4. “Free trade” does not result in development for backward countries.
On the contrary, historical and current experience show that: 1) industrialized countries like Japan developed on the basis of protection and discriminatory support; and 2) Third World countries like the Philippines that prematurely liberalized have suffered.
Japan certainly has more to gain from so-called free trade with the Philippines. The Japanese economy’s gross domestic product (GDP) of US$4.4 trillion in 2006 is 50 times larger than that of the Philippines. Japan is also the biggest foreign investor in the Philippines with a cumulative US$3.9 billion as of 2005, constituting over one-fifth of the country’s foreign investment stock. Japan accounted for 17% of the Philippines’ total trade in 2005 and is its second largest trading partner, while the Philippines accounted for just 1.4% of Japan’s total trade.
Underlying these figures are economies of vastly different industrial, agricultural and service sector strength. The myth of “comparative advantage” and the so-called “level playing field” between such economies is merely a smokescreen for giving the stronger economy free rein to profit from the other.
5. The JPEPA’s liberalization agenda severely limits the Philippines’ freedom to set economic policy.
Government controls on how foreign investors operate in the country are necessary to ensure that the Philippines gets concrete and substantial benefits from such investments. This means, among others, ensuring control over investors’ operations through equity and ownership requirements or joint ventures. It also means ensuring benefits to the domestic economy through local content requirements and technology transfers.
These linkages between foreign investors and domestic entrepreneurs will not spontaneously arise and have to be consciously built, yet the JPEPA would disallow policies to build these. Investment provisions on “National Treatment” and “Most Favored Nation Treatment” will prevent the Philippines from favoring Filipino entrepreneurs over Japanese investors. There are also explicit “Performance Requirement Prohibitions” which disallow the Philippine government from requiring Japanese investors to achieve a certain level of domestic content, purchase goods and services in its area of operations, among others.
All these are designed to give Japanese investors greater protections, to ensure that they retain their advantages and to enable them to extract the maximum profit from their operations.
6. The JPEPA will worsen Philippine de-industrialization and cause job losses.
The government claims the local exporters would gain through export growth as tariffs are reduced and removed altogether. But the majority of Philippine exports to Japan are industrial manufactures that are actually subcontracted from Japanese transnational corporations (TNCs) and assembled using imported inputs while taking advantage of cheap Filipino labor.
If anything, the JPEPA actually raises the danger that some electronics and auto parts suppliers based in the country, whether TNCs or any genuinely Filipino enterprises, will be affected. Of course, there is no genuinely Filipino electronics or auto industry to speak of. But there are still such suppliers based in the country that import raw materials or components and assemble them either for re-export or as inputs to other electronics or auto assemblers in the country.
Such firms may have to close down if the removal of tariffs on these items makes them cheaper to import than procure from locally based manufacturers. Local steel makers will also be facing steeper production from Japanese producers. The resulting plant closures and layoffs could well mean some tens of thousands of jobs will be lost.
RSS feed • Subscribe via email • Discuss
You must be logged in to post a comment.
Party-list group Slams Mikey Arroyo for Cha-cha Initiatives
Kin of Missing Activist Seek Solons’ Help
JdV Endorsement Could Boost Impeach Rap – Satur
Lawyers’ Groups to Seek UN’s Help to Curb Attacks vs Lawyers, Judges
Charges vs. 72 Southern Tagalog Activists Baseless – Lawyer
Duterte-Nograles tiff over park prelude to 2010?
Urban poor group hits Arroyo on housing mega-sale
Military operations in ComVal is linked to mining – environmental alliance
San Isidro town govt to penalize cacao felling
Boston villagers recount tales of military abuses
As US Economy Tanks, Philippines Gets Set for Downturn
Philippine Airlines Reports P5.7-Billion Loss in 6 Months
Becoming ‘Instruments of Healing’ in Mindanao
In the Philippines, Prosecution as Tool for Persecution
Arroyo Dissolves Gov’t Peace Panel
Major US Gov’t Report Concludes Tobacco’s Media Promotion Leads to Smoking
Manila’s Censorship Law Rears Its Ugly Head
The New Settlers: Mindanao Muslims Head North
Waiting Game for North Cotabato Refugees
The MOA, the Cha-Cha, and the US Ambassador
Davao Villagers Battle World’s Largest Mining Company
Filipinos Give Arroyo Failing Mark for Performance
Philippines’s Miguel Syjuco Wins Asia’s Top Literary Prize
MILF Commits Anew to International Humanitarian Law on Landmines
Body of Lies
Pimentel Dismayed by Ombudsman’s Dismissal of Bolante Rap
Labor Migration in the Philippines: A Dangerous Doctrine
(Unsolicited) Advice on Asia Policy for President-Elect Obama
Philippines Accused of ‘Persecuting’ Human Rights Advocates Through ‘Legal Offensives’
Continuing Threats, Surveillance vs Lawyers, Judges Denounced
April 22nd, 2008 at 2:42 am
I already meet and attended meeting with those Japanese. In negotiation they always insist their conditions which gives to the other country to the point of no return. They insist their motives and advancement. They give you favor once but what is the return? Even 10 times of what they give. I hope Philippine government must think about Japanese trap for the benefits of the Filipino people.
May 1st, 2008 at 12:19 am
JPEPA MEANS JOBS. jobs means higher GDP. jobs means poverty alleviation. jobs means better financial health for the micro and macro economy
WHO DO YOU WANT TO HAVE A BILATERAL TRADE AGREEMENT WITH? JAPAN or BURMA? LAOS? CAMBODIA? How useless would that be.
accept the fact the we need japan more than they need us
May 6th, 2008 at 2:52 pm
In fightingFTA’s website, its observations are quite enlightening for us non-experts in international trade agreements, which reads:
“Under North-South FTAs, the market access for the South is generally very small. For the Japan-Philippines Economic Partnership Agreement (JPEPA), Japan got improved access to the Philippines automobile market, new fishing opportunities in the Philippine seas (to replace imports), stronger investment guarantees and even the green light to export toxic wastes, while the Philippines got reduced tariff rates on a few exported fruits and a quota to be able to send 100 nurses a year to Japan, In the Japan-Thailand deal, Japan got major investment opportunities in the automobile and health sectors, while Thailand goat a measly quota to send chefs and masseuses to Japan.” (Today’s FTA Frenzy)
On government’s claim that Philippines will lose investment opportunities worth P 4 billion, well fightingFTA’s wrote, in the same article, that:
“Several World Bank and UNCTAD studies show that there is no direct relationship between signing an investment agreement and receiving increased foreign investment. China, South Africa and Brazil are prime examples of countries that have captured big investment inflows in recent years without such agreements. Indeed, signing such an agreement can get you into costly legal disputes for failing to deliver the right investment conditions, resulting in net financial losses.” (Today’s FTA Frenzy)
Lest we be mislead again, JPEPA is not intended to benefit the poor and under/unemployed of the Philippines but to further exploit them in tandem with the Philippine natural resources for to maximize and protect the profits of large Japanese corporations. Note that large Japanese corporations together with their government are the ones pushing the Economic Partnership Agreement unlike in the Philippines where it is the government that pushed it with negligible consultations with local industries. To ensure this objective for Japanese investors, JPEPA includes the following provisions: (1) to be treated no less favorably than domestic companies (national treatment); (2) get any better treatment that is offered to TNC under other trade deals (most favored nation); (3) enjoy secure ownership of all assets: no expropriation (whether direct or indirect), no nationalization and fewer possibilities for the state to issue compulsory licenses in the public interest; (4) protection and insurance to realize any anticipated profits – and to sue the state if any public policy measure or decision gets in the way of that (similar to NAFTA); (5) conduct business with minimal hassle from the government – no requirements to hire local workers, no obligations to transfer technology, full freedom to send money out of the country and generally few restrictions on moving capital around; (6) have direct access to local policy-making process; and expand their commercial monopolies through a longer menu of intellectual property rights.
The future consequences of those provisions are far-reaching. Just some of the situations – local fishing companies (tuna etc) or fishermen that will not survive the competition with Japanese fishing investors cannot be compensated (not covered by safeguard measure, dumping or countervailing since these laws applies only to goods sold in the Philippines and not to simply cornered the supply source and not the market in the Philippines) unlike their Japanese counterparts; whatever petroleum, gas or minerals that Japanese investors extracted from the Philippines, they are not required to process or sell it here even if local industries or consumers will need it (oil crisis) also the same in the case of agricultural products produced in land (food crisis); local government cannot impose additional real property taxes and business tax other than those already existing at the time of entry of JPEPA.