech, WEF founder and executive chair Klaus Schwab had to immediately clarify that the WEF was a neutral platform and appealed to the parties to discuss peaceful solutions.
 
Instead of discussing China, Aquino dwelt more on how reforms were bearing fruit and benefiting ordinary Filipinos. He also spoke about the momentum being “irreversible,” to allay concerns that governance reforms would be put in jeopardy when his term ends in 2016.
 
‘PH has got it right’
 
“The key takeaway for the Philippines is a very strong articulation of the case for the Philippines. I myself am a longtime observer of the Philippines and aware of sometimes the weariness and skepticism due to many rounds the country had gone through of what seemed like a revival but were frustrated by politics one thing or another,” said John Pang, a visiting scholar from New York University and the chair of WEF’s Global Advisory Council on Southeast Asia. “Despite the natural disasters, it has really got it right,” Pang said.
 
“There’s a very strong sense that the Philippines is on track. It’s back and there’s a lot to look forward to. I think that it has managed to communicate to the world how the fundamentals work and how these fundamental advantages can be sustained,” he added.
 
Pang, a Malaysian academic and management consultant, has spent a lot of time looking at Southeast Asian economies as founder and former head of CIMB Asean Research Institute Ltd., which was created by the CIMB group as an independent research institute to further the integration agenda of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.
 
“It’s great to be here in the Philippines at a time when the level of self-confidence and hope is so high. Understandably, this year’s East Asia Summit reflects the same exuberance and high spirits. But of course, there’s a lot more hard work to be done both on the public and private sectors,” added Malaysian Karim Raslan, chief executive officer of KRA Group, a Southeast Asian public affairs consulting firm specializing in stakeholder relations, political risk and business advisory.
 
Raslan, who was among the panelists at the session “Philippines: The Next Asian Miracle,” had the most memorable line in that session when he said Aquino had a “charisma deficit” but noted that he had “delivered” anyway. For such a leader, Raslan said one six-year term may not be enough and urged the current regime to use its political capital to “change the rulebook.”
 
For Pang, the Philippines had done a “tremendous” job hosting the East Asia Summit. The welcome reception hosted by the Ayala group on Wednesday night, he said, was “by any standard, quite a show and spirit of organization.”
Best of Filipino talent
 
The Ayala group’s reception for WEF delegates at the Ayala Triangle featured the best of Filipino talent through traditional dance numbers, a fashion show and a mini-concert by Lani Misalucha who wowed the audience, especially the foreigners who watched her for the first time. It also featured Filipino creativity by featuring furniture pieces proudly made in the Philippines.
 
Gary Valenciano and Jed Madela, on the other hand, top-billed the cultural show hosted by Aquino at the Philippine International Convention Center on Thursday night.
 
So-Young Kang, founder and chief executive officer of Singapore-based transformation design firm Awaken Group and part of WEF’s Young Global Leader (YGL) community, said she was “highly impressed” by the quality of people from the local service industry as well as the mindset of the young Filipinos she interacted with at the forum.
 
Indeed, what left a lasting impression on the foreign delegates who attended the three-day summit was the people: the high quality of Filipino talent and the growing mass of young people who are eager to make a difference and cement the country’s gains.
 
After the main event in Metro Manila, the US-educated Kang was among those who flew to Mactan, Cebu, to attend the YGL-led side summit Open Collaboration with East Asia New Champions 2014 (OCEAN14) at Movenpick Hotel.
“Overall, if I include WEF and also OCEAN14, I think my No. 1 takeaway is that Filipino people are so nice, so service-oriented,” Kang said.
Guillermo Luz, private sector cochair of the National Competitiveness Council, said that from the start of the conference planning, the Philippine team felt it was important to highlight the creativity of Filipinos.
 
“The Philippines of course, that’s the storyline—big turnaround since the new administration.
There’s no question in anyone’s mind that governance was a big factor behind it and they can see the results in terms of the economy growing at 7 percent, the improvement in competitiveness ranking and investment grade,” Luz said.
 
‘One of the best’ WEF summits
 
But on top of these, Luz said this summit also showed Filipino organizational skills in working with the WEF and likewise manifested creativity as a people.
 
Because most of the events during the three-day East Asia Summit were within the Makati central business district, heavy traffic in the metropolis was not much of an issue, at least for the participants. To ensure seamless transfer to the cultural show held at PICC, there were lanes dedicated to the shuttles from Makati City.
 
“They (delegates) were agog over the music, the passion, the entertainment part that showed off the Filipino creativity. Maybe what they don’t know is even the furniture placement around WEF are Filipino-made including (the creations of) Kenneth Cobonpue,” Luz said, noting the furniture pieces that were strategically placed in the lounge where bilateral meetings took place.
 
He added that some foreign delegates and East Asia Summit veterans had even said that the meeting in the Philippines was “one of the best” WEF East Asia Summits they had ever attended.
Over 600 top leaders in business, policymaking, media, academia and civil society from 30 different countries gathered in Metro Manila for three days of discussions on key global, regional and industry agendas most relevant to East Asia.
 
Issues linked to the upcoming integration of 10 member-states of Asean into a unified Asean Economic Community (AEC) by 2015 cornered much of the discussions inside and outside the formal sessions alongside key challenges such as inclusive growth, infrastructure backlog, skills gap and food security.
 
Hope for the country
 
As the country seeks new legs to sustain its economic growth, proponents of the so-called creative economy championed by British author and professor John Howkins—who first published a book on how to turn ideas into money in 2001—hope to see this segment playing a bigger role in the Philippine economy.
 
The creative economy comprises advertising, architecture, art, crafts, design, fashion, film, music, performing arts, publishing, R&D (research and development), software, toys and games, TV and radio and video games where Filipinos naturally excel in.
 
Filipino youth dynamism also left a good impression among foreign delegates.
 
With a population of some 100 million and average age of 23, the young were an integral part of the East Asia conversations and the young Filipino delegates—especially the social entrepreneurs and advocates of different causes—were great ambassadors for the Philippines.
 
(Editor’s Note: The author is a member of WEF’s Young Global Leaders Class of 2014).


Hosting the World Economic Forum: Is the Philippines the next tiger economy?


May 26, 2014 10:56am

 


With our country emerging as one of the fastest growing economies in the world, it should come as no surprise that Manila was chosen to host the 2014 World Economic Forum (WEF) on East Asia. As the new toast of the town among the global business elite, the Philippines -- along the likes of Mexico – has transformed into one of the most promising emerging markets in the early-21st century.

Meanwhile, the giant economies of China, Brazil, Russia, and India have been struggling with varying forms of “middle income trap”, as inflation, slowing growth, and policy paralysis undermine decades of robust economic expansion. In turn, the Philippines has managed to amass huge foreign exchange reserves and score above-average growth rates with relatively low inflation and interest rates.

Under the stewardship of the Aquino administration, there has been greater commitment to “good governance”, as exemplified by the ongoing anti-corruption initiatives and investigations. Host to about $300 billion in untapped mineral reserves, Mindanao is poised to benefit from large-scale foreign investments amid an increasingly promising peace process, which has paved the way for the establishment of the Bangsamoro state. No wonder, given our country’s youthful population, natural resources, myriad of tourist attractions, and huge reserve of skilled labor, it has become fashionable these days to talk about the Philippines as the new tiger economy of Asia.

In conjunction with the WEF, I had the privilege to join a distinguished panel of speakers in the 2014 Bloomberg Leadership Forum, in partnership with the Department of Finance (DOF), where we extensively discussed two inter-related questions of utmost significance: Whether the Philippines’ recent economic boom is sustainable, and whether it is poised to become a new tiger economy.
From our exchanges, it was quite evident that the panelists, featuring leading businessmen, policy-makers, and bankers in the region, more or less agreed on one thing: The Philippines suffers from an “infrastructure deficit”, which could seriously undermine the country’s long-term development trajectory. In addition, a more careful look at the Philippines’ recent economic growth also suggests that our biggest problem is that our growth is not trickling down to the greater population. In this sense, our challenge is not only to sustain high growth rates, but to ensure that our growth is meaningful and consequential to the greater population.

The Real Challenge

Despite years of robust economic expansion, the Philippines continues to suffer from a glaring absence of inclusive growth. Poverty and unemployment figures have hardly changed, while inequality is intensifying. Few major businesses swallow newly-generated growth, while the majority of the population is yet to benefit from the recent economic boom.

Much of our recent growth has been anchored by real estate expansion and low- to medium-end services. Hard-earned remittances from abroad have fuelled domestic consumption. In light of the continuing failure of our land reform program, rural poverty has forced millions of our citizens to search for better opportunities in increasingly congested urban centers, which provide cheap labour for few major conglomerates. Due to massive annual debt-payment (about 20% of our national budget in recent decades) and low tax-collection rates, the Philippine government still has one of the lowest spending rates on education and health in the developing world. Widespread corruption only compounds the situation.

In contrast, the tiger economies of Asia (South Korea and Taiwan) largely relied on successful land-reform, export-oriented manufacturing, and domestic capital to fuel decades of sustained economic expansion. Unless we make our growth more inclusive, there is a high probability that the Philippines will lose economic momentum in the medium- to long-run.

The Infrastructure Imperative

Developments in neighboring Southeast Asian countries have placed the Philippines in a more positive light. Thailand has been engulfed by a vicious political crisis, and the recent establishment of a military government has drawn international criticism and widespread opposition at home. In Vietnam, anti-China protests turned into a massive destruction of industrial plants owned by China and Taiwan, precipitating the exodus of thousands of Chinese citizens. Indonesia, in turn, has drawn huge criticism for imposing new protectionist measures against foreign investments, especially in the lucrative mining sector.

As the Philippines packages itself as an attractive investment destination in a highly competitive neighborhood, it seems quite scandalous that we continue to have one of the world’s worst airports. Due to legal squabbling, our government has struggled to efficiently transfer international flights to alternative sites. Our infrastructure spending is among the lowest in Asia, dwarfed by comparable economies such as Indonesia. The Aquino administration is set to double infrastructure spending, but it is yet to finalize a single Private-Public-Partnership (PPP) project, and the recent corruption scandals will further complicate budget-allocation for and implementation of strategic infrastructure projects.

Our transportation and communications infrastructure are highly underdeveloped. Commuting is a daily struggle for millions of ordinary Filipinos, while top government officials and businessmen benefit from convenient private transport. The internet speed in the Philippines, meanwhile, is among the slowest in Asia, while few companies make huge profits in a tightly-contested market.
 
Attracting high-quality foreign investment is crucial to our national development, since global companies have the resources and technology to turbo-charge industrialization and provide well-paying employment opportunities for the greater majority of the population. The Philippines has caught the attention of the international community, but it will continue to struggle to attract foreign direct investments unless it creates a robust physical infrastructure and a more stable regulatory environment. And this will require a committed and visionary leadership well beyond the current administration’s term.

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Richard Javad Heydarian teaches political science and international relations at the Ateneo De Manila University, and is a columnist for “Asia Times” and “The Huffington Post.” As a foreign affairs specialist, he has regularly presented at varying local and international conferences and panel discussions, and been interviewed by leading media outlets such as Aljazeera, BBC, Bloomberg, CCTV, The New York Times, NPR, among other publications. He can be reached at jrheydarian@gmail.com

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