Ernesto Pernia said that when he was given an initial draft of
an updated "foreign negative list", he sent it back for
amendment because it was "puny".
"I want a more aggressive liberalization," Pernia told reporters
on the sidelines of a business forum organized by foreign
business chambers.
The Philippines is one of Asia's fastest growing economies but
it lags regional peers in terms of attracting foreign direct
investment because of foreign ownership restrictions, high power
costs and poor infrastructure.
Pernia said that among the sectors and activities targeted for
opening or further opening were the practice of all professions,
retail trade enterprises, ownership and management of public
utilities and contracts for construction.
Since coming to power in June 2016, President Rodrigo Duterte
has vowed to open up the economy and liberalize sectors such as
energy, power and telecoms to make the country more competitive
and give Filipinos better services and lives.
In terms of openness to foreign investment, "we have to be at
par with other countries, no choice, otherwise we will continue
to be left behind," Pernia said.
Foreign direct investment hit a record $7.9 billion in 2016,
central bank data showed, but the figure pales in comparison
with those it has for Vietnam ($12.6 billion) Malaysia ($13.5
billion) and Singapore ($61 billion).
Investors have long been frustrated at being shut out of some
sectors in a market of more than 100 million Filipinos, either
squeezed by local monopolies or regulations that bar or limit
foreign ownership in certain activities.
"The key point is how quickly the new administration is going to
proceed with its stated intention to remove restrictions on
foreign direct investment," Julian Payne, president of the
Canadian Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines told reporters.
"You want to at least have the ASEAN average (of FDI flows) and
we still got a long way to go," Payne said.
(Reporting by Karen Lema; Editing by Richard Borsuk)
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