By Phidel Marion G. Vineles
PIDS
The
Philippine services sector needs an
articulated and comprehensive national strategy to maximize its potentials as a
growth engine for the economy.
In the National Workshop on
Services organized by state think tank Philippine Institute for Development
Studies (PIDS) and the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA), experts and
stakeholders from the private and public sectors underscored the need for a
more focused national strategy for services.
The Philippines can be a hub
for services trade in Asia Pacific because of its pool of skilled, semiskilled,
and low-skilled workers, PIDS Research Consultant Dr. Ramonette Serafica said.
“The estimated 10.4 million Filipinos abroad are a natural market for
Philippine services,” she added.
According to Ms. Serafica,
the country can tap opportunities in maritime, outsourcing, franchising,
medical, and educational services. “The Philippines can be a home to
world-class brands with the internationalization of Philippine franchise
brands,” she said.
There is a need, however, to
boost government support such as in strengthening Philippine participation in
international shows, trade missions, and business matching sessions, she said.
Alegria “Bing” Sibal-Limjoco, vice-chairman of the Philippine Franchise
Association, lamented: “In last year’s Philippine participation in
international franchise held in Singapore, the country had only a booth while
other ASEAN countries had pavilions.”
For Doris Magsaysay-Ho,
president and CEO of A. Magsaysay, Inc., the country’s high-quality talent pool
is a competitive services proposition for the global maritime industry.
“Knowledge of the maritime field using experienced people offers opportunity to
develop business outsourcing services for shipping companies, insurance
companies, and others,” she said.
The Philippine Information
Technology – Business Processing Management (IT-BPM) industry, meanwhile, is
not only competitive in voice services, said Ana Maria Bongato, executive
director for talent development at the IT Business Process Association of the
Philippines (IBPAP). A wide range of services such as IT application,
engineering, animation, data analytics, and other business process services are
offered by the Philippines, she said.
The Philippine IT-BPM
industry is ranked second as a global outsourcing destination and is the
country’s largest private sector job creator with 900,000 jobs created last
year, said Bongato.
Former health secretary Dr.
Jaime Galvez-Tan said the country can be an international and medical
retirement zone. “The country can be retirement havens for Northeast Asians,
OFWs, and expats,” Galvez-Tan said. “We can offer spa tourism, alternative, and
Filipino traditional medicine to them,” he said.
Also, trade in educational
services can make an important contribution in enhancing Philippine higher
education, said Prof. Tereso Tullao Jr. of De La Salle University. It can lead
to harmonization of academic standards and open avenues for regional
cooperation in higher education, he said.
Mr. Tullao called for higher
standards in educational services, noting the small number of accredited
programs and lack of faculty qualifications of Philippine higher education
institutions (HEIs). “Only 21.5 percent of the more than 2,200 HEIs have some
form of accreditation and a miniscule 12.7 percent of around 130,000 faculty
members have doctoral degrees,” he said.
To harness services trade,
former PIDS president Dr. Josef Yap stressed the need to have an institutional
framework to address cross-cutting issues in services trade such as smuggling, transportation and
logistics, skills mismatch, and power.
“There is a need to create an
institutional setting to coordinate policies required to develop the country’s
services capacity through infrastructure development, skills upgrade, support
policies and incentives,” Mr. Yap said.
Moreover, the national vision or strategy on promoting the service
sector should be anchored on a higher order objective which is the pursuit of
inclusive growth for the country, said NEDA deputy director-general Emmanuel
Esguerra.
In relation to this, PIDS
President Gilberto Llanto said there is a need for a deeper understanding of
the services sector for effective policy measures considering that the sector
contributes significantly to the economy. “Philippine growth is driven by an
expanding services sector which accounts for 57 percent of total GDP,” Mr. Llanto
noted.
It is thus important to guide
the direction of the services sector since it contributes positively to the
country’s development and job generation agenda, said Laura del Rosario,
Foreign Affairs undersecretary for international economic relations.
At the close of the workshop,
Ms. Del Rosario announced the revival of the Philippine Services Coalition, a
multi-stakeholder group to be led by the private sector that will campaign for
reforms to boost the services sector. The coalition will soon meet to map out
its strategic initiatives, she said.
The National Workshop on
Services was held in preparation for the Philippines’ chairmanship of the
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum next year, Ms. Del Rosario added.
The workshop brought together
local and international experts and other stakeholders to discuss opportunities
in services trade. The output of the workshop will serve as an input toward a
comprehensive strategy on services.
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