HomeForexApproved foreign investments lowest in more than a year

Approved foreign investments lowest in more than a year

BUILDINGS are seen in Bonifacio Global City, Taguig City, Feb. 7, 2025. — PHILIPPINE STAR/NOEL B. PABALATE

By Pierce Oel A. Montalvo, Researcher

APPROVED foreign investments in the Philippines slumped further by 82% in the first quarter to the lowest in one-and-a-half years, according to the local statistics agency, as US President Donald J. Trump tries to undo decades of global economic integration through his sweeping tariff increases.

Foreign investment commitments approved by the country’s investment promotion agencies plunged to P27.99 billion from P155.26 billion a year earlier, according to data from the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) posted on its website on Thursday.

This was also 51.5% lower than a quarter earlier and the lowest since the P27.46 billion logged in the third quarter of 2023.

“The main reasons are the geopolitical uncertainties and trade disruptions caused by Trump’s tariffs,” Calixto V. Chikiamco, president at Manila-based Foundation for Economic Freedom, said in a Viber message.

“These factors are aggravating the already dire unfavorable climate for foreign investments, from high food inflation to lack of infrastructure and internal political divisions,” he added.

While Mr. Trump’s announcement of sweeping reciprocal tariffs on US trade partners did not come until April, he had threatened to increase duties during his campaign last year.

He later suspended these tariffs for 90 days starting April 9, imposing a 10% base tariff instead until July, pending negotiations.

South Korea was the leading source of foreign investment pledges, with commitments hitting P12.36 billion or 44.2% of the total. The US followed with P3.08 billion (11%) and China with P2.88 billion (10.3%).

Real estate activities attracted the biggest share of foreign investments at P10.79 billion (38.5%), followed by manufacturing at P6.14 billion (21.9%) and administrative and support services at P5.35 billion (19.1%).

The impact of lower investment pledges on Philippine economic growth would be limited, Mr. Chikiamco said, noting how the economy continues to rely on consumption and government spending rather than investment.

Economic growth in the first quarter was slower than expected at 5.4%, below the government’s 6-8% target for the year.

The Philippine Economic Zone Authority approved P17.85 billion in foreign investments, accounting for 63.8% of the total. The Board of Investments (BoI) came in second with P7.29 billion or 26% of the total, followed by the Bases Conversion and Development Authority with P1.91 billion and the Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority with P476.95 million.

Central Luzon had 53.3% of total foreign investment commitments at P14.9 billion, followed by Metro Manila at P6.78 billion and the Calabarzon (Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, Rizal and Quezon) Region with P3.95 billion.

Foreign and local investments pledged during the quarter are expected to generate 31,848 jobs once the projects are realized.

On the other hand, investment pledges from Filipino nationals fell 8.4% to P153.94 billion in the first quarter, the PSA said.

Mr. Chikiamco said the local political situation could affect foreign investment pledges in the next quarters.

Investors would want to know “whether President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. has enough political capital, given the results of the midterms, to push for more economic reforms in the remaining years of his term,” he added.

He said the state should liberalize foreign investment laws, expand public-private partnerships in infrastructure and reform education to boost workforce quality to counter the foreign investment decline.

It should also boost farm output to lower food prices and ease wage pressures, modernize labor rules and pursue free trade deals with the European Union, Canada and the US while seeking membership in the Japan-led Comprehensive and Progressive Free Trade Agreement for Transpacific Partnership, he added.

PSA data on foreign investment pledges differ from actual foreign direct investments tracked by the Philippine central bank, whose data go beyond projects and include reinvested earnings and lending to Philippine units through their debt instruments.

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