Gov’t To Ease Investment Limits (Bloomberg)

The Philippine government plans to propose legislative measures to ease curbs on foreign direct investments and help reduce unemployment, Economic Planning Secretary Arsenio Balisacan said.

Discussions with lawmakers are taking place on ways to ease foreign-ownership limits in areas such as utilities, trade and education, and loosen rules for foreigners to engage in professions including medicine and accounting, Balisacan said in an interview in his office in Manila yesterday.

“Many of these restrictions are out of place, out of context,” Balisacan said. “The intention is to improve the investment climate. We want to make the economy more efficient and create more jobs.”

President Benigno Aquino is seeking more overseas investments that will reduce the nation’s dependence on remittances and lower Asia’s second-highest unemployment rate. The government plans to double its job creation target to at least 2 million a year, Balisacan said.

Investment pledges climbed to a record $15.9 billion last year, Philippine Trade Secretary Gregory Domingo said last month, as Japanese companies including Murata Manufacturing Co. boosted expansion plans. The nation’s jobless rate of 6.8 percent was the highest in the region after New Zealand’s 6.9 percent, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

The government is also studying looser restrictions on aviation and may allow foreign airlines greater access to boost tourism, Balisacan said. The review on ownership curbs won’t include areas restricted by the Constitution, Finance Secretary Cesar Purisima said in a Feb. 19 e-mail.

The economy grew 6.8 percent last quarter, beating expansions in Malaysia and Indonesia and helping propel the peso to a near five-year high in February. The Philippine Stock Exchange Index surged to a record last week, and net portfolio inflows were almost six times more in January from December.

Last year, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas announced limits on lenders’ currency forward positions, banned overseas funds from special accounts and expanded monitoring of banks’ real-estate exposure as it stepped up efforts to curb capital inflows. It reduced the rate on special deposit accounts in January while holding its benchmark interest rate at a record-low 3.5 percent.

Original Source: www.mb.com.ph