March
10, 2004
Cebu’s economy ‘faring better’
than the country
By Karen M. Flores
SPEAKERS
and reactors to the morning session of the Sun.Star
Economic Forum 2004 Tuesday sang Cebu’s praises
as a haven for investors and tourists.
Rex
Drilon, who was with Cebu Holdings Inc. before he became
chief operating officer of Ortigas and Co., announced
to participants how “clean” the Cebu City
Government is.
“In
my four years here, I never had to bribe anyone to get
anything done,” said Drilon, a panelist to the
presentation of Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
Chairperson Lilia R. Bautista.
For
his part, Dr. Vicente B. Valdepeñas Jr., a member
of the monetary board of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas
who spoke during the first session, noted Cebu’s
international reputation for its “safe streets”
compared to Manila. |
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| ECONOMIC
FORUM. Atty. Lilia R. Bautista (center), chairperson
of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), answers
a question from the audience in reaction to her speech
on investments strategies and business outlook for 2004
during Tuesday's Sun.Star Economic Forum. (Sun.Star Foto/Arni
Aclao) |
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Other
than reputation, however, both Bautista and Valdepeñas presented
figures to show how Cebu has been faring better than the rest of
the country.
The
nationwide increase in the number of new corporations registered
from 2002 to 2003 was 0.57 percent while in Cebu, the figure was
17.46 percent, Bautista said in her presentation.
Cebu
center
Annual
exports from 1998 to 2002, meanwhile, steadily increased from $2.036
million to $3.108 million.
In
the regional scene, Central Visayas is now the fourth
largest economy in the country, next to the National
Capital Region, Southern Tagalog and Central Luzon.
With the employment opportunities and the quality of
life here, Drilon noted that the per capita income in
Cebu is 2.5 times bigger than the national figure.
At
an estimated $2,500, Cebu’s per capita income
is even bigger than Thailand and “almost as high”
as that of Malaysia.
He
also pointed out that there are at least 60 banks in
Cebu and 1,500 hectares of business parks and economic
zones scattered all over the island.
Moreover,
Drilon said the island has been “hardly tarnished
by the reputation of the wild, wild east” that
has bugged the country and even this region of Asia
what with reports of terrorism. |
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“Why
invest in Cebu? Because it’s the center of the universe,”
he told forum participants, who laughed at this comment.
Drilon
explained that Cebu is within four hours of “any major city
in Asia,” which makes it a convenient stop and area for business
transactions.
Legislated wage cuts jobs
By Cherry Ann T. Lim
BUSINESSMEN
in Cebu backed the central bank’s move to stabilize the peso
and voiced support for the scrapping of the minimum wage law, but
said these were not enough to bring investors back to the country
and help the economy grow.
“I
never believed in minimum wage laws, especially for economies with
rapid population growth,” said Dr. Vicente Valdepeñas
Jr., member of the Monetary Board, the policy-making body of the
Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), Tuesday during the Sun.Star Economic
Forum 2004 at Waterfront Cebu City Hotel.
He
said the government doesn’t know enough about productivity
in factories to determine wages and would be better off following
the examples of Thailand and Malaysia, which have no minimum wage
laws but determine their wages through collective bargaining agreements.
Besides,
“the vast majority of manufacturers (in the Philippines) don’t
comply with the (minimum wage) law,” he said.
On
the sidelines of the forum, Glenn Westerman, president and chief
executive of Lexmark International (Phils.) Inc., said he was for
the scrapping of the minimum wage law.
“Legislating
minimum wage is the way to lose jobs,” he told Sun.Star.
Doesn’t
help
According
to Wester-man, also the immediate past president of the American
Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines in Cebu, that law applies
to unskilled labor, a segment in which the Philippines is not competitive
against China, Vietnam and Indonesia.
“Your
regulating unskilled labor doesn’t help,” he said.
If
the Philippines wanted its economy to grow, the better strategy,
he said, was for government to help its citizens “move up
the value ladder.”
Enabling
Filipinos to do high-skilled work would allow them to command better
salaries that they could use to buy cars and houses, which would
spur the economy.
Local
businessmen have long advocated more flexibility in the wage rates,
saying it was better to pay low wages and save jobs than to pay
high legislated wages and discourage employment.
This
is why the Cebu Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Cebu-Gifts, Toys
and Housewares, Philexport-Cebu, Cebu Furniture Industries Foundation
Inc., Mandaue Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Fashion Accessories
Manufacturers and Exporters Foundation, and Cebu Business Club last
year voiced their support for Republic Act 9178, which exempts barangay
micro business enterprises from income taxes and the minimum wage.
During
the forum, Valdepeñas also said the Bangko Sentral was “managing
the peso-dollar rate” because it was part of its obligation
as a member of the International Monetary Fund to manage volatility
in the exchange rate.
The
peso has been hitting its record low of 56.35 to the dollar in recent
days amid political uncertainty ahead of the May presidential election.
This
was his response to the question by Philippine National Bank chairman
Francisco Dizon on why the BSP increased the bank reserve requirements
by two percent, siphoning off P30 billion from the banking system,
instead of just letting the peso fall and making the exporters happy.
Hardest
hit
Valdepeñas
said it was the national government that would be hardest hit by
a peso depreciation because unlike exporters, it doesn’t earn
in dollars but it borrows overseas in dollars.
A
weak peso would mean it would have to use more pesos to pay for
its dollar loans.
Part
of the problem, he said, is that the Bureau of Internal Revenue
(BIR) collects only half of the collectible taxes because there
is “a lot of cheating going on in this country.”
If
the BIR could collect enough, the national government wouldn’t
have to borrow overseas to fund its budgetary requirements.
As
it is, every P1 depreciation results in a P300-million increase
in the budgetary deficit for the national government.
Lexmark’s
Westerman agreed on the need to have a stable foreign exchange.
He
said a peso depreciation was favorable to exporters and foreign
investors in the Philippines, like Lexmark, but it affects the employees,
who earn in pesos, because it “lowers their standard of living.”
When
the peso goes down, prices of basic commodities go up because many
things, like petroleum and other products, are imported.
The
way to grow the economy, he said, was to keep the peso stable and
to keep the government stable.
Marilou
Ordoñez, immediate past president of the Cebu Travel and
Tours Association, said the weak peso was good for inbound travel,
but not for outbound travel, which is by far getting much more business
than inbound.
Despite
the currency advantage, which tourists exploit to shop for cheap
brand-name clothes in the Philippines, the country has still not
been getting that many foreign tourists, she said, because of the
bad publicity it is always getting.
Warning
Anastacio
Muntuerto Jr., former president of the Cebu Chamber of Commerce
and Industry, said the weakening peso should be a warning to exporters
not to rely so much on the US economy.
He
said the US dollar was projected to devalue further and the peso
would suffer “because we are pegged to the dollar.”
The
United States and Japan are the major buyers of Philippine exports.
Muntuerto
said the US was currently suffering from excess capacity so a deflationary
trend could be expected.
“Right
now, their personal consumption is okay. That is driving the US
economy. But what if it will drop if unemployment goes up?”
he said.
March
9 ,
2004
Forum highlights Cebu’s
soaring investments
SOARING
figures in new investments and exports in Cebu some 15 years since
“Ceboom” and Region 7’s role in the country’s
economy are among the topics in tomorrow’s Sun.Star Economic
Forum 2004.
Securities
and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chairperson Lilia R. Bautista will
also include in her presentation a talk on the national economy
pictured as returning to its health and the future of information
technology.
The
forum will be held from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Arctic Hall of
the Waterfront Cebu City Hotel.
Bautista
will speak second in the day-long forum that carries the theme “Economic
opportunities and challenges in times of political and global uncertainty.”
Her
topic is on investment strategies and business outlook for the year.
Although
her presentation focuses mainly on the bigger picture, Bautista
is expected to cite figures that highlight the importance of investments
in Cebu and the island’s economic performance in the national
scene.
While
improvement were slight in some national figures, like in new investments,
Cebu registered growth that more than dwarfed the national average.
The
three other presentors in the four sessions in tomorrow’s
forum are Dr. Vicente B. Valdepeñas Jr. of the monetary board
of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (drivers for economic growth
in the next two years), Noel M. Mendoza, president of IBM Solutions
Delivery (new developments and trends in global outsourcing), and
Jesus C. Romero, vice president of GlobeQuest (new developments
and trends in broadband communications). KMF
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