Home | About TeamAsia | Clients | Job Opportunities | Speaker Opportunities | Contact Us | Sign Up  
Home > Media Articles >   2004 > Ruminations on Investment
< Back   

 

 

Ruminations on Investment
By Michael Alan Hamlin
April 26, 2004

Thank God It's Friday! As I write this Monday-morning piece as the previous week winds down, I find myself somewhat uncharacteristically staring out my office window at the activity taking place across the street. Just this morning, Northgate Cyberzone began construction on the new HSBC call center that's been hyped up in the papers the past couple of weeks.

To watch things get started, and I presume to leverage the obligatory groundbreaking photo op, a bunch of foreigners gathered around the construction equipment that appeared in the field early this morning. They - the construction equipment, that is - have been going at it ever sense, busy as bees, moving tons of soil out of a fast-growing hole in the ground, and making quite a racket in the process. That racket accounts for my distraction, I suppose.

But it also got me to thinking. Construction is becoming a big thing again, as the economy continues to recover and it becomes increasingly evident that the country will probably have the same president after May 10 that it has now. Not a day goes by that I don't receive some sort of promo piece on yet another luxury condominium being built in Makati, Ft. Bonifacio, Alabang, Libis, or some other trendy hotspot.

Out here in Northgate Cyberzone in Alabang, the new HSBC building isn't the only thing cooking. Across the field fronting Zapote Road the new Convergys building has quickly reached its full three-storey height. Another tier-one call center, APAC, has exercised its option for the entire four-storey Building C that sits next to the one our offices occupy, Building B. Building B itself has most of two floors leased out to Ambergris, a local call center outfit. Across Zapote Road in the ritzy Insular Life twin towers, Epixtar is expanding its call center to 1,000 seats. It's adding another 1,500 in Libis, housed in Epixtar House in Eastwood.

In Makati People Support is building a new building, and TeleTech's suppliers have been buying media supplements announcing the opening of its newest call center. With all this, and more, highly visible activity, it's easy to get caught up in the euphoria associated with call centers, which have become the career of choice among many young people. As some told me recently, "our friends and family admire us because we were able to get jobs in the call center industry." Only about one in every 100 applicants gets accepted, according to the scuttlebutt.

Call center sector investment represents a mixture of purely foreign and local investment. Most of the tier one companies don't look for local partners. Tier two companies frequently do, and local call center operators generally look for either industry partners or hire expatriates to teach them the business. In other e-Services sectors such as software development, engineering and design, and financial back office operations, foreign investment is the principal driver of development.

According to economic planning secretary Romulo Neri, total foreign investment in the Philippines is probably going to be in the vicinity of US$1.5 billion this year. India will get about US$10 billion, and like the Philippines, a significant portion of this investment goes to non-traditional sectors like e-Services and network infrastructure. Fortunately for both countries, non-traditional investment is a much more efficient job generator than investment in traditional sectors like light and heavy industry manufacturing and assembling. And that's why we seem to have been taken over by call centers recently.

Yet foreign investment accounts for just 10 percent of total annual investment in the Philippines. It is domestic firms that account for the bulk of investment. Neri says that domestic investment has been growing around seven to eight percent a year, but that it needs to increase to at least 15-20 percent annual growth to match domestic investment rates in other regional economies.

Obviously, foreign investment needs to grow faster too, and that's not just a matter of investor perception. Rather, lack of investment in some key sectors is attributable to protectionism, some of it constitutionally enshrined. Neri feels that liberalizing mining, utilities, shipping, ports, and airlines, for instance, could generate an additional US$2 billion a year in foreign investment, effectively doubling present levels, and generating significant job growth and lessen our new dependence on e-Services.

However, government has its hands tied for political and constitutional reasons. Perhaps a re-elected government will have both the moral authority, and the political will, to make this happen. That's something to ruminate about, at least.


(Michael Alan Hamlin is the managing director of consultancy TeamAsia and the author of three books on Asian economies and companies. His latest book is Marketing Asian Places, of which he is a co-author (Wiley, 2001), and he is currently at work on High Visibility: The Making and Marketing of Asian Professionals into Celebrities. Write him at mahamlin@teamasia.com.).

Copyright © 2003 Michael Alan Hamlin. All Rights Reserved.

Back to prevous page


Media Archives

Copyright © 2004 TeamAsia and Hamlin-Iturralde Corporation. All rights reserved.