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Business Groups Urged Senate to Approve the PHL RCEP Membership
Groups Push Senate to Approve PHL RCEP Membership

Business Groups Urged Senate to Approve the PHL RCEP Membership

Business Groups such as the Financial Executives Institute of the Philippines (FINEX), Makati Business Club (MBC), Management Association of the Philippines (MAP), and the Philippine Council for Foreign Relations (PCFR) pushed the Senate in a joint letter to approve the Philippines’ membership in the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP).

The industry groups stated, “Like any free trade agreement, RCEP provides wide economic opportunities for our country, along with certain threats to uncompetitive industries, and individual producers and their workers. And like in the other free trade agreements the country has joined (of which our country has the least, compared to Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, and Vietnam), the overall economic gains in terms of net job creation, economic growth, and price stabilization will well outweigh the costs.”

The RCEP has 15 members including 10 ASEAN countries together with Australia, New Zealand, China, Japan, and South Korea. It is considered to be the biggest trade bloc in the world and represents 30% of global gross domestic product (GDP)

The trade agreement took effect on January 1, 2021. However, the Senate was unable to approve the RCEP before 2021 ended.

The groups noted, “RCEP will help MSMEs expand market access, especially with more liberal rules of origin on traded products to qualify for trade concessions. It will also provide broader and cheaper alternative sources for inputs and reduce costs of doing business through improved trade facilitation, especially customs and trade clearance procedures.”

They mentioned that debarring from the RCEP will be “immensely costly to our economy and our people.”

In addition, the groups expressed, “We can anticipate a significant decline in our exports to RCEP countries, which now account for nearly two-thirds (64%) of our total exports, as trade with us will logically be diverted to fellow members. It would also make us even more unattractive to job-creating investments than we already are, as these would best locate in RCEP member countries to take advantage of free access to its vast market.”

They continued, “For the same reason, our membership could attract more foreign investments into the country from firms wishing to produce and sell to the large RCEP market.”
The group stated that tax elimination will take up to 20 years which will give more time to enhance production and strengthen competitiveness.

The business groups concluded, “RCEP skeptics should find comfort in the fact that little will immediately change in the country’s trade relations, since RCEP only reaffirms existing trade concessions we already have with all RCEP members via the ASEAN Trade in Goods Agreement (ATIGA) among ASEAN members and the ASEAN-Plus Free Trade Agreements with the rest.”

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  • Claire Feliciano

    Marie Claire Feliciano is a Senior Digital Copywriter. She focuses on writing SEO content such as blogs, infographics, and news articles.

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