Angara In his lecture before graduate students of the Public Policy Program of Stanford University, Senator Sonny Angara took note of how the Philippines has managed to jump 10 spots in the Economic Complexity Index (ECI), from number 45 in 2008 to number 35 in 2018.

Angara:PH can become properous

April 28, 2021 Ryan Ponce Pacpaco 396 views

Senator to Stanford grad students: Economic complexity key to country’s prosperity

SENATOR Sonny Angara said yesterday the Philippines has the potential to become a more prosperous nation if it is able to take full advantage of its resources and make a mark in the global marketplace.

Over the past six decades, Angara noted how the Philippines has managed to transform itself from a country that ships out primarily agricultural products to one that produces and exports more complex products, particularly in the electronics sector.

In his lecture before graduate students of the Public Policy Program of Stanford University, Angara took note of how the Philippines has managed to jump 10 spots in the Economic Complexity Index (ECI), from number 45 in 2008 to number 35 in 2018.

The ECI, which is part of the Atlas of Economic Complexity developed by Harvard University’s Ricardo Hausmann and MIT’s Cesar Hidalgo, outlines the productive capabilities of a country based primarily on what it is exporting.

Countries that are able to produce more diverse, complex and uncommon products will score higher in the ECI and consequently, grow at a faster pace than those with a smaller export basket, including rich nations that rely heavily on their natural resources such as oil.

“The Philippines ranked 35th, which is not bad, considering that the ranking places us 4th in ASEAN behind only Singapore (5th), Thailand (22nd), and Malaysia (26th), and ahead of countries like Canada (39th), India (42nd), and New Zealand (54th). We’re recognized as a regional leader, suggesting that we must have been doing something right,” Angara said.

In 2018, the GDP per capita of the Philippines was at $3,102, growing at an average of 4.8 percent over five years.

“Because economic complexity describes the productive knowhow or knowledge embedded within a country’s productive structure, it has a strong correlation with the income per capita that the country is able to generate. Complexity is not only an outcome of prosperity—it is in fact a driver of it,” Angara said.

While the Philippines has made significant strides in terms of economic complexity, Angara said the country still has a long way to go before it is able to reach the level of productivity and growth that will result in better opportunities and prosperity for its people.

According to Angara, one of the biggest challenges that the country faces is on how to keep its skilled workforce from going overseas.

“In the case of the Philippines, our domestic capability is bleeding out because our biggest export is in fact our people. It is said that there are at least 10 million Filipinos working overseas primarily because job opportunities at home are scarce or not lucrative enough to earn a decent living,” Angara said.

Taking off from the arguments and ideas raised by Hausmann and Hidalgo, Angara came up with the Tatak Pinoy initiative in middle of 2019 to find ways of helping Filipino industries and professionals become more globally competitive.

“We envisioned that through this initiative, the country may eventually produce and export more complex, high-value products and services; encourage more investment; and create more job opportunities at home for Filipinos so they don’t have to leave anymore for greener pastures abroad,” Angara said.

In February last year, Angara convened a public hearing attended by a diverse set of stakeholders to discuss the Tatak Pinoy initiative and how it can be implemented as a national policy.

Among the major themes that emerged during the hearing was the need for the country to undertake a major up skilling effort to match the new demands of the Fourth Industrial Revolution.

Emphasis was also given to the need to introduce major reforms in the country’s basic education, particularly to put more focus on science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) as the building blocks to success for our students.

“In no way is this endeavor easy, especially when coordinating such as widespread policy across several departments and promoting a novel way of economic thinking involves repetition and constant dialogue,” Angara said.

“Economic growth and development are fundamentally the products of a collaborative process between stakeholders. No one sector is singularly responsible for making the economy prosper. What’s crucial is the collective effort. In the end, the best opportunities for growth are the ones that we create for each other, with each other,” Angara added.

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