MANILA, Philippines - The Philippines still lagged behind Southeast Asian neighbors in attracting foreign direct investments (FDIs). But a report from global banking giant Citibank indicated that the Philippines is cathing up on FDI, recording the highest growth rate of 185 percent as against the 2.11-percent average expansion across the so-called Asean-6 in 2012.
“The Philippines remains the regional FDI laggard but interestingly saw the sharpest year-on-year rise in the Asean (Association of Southeast Asian Nations),†Citi said in a report.
The country, awarded investment-grade status by two credit rating agencies this year, attracted a total of $2.8 billion in FDI last year, according to data from the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) cited in the report.
The figure represented a notable increase of 185 percent from $981 million in 2011, data showed. Philippine FDI growth rate was significantly higher than the 2.11-percent expansion recorded across the so-called Asean-6.
Asean-6 groups Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.
“The Philippines is catching up from a low base,†Citi said. It however did not cite any reason for the fast FDI growth posted last year.
Regionally though, Citi said Asean-6 is benefiting from a shift in investor sentiment toward China, where rising labor costs and an appreciating yuan have dented competitiveness of its manufacturing industry.
Last year, FDI to China decreased to $121 billion from $124 billion, according to UNCTAD figures, suggesting investment inflows “may be finally peaking.â€
“This corroborates anecdotal evidence of diversification of FDI portfolios…away from China towards Asean,†Citi said.
For the Philippines, a demographic dividend – characterized by a booming work force – could also bode well for an increase in FDI. Citi said the same is true for the rest of Asean-6, except Singapore.
On nominal value though, the Philippines’ FDI accounts for less than one percent of what the region got during the similar period.
A total of $111.3 billion in FDI was shared last year by Asean-6, data showed.
Broken down, Singapore got the highest chunk of FDI inflows at $56.7 billion, followed by Indonesia ($19.9 billion), Malaysia ($10 billion), Thailand ($8.6 billion), and Vietnam ($8.3 billion).