Oligopolies stall Philippines development; more FDI needed – Salceda
(The Philippine Star )
- June 14, 2021 - 12:00am
MANILA, Philippines — The Philippines remains a laggard among its Asian neighbors, partly because of the influence oligopolies have over practically all administrations and, as such, local tycoons’ businesses thrive and deprive the country of much-needed foreign direct investments.
This was the assessment made recently by Albay Rep.
Joey Salceda on the state of economic affairs in the country, in a recent
digital forum sponsored by the Department of the Interior and Local Government
(DILG).
“Operating as monopolies and oligopolies, the
corporate conglomerates find it convenient to restrict production and
investment below the competitive level,” the economist lawmaker who chairs the
House ways and means committee said.
An oligopoly exists when a market or industry is
dominated by a small group of large producers and sellers.
Citing the country’s few FDI, Salceda explained
that foreign investors’ “willingness to invest” is “inhibited by their
concentrated ownership structure and their uncertainties about the stability
and duration of government favoritism.”
The DILG-led webinar sessions are held in support
of Resolution of Both Houses 2 (RBH 2), authored by Speaker Lord Allan Velasco,
which seeks to open up the country to more foreign investors by amending
restrictive economic provisions in the Constitution.
Asked about the impact of opening the economy on
the micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs), Salceda said more FDI should
benefit market competition.
“FDI restrictions lead to lack of competition in
the country which increases oligopolistic power and reduces the need to invest.
As a result, oligopolies are the ones benefitting from profits, influence law,
and prevent foreign competitions to enter the Philippines,” he said.
Salceda lamented that while the country’s
post-Marcos Constitution made sure dictatorships will never see the light of
day again, its very rigid protectionist economic policies allowed domestic
industries to be controlled by oligopolies.
“In trying to be nationalistic with our
Constitution, we have ironically fattened our domestic oligopolies, at the
expense of the people. Shamefully, and once again, we are the most
oligopolistic market in the region,” he said.
Seeking to correct this is what moved the House to
approve RBH 2 on third and final reading last June 1. It is now pending before
the Senate.
Ako Bicol party-list Rep. Alfredo Garbin Jr., who
heads the House committee on constitutional amendments, remarked on
Independence Day last Saturday that Filipinos should be “free” from the
“economic chains” in the 1987 Constitution.
“Twenty (20) years of the 21st Century have passed
and we are realizing now that we cannot prosper in the remaining decades of
this 21st Century if we keep ourselves chained to these restrictive economic
provisions,” said Garbin as he urged the Senate to act on RBH 2.
https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2021/06/14/2105309/oligopolies-stall-philippines-development-more-fdi-needed-salceda?fbclid=IwAR28X0gIZ1b6NnwJbrv0u1lVii2gdWYVcT4AxylF5amRtGNE6gRPd4H79vQ
No comments:
Post a Comment